K-PUNK TOP 100 BRITISH ALBUMS

Wed. June 23, 2004
Categories: Abstract Dynamics

OK, indulge me, I’ve indulged myself….
It’s partly the disgust, rage and disappointment of actually seeing the Observer list : where it’s not drably canonic, it’s absurd (and not in any interesting way, absurd in that there are obviously people out there who get paid to write about music whose taste has not moved on since they were first year undergraduates); and where it’s not canonic or absurd, it’s infuriating. Lloyd Cole and the Commotions! Fucking Lloyd ‘couldn’t write his way out of a paper bag’ (MES) Cole. Good God, the only place I expected to see his smug chubby chops again was staring at me from out of a car boot.
And I can hardly bear to say it, but The Stone Roses being placed, never mind about getting to number 1. This is far more depressing than reality TV pop, jeez, people who are prepared, in 2004, to vote that over-hyped slice of slight retro-puffery as the best British album ever made , well, they deserve only the worst, the most mediocre, of everything. Yeh, you can understand a momentary aberration when it came out, people getting carried away, intoxicated on Brown’s manc swagger (I mean, Brown’s solo stuff and that single he did with UNKLE obviously tower above anything the Roses achieved; and they should be placed oooh as high as 312), temporarily letting the guard down and the standards slip when there was a paucity of alternatives. But, now, in 2004, after a decade of time-shattering rhythmic psychedelia, after Loveless, after garage, do we really need to stir that undead r and r cavader? Oasis, too. And Echo and the ‘moon in june’ Bunnymen.
All those tedious undergrad poster boys. What dream-deprived, desire-decayed, quotidian mire do those who voted live in?
So it’s partly the rage, and partly the inspiration of Marcello and, even more, of Jim (still no permalinx; see Monday 21st June entry), partly because it’s a bit of fun….
k-punk’s top 100 british albums — arranged by decade (though I’m sure I’ve got some of the dates wrong, I just did it by memory). Naturally, it’s been thrown together, so it’s a bit rorshach blot, not rationally considered (and possibly all the better for that), not objective (what would that mean?), not even pretending to be, it’s an attempt, not to Mount Rushmore-like inscribe in stone, with the Big Other at my shoulder, a sacred list of albums that are ‘Good’, but to record those albums that were Events in my life, that changed things, that forever altered my scanning patterns, my expectations, perceptions…
There are almost certainly horrendous omissions …
Yes, it’s too white, too male (but then, so am I), the eighties are over-represented (but then, that’s when I was most impressionable)….
00’s
Dizzee Rascal – Boy in Da Corner
Oxide and Neutrino Present: the Solid Sound of the Underground
Oxide and Neutrino – Execute
David Sylvian – Blemish
90’s
187 Lockdown – 187 Lockdown
Tricky – Pre Millennium Tension
Goldie – Saturnz Return
Massive Attack – Protection
Breakdown Presents: Drum & Bass Selection 3
