Favorite P&J No. 3 Album (1971-2005)

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Following on from the 2nd place poll (Favorite Pazz 'n Jop 2nd Place Album)

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Talking Heads, Remain in Light (1980) 13
Television, Marquee Moon (1977) 10
Radiohead, Kid A (2000) 5
The Clash [U.S. version] (1979) 5
Nick Lowe, Pure Pop for Now People (1978) 5
Public Enemy, Fear of a Black Planet (1990) 5
R.E.M., Automatic for the People (1992) 3
Bruce Springsteen, Born to Run (1975) 3
Bob Dylan, Live 1966 (1998) 3
PJ Harvey, Rid of Me (1993) 2
Beck, Midnite Vultures (1999) 2
Rod Stewart, Every Picture Tells a Story (1971) 2
Bjork, Vespertine (2001) 2
Fountains of Wayne, Welcome Interstate Managers (2003) 2
Sufjan Stevens, Illinois (2005)2
The Replacements, Pleased to Meet Me (1987) 2
Randy Newman, Good Old Boys (1974) 2
Bruce Springsteen, Nebraska (1982) 2
Tracy Chapman (1988) 1
Loretta Lynn, Van Lear Rose (2004) 1
Elvis Costello & the Attractions, Trust (1981) 1
Cornershop, When I Was Born for the 7th Time (1997) 1
Sleater-Kinney, Call the Doctor (1996) 1
Moby, Everything Is Wrong (1995) 1
R.E.M., Monster (1994) 1
The Robert Cray Band, Strong Persuader (1986) 0
R.E.M., Out of Time (1991) 0
The Flaming Lips, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002) 0
Jackson Browne, The Pretender (1976) 0
John Cougar Mellencamp, Scarecrow (1985) 0
Los Lobos, How Will the Wolf Survive? (1984) 0
Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues (1983) 0
Lou Reed, New York (1989) 0


Matos W.K., Saturday, 13 October 2007 01:42 (seventeen years ago)

Voted for Trust, long my favorite EC and long one of my favorite albums.

Matos W.K., Saturday, 13 October 2007 01:44 (seventeen years ago)

I voted for Cornershop, just to piss off the Rev.

Dimension 5ive, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:21 (seventeen years ago)

I remember when New Adventures in Hi-Fi came out thinking, "This isn't going to be four No. 3s in a row, is it?" (it finished 11th.)

Matos W.K., Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:23 (seventeen years ago)

OH god, what a poll!

Every Picture Tells a Story is the one I listen to most often, I guess, although The Clash, Trust, Scarecrow, Rid of Me, Fear of a Black Planet are some of my favorites.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:37 (seventeen years ago)

Marquee Moon's got it locked.

Romeo Jones, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:44 (seventeen years ago)

Top Ten
1. The Clash (US Version)
2. Every Picture Tells A Story
3. Marquee Moon
4. Good Old Boys
5. How Will The Wolf Survive?
6. Remain In Light
7. Out Of Time
8. Scarecrow
9. Call The Doctor
10. Midnite Vultures

Even though I'm not voting for it I'm kinda surprised to see how well Midnite Vultures did. It's my favorite Beck album and feels pretty underrated now.

da croupier, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:52 (seventeen years ago)

pure pop for now people

gershy, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:55 (seventeen years ago)

Ooh, forgot about Fear Of A Black Planet! Shoulda put that in there near the bottom.

