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London Tube strikes: When are they and what lines will be affected?

London Undergrounddrivers are on their second day ofstrikeaction this week, causing significant travel disruption for commuters and visitors to the capital.

The Independent US

The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT)unionconfirmed its members will walk out for 24 hours from midday on Tuesday 21 April, and again on Thursday 23 April.

This means the first strike will last from Tuesday into Wednesday, and then the second from Thursday into Friday.

There are additional strikes planned for May and June.

The RMT has accused Transport for London (TfL) of attempting to impose a newfour-day working week, with general secretary Eddie Dempsey expressing frustration over the stalled negotiations.

London Underground drivers will begin strike action this week (Getty)

He said: “We have approached negotiations withTfLin good faith throughout this entire process, but despite our best efforts, TfL seem unwilling to make any concessions in a bid to avertstrikeaction.”

Claire Mann, TfL’s chief operating officer, said the proposals for a four-day working week allow the company to “offer train operators an additional day off, whilst at the same time bringingLondon Undergroundin line with the working patterns of other train operating companies, improving reliability and flexibility at no additional cost”.

She added: “The changes would be voluntary, there would be no reduction in contractual hours and those who wish to continue a five-day working week pattern would be able to do so.”

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TfL has set out what travellers can expect during strike days, with certain lines more affected than others. Here’s what you need to know:

What dates are the Tube strikes?

April

  • Tuesday 21 to Wednesday 22 April

  • Thursday 23 to Friday 24 April

  • Tuesday 19 to Wednesday 20 May

  • Thursday 21 to Friday 22 May

June

  • Tuesday 16 June to Wednesday 17 June

  • Thursday 18 June to Friday 19 June

What time will the Tube shut and reopen?

TfL has laid out how its services will be affected over the coming days (Transport for London (TfL))

The planned strike action will take significant parts of the network out of action for half of two consecutive days, lasting from midday to midday.

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, travellers can expect normal service until mid-morning, when services will begin to ramp down. There will be significant disruption on all lines from midday, and lines that do run will finish early. TfL recommends completing journeys by 8pm.

On Wednesdays and Fridays,Tubeservices that do run will begin later, with no service expected before 7.30am. There will be significant disruption until midday, when normal service will begin to resume, but with delays very likely.

Which Tube lines will be affected?

TfL says strikes will affect the wholeTubenetwork, but a reduced service will still run on most lines with significant disruption.

However, there will be no service on the:

  • Piccadilly and Circle lines

  • Metropolitan line between Baker Street and Aldgate

  • Central line between White City and Liverpool Street

On Wednesday morning the TfL website also showed severe delays on the Bakerloo, Central, District, Hammersmith & City, Jubilee, Metropolitan, Northern and Victoria lines.

Elizabeth line, DLR, London Overground, and tram services will be running normally on strike days, but are likely to be very busy.

London Tube strikes: When are they and what lines will be affected?

London Undergrounddrivers are on their second day ofstrikeaction this week, causing significant travel disruption for commuters and vis...
Civil rights groups sue to keep DOJ from reviewing state voter lists

WASHINGTON – Civil rights groups filed a federal lawsuit aiming to block the Justice Department fromcollecting and reviewing state voter liststoweed out ineligible voters, arguing that the federal government hasno role under the Constitutionto manage state elections.

USA TODAY

The advocacy group Common Cause, along with a handful of voters, also wants to prevent thefederal government from creating a databasewith the personal information of hundreds of millions of voters' addresses, driver’s license numbers and Social Security numbers.

The lawsuit is the latest legal battlefield over voter registration amidPresident Donald Trump’scampaign to prevent undocumented immigrants and other ineligible voters from casting ballots. Justice lawyers have argued in other cases that they have the power to collect and review rollsto prevent fraud.

<p style=President Donald Trump returned to Phoenix to speak at Turning Point USA's "Build the Red Wall" event at Dream City Church on April 17, 2026, ahead of this year's midterm elections.

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Trump speaks in Arizona for Turning Point's 'Build the Red Wall' event

President Donald Trumpreturned to Phoenix to speak at Turning Point USA's "Build the Red Wall" event at Dream City Church on April 17, 2026, ahead of this year's midterm elections.

Omar Noureldin, Common Cause's senior vice president of policy and litigation, said the author George Orwell warned about such government surveillance in his book "1984."

"Essentially it’s a Big Brother type issue," Noureldin, a senior counsel to the assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Biden administration, told USA TODAY. "We should be suspicious of the federal government engaging in creating large databases."

Common Cause is represented by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), the American Civil Liberties Union, Protect Democracy and the Democracy and Rule of Law Clinic at Harvard Law School.

The civil rights groups are asking the U.S. District Court in Washington, DC, to order the Justice Department to delete the confidential voter data it has already collected from more than a dozen states. The lawsuit also asks the court to prevent the department from sharing the voter data with other agencies or third-party contractors because of privacy concerns it could be hacked.

Trump seeks to 'nationalize' elections

The lawsuit was filed as the Justice Department is fighting in federal court in 30 states and the District of Columbia for voter lists with the confidential information. At the same time, Trump has urged Congress to approve legislation requiring identification to vote and proof of citizenship to register.

"The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting,"Trump said on Dan Bongino’s podcast in February.

The Justice Department has demanded that states turn over voter lists to help remove ineligible voters such as undocumented immigrants, dead people and those who have moved. The department has sued states that agreed to turn over names but refused to also provide personal information such as driver’s license numbers and the final four digits of Social Security numbers. In some states, the voter data includes party affiliation and the history of when voters cast ballots.

To combat that effort, the latest lawsuit from Common Cause and CREW aims to prevent the department from using the personal information of voters from at least 12 states that have already provided it and up to 19 that have said they would provide it. The first 12 states to share the information are Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.

"The U.S. Department of Justice ('DOJ') has launched an illegal and unprecedented quest to stockpile millions of Americans’ confidential voter data in a system of record within its Civil Rights Division," the lawsuit said. "DOJ is using this highly sensitive data to build – without statutory authorization – a sprawling new voter surveillance and purging apparatus that endangers millions of Americans’ fundamental voting and privacy rights."

President Donald Trump answers questions after signing an executive order to limit mail-in voting in the Oval Office of the White House on March 31, 2026 in Washington, DC.

