List ‘Em Carefully: Top Ten Albums of 2001
With all of last month’s end-of-year fun still very much in our minds, we decided to take a look back at some of our favorite albums from year’s past. You know, before 2007, or when CoS was officially up and running.Thus, we tapped Chris DeSalvo to takle a look at the Top 10 Albums of 2001 in our newest edition of List ‘Em Carefully…
2001 was a year in which rock n’ roll made its comeback. A lot of us were coming into our own as young, teenaged, jaded yet hopeful kids, looking for a sound to latch onto. We were desperate to rid our collective subconscious of the boy band/Britney-laden repertoire that popular radio became a slave to at the conclusion of the millennium. It’s hard to believe we’re looking back almost a decade later now.
But with good reason, as 2001 was alternative music’s breakout year (it’s first since 1991), and the reason why “indie rock” has become the darling for today’s music scene. I firmly believe XM and SIRIUS radio were born (and eventually merged) as a result of the young listeners collective awakening in this seminal year. A lot happened, a lot of shit went down, and as a result, music became the focus for a lot of those kids, many of which lead very relevant bands in the present day.
So, without further ado, here’s a list of this “celebrated” year’s Ten Best:
10. Tenacious D - Tenacious D
Jack Black and Kyle Gass manage to mesh a bludgeoning slew of power chords with a splendidly off-color look into the imagination, and what results is the most quotable album of 2001. Though Black has gone onto A-list status in Hollywood, it’s refreshing to see he hasn’t lost his will to be weird, and “The D” still reigns supreme. It’s hard to say whether or not we’d have Flight of the Conchords, or Demetri Martin would have found their way into our daily play lists had this record not gone over as well as it did.
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9. Jimmy Eat World - Bleed American
Bleed American is no-holds-barren post-punk without the swill brought to the table by any band with the words “Blink,” or “Sum” in their name. What they lacked in the thrift-store cool of other bands breaking out in this era, they made up for in writing songs that bombastically spelled out R-O-C-K-A-N-D-R-O-L-L.
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8. Rufus Wainwright - Poses
It’s appalling that there are still people who claim to be music-buffs who have yet to give Wainwright the time of day. He sings like a bird, and has never been guilty of writing a song to fill up a full-length. Many top tens from 2001 neglected to mention Rufus, and they are all, thereby, negated.
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7. Quiet Is The New Loud - Kings of Convenience
The most clever album title of the year, and a band that became far more than a watered-down Belle & Sebastian. The songs tell stories all skinny (not-yet-skinny-jeans-laden) coeds could relate to without even trying. Rest assured, many a young coffee-house open-mic-playing young man (or woman) wouldn’t have gave it a shot without this band.
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6. Gorillaz - Gorillaz
We all know the signature song that put this side-project on the map, but listen to the whole album, and you won’t feel like you’ve wasted any valuable time. This self titled debut is a rare hip-hop effort that sounds just as fresh today as it did when it “dropped.”
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5. Radiohead - Amnesiac
While the schtickiness of Kid A had run its course for some, Amnesiac is a superior record in just about every way. The songs carry heavier weight, and the gorgeous soundscapes Thom Yorke’s laptop generated were far more realized than what had come of the aforementioned sister album.
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4. Ryan Adams - Gold
Newsflash: There will never be a “new Dylan.” Ryan Adams came closer than that waif from Omaha could ever hope to, and Gold was a smorgasbord of proof that his songwriting knew no boundaries. Everyone else in the sensitive-singer-songwriter genre that released a record in 2001 could’ve titled their effort Silver.
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3. The Shins - Oh, Inverted World
With the rage that reigned throughout the nineties finally out of the way, The Shins took subtlety to new, voluminous levels with their sterling debut. Think, “Wind chimes meet the Beach Boys,” and welcome an album that soothes the angst out of your veins, and all but makes you forget that grunge ever existed.
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2. The White Stripes - White Blood Cells
A carnal knowledge of twelve-bar blues influenced Detroit’s Jack White to fuse sonic six-string revelry with simplistic ditties as original as Bob Dylan sounded when he picked up a fender. It’s impossible to forgo an accumulation of Goosebumps while listening to an album that took two people less than a week to write, record, and present to the world. Though it’s their third offering, White Blood Cells took art-rock to the top, and made Jack and Meg household names for reminding us that rock n’ roll was fun again.