Never Heard Entirely, Curious:
Strong Persuader
Everything Is Wrong
Illinois (I think I turned it off after the third fanfare, hoping I can get my girlfriend or somebody else who's paid more attention to the guy to make me a best-of mix)

Never Heard Entirely, Only Will If A Copy Lands In My Lap And I'm Feeling Frisky:
Born To Run
The Pretender
Trust
Nebraska
Tracy Chapman
Live 66
Van Lear Rose

The worst of these that I've heard is EASILY Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots. wtf.

da croupier, Saturday, 13 October 2007 02:58 (seventeen years ago)

lou reed's new york may not be worst, but that record dated almost immediately (liked it at the time, haven't had any desire to hear it in at least 15 years

gershy, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:03 (seventeen years ago)

It's good that SOMEBODY wrote a song about the "hymietown" controversy, the kids will never forget now that its on a Lou Reed album.

da croupier, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:07 (seventeen years ago)

As a not-sober man at the moment, "Rain on the Scarecrow" sounds great.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:08 (seventeen years ago)

"Daddy, who's Mr. Waldheim?"

da croupier, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:09 (seventeen years ago)

i still remember eleanor bumpers & michael stewart, they must appreciate that!

gershy, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:10 (seventeen years ago)

TS: Lou's "There is No Time" vs PE's "Pollywanacraka."

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:12 (seventeen years ago)

The Clash.

Runners-up:

Rod Stewart, Every Picture Tells a Story (1971)
Randy Newman, Good Old Boys (1974)
Bruce Springsteen, Born to Run (1975)
Television, Marquee Moon (1977)
Nick Lowe, Pure Pop for Now People (1978)
John Cougar Mellencamp, Scarecrow (1985)

Slightly more marginal runners-up:

Talking Heads, Remain in Light (1980)
Elvis Costello & the Attractions, Trust (1981)
Bruce Springsteen, Nebraska (1982)

Even more marginal:

Jackson Browne, The Pretender (1976)
Los Lobos, How Will the Wolf Survive? (1984)

After 1986: Fuck it. I dunno, I guess Sleater-Kinney and Cornershop and probably a couple others are good, but I'm kinda drunk right now and to be honest even those two I named seemed really really marginal.

xhuxk, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:23 (seventeen years ago)

When you're kinda drunk everything marginal sounds classic.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 03:29 (seventeen years ago)

I'm not drunk (sadly, I find it hard to get drunk lately). But I'm sleepy. And I'm voting for SLEATER-KINNEY! They got robbed in the 1996 poll. But it's not their fault that the greatest album of the 1990s came out the same year. And it's my third fave album of the decade after Shanté (p.s. I was at a very intermittently boring conference all day hence the sleepiness and I entertained myself by rapping "Trick or Treat" in my head over and over cuz OF COURSE I know it by heart...thanx Shanny).

So yeah, S-K. "I Wanna Be Yr Joey Ramone" was the best music song since "Lost in Music." I think. That bored "It's what I thought, it's rock & roll." Rock & roll is this THING up there on stage that has only ever spoken halfway to these women. So they want to cross the floodlights and take it all the way in the form of a Joey Ramone/Thurston Moore-style rock & roll hero for other bored women out there. And on "Words + Guitar," they get to be. Epic stuff here, folks. Epic.

Kevin John Bozelka, Saturday, 13 October 2007 04:46 (seventeen years ago)

Hate to not vote for Every Picture, Marquee Moon, The Clash, or Born to Run but it's gotta be Remain in Light for me. That one has never been far from my record, cassette, CD, or MP3 player ever since I first bought in 1980. Same as it ever was.

that's not my post, Saturday, 13 October 2007 05:59 (seventeen years ago)

PH43R is probably one of my five favorite albums ever made, or at least ten, so that.

The Reverend, Saturday, 13 October 2007 08:50 (seventeen years ago)

Wow, what a crazy list! It was between Rod, the Clash and PE for me. Had to go with Every Picture Tells a Story, mainly because I really regretted not voting for it on the '71 poll (hey, what do ya want, Riot is undeniable); The Clash and Fear of a Black Planet got my '79 and '90 votes respectively, so...

JN$OT, Saturday, 13 October 2007 09:07 (seventeen years ago)

Why you break heart by not including Fishscale(another serious contender for my vote), Matos? (j/k--please don't hurt me!)