Suburban Base and Moving Shadow Present The Joint LP
Various – Techsteppin’
The Dark Side: Hardcore Drum and Bass Style (React)
Marvellous Cain – Gun Talk
World of Twist – Quality Street
Tricky – Maxinquaye
Aphex Twin – Selected Ambient Works
Basement Jaxx – Remedy
MBV – Loveless (also here)
Barry Adamson – Soul Murder
Altern 8 – Full on Mask Hysteria
Renegade Soundwave – Soundclash
80’s
New Order – Movement
J AMC – Psychocandy
The Fall – Grotesque
The Fall – Hex Enduction Hour
Japan – Tin Drum
John Foxx – Metamatic
Visage – Visage
OMD – Architecture and Morality
Blue Nile – Hats
Associates – Sulk
Adam and the Ants – Kings of the Wild Frontier
Joy Division – Closer
Happy Mondays – Squirrel and G-Man
Kate Bush – Hounds of Love
Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden
African Headcharge – Off the Beaten Track
The Smiths – Hatful of Hollow
23 Skidoo – Seven Songs
23 Skidoo – The Culling is Coming
London Posse – Gangster Chronicle
Mark Stewart + Maffia – As the Veneer of Democracy Starts to Fade
Annie Anxiety – Jackamo
The Cure – Pornography
Bauhaus – Mask
Scritti Politti – Provision
ABC – Lexicon of Love
Simple Minds – New Gold Dream
Magazine – The Correct Use of Soap
Test Dept – The Unacceptable Face of Freedom
Pet Shop Boys – Actually
Pet Shop Boys – Please
Durutti Column – Vini Reilly
Gang of Four – A Brief History of the Twentieth Century
Ultravox – Rage in Eden
Siouxsie and the Banshees – A Kiss in the Dreamhouse
Soft Cell – Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret
Soft Cell – This Last Night in Sodom
Marc and the Mambas – Torment and Toreros
The Pop Group – For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?
Happy Mondays – Bummed
808 State – Quadrastate
The Cure – Seventeen Seconds
The Jam – Greatest Hits
Virginia Astley – In Gardens Where We Feel Secure
Brian Eno – On Land
Cabaret Voltaire – Voice of America
70’s
Slits – Cut
Black Sabbath – Paranoid
Tubeway Army – Tubeway Army
Tubeway Army – Replicas
Ultravox – Systems of Romance
The Stones – Exile on Main Street
John Martyn – Solid Air
Roxy Music – Roxy Music
Roxy Music – For Your Pleasure
Bowie – Low
Cabaret Voltaire – Mix Up
Pop Group – Y
Roy Harper – Stormcock
Bryan Ferry – Let’s Stick Together
Magazine – Real Life
Killing Joke – Killing Joke
PiL – Metal Box
John Barry – 007 10th anniversary edition James Bond Collection
Shirley Bassey – The Singles
Magazine – Real Life
Japan – Adolescent Sex
John Cale – Paris 1919
Joy Division – Unknown Pleasures
Van Morrison – Moondance
60’s
BBC Radiophonic Workshop – BBC radiophonic music
Pink Floyd – Piper at the Gates of Dawn
The Stones – Let It Bleed
The Stones – Aftermath
The Kinks – Village Green Preservation Society
The Beatles – Rubber Soul
The Beatles – Revolver
The Beatles – White Album
30’s
Pennies From Heaven OST
The Singing Detective – OST
What might have featured/ what might well feature in future, if I’d heard them enough/ recently/ at all:
Joe Meek —- Throbbing Gristle —- This Heat —- Clock DVA —- Human League — The Who — Imagination — 10 cc —

