The 50 Best 10th Albums of All Time


From the Rolling Stones’ double-LP masterpiece to Aretha’s iconic breakthrough to pretty decent records from Springsteen, Duran Duran, Jay-Z and more

Not every great artist has a long game. The Sex Pistols and Lauryn Hill made one legit album each. N.W.A., Stone Roses, and Neutral Milk Hotel vanished after two. Buffalo Springfield, My Bloody Valentine, and Nirvana only made it to three. And by the time that even some genius-level acts make it past the seven or eight album mark, they are running on fumes. (If you doubt us, spend time with the later work of Sly and the Family Stone or Phil Collins.) It takes a special artist or group to still have a relevant message by the time their tenth album arrives.

This list spotlights the true legends who made it to their 10th album and were still near the top of their game. In some cases, like the Rolling Stones or Merle Haggard, it may have even been their absolute peak. But to be clear, this required us to make several judgement calls that weren’t always easy. The main one was that live albums, compilations, soundtracks, and EPs do not count. They need to be proper studio albums. In most cases, covers albums like David Bowie’s Pin-Ups count as long as it was treated like a proper LP, and largely featured new recordings. 

That doesn’t mean there aren’t grey areas. Is Neil Young’s Rust Never Sleeps a studio or live album? Is Magical Mystery Tour a full Beatles LP or a rare “double EP?” Is a double EP even a thing? Do we lump together all the releases by artists like Bob Seger, Elvis Costello and Tom Petty who often worked with very iconic backing bands but sometimes put out solo albums? We did our best to sort through these vexing questions, and give you this list. 

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