JN$OT, Saturday, 13 October 2007 09:13 (seventeen years ago)

even if you'd tear me to pieces each piece would hiss, spitting blood, "won't tell which one i voted for!"

t**t, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:05 (seventeen years ago)

Album on this list I am most curious about (didn't like him at the time; quite possibly didn't give him the chance he deserved):

The Robert Cray Band, Strong Persuader (1986)

xhuxk, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:07 (seventeen years ago)

but if i hadn't voted for what i actually voted for, i'd have chosen prolly from amongst these three: public enemy, randy newman, björk.

t**t, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:11 (seventeen years ago)

*strukk speechless by the hugeness of the benefit of the doubt awarded robert cray by xhuxk*

t**t, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:13 (seventeen years ago)

Strong Persuader is excellent, xhuxk; it's way better than the sorta similar A Woman Like Me, for instance. But you probably won't like it if you don't think much of Bettye Lavette's albums. Maybe.

xp

Yeah, me too.

JN$OT, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:15 (seventeen years ago)

Strong Persuader is pretty good; it's what I keep imagining what a strong Richard Thompson record sounds like.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:21 (seventeen years ago)

Maybe, if Richard wasn't so damn British.

JN$OT, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:25 (seventeen years ago)

The Strong Persuader album itself is great, but the song that the title comes from, "Right Next Door," is one of the monster cheating songs of all time, especially because it comes from Jody's perspective. Any male country singer you can name would have a massive #1 hit with that baby, but I would kill to hear Wynonna's version.

Dimension 5ive, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:30 (seventeen years ago)

Matt OTM about "Right Next Door"--it's just too bad that Bettye's version isn't quite as gripping.

JN$OT, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:35 (seventeen years ago)

great song with awful keyboards.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 13 October 2007 13:37 (seventeen years ago)

Boy, the first ten are all great, except maybe the Jackson Browne, which I'm not familiar with. I even like that Randy Newman LP. After that, hardly anything I care for, except Mellencamp and Sleater-Kinney (and Dylan live, which only partly counts).

I still recall the Robert Cray record as being pretty terrible, though.

sw00ds, Saturday, 13 October 2007 16:52 (seventeen years ago)

(not counting dylan 66)

top ten
marquee moon
fear of a black planet
every picture tells a story
remain in light
call the doctor
automatic for the people
rid of me
scarecrow
born to run
good old boys

bottom ten
yoshimi
welcome interstate managers
new york
vespertine
tracy chapman
the pretender
out of time
speaking in tongues
pleased to meet me
the clash

balls, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:43 (seventeen years ago)

marquee moon/vespertine. Tough choice.

I know, right?, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:48 (seventeen years ago)

Good Old Boys, closely followed by Fear of a Black Planet

grebtesthit, Saturday, 13 October 2007 19:52 (seventeen years ago)

in actual listening-time terms I should have probably went with Everything Is Wrong, which I was obsessed with in 1995. I could also have easily voted for Automatic for the People. I'm so ILM-uncool.

Matos W.K., Saturday, 13 October 2007 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

Remain In Light gets my vote. There are a few others I like a lot, but not nearly as much as this one.

Moodles, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:08 (seventeen years ago)

actual listening-time terms everything is wrong would definitely make my top ten (nearly did anyway) as well as midnite vultures and probably trust.

matos did you stop in 05 cuz that's the last 'real' pnj?

balls, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:25 (seventeen years ago)

If you know Matos, you know the answer to that question.

The Reverend, Saturday, 13 October 2007 21:29 (seventeen years ago)

It's still unclear to me that Live 66 should count, but since it's here I'm going to vote for it. Even on the strength of the acoustic disk I'd vote for it, just over Every Picture Tells A Story, Everything Is Wrong, Nebraska, and one of the REM records (can't decide).

Euler, Sunday, 14 October 2007 12:22 (seventeen years ago)

Remain in Light

Brad C., Sunday, 14 October 2007 15:02 (seventeen years ago)

randy newman

deej, Sunday, 14 October 2007 16:51 (seventeen years ago)

For me it's
The Clash UK version
Remain in Light
The Clash US version
Strong Persuader
Call the Doctor
everything else

Pete Scholtes, Monday, 15 October 2007 08:30 (seventeen years ago)

But I still voted for the Clash.