DOJ seeks state lists to find noncitizens, other ineligible voters

Government lawyers have said they want to check state voter lists against the Department of Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) system to confirm whether they are U.S. citizens.

Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelsonannounced in October 2025that the state compared its voter list against the SAVE database and found 2,724 potential noncitizens out of 18 million registered voters in the state. She said 33 people had been referred to the attorney general’s office in June.

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But the civil rights lawsuit contends the system is "flawed" and "faulty" because citizens born outside the United States who have become naturalized are at higher risk to be identified as noncitizens, which imperils their right to vote.

Anthony Nel of Denton County, Texas, is a plaintiff in the case because he was removed from the state's voter rolls last year despite being a U.S. citizen. Nel was born in South Africa in 1996 but became a citizen when his parents were naturalized in 2013.

After voting early in the November 2025 election, Nel received a letter from the county registrar saying the federal SAVE system showed "that you were not a United States citizen" and asked him to provide proof of his citizenship. By the time he renewed an expired passport in December 2025, he had missed a 30-day deadline to provide his documentation and his voter registration had been canceled.

"When I first got the letter, my initial feelings were frustration and probably a little bit of anger," Nel told USA TODAY. "I’m a naturalized citizen because of my parents, and so it’s frustrating when you do everything right because that’s what they tell you to do and it’s still causing issues."

A voter registration table at the inaugural Northeast Georgia Black Business Expo at Georgia Square Mall in Athens, Ga. on Nov. 15, 2025.

Judges found no authorization for DOJ 'fishing expedition'

The Justice Department has argued in other cases that it had the authority to ask for voter lists to prevent fraud under the 1960 Civil Rights Act, the 1993 National Voter Registration Act and the 2002 Helping Americans to Vote Act.

But federal judges have dismissed the department’s lawsuits in five states: California, Oregon, Michigan, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The judges have noted the Constitution says: "The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each state by the Legislature."

The statutes that federal lawyers cited allow investigations of specific allegations of voter fraud, but judges ruled against the sweeping demands for voter information the Justice Department made.

U.S. District Judge Mary McElroy in Rhode Island found no factual allegations that the state was violating the law in maintaining its voter list. She said the statutes the department cited don’t authorize "the kind of fishing expedition it seeks here."

The civil rights lawsuit raised the same arguments against the department’s access to voter data from states that complied.

"No federal statute authorizes DOJ’s sprawling new voter surveillance, data consolidation, and purging operation," the lawsuit says. "In taking these actions, DOJ is usurping powers that the Constitution and federal statutes vest in the States."

Protesters attend March 28, 2026, rally at Drake Springs Park in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, as part of the third installment of the national No Kings movement to oppose President Donald Trump.

States disregarded privacy of millions of Americans: lawsuit

Aside from the lack of authorization for the voter data, the civil rights groups contend that storing the sensitive data about hundreds of millions of voters in a single federal system creates a greater risk of targeting by hackers and foreigners trying to undermine elections and data security.

"These states have disregarded the privacy and voting rights of millions of Americans who never consented to disclosing their sensitive personal data to the federal government for undefined purposes and without statutory authorization," the lawsuit says.

Ruth Nasrullah of Texas joined the lawsuit because her name has changed three times because of marriage and divorce. She has heightened concerns about her privacy because of her experience as an activist and a journalist.

"Due to her heightened privacy concerns, she intentionally protects her personal information and limits the personal information she shares," the lawsuit says.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Lawsuit filed to prevent DOJ from reviewing state voter lists

Civil rights groups sue to keep DOJ from reviewing state voter lists

WASHINGTON – Civil rights groups filed a federal lawsuit aiming to block the Justice Department fromcollecting and reviewing state vote...
How Tiny Vending Machines Have Created a Resurgence in Popularity of Richard Scarry’s Busytown Universe (Exclusive)

Richard Scarry's books and Busytown universe are gaining new fans through Instagram and collaborations with his son Huck Scarry

People Richard Scarry prints in Inciardi vending machines (left), close up of printsCredit: Folklore Book Shop, Inciardi Prints

NEED TO KNOW

  • Mini Print Vending Machines featuring Scarry-inspired art have sold over 150,000 prints across 30 states

  • Fans of all ages are rediscovering Scarry's whimsical world through books, art and collectible merchandise

We're in aBusy, Busy Worldlike never before!

Richard Scarry's beloved books, includingBusy, Busy World, are enjoying a resurgence as adults who grew up with the author's work try to find the whimsy in their day-to-day lives.

Scarry's many books, written between 1949 and 1994, have returned to the spotlight, in part, thanks to the increasingly popular Instagram account@richardscarrylove, which is a collaborative effort between Random House and Scarry's son, Huck Scarry, and has more than 384,000 followers.

The world of Busytown, the whimsical universe created by Scarry, has also found a new audience thanks toInciardi Prints' beautiful tiny reproductions available through Ana Inciardi's Mini Print Vending Machines. The effort began when Random House Children's Books launched its thoughtfully curated global licensing program, which brings the warmth and detail of Scarry's books to everyday products. For Inciardi, the collaboration was a dream come true, and a full-circle moment for the artist, who was deeply influenced by Richard Scarry growing up.

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Richard Scarry-themed mini vending machineCredit: The Yankee Book Shop

"I still remember my first Richard Scarry book. My sister and I loved to look at a specific page called 'Little Things' that had pictures of all of these tiny items. We would make up games with the images for hours. His art inspired me to start making my own drawings as a child," Inciardi tells PEOPLE.

"In my first and only printmaking class in college, I was asked to make a list of artists that inspired me the most, and I wrote down Richard Scarry, Julia Rothman and Addison Wagner (who is now my wife). It has been a dream come true to see this art continue to inspire children through the Mini Print Vending Machines ," she continues, adding, "I receive so many letters from kids with their own drawings inspired by the mini prints!"

In an exclusive statement about the partnership shared with PEOPLE, Huck Scarry says, "My father drew what he loved and loved what he drew. Generations agree! It is such a wonderful treat to see Ana Inciardi get excited and inspired to bring her distinctive graphic touch and whimsy to his adorable vehicles. Have fun! Beep Beep!"

