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American Songwriter Albums of the Decade

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We’re not as crazy about lists as some other media outlets. At times, they’re a lot of fun, while at other times they can cause some epic intra-office battles. For our Best Albums of the Decade list, the editorial staff was pretty much unanimous about who was going to be at the top, which averted some pretty terrible pranks we had planned…guess that’s for another list down the road. There were so many wonderful, incredible, certifiably magnificent records released in this decade, choosing the top 25 was never going to be easy.

We hope you enjoy our selections, and include your own lists and thoughts in the comments.

MGMT Oracular Spectacular

25.

MGMT
Oracular Spectacular
(Columbia, 2008)

This debut near the close of the decade fittingly starts off our list. The rocking indie synth-pop duo stepped up to the plate, called their shot and knocked it out of the park with this release. It’s a confident first effort that will hopefully be followed by more of the same.

The Old 97s Satellite Rides

24.

Old 97s
Satellite Rides
(Elektra, 2001)

Rhett Miller and the gang drop the Texas twang in favor of Beatles-y power-pop on their fifth album. “Designs On You” sounds like the perfect expression of booze-drenched lust, while “Question” considers love from a more spiritual perspective.

The White Stripes Elephant

23.

The White Stripes
Elephant
(V2, 2003)

Meg and Jack White secured themselves an entry in the modern rock encyclopedia with Elephant. Building off their previous indie success, this album affirmed their major label viability and Jack White’s songwriting dynamism.

Gnarls Barkley St. Elsewhere

22.

Gnarls Barkley
St. Elsewhere
(Downtown, 2006)

“Crazy” was their calling card, but St. Elsewhere, the dynamic duo of DJ Danger Mouse and Cee-Lo Green’s debut album, is a winner from start to finish. Lyrically, you’ll find more depth here than on your average hip-hop/r&b/neo-soul hybrid, and when it comes to creativity, Gnarls Barkley are among the best in the league. They shoot, they score.

Bon Iver For Emma, Forever Ago

21.

Bon Iver
For Emma, Forever Ago
(Jagjaguwar, 2008)

The now-romanticized account of a winter in isolation aside, the hype behind Justin Vernon’s debut held up. The songs, like the slow-melting “Flume” and rolling “Skinny Love,” prove themselves over and over again. Vernon reminded everyone what juiced-up vocals and a guitar could accomplish.

Modest Mouse Good News for People Who Love Bad News

20.

Modest Mouse
Good News For People Who Love Bad News
(Epic, 2004)

Purveyors of indie rock both jarring and genius, Modest Mouse probably never expected to have a mainstream radio hit. But by the time they around to their fourth studio album, they were writing songs too catchy and clever to be ignored.

TV on the Radio Return to Cookie Mountain

19.

TV on the Radio
Return to Cookie Mountain
(4AD, 2006)

“Wolf Like Me” announced their noisy, seemingly overnight arrival. This album rocked, it swayed, it pulsed, it stormed and it’s still darn good all the way through.

Steve Earle Jerusalem

18.

Steve Earle
Jerusalem
(Artemis, 2002)

Jerusalem was this left-wing songwriter’s attempt to grapple with “America’s ignorance of Islam.” Though heavy-handed and at times fatalistic, the album ends on a hopeful note, with Earle singing: “I believe that one fine day/All the children of Abraham/Will lay down their swords forever/In Jerusalem.” Let’s hope so.

Radiohead Kid A

17.

Radiohead
Kid A
(Capitol, 2000)
Kid A wowed listeners when it first debuted, and it’s still awe-inspiring now. The band took the bold next-step-forward in electronic rock with this album–and they never looked back.

The Flaming Lips Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots

16.

The Flaming Lips
Yoshimi Battle the Pink Robots
(Warner Bros., 2002)

Yoshimi is the gem of the Lips’ output this decade. The album finds their trippy, far-out songwriting in place, but the melodies here soared to new heights and kept pulling us back in for repeated listens.

Amy Winehouse Back to Black

15.

Amy Winehouse
Back in Black
(Republic, 2006)

If Amy Winehouse never made another album, she’d still be a major figure in music, thanks to this soul-drenched, rehab-denying breakthrough LP. A song cycle about a woman living on the edge, Winehouse tapped into a retro Motown sound, but kept the lyrics thoroughly modern. The result is a contemporary classic.

Iron and Wine The Creek Drank the Cradle

14.

Iron and Wine
The Creek that Drank the Cradle
(Sub Pop, 2002)

Sam Beam’s first album is an intimate and poetic collection of songs, sung to a hushed guitar and banjo. “Upward Over The Mountain” is a cryptic letter to Mom that deals with God, dreams and the time the family dog miscarried her pups.

Beck Sea Change

13.

