Another milestone achieved with my 900th
review on Tuesday. The next disc is a great one but before we get there, let’s
take a look back.
I continue to mark pretty hard, , and it is mostly
showing up in a reduction of five star albums, and a corresponding bump in four
star albums. In the last 100 reviews I gave 39 albums three stars (up one from
the previous 100) and 36 albums four stars (up 6).
Five star albums slipped for the third straight
time, and a mere 4 albums achieved a perfect score. This is down 1 from the previous
100 and less than half of the 11 I awarded between discs 500 and 600. The reviews
are random, so I’m either getting to be a harder marker or possibly a lot of
those classic albums I’ve had in my collection for years have now been
reviewed, so I am increasingly reliant on new music.
That wouldn’t explain my next review, though, which
is going to be a five star album that I’ve only owned for a few months. That’s
a teaser! For now, here are the four perfect scorers from discs 801 through 900:
- Lyle Lovett– Pontiac
- Bob Dylan – Oh Mercy
- Dave Brubeck Quartet – Time Out
- Blue Oyster Cult – Secret Treaties
This is Blue Oyster Cult’s second consecutive five
star review (they got on in the previous recap for “Fire of Unknown Origin.”
What can I say? I like Blue Oyster Cult.
There was only a single one star album in the past
100, and that went to the half-baked abomination that was Neil Young’s “A Letter
Home.” Here’s the full list of albums that were dismissed from the collection:
- Neil Young, “A Letter Home” – yech. Truly terrible.
- Neil Young, “America Stars ‘n’ Bars” – not terrible but just not worth
keeping.
- Heart “Bad Animals” – I really like the hit (“Alone”) but not enough to keep the rest of the questionable
material. Gone.
- Black Mountain “IV” – a very recent parting as I only bought this album in
the last few weeks and just saw the accompanying tour as well. It just isn’t
up to the level of their earlier releases though, and I’m going to end the
relationship now rather than drag it out for years. I already regret buying the
T-shirt at the swag table.
A bit of a bad run for Neil Young, I suppose.
The
nineties still hold a slight edge in terms of the decade with the most albums
at 223. The eighties are in second with 196 and the oughts and seventies are
neck and neck at 185 and 181 discs reviewed respectively. As I buy more and
more newly released music the ‘tens’ are making a bit of a surge; I’ve already
reviewed 67,with 11 of those in the past 100.
In terms
of overall reviews, Alice Cooper remains in top spot with 24 albums (up one
from 100 albums ago), and Steve Earle stays in second place with 17 albums (up
one as well). Third place is a two way tie between Bob Dylan and Tom Waits, each
with 16 reviews.
On we go
toward 1,000 reviews!
1 comment:
Congratulations! Although I may not comment much/at all, I do read and enjoy all of your entries, even the ones I don't agree with. Just wait until you get to Barry Manilow!
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