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The first collection ofRichard Scarry mini printslaunched in September 2025 with 20 vending machines and has since grown to 42 vending machines across 30 states, placed in independent bookstores and specialty retailers, as well as a terminal in New York's Grand Central Station. The third collection of highly sought-after prints debuted in January 2026, featuring a rare Goldbug print (the “tiny yellow fellow” that frequently appears hidden in the pages of Richard Scarry's work) in a highly limited run — rewarding superfans and reinforcing the collectible appeal.

Thus far, over 150,000 Richard Scarry prints have been sold since the vending machines debuted.

Rachel Bader, Director of Licensing at Penguin Random House, tells PEOPLE, "We were drawn to partner with Ana not just for her outstanding work and artistry, but because she's a true fan of Richard Scarry. The shared connection makes the collaboration especially meaningful — it not only honors the legacy of Richard Scarry, but also brings fresh, creative energy to a brand that's been loved for nearly seven decades."

"What's perhaps most unique is how the vending machines and mini prints don't only showcase Ana's artwork, they're also bringing people into stores and sparking discovery of Richard Scarry across art, books, and other merchandise. It's been incredibly rewarding to see this partnership resonate with a multi-generational audience, and bridge the gap between longtime Richard Scarry fans, new readers, and the adults who collect Ana's artwork," Bader says.

Richard Scarry print available via the mini vending machineCredit: Inciardi Prints

Huck spoke to theNew York Historical Societyabout his father's work in 2019, sharing that "Busytown really came into being withWhat Do People Do All Day?published in 1968."

Only 15 years old at the time, Huck recalled, "Busytown was still only fermenting in my father's mind when I was a child. That said, I loved to read the storybooks both my parents — my mother, Patsy, wrote several of the earlier books, illustrated by Richard — created when I was little.Pierre Bear,Good Night Little Bear,Just for Funare a few of these."

When it came to seeing new audiences fall in love with the work in the decades since the books were first released, Huck said, "What has particularly struck me is how universal the love for Richard's books is: Be it in Italy or Finland or China, be the readers one year old or 90, my father seems to touch just about everyone's heart and just about everyone feels that they have their own personal relationship with his world."

"It is an incredibly beautiful thing to reach so many people in so many places, totally regardless of time, with just a pencil, tubes of color paint, and a fertile imagination," Huck concluded.

Read the original article onPeople

How Tiny Vending Machines Have Created a Resurgence in Popularity of Richard Scarry’s Busytown Universe (Exclusive)

Richard Scarry's books and Busytown universe are gaining new fans through Instagram and collaborations with his son Huck Scarry ...
Racing Driver Kylie Marie Walton and Co-Driver Janey Lee's Vehicle Burst into Flames — Now Lee's Husband Is Sharing a Health Update

Two race car drivers are recovering after an incident during a live rehearsal left them hospitalized

People Janey Lee and Kylie Marie WaltonCredit: Kylie Marie Walton/instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Janey Lee became engulfed in flames after her seatbelt jammed while driving with Kylie Marie Walton, Lee’s husband said

  • “Thank you everyone for your continued love and support!” Lee said in an update

Professional race car drivers Kylie Marie Walton and Janey Lee are recovering weeks after their vehicle caught fire during a live event, leaving them both seriously injured.

In a jointInstagram poston March 26, Lee’s husband Eric made a video to combat “bad information out there” and confirm that the co-drivers were involved in an accident on Tuesday, March 24, at approximately 11 a.m. while pre-running the San Felipe 250, held near San Felipe, Baja Calif.

“The car caught fire under Janey’s seat, but her seatbelt was not released,” he said, beginning to break down and cry. “At that point, she was fully engulfed in flames.”

He added that “Kylie saved Janey’s life” by helping her release the seatbelt despite the chaotic circumstances.

Eric also credited the ladies’ helmets, gloves and other protective gear for preventing the situation from being worse than what it was. Still, Lee suffered “extensive” burns to her legs, as well as burns to her shoulders, “that will also require some grafting.”

“She’s a trooper, and she’s in good spirits,” Eric said of his wife.

Walton also suffered burns to her hands, he said in the video. “The girls are tough,” he continued. “They really are.”

Becoming emotional once again, Eric then thanked everyone present for “getting the girls outta there quickly.”

His video was one of nearly a dozen updates that he, Lee and Walton have shared.

On April 9, Road 2 Recovery, a non-profit that raises money for professionally licensed athletes after they sustain a career-ending injury, said in anInstagramupdate: “Both [Lee and Walton] are facing a long and challenging recovery from their burn injuries, requiring ongoing medical care, patience, and resilience.”

The post included a photo of Lee lying in a hospital bed, almost fully covered in bandages with a brace on one of her legs. The following image showed Walton at home resting with her hands wrapped in gauze.

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By April 14, Lee had spent 20 days in theBurn Unit ICU.

Walton has also kept her supporters aware of her situation.

“I just wanted to take a moment to check in and say thank you from the bottom of my heart for the ongoing prayers, messages, and support,” she captioned an April 20Instagram video. “It truly means more to me than I can explain.”

The clip showed her getting help changing her bandages and sterilizing her wounds.

“I had a doctor’s appointment last week and was able to see Janey while I was there. It meant so much to check in on her and see how she’s doing in her recovery too,” Walton wrote, adding that she would provide another update later this week.

On Wednesday, April 22, Lee told her followers that she’s finally been able to start walking again with assistance from her nurses.

“It’s been easier to get out of bed with each day that passes and I’m no longer needing additional rescue pain meds to do so. Bless!” she wrote, along witha videoof her progress.

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Lee added that she was working on introducing movement and “coordination foot work” without her walker after multiple surgeries.

“Hospital hopscotch goes HARD my girl 🙌😮‍💨 I love you I’m so proud of you 👏🏼 keep it up,” Walton commented.

“Thank you everyone for your continued love and support!” Lee said. “It truly means the world to me and helps me push through the toughest of times. I love you all!”

Read the original article onPeople

Racing Driver Kylie Marie Walton and Co-Driver Janey Lee's Vehicle Burst into Flames — Now Lee's Husband Is Sharing a Health Update

Two race car drivers are recovering after an incident during a live rehearsal left them hospitalized NEED TO KNOW ...
Sabrina Carpenter's Fringe Skirt for Coachella Is Ridiculously Bold

Sabrina Carpenterwore a black high-cut bodysuit with thin strappy sides, a long black fringe Dior skirt, retro blonde waves, and glossy glam forCoachella2026. The singer was pictured mid-performance on a chair, with the fashion house captioning the post, “Sabrina Carpenter wears Dior at Coachella 2026.”