25 Responses to “K-PUNK TOP 100 BRITISH ALBUMS”

  1. oliver Says:

    Just want to say for myself, re: 90s, ‘DI Go Pop’. There. Said it. Nice list, though.

  2. oliver Says:

    oh, ok, to be pedantic, I’ll regret this, but:
    drum & bass selection vol 1 and 2 on breakdown
    sound of the pirates on locked on
    chill out by klf
    jungle hits vol 1 & 2 on street tuf
    +
    fourth draw down (as good as sulk)
    the dreaming (as good as hounds of love)
    empires and dance (as good as new gold dream)
    more specials by the specials
    special beat service by the beat
    cupid & psyche 85 by scritti
    +
    the north star and the ravens by snady denny
    and the stones um let it bleed should have been up beyond half-great sticky fingers, exile should have been well up because it’s the best thing ever, and, I dunno, they’re the best whatever, whenever,
    aren’t they? (Luke?)

  3. oliver Says:

    ha ha! course!

  4. mark k-p Says:

    I like DI Go Pop, but it wouldn’t make the 100 (saw them live, they were amazing)…
    Maybe Breakdown D and B 1 and 2 are better than 3, but I’ve only got 3 and 4…
    Chill Out I haven’t heard all of
    Ditto lots of Associates stuff I really should have
    and The Dreaming
    Like Empires and Dance but, really, few things are as good as NGD
    I realise most would choose Cupid and Psyche over Provision — but Provision takes that fastidio-intricate micro-intense sumptuousness to its logical extreme…
    Sandy Denny, not heard…

  5. Marcello Carlin Says:

    point of order: the altern-8 elpee came out in ’92 so it should be in the ’90s section. otherwise a splendid list. yes, 187 lockdown, absurdly underrated outfit/record – even if “kung fu” is on record as being simon bates’ all-time favourite single (???!!?!?!?!!?). god yes, the unacceptable face of freedom, that’s an astonishing record; a truer, harsher and yet more compassionate depiction of thatcherite britain than anything billy bragg achieved.
    i hummed and hawed about putting in any mark stewart & the maffia (seeing as “the maffia” are all americans), partly because of the latter’s treachery in backing jagger on TOTP when he came on to perform the beyond-loathsome “let’s work.” but the third stewart/maffia album (entitled “mark stewart” – 1987) is a milestone; the true beginning of trip hop, the missing link between tin drum and maxinquaye.
    somewhere in my parched archive i have a 10,000 word piece on goldie’s “mother” (the 60-minute version) which i wrote back in ’98 and unsuccessfully pitched to the wire (no change there then eh?). if i can find it i’ll put it up on the blog.

  6. steve_hyperdub Says:

    surprised you forgot about No U Turn’s ‘Torque’ Mark

  7. mark s Says:

    project undermined by continued kowtowing to now-meaningless 50s marketing category (cf use of word “album”)
    in future lists shall:
    i. define their OWN (new and for-now unrecuperated) aesthetic-shaping limitation categories (from a distance resembles a fly; has just knocked over the watercooler; maybe would have been an album if it wasn’t a type of benelux cheese – YOU’VE READ FOUCAULT YOU KNOW THE DRILL!!) (ie haha marcello included jazz insects tape on his = he is in the clear here!!!)
    ii. WHY ARE WE ALL STILL TIMIDLY PROPPING UP THE HEGEMONY OF OUR OWN FINGERNUMBER PEOPLE!! ppl voted for Lloyd Cole cz they like his way with a tune; the reactionary intellectual laziness that STILL DEFERS to the EVIL NEOLIBERAL DECIMAL has NO SUCH ACCEPTABLE VALIDATION!!
    (failure to accede to i. => withdrawal of privilege even to MOUTH the word “dub”)

  8. Anonymous Says:

    (that k-punk list seems to come in at 104 btw so he = in clear also, acc.the NumerologyPolice spokesdigit)

  9. oliver Says:

    oh dear oh dear

  10. mark k-p Says:

    Mark Sinker, make yr way over to the hyperstition blog (http://hyperstition.abstractdynamics.org) fortwith – hegemony of digits under assault there – n-1!!!
    If I’ve added it up wrong — well, no surprise, arithmetic’s never been my strong point —
    Steve, yes ‘Torque’ was one of the ‘horrendous omissions’ I warned of… Makes me wonder if I’ve lost my copy actually…
    Marcello, obv agree with you about MS; I saw them live at the time Mark Stewart came out, still one of the most electric experiences I’ve had at a gig…
    Wasn’t sure about the Altern-8 date — but reminded of it thanks to yr list, what a fabulous record, prolecore, must post something on that —
    Marcello, you, Kodwo and Steve Hyperdub are the only people I know who like ‘Mother’; I did a piece on it too (compared it to Scott Walker as I recall), must dig that up…

  11. mark s Says:

    actually it might be interesting to try and draw up a “serious” foucault-type list of the required characteristics of the post-whatever art”work” viz
    i. resists established routines and processes of commodification (like: what length is it? where do you file it? is it too easy to review?]
    ii. is to be completed by the responses of you-the-viewer
    iii. [to be completed by the responses of you-the-viewer ]

  12. Marcello Carlin Says:

    …and i proclaim the winner in all three categories to be –
    “the wit and wisdom of ronald reagan” (stiff records, 1980)!