Pete Scholtes, Monday, 15 October 2007 08:31 (seventeen years ago)

lou reed's new york may not be worst, but that record dated almost immediately (liked it at the time, haven't had any desire to hear it in at least 15 years

Strangely enough, this applies to a lot of albums on the list (IMO). I'm actually shocked at the number of albums here that I enjoyed at the time but have barely thought about since (Flaming Lips, Mellencamp, Cornershop ...).

I think "Born To Run" edges "Rid of Me" (barely), "Automatic for the People", and "Everything Is Wrong". Even two or three years ago I wouldn't have imagined I'd prefer Springsteen to PJH, but there's something about the rage and bluster of "Rid of Me" that hasn't been kind to the passing of time.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Monday, 15 October 2007 10:08 (seventeen years ago)

The Clash, predictably enough

least favorite: Vespertine.

Patrick, Monday, 15 October 2007 11:01 (seventeen years ago)

Voted for Remain In Light but Clash, Trust, Vespertine and Rid Of Me were all contenders.

Jeff W, Monday, 15 October 2007 11:09 (seventeen years ago)

...oops, and Fear obv. On some days, I like that even more than RIL.

Jeff W, Monday, 15 October 2007 11:11 (seventeen years ago)

Born To Run

Tied for 2nd:

Trust & Every Picture Tells A Story

kornrulez6969, Monday, 15 October 2007 16:28 (seventeen years ago)

Many LPs I like; very few I (still) love. I choose Pure Pop, or Jesus of Cool more precisely - my copy has the tracks from both. But my own ideal version of The Clash, similarly combining the UK and US versions, would've beaten Nick.

Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 15 October 2007 16:46 (seventeen years ago)

I went with Pure Pop, or, more precisely, how Nick Lowe sounded coming out of my mom's 1968 Cutlass radio in 1980. Simple, but effective

Morley Timmons, Monday, 15 October 2007 18:12 (seventeen years ago)

So has anybody asked how come R.E.M. finish third so much? Three years out of four at one point!

They shoud write an autobiography called I Am Third! (But I think Gale Sayers beat them to it.)

xhuxk, Monday, 15 October 2007 18:20 (seventeen years ago)

Pavement finished in second place a couple of times back then, too, which kinda had me convinced that they were the new R.E.M. (as far as year-end crit lists were concerned) for awhile there.

JN$OT, Monday, 15 October 2007 18:32 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

ILX System, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 23:01 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

ILX System, Wednesday, 17 October 2007 23:01 (seventeen years ago)

rightfully so:

The Robert Cray Band, Strong Persuader (1986) 0
R.E.M., Out of Time (1991) 0
The Flaming Lips, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002) 0
Jackson Browne, The Pretender (1976) 0
John Cougar Mellencamp, Scarecrow (1985) 0
Los Lobos, How Will the Wolf Survive? (1984) 0
Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues (1983) 0
Lou Reed, New York (1989) 0

stephen, Thursday, 18 October 2007 00:36 (seventeen years ago)

really surprised by the Nick Lowe showing (no slight on the album).

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 18 October 2007 00:46 (seventeen years ago)

rightfully so:

The Robert Cray Band, Strong Persuader (1986) 0
R.E.M., Out of Time (1991) 0
The Flaming Lips, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002) 0
Jackson Browne, The Pretender (1976) 0
John Cougar Mellencamp, Scarecrow (1985) 0
Los Lobos, How Will the Wolf Survive? (1984) 0
Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues (1983) 0
Lou Reed, New York (1989) 0

Half of which deserved to get a vote or two.

JN$OT, Thursday, 18 October 2007 05:29 (seventeen years ago)

marquee moon>>>>remain in light

Jordan Sargent, Thursday, 18 October 2007 05:31 (seventeen years ago)


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