Sabrina Carpenter makes a case for fringe at Coachella 2026

Have a look at Sabrina Carpenter in a fringe skirt:

Carpenter’s fringe skirt is the hook. She paired with a high-cut black micro bodysuit, strappy sides, and swishy movement over the chair. It performed a sleeker version of boudoir drama. Her retro blonde waves, glossy makeup, and a black mic kept the styling polished.

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The pop star’s weekend-two headlining set kept her“Sabrinawood”world going with custom Dior by Jonathan Anderson. That Dior reworked four-stage looks for her return, including this black bra-and-fringe set, while her Coachella setlists placed “Bed Chem” and “Juno” late in the show before Madonna’s surprise guest stretch.

Fans reacted quickly. One wrote, “AND WE ARE ABSOLUTELY OBSESSED.” Another commented, “She’s an absolute queen.” A third added, “This is next level.”

The postSabrina Carpenter’s Fringe Skirt for Coachella Is Ridiculously Boldappeared first onReality Tea.

Sabrina Carpenter’s Fringe Skirt for Coachella Is Ridiculously Bold

Sabrina Carpenterwore a black high-cut bodysuit with thin strappy sides, a long black fringe Dior skirt, retro blonde waves, and glossy gla...
Which was your favorite? The 50 best rock albums from the 1970s

The 1970s were a decade defined by the evolution of rock music as both a genre and cultural movement, splintering and morphing into sub-genres like punk, folk rock, heavy metal, glam rock, and singer-songwriter. It was also an era that, both musically and politically, found its legs and defined itself, in some ways, in its opposition to the optimistic and LSD-infused '60s. '70s rock was political—whether explicitly or covertly—as music tends to be in times of war, conservative backlash, and changing norms around gender and sexuality.

Stacker Photo of Pink Floyd Photo circa 1973. -

Best rock albums of the 1970s

The concurrent deaths of Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, the rise of disco, and the disbanding of the Beatles allindelibly marked the beginning of the 1970s, signaling a departure from psychedelic and jam rock, toward harder, louder, and grittier sounds. Meanwhile, global and national violence, a rebellious youth movement, and the legacy of '60s pop and proto-punk gave the music of the '70s power, whether in the quietly groundbreaking dulcimer strums of Joni Mitchell's iconic album "Blue" or the deafening roar of Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath's stadium tours.

Speaking of which, many of the decade's most iconic musiciansstill performworldwide today. '70s hitmakers likeJourney,Rod Stewart, andAC/DCcontinue to play live well into 2026, hooking new generations of fans and transporting long-time listeners back to the good old days of rock and roll. Some bands even come back together decades down the line, like Canadian rockers Triumph,who reunitedin April 2026, and Rush, who will kick off theirFifty Something reunion tourin the summer of 2026.

It's a thrill to hear new music from these living legends, but there are, of course, countless hits to revisit in their back catalog. To look back on the greatest of the '70s,Stackercompiled data on the best rock albums of the decade and listed the top 50, according toBest Ever Albums, which ranks albums according to their appearance and performance on 40,000 editorial and data-based charts (e.g., Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, Billboard, etc.). The Best Ever Albums score is derived from a formula that weighs how many charts an album has appeared on and how high it reached on each of those charts and awards points accordingly. For a more in-depth methodology,read here.

Read on to explore the musicians and albums that made the 1970s one of the most interesting decades in music history

Carole King sitting in a window seat next to a cat. -

#50. 'Tapestry' by Carole King

- Best Ever Albums score: 7,771- Rank all-time: #240- Rank in 1971: #11

FeaturingJames Taylor and Joni Mitchellon background vocals, Carole King's iconic "Tapestry" won four Grammys—more than anyone had ever received at once at that time. Thehighly influential albumlaunched King into the spotlight as one of the singer-songwriters who pioneered the genre and brought her into the public eye, beyond her work as the songwriter behind hits she'd penned for others, like "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," "The Loco-Motion," and "(You Make Me Feel Like) a Natural Woman."

Billy Joel in a bed next to a mask on a pillow. -

#49. 'The Stranger' by Billy Joel

- Best Ever Albums score: 7,817- Rank all-time: #239- Rank in 1977: #7

Billy Joel recorded "The Stranger" whilein danger of being droppedby Columbia Records. He originally planned to team up with Beatles producer George Martin but changed his mind when Martin pressured him to use a studio band rather than his road band and hired Phil Ramone for the job instead. This proved to be a fateful decision, as the album is widely considered to be Joel's best. "The Stranger" includes classics like "Just the Way You Are," "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant," "Vienna," and "She's Always a Woman."

Abstract drawing of earth from space with trees and plants coming up. -

#48. 'Fragile' by Yes

- Best Ever Albums score: 7,932- Rank all-time: #235- Rank in 1971: #10

Keyboardist Rick Wakeman was hired to replace one of Yes' co-founders, Tony Kaye, shortly before the group recorded "Fragile." According to Wakeman, he was asked to joinDavid Bowie's newly formed bandSpiders From Mars the very same day he was invited to be a member of Yes. He decided to go with Yes because he felt he would have more creative freedom and input there. "Fragile" became one of theseminal albums of progressive rock, ushering in the genre alongside contributions from King Crimson and others.

Individual square images of each Beatle performing. -

#47. 'Let It Be' by The Beatles

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,283- Rank all-time: #227- Rank in 1970: #11

"Let It Be" was the Beatles' final (and most controversial) album before the band broke up later in 1970. Though it included hits like "Across the Universe," "Get Back," "The Long and Winding Road," and the title track, many critics, as well as Paul McCartney, disliked producerPhil Spector's additionsto the album. The making of the album, which ischronicled in two documentaries, was plagued with ill-feeling—with George Harrison leaving the group and eventually rejoining—and signaled the end of the band.

