LOS ANGELES â Let the debate begin. Who has the best music albums ever?
Apple Music certainly has an idea. The music streaming giant announced on Wednesday their 10 greatest albums of all time with Lauryn Hillâs 1998 iconic âThe Miseducation of Lauryn Hillâ claiming the top spot. Hillâs debut album outpaced other classic records from BeyoncĂŠ,The Beatles,Michael Jackson,Prince,Stevie Wonder, Kendrick Lamar,Amy Winehouse,Frank Ocean and Nirvana.
Recommended Videos
âThis is my award, but itâs a rich, deep narrative, and involves so many people, and so much sacrifice, and so much time, and so much collective love,â Hill said after receiving the news.
The top 10 albums culminated Apple Musicâs inaugural 100 best albums, which started with a 10-day countdown last week. There's only five artists with two albums on the full list including The Beatles, Wonder, Prince, Radiohead and BeyoncĂŠ.
The process started several months ago when Apple Musicâs editorial team of editors and music experts â including Zane Lowe (global creative director and lead anchor for Apple Music 1) and Ebro Darden (global editorial head of hip-hop and R&B) â generated a list of candidates from the past 65 years.
âThis list isnât a popularity contest,â Darden said. "We challenged everyone to not vote based on your favorites. Youâre invited into the panel because you have music knowledge beyond what you listen to when youâre on the elliptical machine.â
Members from Apple Musicâs internal team submitted their personal lists of albums through the company's voting microsite. The votes were weighted according to an albumâs placement â the higher the ranking, the more votes assigned.
Apple Music used the same voting methodology for a select group external voters that included artists, songwriters, producers and some media.
And now, we're here. With commentary from Lowe and Darden, here is Apple Musicâs top 10 best albums list:
1. Lauryn Hill, âThe Miseducation of Lauryn Hillâ (1998)
DARDEN: Weâre really leaning on what she did on this album. The songwriting, what she shared, what was happening in her life that she effectively put in the music. The fact that she just became a mother. All the R&B vibes. The Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway along with DâAngelo's âNothing Even Matters.â The social commentary in âDoo Wop (That Thing).â Itâs hip-hop. Itâs R&B. Itâs got a dancehall element. Itâs a powerful woman being independent and being like âYo, I got something to say.â And oh by the way, the son sheâs singing about on the album is Bob Marleyâs grandson.... It checks so many boxes.
2. Michael Jackson, âThrillerâ (1982)
LOWE: Itâs the greatest blockbuster album ever. I think everyone Iâve spoken to about this list automatically assumes that itâs going to be No. 1. Thatâs because weâve spent decade after decade seeing it basically No. 1. It came out during a time period when music was the top entertainment in the world. People were desperate for this Michael Jackson record even more than going to see a movie. âThrillerâ is an incredible record. The whole thing is dialed in. But it didnât bug me that Lauryn came in at No. 1 and âThrillerâ landed at No. 2.
3. The Beatles, âAbbey Roadâ (1969)
DARDEN: âAbbey Roadâ has taken on a more modern life of its own in the social media space with TikTok. Maybe thatâs why it landed so high. When you go song for song on âAbbey Road,â I think it musically represents a happy time for the Beatles. Itâs very much like more raw Beatles than pop Beatles.
4. Prince and the Revolution, âPurple Rainâ (1984)
DARDEN: I love that it was a Black artist making soulful rock and pop records. I loved the movie. Itâs phenomenal memories. Itâs not my favorite Prince album. Iâm more into âSign Oâ The Times.â Dance, music, sex romance. Iâm a big Prince fan, so Iâm happy this got the votes. I think âPurple Rainâ lives on in (iconic fashion).
5. Frank Ocean, âblondâ (2016)
LOWE: I had this higher than five. I simply adore this album. I feel like Frank is like Prince. He is like Michael. He is like Lauryn. He is like Marvin (Gaye). He is like Radiohead. He is the great outliers who found a way into our hearts on a massive scale. They do not make music to appeal to a large audience, and yet somehow the music they make reaches us. âBlondâ didn't hit the certain sales targets that some of the biggest albums on this list did... But every time I put it on, it moves me different every single time.
6. Stevie Wonder, âSongs in the Key of Lifeâ (1976)
LOWE: It starts with a message, and it ends with a time to process everything that's happened in between. In the end, he finally gives you a moment to just take everything you've listened to and just absorb it. He channeled something major.
7. Kendrick Lamar, âgood kid, m.A.A.d cityâ (2012)
DARDEN: Iâm happy this went so high. It was his debut album. He wrote an audio movie about his neighborhood and basically being a reluctant kid who is surrounded by all this toxicity, mayhem and chaos. Heâs trying to see his way through it. He created opportunities for him and his friends to survive.
8. Amy Winehouse, âBack to Blackâ (2006)
LOWE: It talks about heartbreak, rejection, unrequited love and the pain you go through when you have feelings for someone who doesn't have the same feelings back. You don't know what to do with that emotion. It's very human. If we all live long enough, we're going to go through real heartbreak in our life. This album took that experience and made us sing and dance and move. It's one of the most tasteful albums about heartache ever recorded. It's an incredible magic act.
9. Nirvana, âNevermindâ (1991)
LOWE: This was a combination of real skill, beautiful instinct, total courage and vulnerability. It showed the ability to dial into what ( Kurt Cobain ) was feeling and dress it up in a way that made people want to dance, jump, sing and scream. But if you really listen, which tens of millions of people did, it was deeper than that. And we understood it. This album was the start of me being able to sit down and have a conversation about anxiety and depression with my mom, my brother and friends. If he could write about it, why can't I talk about it?
10. BeyoncĂŠ, âLemonadeâ (2016)
DARDEN: This was the first time we got to see BeyoncĂŠâs personal life. Her sister just beat up her husband on an elevator, and everybodyâs in their business now... I like âLemonadeâ but itâs not my favorite BeyoncĂŠ album. âRenaissanceâ is one my favorite BeyoncĂŠ albums ever. But if you lived in that âLemonadeâ moment, it was a big deal.