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In 2014, TeamRock put Damnation at number 91 on their "Top 100 Greatest Prog Albums of All Time" list commenting: "the first Opeth album to abandon metal entirely, Damnation trumped its heavier sibling Deliverance by bringing Mikael Åkerfeldt’s masterful songwriting to the fore". [13] Loudwire listed Damnation as the second best album of ...
In June 2015, Rolling Stone ranked Blackwater Park at 28th place for their list of "Greatest Prog Rock Albums of All Time". [40] TeamRock placed the album at #36 on their "Top 100 Prog Albums of All Time" list. [41] In 2012, Loudwire listed the title track as the second best metal song of the 21st century. [42]
The Billboard Indonesia Top 100 was the standard record chart in Indonesia for Indonesian language and/or English-Indonesian language songs, compiled independently in collaboration with ASIRI, with Andhika Septian as the head of this project who also developed its data scoring methodology, published weekly by Billboard Indonesia.
The "100 Greatest Songs from the Past 25 Years" was a list published by VH1 in 2003 to commemorate 25 years of iconic music since 1978. The list aimed to capture some of the most influential, popular, and enduring songs from 1978 to 2003. Hosted by Drea de Matteo. [1]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 6 February 2025. The following artists have released at least one album in the progressive rock genre. Individuals are included only if they recorded or performed progressive rock as a solo artist, regardless of whether they were a member of a progressive rock band at any point. This is a dynamic list ...
The album came in at number 5 on Rolling Stone ' s list of the top 50 greatest progressive rock albums of all time. [72] It was voted number 130 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums. [73] The album came in at number 1 on a list of the 100 greatest progressive rock albums of all time by Prog magazine. [74]
In a retrospective list, Loudwire named it the best metal album of 2005. [41] In 2014, TeamRock put Ghost Reveries at #46 on their "Top 100 Greatest Prog Albums of All Time" list commenting that "this was a partial concept album, with Satanism as its theme. It’s now regarded as one of the defining albums of 21st-century progressive metal."
The list differs from the 2004 version, with 26 songs added, all of which are songs from the 2000s except "Juicy" by The Notorious B.I.G., released in 1994. The top 25 remained unchanged, but many songs down the list were given different rankings as a result of the inclusion of new songs, causing consecutive shifts among the songs listed in 2004.