Black and white image of the Ramones. -

#46. 'Ramones' by Ramones

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,624- Rank all-time: #216- Rank in 1976: #3

The Ramones' self-titled album was recorded at Radio City Music Hall over the course ofone week and for under $7,000. Considered thefirst real punk album, the new and unfamiliar sound was not at first a commercial success, selling only 6,000 copies in the year following its release. They were critically acclaimed from the start, however, and went on to influence punk bands like the Sex Pistols and the Clash.

A white cover with three separate black and white images of shirtless men standing in a waterfall, sitting in a chair and looking at the other images on the page. -

#45. 'The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway' by Genesis

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,881- Rank all-time: #210- Rank in 1974: #3

"The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" was Peter Gabriel'sfinal album with Genesisand has been referred to as the "Ulysses of concept albums." The album tells the story of a Puerto Rican kid named Rael who embarks on a journey in New York. The creation of "The Lamb" mostly took place at the famed English recording studio, Headley Grange. Relations among the bandmates became strained when Gabriel seized control of the lyric writing and left continuously to work on a screenwriting project with "Exorcist" director William Friedkin, as well as to care for his infant daughter and wife.

Neil Young standing on the beach in a yellow blazer looking at the ocean and everything on the beach is also yellow, including a table and chairs with umbrella.. -

#44. 'On the Beach' by Neil Young

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,908- Rank all-time: #208- Rank in 1974: #2

One of Neil Young's darkest albums, "On the Beach" came shortly after his hugely successful album "Harvest"; the record dealt with feelings ofisolation and angerat both the state of the world—the endlessness of the Vietnam War at the time, especially—as well as his own experiences with fame and the death of his friend. The album defied genre categorization, existing somewhere between country and rock. Young recorded the album with therhythm section from The Bandand Rusty Kershaw of the country band Rusty & Doug.

A cartoon of Elton John wearing platform ruby slippers and stepping into a brick wall where the yellow brick road begins and leads to Oz. -

#43. 'Goodbye Yellow Brick Road' by Elton John

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,955- Rank all-time: #206- Rank in 1973: #6

Elton John and his lyricist collaborator Bernie Taupin created "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" betweenKingston, Jamaica, and Château d'Hérouville, an 18th-century French château-turned-recording studio where John made "Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player" and "Honky Château." They recorded 21 songs in just 12 days, and the album would go on to be regarded as John's masterpiece and his bestselling album. It included songs like "Bennie and the Jets," "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting," and "Candle in the Wind," as well as its explosive title track.

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#42. 'Fun House' by The Stooges

- Best Ever Albums score: 8,986- Rank all-time: #203- Rank in 1970: #10

The Stooges' second album, "Fun House," took their sound to new levels ofroughness and confrontationalism, in part due to producer Don Gallucci's choice to record the album as if it were performed live. This marked a departure from their first album, which used the Velvet Underground's John Cale as the producer for a crisper sound. The band set up in Elektra Records' Los Angeles studio as if they were onstage, with frontman Iggy Pop doing his performing in his usual active and erratic style, giving the proto-punk band their influential raw sound.

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#41. 'Cosmo's Factory' by Creedence Clearwater Revival

- Best Ever Albums score: 9,116- Rank all-time: #196- Rank in 1970: #9

"Cosmo's Factory" was named for the industrial practice space in San Francisco where Creedence Clearwater Revival rehearsed. Theiconic album cover—which shows the bandmates lounging with various props and Stu Cook perched on his bike—was shot by lead singer John Fogerty's brother, Bob, in the eponymous rehearsal space. "Cosmo's Factory," which blended rockabilly, country, and R&B sounds and included hits like "Travelin' Band," "Lookin' Out My Back Door," and "Run Through the Jungle," spent nine weeks atop the Billboard 200 after its release in 1970.

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#40. 'Darkness on the Edge of Town' by Bruce Springsteen

- Best Ever Albums score: 9,136- Rank all-time: #195- Rank in 1978: #1

"Darkness on the Edge of Town" was Bruce Springsteen's follow-up to his enormously successful "Born to Run" album, but the two could not have been more different tonally. The former project was amuch bleaker album, a counterpoint to the freedom and optimism of "Born to Run" and is said to have been impacted by a lawsuit in which Springsteen was embroiled with his former manager. According to a documentary about the making of the album (which is included in its 2010 deluxe reissue), Springsteen also wanted to create something that responded to the massive amount of fame and glory that came from his first album, fame which was reportedly embarrassing to him.

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#39. 'L.A. Woman' by The Doors

- Best Ever Albums score: 9,211- Rank all-time: #194- Rank in 1971: #9

The Doors frontman Jim Morrison died in Paris only weeks after the release of "L.A. Woman," marking the last album made by the original band. Leading up to the album's completion, Morrison had been arrested for indecent exposure while performing, leading to his being sentenced to several months in prison (though he died before serving the sentence). Praised by critics as the Doors' last great album, "L.A. Woman" included classic hits like "Love Her Madly," "Riders on the Storm," and "The WASP," and explored the transition from the optimism of the 1960s to the uncertainty of the '70s.

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#38. 'Horses' by Patti Smith

- Best Ever Albums score: 9,432- Rank all-time: #188- Rank in 1975: #7

Poet, punk icon, and author Patti Smith released "Horses" during the heyday of theNew York punk venue CBGB, where she regularly performed among other superstar acts like the Talking Heads, the Ramones, and Blondie. Smith recorded the seminal punk album with her band—comprised of guitarist Lenny Kaye, Blondie bassist Ivan Kral, and drummer Jay Dee Daugherty—at the famed Electric Lady studio, with producer John Cale (of the Velvet Underground). Thealbum cover for "Horses,"which features a black-and-white photo of Smith taken by Smith's friend, famed photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, has become an iconic image of both the time and New York's underground punk scene.

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#37. 'Aja' by Steely Dan

- Best Ever Albums score: 9,582- Rank all-time: #183- Rank in 1977: #6

Steely Dan's sixth album, "Aja," markedthe band's evolutiontoward a jazzier, harder-to-define sound. Theproduction of the albumitself took place in six studios on two coasts and included the contributions of 30 musicians for an end result of seven songs. The complicated making of "Aja," which is chronicled in a documentary, was bankrolled by the group's record company, ABC, and involved numerous takes of each song with different configurations of musicians, until the perfect one was accomplished.