  13. Nick Says:

    feeling lot’s of empathy here, mark, apart from: I never liked the fucking Stones, but I do like the Roses album. Several albums in the wrong decade, but you did say it was put together really quickly, so I’ll let it pass. Gonna try and do my own list too…

  14. scott Says:

    i apologise about the Stone Roses.
    their debut album is mildly pleasant/

  15. sapstra Says:

    A dutch list: 80 british + 40 continental
    80 british albums
    70’s Black Sabbath-Black Sabbath
    70’s Black Sabbath-Paranoid
    70’s Bryan Ferry-Let’s stick together
    70’s Fleetwood Mac-Rumours
    70’s John Barry-Themeology
    70’s Joy Division-Unknown Pleasures
    70’s Led Zeppelin-II
    70’s Linton Kwesi Johnson-Forces of Victory
    70’s Mike Oldfield-Tubular Bells
    70’s PiL-Metal Box
    70’s Pink Floyd-Wish you where here
    70’s Sex Pistols-Never mind the bollocks
    70’s Specials-The Specials
    70’s The Stranglers-IV Rattus Norvegicus
    80’s 23 Skidoo-Seven songs
    80’s A Certain Ratio-To Each
    80’s Adam & The Ants-Kings of the wild frontier
    80’s Au Pairs-Playing with a different sex
    80’s Baby Ford-Fordtrax
    80’s Basement 5-1965-1980
    80’s Cabaret Voltaire-2 x 45
    80’s Cabaret Voltaire-8 Crespuscule Tracks
    80’s Cabaret Voltaire-Red Mecca
    80’s Cabaret Voltaire-Three Mantras
    80’s Durutti Column-LC
    80’s Fad Gadget-Under the Flag
    80’s Gang of Four-Entertainment
    80’s General Strike-Danger in paradise
    80’s Glaxo Babies-Nine months to the disco
    80’s Human League-Reproduction
    80’s Human League-Travelogue
    80’s Joy Division-Closer
    80’s Mark Stewart & the Mafia-Learning to cope with cowardice
    80’s Medium Medium-The Glitterhouse
    80’s New Order-Movement
    80’s PiL-Flowers of Romance
    80’s Rip Rig + Panic-God
    80’s Rip Rig + Panic-I’m Cold
    80’s S’Express-Original Soundtrack
    80’s Siouxie & The Banshees-JuJu
    80’s Soul II Soul-Club Classics vol 1
    80’s Test Department-The unacceptable face of freedom
    80’s The Beat-I just can’t stop it
    80’s The Clash-Sandinista
    80’s The Fall-Hex Enduction Hour
    80’s The The-Soul Mining
    80’s This Heat-Deceit
    80’s UB 40-Signing Off
    90’s (Formation Records)-Unified colours of drum & bass
    90’s (V Records)-V Classic Volume II
    90’s Basement Jaxx-Remedy
    90’s Black Dog Productions-Bytes
    90’s Dave Clarke -Archive One
    90’s DJ Hype pts true playaz-In the mix vol 1
    90’s Dope Dragon-Wayz of the dragon
