Did These 100 Albums Change Music? Check Out This List And Decide For Yourself

11 June 2021 | 3:08 pm | Staff Writer

With 14 local acts claiming a spot.

The most influential albums of all time are often debated so Apple Music are here to help, sharing their list of the 100 Albums That Changed Music.

Local artists have certainly made their impact known too with 14 places going out to Aussie acts.

Making the list is AB Original's Reclaim Australia, Kylie Minogue's Fever, Flume's Flume, Yothu Yindi's Tribal Voice, AC/DC's Back In Black, The Saints' (I'm) Stranded, The Triffids' Born Sandy Devotional, The Avalanches' Since I Left You (which has recently been the focus of the latest Rewind podcast series), Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds' Murder Ballads, Gurrumul's Gurrumul, Paul Kelly & The Messengers' Gossip, Tame Impala's Currents, The Presets' Apocalypso and Silverchair's Frogstomp.

International artists featured include Beyonce, 2Pac, Dolly Parton, Billie Eilish, Black Flag, David Bowie, Daft Punk, Cardi B, Marvin Gaye, Madonna, Lorde, Johnny Cash, Metallica and more. Check out the full list below. 

2Pac

All Eyez On Me

AB Original

Reclaim Australia

AC/DC

Back In Black

Amy Winehouse

Back To Black

Aphex Twin

Selected Ambient Works 85-92

Aretha Franklin

I Never Loved A Man They Way I Loved You

Avalanches

Since I Left You

Beastie Boys

Licensed to Ill

Beyonce

Lemonade

Billie Eilish

When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go

Black Flag

Damaged

Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath

Blondie

Parallel Lines

Bob Dylan

Highway 61 Revisited

Bob Marley

Catch A Fire

Brian Eno

Ambient 1: Music For Airports

Britney Spears

...Baby One More Time

Cardi B

Invasion of Privacy

Carole King

Tapestry

Daft Punk

Discovery

David Bowie

The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars

Dizzee Rascal

Boy In Da Corner

DJ Shadow

Endtroducing...

Dolly Parton 

Coat of Many Colors

Ed Sheeran

+

Eminem

The Marshall Mathers LP

Eric B & Rakim

Paid in Full

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours

Flume

Flume

Gil Scott Heron 

Pieces of a Man

Glen Campbell

Wichita Lineman

Gorillaz

Gorillaz

Guns n Roses

Appetite for Destruction

Gurrumul

Gurrumul

Herbie Hancock

Head Hunters

Janis Joplin

Pearl

Jimi Hendrix

Are You Experienced?

John Cage

Music Of Changes

John Coltrane

A Love Supreme

Johnny Cash 

American Recordings

Joni Mitchell

Blue

Joy Division

Unknown Pleasures

Kanye West

808s & Heartbreak

Kate Bush

Hounds of Love

Kraftwerk

Trans Europe Express

Kylie Minogue

Fever

Lauryn Hill

The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill

Led Zeppelin

IV

Leonard Cohen

Songs of Leonard Cohen

Lorde

Pure Heroine

Madonna

Madonna

Marvin Gaye

What's Going On

Massive Attack

Blue Lines

Metallica

Black

Michael Jackson

Thriller

Miles Davis

Kind of Blue

Missy Elliott

Supa Dupa Fly

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Murder Ballads

Nine Inch Nails

The Downward Spiral

Nirvana

Nevermind

NWA

Straight Outta Compton

Otis Redding 

Otis Blue

Outkast

Aquemini

Patti Smith

Horses

Paul Kelly & The Messengers

Gossip

Pink Floyd 

Dark Side of the moon

Prince 

Purple Rain

Public Enemy 

It Takes a Nation of Millions

Queen

A Night at the Opera

Radiohead

Kid A

Rage Against The Machine

Rage Against The Machine

Robert Johnson

King of the Delta Blues Singers

Run DMC

Run DMC

Sex Pistols

Never Mind the Bollocks

Shania Twain 

Come on Over 

silverchair

Frogstomp

Sonic Youth

Daydream Nation

Stevie Wonder

Songs in the Key Of Life

Tame Impala

Currents

Taylor Swift

1989

The Beach Boys

Pet Sounds

The Beatles

Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

The Clash

London Calling

The Cure

Disintegration

The Doors

The Doors

The Pixies

Surfer Rosa

The Presets

Apocalypso

The Prodigy

The Prodigy Experience

The Ramones

The Ramones

The Rolling Stones

Sticky Fingers

The Saints 

I'm stranded

The Spice Girls

Spice

The Stooges

The Stooges

The Triffids

Born Sandy Devotional

The Velvet Underground & Nico

The Velvet Underground & Nico

Tool

Aenima

U2

Joshua Tree

Willie Nelson 

Stardust

Wu-Tang

Enter the 36 Chambers

Yothu Yindi

Tribal Voice


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In celebration of the list The Avalanches' Tony Di Blasi and The Presets' Kim Moyes have shared the five albums that "changed music" for them. 