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#36. 'Moondance' by Van Morrison

- Best Ever Albums score: 10,252- Rank all-time: #171- Rank in 1970: #8

"Moondance" was packed with some of Van Morrison's most celebrated songs, including the titular "Moondance," "Into the Mystic," "Crazy Love," and "Caravan." The album featured Morrison backed by horn and rhythm sections but was not a smooth ride from the get-go. Morrison reportedlyfired most of the bandwho had played on his previous album, "Astral Weeks," and seized control of the project from his producer, Lewis Merenstein.

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#35. 'Led Zeppelin III' by Led Zeppelin

- Best Ever Albums score: 10,340- Rank all-time: #168- Rank in 1970: #7

"Led Zeppelin III" was the band's most sonically different album and, not coincidentally, its most polarizing. The album was written in a rural Welsh cottage that didn't have electricity (but was memorialized on the song "Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp"), allowing the bandmates to explore a more acoustic, mellow sound. While somefans and critics dismissed itas a sign that the band's creative energy was petering out, others praised Led Zeppelin's daringness in reinventing their sound at the peak of their popularity.

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#34. 'Quadrophenia' by The Who

- Best Ever Albums score: 10,344- Rank all-time: #167- Rank in 1973: #5

The Who's rock opera "Quadrophenia" chronicles the tale of Jimmy, a young Brit dealing with a mental health condition whose angst about work and family life functions as acriticism of the British class systemand a celebration of rebellion. Pete Townshend composed the 17-song album, and has since referred to it as "the Who's last great album." The making of "Quadrophenia" was rife with conflict between the band members, exacerbated by nonstop touring and substance misuse.

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#33. 'Red' by King Crimson

- Best Ever Albums score: 11,024- Rank all-time: #159- Rank in 1974: #1

Led by Robert Fripp, seminal progressive rock band King Crimson assembled and reassembled with new musicians around each album release, with "Red" leaning intodarker, rougher soundsthan in their debut record, "In the Court of the Crimson King." By the time "Red" was recorded, the band was close to falling apart, and the animosity and chaos of the group's disintegration can be heard in the intense, sometimes violent sound of the album. "Red" was the group's last output of the '70s; they disbanded shortly after before being reformed in the early '80s.

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#32. 'Tago Mago' by Can

- Best Ever Albums score: 11,636- Rank all-time: #146- Rank in 1971: #8

German experimental group Can's album "Tago Mago" broke from the rock conventions of their debut album "Monster Movie" in favor of morefunky, avant-garde soundsand rhythms. Can's drummer, Jaki Liebezeit, described this move as a result of not "trying to please anybody" and being free from "commercial ideas." Using a 15th-century castle chamber lined with egg cartons, the band recorded for 16 hours a day using three microphones and two tape recorders.

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#31. 'Meddle' by Pink Floyd

- Best Ever Albums score: 11,656- Rank all-time: #145- Rank in 1971: #7

Pink Floyd's experimental album "Meddle" marked a departure from their moretraditional rock sound. The album, recorded at Abbey Road, was comprised of five songs in addition to the 23-minute track "Echoes," which became an entire side of the record. On "Echoes," the band each recorded their parts separately without knowledge of the other members' contributions ahead of time, as well as experimented in other ways to create an unexpected and organic sound. "Echoes," as well as "One of These Days," went on to become signature Pink Floyd tracks.

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#30. 'John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band' by John Lennon

- Best Ever Albums score: 11,859- Rank all-time: #141- Rank in 1970: #5

Shortly after the Beatles disbanded in 1970, John Lennon and Yoko Ono's group, which included Ringo Starr and bassist Klaus Voormann, recorded "John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band." The album is said to have been influenced by Lennon's sessions withprimal scream therapy practitioner Arthur Janov, who proposed that reliving early childhood trauma and screaming could cure one of mental health issues. This influence can be seen on tracks like "Mother" and "My Mummy's Dead."

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#29. 'Transformer' by Lou Reed

- Best Ever Albums score: 12,994- Rank all-time: #130- Rank in 1972: #6

After the Velvet Underground disbanded in the early '70s, frontman Lou Reed struck out on his own to start a solo career. When he went to record "Transformer," his label, RCA,introduced him to David Bowie, who agreed to produce the album. Bowie brought on guitarist Mick Ronson from his band Spiders from Mars to co-produce the record. "Transformer" became one of the seminal albums of the newly emerging glam rock genre, spawning hits like "Walk on the Wild Side" and "Satellite of Love."

Sid Vicious, Johnny Rotten and Steve Jones of The Sex Pistols perform live at The Winterland Ballroom in 1978 in San Francisco, California.  -

#28. 'Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols' by Sex Pistols

- Best Ever Albums score: 13,876- Rank all-time: #119- Rank in 1977: #5

Frequently cited as one of the most influential punk albums of all time, the Sex Pistols' only studio album, "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols"took the U.K. by storm, skyrocketing to #1. Defined by the band's quintessential sneering singing and raw and aggressive sound, the album housed singles like "Anarchy in the UK," "God Save the Queen," and "Pretty Vacant." The album wasinfamous in the U.K.for having "bollocks" in its title; a record shopkeeper was notoriously arrested for displaying the album cover in the window, which only gave the band more publicity.

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#27. 'All Things Must Pass' by George Harrison

- Best Ever Albums score: 14,056- Rank all-time: #116- Rank in 1970: #4

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In 1968, George Harrison traveled to Woodstock, New York, andbefriended Bob Dylan, a relationship that boosted Harrison's songwriting confidence and began what would become "All Things Must Pass." After the Beatles' disintegration, Harrisonbegan his solo projectin earnest, which grappled with both the end of the Beatles and his interest in spirituality. "All Things Must Pass" is often cited as the best solo Beatles album, and reveals Harrison's frequently underrated prowess as a songwriter.

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#26. 'Station to Station' by David Bowie

- Best Ever Albums score: 14,129- Rank all-time: #113- Rank in 1976: #2

Even legendary music critic andDavid Bowie naysayerLester Bangs was forced to admit that Bowie had "finally produced his (first) masterpiece" with "Station to Station." Despite the legendary final product, Bowie called the creation of the album "singularly the darkest days of my life" due to chronic substance misuse and poor eating and sleeping habits. This led the rock star to experience erratic behavior and mental health issues, prompting him to move back to Europe in order to remove himself from L.A.'s drug culture.