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1. The Strokes - Is This It? [UK]
If there’s been a more influential album released since, it was on Mars, and we haven’t heard it. A symmetrical showering of fuzzed-out guitars, coupled with a rolling divvy of old-school cadence meshed with a future that would make Stanley Kubrick proud pummels the ears and imagination of a generation throughout the 37-minute record that has no equal. Many have attempted to imitate the systematic mastery of the five dapper dudes from the lower west side, all have failed. Just make sure you buy the UK release. “New York City Cops” trumps “When It Started”, hands down.
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Honorable mentions:
Pulp - We Love Life
Low - Things We Lost in the Fire
Cake - Comfort Eagle
Explosions in the Sky - Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Live Forever
Daft Punk - Discovery
Bob Dylan - Love and Theft
Jay-Z -The Blue Print
Fugazi - The Argument
Tool - Lateralus
Leonard Cohen - Ten New Songs
*Note, Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot was released in 2002.






















While I loved Dysfunction more, Break The Cycle was their true breakthrough album, and it came out in ‘01…not the former.
microphones - the glow pt. 2
andrew bird’s bowl of fire - the swimming hour
le tigre - feminine sweepstakes
destroyer - streethawk: a seduction
mum - yesterday was dramatic, today is ok
jim o’rourke - insignificance
tortoise - standards
liars - they threw us all in a trench and stuck a monument on top
masada - live at tonic 2001
john zorn - madness, love and mysticism
favorite green album song - o girlfriend
just sayin’
Number one for me HAS to be Gillian Welch’s amazing Time (the Revelator).
And not gonna lie Mo-Mo those arent even the best songs on either album cept for Island in the Sun. Hey CoS whoès going to have the kahunas to put out a Weezer retrospective
wow, then i’m really overestimating how many good tracks are on “Green Album”.
dope nose and american gigolo weren’t on the green album they were on maladroit
great list. i’m glad you kept Weezer’s “Green Album” off this list, despite what some of the commenters are saying. that album really wasn’t all that special, besides Island, Dope Nose, Hash Pipe, and American Gigolo. 4 great songs and the rest as filler does not make a great album.
nice work with the Tenacious D reference. “The Road” popped up when i had my iPod on shuffle the other day and instantly made me laugh.
your top three are also pretty high on my favorite albums of all time.
Putting Jimmy Eat World and the Jack Black novelty act in the top 10 over actual masterpieces like We Love Life and Lateralus = epic fail
david i’m sorry i’m from springfield, ma where staind is from and i think break the cycle is a horrible album. that band turned into something entirely opposite of what i knew them to be with that record.
Good list. I especially agree on Poses Amnesiac–both my favorite releases of the respective artists. Also, Gold and Is This It? get heavy play from me on a regular basis.
My list would also include:
RES - How I Do (A really overlooked gem)
Tori Amos - StrangeLittleGirls
Bjork - Vespertine
Oh, and The Marshall Mathers LP by Eminem
Maybe this is a petty argument to make, but perhaps some honorable mentions to Mutter by Rammstein, Break The Cycle by Staind and The Director’s Cut by Fantomas?
tom nice call on black rebel motorcycle club. i totally spaced on that one.
Nice list and cool idea. In retrospect, I didn’t listen to enough of The Strokes in 2001. It wasn’t really the best year for music with most of my favorite bands in between records, but I have a few others to add:
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club - B.R.M.C.
Candiria - 300 Percent Density
Weezer - Green Album
The Toadies - Hell Below/Stars Above
Will Haven - Carpe Diem
Andrew W.K. - I Get Wet
311 - From Chaos
Spiritualized - Let It Come Down
Vision of Disorder - From Bliss to Devastation
i love the last three but daft should have been at least on there, that album was amazing
I’d probably put Daft Punk up there and bump off either #9 or #10. As soon as I saw 2001 I thought to myself, It This Is? has to be #1, so good job!
my top 10 from 2001 were propbable
gorillaz - gorillaz
the white stripes - white bloods cells
the strokes - is this it?
cake - comfort eagle
weezer - green album
n*e*r*d* - in search of
d12 - devil’s night
stone temple pilots - shangri la dee da
system of a down - toxicity
incubus - morning view
nice list i hope you guys cover the rest of the years in between then and now
Best list we have done agree 100%
Thanks, Drew.
haha Amnesiac is not better than Kid A, but both are amazing. Nice stab at Conor Oberst with the Ryan Adams comments as well. Not a fan? Interesting list otherwise, lots of claims to back up, however.
Jan 14th, 2009 at 8:09 am
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