The Avalanches' Tony Di Blasi

1. The Beach Boy’s - Surf’s Up

This album is so dear to our hearts. From the forlorn blue cover that inspired Since I Left You, to Brian Wilson’s childlike melancholy matched with Van Dyke Parks esoteric lyrics. This album is strange, wonderful and timeless.

2. J Dilla - Donuts

The edits, the feeling, the hidden messages in the music. This album makes you feel something you’ve never felt before and can’t quite put your finger on. Sampling doesn’t get much better than this. Thank you J Dilla!

3. Cornelius - Fantasma

This record is like bizarre west coast pop via Walt Disney via '80s MTV. This seemed like a parallel spirit to what we were doing at the time and Keigo [Oyamada] remains a dear friend. It was lovely to come full circle and work with him on We Will Always Love You all these years later.

4. My Bloody Valentine - Loveless

A psychedelic dream of warped luscious pop music. Layered tracks of guitars all bending to create a soundscape, likes of which we’d never heard. Amongst the controlled chaos are beautiful melodies and harmonies so soft in the mix they’re like almost like subliminal messages. Loveless transcends this world and transports you to your own version of heaven.

5. Marvin Gaye - What’s Going On

From the opening track of this masterpiece the vibe is set in such a style that automatically has you captivated. It's a protest album, an album about ecological tragedy, an anti-war album, an album about spirituality but most of all an album about love can conquer all if we can learn to love ourselves and each other. It's also a musical work of genius as every song is so beautifully written and played with Marvin’s ethereal voice weaving this magical carpet ride together.


The Presets' Kim Moyes

1. Daft Punk - Homework

I used to record my favourite community radio shows on cassette when I was away studying at uni or at my part-time job. That's how I first heard about Daft Punk. I can’t remember the name of the show or the DJ who played Da Funk and it was many months until I even found out what the track was called and who it was by. I wore that tape out until I got my hands on their debut album. Homework has been a constant reference point in my life until this day. The album is just bursting with freshness and energy and completely set a brand new course for electronic music that we are still feeling the effects of today.

2. Massive Attack - Blue Lines
Growing up as a fan of punk, moody goth bands and hip hop, I was also very fond of funk, jazz and soul, and towards my teens I was really starting to embrace electronic music in a big way. Massive Attack seemed to be able to bring a lot of the aspects or attitudes from these various walks of life together on their first record with such an effortless sense of cool. I’ve included it here because I still listen to it from start to finish every couple of months. For me, it's a timeless masterpiece.

3. Clouds - Penny Century

Australian alternative rock in the early '90s was an unbelievably good time as a teenager. The Clouds' mix of surrealist art school lyrics combined with Jodi Phillis and Patricia Young’s impeccable heartstring harmonies hit all the sweet spots I never knew I had. I think I even discovered the Clouds and this album through their surreal music video for Hieronymus on Rage late one night when I was on a youth orchestra tour. That in itself is a lot to unpack! A little fun fact is that this album came out on Red Eye Records which is also a music store in Sydney that I’ve spent a lot of time at over the years. They alone have shaped my musical taste and helped me discover an amazing amount of quality music and I have so much love and respect for them.

4. John Coltrane - A Love Supreme

So much heart, passion, devotion and pain in this recording you can really hear why this set a new standard not just what a jazz album could be, but any album. It's hard to imagine what the world was like before this album. Stone cold classic.

5. Philip Glass - Glassworks

My Year 11 music teacher played Floe from Glassworks in a class one day and it straight up tore my head clean off! The music sounded like some kind of sped up-beat-less techno... relentlessly repetitive, intense yet uplifting and somehow it sounded closer to pop music than the classical music I was familiar with. I could not believe what I was hearing and I had no idea composers and musicians operating in the classical world were capable of ideas like this. From that moment on I decided that this was the kind of spirit I wanted to devote my life to. There are other pieces on this album that are the genetic blueprint for Glass’s film scoring career and in themselves have reshaped and redefined what a soundtrack can be. That imprint has changed the course of music forever.

Stream the full 100 Albums That Changed Music list here.