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#25. 'Harvest' by Neil Young

- Best Ever Albums score: 14,822- Rank all-time: #104- Rank in 1972: #5

Neil Young's most commercially successful album, "Harvest" was recorded in his home studio, and included hits like "Heart of Gold" and "Old Man." David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash all played on the record. After taping a live show with Linda Ronstadt and James Taylor, Younginvited the two musiciansback to his house and they contributed off-the-cuff guitar and vocal backups.

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#24. 'Physical Graffiti' by Led Zeppelin

- Best Ever Albums score: 14,840- Rank all-time: #103- Rank in 1975: #5

Led Zeppelin's sixth album, "Physical Graffiti," is known as the prolificband's rawest effort. Recorded again at Headley Grange, the album paid tribute to Chicago blues influences and yielded the quintessential Led Zeppelin hit "Kashmir."

Unclothed kids climbing over stones on a hill.  -

#23. 'Houses of the Holy' by Led Zeppelin

- Best Ever Albums score: 15,151- Rank all-time: #99- Rank in 1973: #2

Led Zeppelin recorded "Houses of the Holy" at Mick Jagger's estate, Stargroves. The album is known for being lighter and more playful than their previous albums,experimenting with genrespreviously untapped by the band. While some critics dismissed it, with one Rolling Stone critic nicknaming the band "Limp Blimp," the album was a commercial success.

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#22. 'A Night at the Opera' by Queen

- Best Ever Albums score: 15,415- Rank all-time: #95- Rank in 1975: #4

Featuring some of Queen's most famous hits, including the behemoth "Bohemian Rhapsody" and "You're My Best Friend," "A Night at the Opera" is consideredQueen's masterpiece. "Bohemian Rhapsody" spent nine weeks atop the UK Singles Chart. The band borrowed the album's title from the Marx Brothers' film of the same name.

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#21. 'Close to the Edge' by Yes

- Best Ever Albums score: 16,191- Rank all-time: #90- Rank in 1972: #4

Critics consider "Close to the Edge" to beYes' "crowning achievement," and "progressive rock's defining masterwork." Hermann Hesse's "Siddhartha," which Jon Anderson was reading at the time, heavily influenced the album's lyrics and themes.

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#20. 'After the Gold Rush' by Neil Young

- Best Ever Albums score: 18,484- Rank all-time: #78- Rank in 1970: #2

Using musicians from both the folk-rock collective Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and Crazy Horse, Neil Young crafted most of "After the Gold Rush"in the basement of his house. Though the album wasn't a great critical success at the time, it served to launch Young's solo career and was reconsidered by critics in light of his later successes, notably "Harvest."

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#19. 'Blue' by Joni Mitchell

- Best Ever Albums score: 19,090- Rank all-time: #76- Rank in 1971: #6

Joni Mitchell's "Blue" has been called "perfect," and had an enormous impact on both women musicians and women listeners because of its vulnerable subject matter and themes of freedom, exploration, and loss, which,according to Graham Nash(of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young) "freed female artists" to make that kind of music too. Employing the dulcimer, guitar, and piano, the album was completely composed and performed by Mitchell, with James Taylor, Stephen Stills, Sneaky Pete, and Russ Kunkel contributing some instrumentals.

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#18. 'Born to Run' by Bruce Springsteen

- Best Ever Albums score: 20,435- Rank all-time: #69- Rank in 1975: #3

When an unofficial rough cut of the title track from "Born to Run" was distributed to radio stations in 1974, it became so popular itlaunched Bruce Springsteenfrom relative obscurity—as his previous albums had not been successful—directly into the public eye. The subsequent release of the album went even further, elevating him to the status of "rock 'n' roll poet," and saw him grace the covers of Time magazine and Newsweek.

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#17. 'Paranoid' by Black Sabbath

- Best Ever Albums score: 21,213- Rank all-time: #61- Rank in 1970: #1

"Paranoid" was Black Sabbath's follow-up to their successful debut album and representeda turning point for heavy metalas not only a genre unto itself, but a commercially successful one. Grappling with issues of war, atomic weapons, and lower-class oppression, the album was, politically, a product of the times. It proved timeless for its pioneering of heavy metal, for which the album served as a "template" for future bands.

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#16. 'Sticky Fingers' by The Rolling Stones

- Best Ever Albums score: 21,511- Rank all-time: #58- Rank in 1971: #4

"Sticky Fingers" was the Rolling Stones' ninth studio album and produced legendary hits like "Wild Horses" and "Brown Sugar." Theiconic album cover, designed by Andy Warhol and shot by members of Warhol's art collective the Factory, featured the band holding up photographs of someone's crotch in a pair of tight jeans to their own bodies. The original release of the album included a real zipper, which could be undone to reveal underwear beneath, but was discontinued due to its damaging the vinyl.

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#15. 'Low' by David Bowie

- Best Ever Albums score: 22,362- Rank all-time: #53- Rank in 1977: #4

Written after David Bowie's departure from L.A.'s drug scene and move to Berlin, "Low" is hismost subdued album. During the creation of the album, Bowie was recovering from a substance use disorder and mental health conditions, and he did not attempt to invent a persona for the album. Nevertheless, "Low" is not completely bleak; featuring Brian Eno, it experiments with electronic and futuristic sounds for an almost playful effect.

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#14. 'Marquee Moon' by Television

- Best Ever Albums score: 24,968- Rank all-time: #47- Rank in 1977: #3

"Marquee Moon" was New York punk band Television's debut album. While not hugely commercially successful, it continued the evolution of punk started by bands like the Velvet Underground and perpetuated by artists such as Patti Smith and the Ramones and took the New York punk scene by storm.Critics raved about "Marquee Moon," with one calling it "a 24-carat inspired work of pure genius."

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#13. 'Hunky Dory' by David Bowie

- Best Ever Albums score: 25,719- Rank all-time: #46- Rank in 1971: #3

"Hunky Dory" catalyzed David Bowie's career, the first of his albums to catapult him to fame. Featuring hits like "Changes," "Life on Mars," and "Queen Bitch," the album preceded "The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars" by only six months. "Hunky Dory" was the beginning of what Bowie would become legendary for, cementing his image as a gender-bending, glam pop-rock icon who wasconstantly reinventing himself.

