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This is a list of 1980s music albums that multiple music journalists, magazines, and professional music review websites have considered to be among the best of the 1980s and of all time, separated into the years of each album's release. The albums listed here are included on at least four separate "best/greatest of the 1980s/all time" lists ...
NOFX – Punk in Drublic [1] [5] The Gits – Enter: The Conquering Chicken; The Offspring – Smash [1] [2] Rancid – Let's Go [2] Sunny Day Real Estate – Diary [5] Lagwagon – Trashed; Ten Foot Pole – Rev; Strung Out – Another Day in Paradise; Millencolin – Tiny Tunes; RKL – Riches to Rags; Blink-182 – Buddha; Frenzal Rhomb ...
These are the Billboard magazine number-one albums of 1980, per the Billboard 200. Pink Floyd 's The Wall was the best-selling album of 1980, and spent 15 consecutive weeks at number one. Chart history
Entertainment! was ranked the fifth best album of 1979 by NME. [23] Reviewing the album in Rolling Stone in 1980, David Fricke regarded Entertainment! as "the best debut album by a British band – punk or otherwise – since the original English release of The Clash in 1977". [ 24 ]
1980 greatest hits albums (26 P) Pages in category "1980 compilation albums" ... Novi Punk Val; O. Oi! The Album; The Original Singles: 1965–1967, Volume 1 ...
CD has additional tracks. Punk and hardcore. Not So Quiet on the Western Front: 1982 LP, 1999 CD Alternative Tentacles: 47 bands, mostly Northern California hardcore. Punk-O-Rama [4] Various 1994-2005 Epitaph Records: Series of low-cost albums featuring Epitaph artists. Early issues are mostly punk. Punkzilla: Various 2001 Nitro Records
The following is a list of post-punk bands. Post-punk is a musical movement that began at the end of the 1970s, following on the heels of the initial punk rock movement. [ 1 ] The essential period that is most commonly cited as post-punk falls between 1978 and 1984.
Released in 1981, Youth of America was, according to Sage, not well received in the United States at the time of its release, but fared better in Europe. [4] Milo Miles of The Boston Phoenix had mixed feelings about the album's tracks: "The side-long epic 'Youth of America' sags over the long haul, since no amount of innocent determination could keep such a ream of guitar psychodoodles free ...