Beck
Sea Change
(DGC, 2002)

A departure from his earlier work, Sea Change unearths a vein of craftsmanship unseen in previous Beck albums that’s golden and precious. A break-up album to stand up against all other break-up albums.

Tom Waits Orphans

12.

Tom Waits
Orphans, Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards
(Anti-, 2006)

Featuring new songs as well as rarities, this three-disc album serves up a broad array of “grand weepers” and “grim reapers.” Highlights include Kerouac’s “Home I”ll Never Be,” and a spoken-word performance of a Bukowski poem.

Elliott Smith Figure 8

11.

Elliott Smith
Figure 8
(Dreamworks SKG, 2000)

Often labeled as moody songwriter Elliott Smith’s most accessible and well-put-together album of his all-too-brief career, we must agree. His second major-label effort continued down a path of more elaborate production, yet his voice soars above it all in a way not captured on previous albums, creating a wonderful balance here that elevates Smith’s dark melancholy with grace.

The Strokes Is This It

10.

The Strokes
Is This It
(RCA, 2001)

The Strokes conquered the world with this watershed album, merging the garage ethos of the Velvet Underground with Motown swagger. Great melodies, great grooves and, most of all, great fun.

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy Sings Greatest Palace Music

9.

Bonnie “Prince” Billy
Sings Greatest Palace Music
(Drag City, 2004)

Dismissed by some critics as a prank, this collection of Palace songs—recorded with veteran Nashville session musicians—is inventive, playful and affecting. “Agnes Queen of Sorrow” is a classic country duet for the ages.

Bright Eyes I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning

8.

Bright Eyes
I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning
(Saddle Creek, 2005)

In 2005, Conor Oberst released two albums on the same day (Digital Ash in A Digital Urn is equally brilliant), but this is the one everyone remembers, for poetic masterpieces and sad-boy anthems like “Lua,” “First Day Of My Life,” and “We Are Nowhere And It’s Now.”

Regina Spektor Soviet Kitsch

7.

Regina Spektor
Soviet Kitsch
(Sire, 2004)

On her major label debut, Soviet-born, NYC-based singer-songwriter Regina Spektor won the world over with her quirky songcraft, classical music roots, and amazingly agile voice. Primarily a pianist, she was also equally impressive rocking out with a punk band (“Your Honor”) or banging a drumstick on a chair (“Poor Little Rich Boy”), and helped invent a brand new genre: “Regina Spektor Sound-Alike.”

Andrew Bird Armchair Apocrypha

6.

Andrew Bird
Armchair Apocrypha
(Fat Possum, 2007)

Known for taking risks and leaps with each new album, on Armchair Apocrypha Bird appears most comfortable with his voice and production, making it is his best work to date and confirming him as one of the leading songwriters of the decade. He makes avant-garde approaches come off classic and unassuming.

Ryan Adams Heartbreaker

5.

Ryan Adams
Heartbreaker
(Bloodshot, 2000)

The first solo effort by this enfant terrible stands as the high-water mark of his career. The songs are a series of melodramatic confessions, set to stripped-down, gorgeous instrumentation. “Come Pick Me Up” manages to sound both bratty and heartrending.

Arcade Fire Funeral

4.

Arcade Fire
Funeral
(Merge, 2004)

A family band from Canada that took the world by storm, Arcade Fire make music that touches on the disparity between being a child and being an adult. Hipsters took to it like a well-worn t-shirt, but anyone with a heart and a soul can appreciate their rebel yell.

Gillian Welch Time (The Revelator)

3.

Gillian Welch
Time (The Revelator)
(Acony, 2001)

Hidden within this seemingly simple, austere presentation is a hard, refreshing punch to the gut. Time stands as the best work to date of Welch and Rawlings. Here, the duo bottled their tight, haunting vocals with songs bounding over genre lines and defined their sound. It’s a testament to the power of the stripped-down sound of winding guitars and well-pitched harmonies. They set the bar. Though by no means mainstream, the album created powerful wrinkles in the fabric of modern music that continue to appear.

Bob Dylan Love and Theft

2.

Bob Dylan
Love and Theft
(Columbia, 2001)

That Bob Dylan reinvented himself on Love And Theft should come as no surprise — that’s what Bob Dylan does. But what a reinvention. Melding old-timey influences, blues magic, and some of the most impressive, rambling and literary lyrics he’s committed to paper, Dylan created a brand new persona — that of the aged minstrel who knows that life is but a song.

Wilco Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

1.

Wilco
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
(Nonesuch, 2002)

Here’s where the best elements of American music meet — rock songs that mean something, indelible melodies, innovative production, cathartic lyrics, and Jeff Tweedy’s smoky voice and broken heart. From “Ashes of American Flags” to “Reservations,” no album resonated more than YHF during this turbulent decade.

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