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#12. 'Exile on Main St.' by The Rolling Stones

- Best Ever Albums score: 27,266- Rank all-time: #42- Rank in 1972: #2

Widely considered the Stones' creative peak, "Exile on Main St." was written and recorded during the band's partying days in France, using thebasement of their new villa. The album is known for its raw, gritty sound, which is no surprise, considering the band was on the run from tax collectors in Britain, and Keith Richards had fallen into heroin addiction.

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#11. 'Blood on the Tracks' by Bob Dylan

- Best Ever Albums score: 27,681- Rank all-time: #41- Rank in 1975: #2

Despite its status as Bob Dylan's "breakup album," "Blood" is known for itswarmth and timelessness. The album features hits like "Tangled Up in Blue," "You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go," "Buckets of Rain," and "Shelter From the Storm." According to Pitchfork, Dylan was bemused at the record's popularity, having said at the time of the album's release, "It's hard for me to relate to … people enjoying that kind of pain."

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#10. 'Who's Next' by The Who

- Best Ever Albums score: 28,463- Rank all-time: #39- Rank in 1971: #2

Famously opening with "Baba O'Riley," "Who's Next" was the Who's most successful album in the U.S. The album was the band's follow-up to the highly successful rock opera "Tommy" and was originally supposed to beanother rock operatitled "Lifehouse." When that project failed to come together, some of the songs were repurposed to create "Who's Next."

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#9. 'Animals' by Pink Floyd

- Best Ever Albums score: 29,501- Rank all-time: #36- Rank in 1977: #2

Coming on the heels of major hits like "The Dark Side of the Moon" and "Wish You Were Here," Pink Floyd recorded "Animals" in astudio they'd recently built. Based largely on George Orwell's novella "Animal Farm," the album critiqued Britain's capitalist power structures with a raw, angry sound. The creation of the album broughtdiscord among the band membersto the surface as they grappled with their major success and dealt with personal issues and grievances.

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#8. 'Unknown Pleasures' by Joy Division

- Best Ever Albums score: 30,009- Rank all-time: #35- Rank in 1979: #3

Post-punk band Joy Division's debut album "Unknown Pleasures" was created after sound effects and synth maestro Martin Hannett joined the group. His addition transformed the band from a Stooges and Sex Pistols-styled punk band into a group with a genre-defining sound all of its own. Its album cover, which features a white-on-black graphic that looks like a diagram of mountains or even a heartbeat monitor,became an iconic image.

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#7. 'The Wall' by Pink Floyd

- Best Ever Albums score: 35,651- Rank all-time: #27- Rank in 1979: #2

The historically popular concept album "The Wall" buoyed Pink Floyd to even higher levels of fame but proved challenging for the band's integrity asacrimony between the membersreached a breaking point. Disagreements about the band's artistic direction, as well as bassist and singer Roger Waters' seizing of control of most of the band's creative decisions, resulted in "The Wall" being the last album the four original bandmates would record together.

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#6. 'Rumours' by Fleetwood Mac

- Best Ever Albums score: 37,205- Rank all-time: #24- Rank in 1977: #1

"Rumours" was Fleetwood Mac's most successful album and would become one of themost well-known albumsin pop music history. This popularity came in spite of, or perhaps because of, the well-publicized drama that rocked the band members and was documented in the album itself. Inner-band affairs and infidelity, as well as intense drug use, led to the creation of the emotionally charged album.

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#5. 'London Calling' by The Clash

- Best Ever Albums score: 44,547- Rank all-time: #18- Rank in 1979: #1

By the end of the '70s, punk had started to become more about grungy aesthetics than the radical politics the movement was originally founded upon. In "London Calling," however, the Clash refocused their contribution to punk on ideology, and the album is considered their "creative apex." "London Calling" is considered by many to be one of the greatest rock albums ever. The album sits at #16 on Rolling Stone's list of the greatest albums ever recorded.

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#4. 'Led Zeppelin IV' by Led Zeppelin

- Best Ever Albums score: 53,666- Rank all-time: #11- Rank in 1971: #1

The officially untitled album (often referred to as "Led Zeppelin IV" or "Zoso") wasreleased without band informationand images in an aggressive and deliberate move by the band to get back at critics, who they felt were underestimating their work. However, the air of mystery surrounding the album did nothing to dissuade fans from digging into it—if anything, it created a sense of mystique that made the band more popular than ever. Recorded at Headley Grange, the album includes the iconic "Stairway to Heaven" and "Black Dog," and is considered to be one of the best rock albums of all time.

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#3. 'The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars' by David Bowie

- Best Ever Albums score: 59,016- Rank all-time: #9- Rank in 1972: #1

David Bowie's ubiquitous alter-ego Ziggy Stardust is the star of his famousouter space-set concept album, which melded glam rock with performance art and called attention to the blurred lines between rock 'n' roll star, messiah, and actor. "Ziggy Stardust" was the first Bowie album to sustain its concept throughout the album and was groundbreaking in itssubversion of sexual and gender norms, as well as performance and genre conventions.

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#2. 'Wish You Were Here' by Pink Floyd

- Best Ever Albums score: 60,010- Rank all-time: #8- Rank in 1975: #1

Recorded at Abbey Road, "Wish You Were Here" wasinspired by Syd Barrett, the founder of Pink Floyd who had left the band years before due to serious mental health concerns. When Barrett showed up unexpectedly at the recording sessions he was almost unrecognizable, something thatgreatly disturbed the band. The album served as a critique of the music industry, and several members of the band have cited it as their favorite Pink Floyd record.

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#1. 'The Dark Side of the Moon' by Pink Floyd

- Best Ever Albums score: 85,935- Rank all-time: #2- Rank in 1973: #1

"The Dark Side of the Moon" has spent18 years on the Billboard 200 Albums chartand has sold over 45 million copies. The album grapples with themes like wealth, death, and time, and solidified Floyd's transition from jam band to serious rock band. It was also Roger Waters' first credit as a sole lyricist, which would define the band's sound and the course of their career for the next decade.

Which was your favorite? The 50 best rock albums from the 1970s

The 1970s were a decade defined by the evolution of rock music as both a genre and cultural movement, splintering and morphing into sub...

 

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