    90’s Ed Case-Sound of the pirates II
    90’s Fatboy Slim-Better Living through chemistry
    90’s Full Cycle:-Music Box
    90’s Goldie-Ring of Saturn
    90’s Grooverider presents-Hardstep Selection vol 1
    90’s Hardleaders 4 Into the jungle-
    90’s Hardleaders 6 presents Jungle Dub II-
    90’s James Lavelle-Fabric Live
    90’s Kemistry & Storm-DJ Kicks
    90’s LTJ Bukem-Mixmag live! vol 21
    90’s Metalheadz-Metal Box
    90’s Metalheadz-Platinum Breaks
    90’s Ninja cuts: funkjazztical tricknology-
    90’s No U Turn-Torque
    90’s Orbital -In Sides
    90’s Ragga Twins-Reaggae owes me money
    90’s Soul II Soul-Vol 2 The nineties
    90’s The Prodigy-Experience
    90’s Tricky-Nearly God
    90’s Tricky-Pre Millenium Tension
    90’s UNKLE-Psyence Fiction
    90’s Zed Bias-Sound of the pirates
    00’s Dizzee Rascal-Boy in the corner
    00’s Oxide & Neutrino-Execute
    40 albums from the continent
    70’s Can – Tago Mago
    70’s Ennio Morricone – Once upon a time in the west
    70’s Giorgio Moroder – From here to eternity
    70’s Kraftwerk – Trans Europe Express
    70’s Kraftwerk – Die Mensch Maschine
    70’s Metal Urbain – Anarchy in paris
    80’s Abwarts – Der westen ist einsam
    80’s Allez Allez – African Queen
    80’s Andreas Dorau – Blumen und Narzissen
    80’s Arbeid Adelt – Jonge Helden
    80’s DAF – Alles ist gut
    80’s Der Plan – Normalette Surprise
    80’s Die Haut – Burnin the Ice
    80’s Einsturzende Neubauten – Halber Mensch
    80’s Einsturzende Neubauten – Kollaps
    80’s Fehlfarben – Monarchie und Alltag
    80’s Front 242 – Backcatalogue
    80’s Kiem – Keam
    80’s Kraftwerk – Komputerwelt
    80’s Laibach – Nova Akropola
    80’s Liaisons Dangereuses – Liaisons Dangereuses
    80’s Mekanik Kommando – Snake is queen
    80’s Minny Pops – Sparks in a dark room
    80’s Nasmak – 4 Our Clicks
    80’s Nexda – Nexda
    80’s Palais Schaumburg – Palais Schaumburg
    80’s Plus Instruments – Februari April 1981
    80’s Suspect – Above suspicion
    80’s TC Matic – L’apache
    80’s The Honeymoonkillers – Les Tuers de la lune miel
    80’s Urban Dance Squad – Mental Floss for the globe
    80’s Yello – Claro que si
    90’s Alec Empire – The Destroyer
    90’s Fierce Ruling Diva – Fierce Ruling Diva
    90’s Fucking Hardcore 4
    90’s Maurizio – M
    90’s MC Solaar – Qui sème le vent récolte le tempo
    90’s Ruffneck – Da True Core
    90’s Soon E MC – Atout…point de vue
    90’s Tresor 1992 Klang der Famile

  16. murray Says:

    yes it’s painful that the Observer still has to indulge in the obvious for its lovingly prepared canon, enlisting the help of true knowledgables like Emma Bunton, but why we’re enagaging with its feature I would also defend ‘The Stone Roses’. Pure ecstasy wonder that album. It may only be backward trickery but the intro to Don’t Stop mimics the e-rush, while even the references (Marr, S&G, Hendrix) are not exercises in mere nostalgia.
    but yes anything from mate’s tapes to faceless techno label compilations should qualify…

  17. Martin Says:

    Of course the Observer list was rubbish, but what would you expect with Danny Baker and Charles Shaar Murray ( a bloke who makes Ian Mc Shane look hip and probably has pictures of Mick Jones all over his Mac) on the judging panel. I can’t be bothered to do 100 – I’m too pissed off that Sweden have been knocked out of Euro 2004 – but here’s some ones I’d definitely stick on my 100 – assuming I wanted to do British music a favour, rather than disgrace myself at the next UN summit
    COIL – Love’s Secret Domain
    SHUT UP AND DANCE & FRIENDS – Fuck Off And Die
    BETTY BOO – Boomania
    T REX – Electric Warrior
    ADAM AND THE ANTS – Kings of the Wild Frontier
    WHITEHOUSE – Thank Your Lucky Stars
    POGUES – Red Roses for Me
    MOTORHEAD – Orgasmatron
    THE POP GROUP – Y
    ADVERTS – Crossing the Red Sea With the Adverts
    V/A – Raw Records Punk Collection
    DJ SCUD – Ambush
    V/A – Ministry of Sound- Back to the Old Skool Vol 1
    SLITS – Cut
    BAUHAUS – Bela Lugosi’s Dead (YES ITS A 12″ BUT SURELY YOU CAN’T EXPECT ME TO SIT THRU A WHOLE BAUHAUS LP )
    CRASS – Best Before 1984 (SIDES 1 AND 2)
    NURSE WITH WOUND – Merzbild Schwet
    NURSE WITH WOUND – Soliloquy for Lilith
    DUB SYNDICATE – Echomania
    V/A – An Afflicted Man’s Musica Box
    SNIVELLING SHITS -I Can’t Come
    THROBBING GRISTLE – DOA
    BUZZCOCKS – Another Music in a Different Kitchen
    MEL AND KIM – F.L.M
    HUGGY BEAR – Taking the Rough With the Smooch
    DEATH IN JUNE – Nada!
    LADYTRON – 604
    GOLDFRAPP – Black Cherry
    DAVID BOWIE – Scary Monsters
    RUTS – Grin and Bear It
    V/A – The Portable Altamont
    V/A – Just Ragga 7
    (LOOK, CHECK THOSE MEAN AND MOODY RUDE GIRLS ON THE ORIGINAL FRONT COVER, THIS IS THE SOUND OF THE LONDON I REMEMBER! IF RICHARD ALLEN HAD WRITTEN ‘KNUCKLE GIRLS’ IN 1994, THESE CHICKS WOULD HAVE BEEN ON THE JACKET! THIS IS MORE UK THAN FUCKING THIN LIZZY!)
    See, I’ve given up already 🙂

  18. mark k-p Says:

    Nice list – y’see coming up with a 100 ain’t that easy! Pogues I thought abt including (1st album) and perhaps shd have… Mel and Kim, loved the singles, never heard the elpee.. Whitehouse require further exploration… Bauhaus, no, yr being harsh…
    Sapstra, great list too … could and perhaps shd have included Nearly God, The Prodigy Experience is a major omission on my part, UB40 Signing Off is something I’ve been meaning to revisit for some time…

  19. amblongus Says:

    Strange lack of Ivor Cutler in all these lists. Whither Dandruff?
    And if you can have compilations, how about the Messthetics series of collected postpunk/UK 78-82 singles from Hyped To Death? It might not be strictly permitted in the Observer to promote CDRs from the USA in a flag-waving celebration of Britpop but where else are you going to find the essential postpunk goodness of the Desperate Bicycles and those early Scritti Politti tracks?

  20. Martin Says:

    Oh…I agree with you on the Desperate Bicycles…but I almost feel like starting a blog JUST to slag off the Messthetics series
    (PS- sorry, I forgot ‘Germfree Adolescents’ by X-Ray Spex)

  21. simon b Says:

    Wot no Felt, Family, Badfinger, Incredible String Band, Buzzcocks, Who, Echo and Bunnymen…? Tho hats off for The Associates.

  22. alfie Says:

    just got mesthetics cds – 3 & 8 – all brit DIY bands – desperate bycycles – dumm dum dum et al what happened to all these bands and why is it left to americans to collect and resurect these classics?
    alfie

  23. simonb Says:

    Yeah, Mark, and where’s Zeppelin 4? HL’s Dare? Sabbath’s Master of Reality? Hawkwind’s Space Ritual? CDGC’s PawnHearts? London Possee?Monochrome Set? Orange Juice? Small Faces’ Ogden’s? I could go on.
    OMD – purlease. Sylvian? Totally overrated.

  24. simonb Says:

    Bauhaus? C’mon! Where’s the Specials, man? X ray spex – good call, MArtin. And the adverts ‘red sea’? I rate it highly. More crap in MArk’s list – Eno – total pseud, tho Warm Jets is fun.

  25. intruda Says:

    all a bit (post-?)gofik white boy, innit. as if all the best british music is from the 80’s.