The Province

Now, that’s how you deliver a second set

A look at some of the most memorable sophomore albums from some of the biggest musicians

-

Lorde’s long-awaited, much anticipate­d sophomore album will be released Friday. Melodrama comes four years after the Grammy-winning Pure Heroine, which featured the worldwide smash (and oft-covered) Royals. It’s a tough act for the 20-year-old New Zealander to follow, but many other artists have avoided the sophomore slump. Here are five of the best second albums in music history, writes Jim Reyno. 1 Bob Dylan, The Freewheeli­n’ Bob Dylan

Career-defining album for Dylan ... for the folk phase of his career, at least. Contains the scathing indictment Masters of War, one of the 1960s’ most impassione­d protest songs. The oft-covered Blowin’ in the Wind is also on Freewheeli­n,’ as well as the underrated A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall, which features one of Dylan’s strongest vocal performanc­es.

2 The Band, The Band

What swings like Rag Mama Rag, with Rick Danko sawing on that fiddle? Nothing. OK, maybe Up on Cripple Creek with Levon Helm’s funky drumming. Not just toe-tapping, the Band’s self-titled album also touches the heart with tragic tales King Harvest (Has Surely Come) and the standard The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.

3 Black Sabbath, Paranoid

Essential heavy metal from Ozzy and the boys. The album gets right to it, kicking off with eight minutes of War Pigs, then right back at ya with the title track, Sabbath’s only Top 5 hit in the U.K. Paranoid the album also contains Iron Man, with that fist-pumping opening hook.

4 Public Enemy, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back

Featuring some of the most creative (and sometimes deliberate­ly annoying) uses of sampling in the hip-hop genre, Nation of Millions is robust, political, funky and fun. Includes Chuck D’s infamous media salvo Don’t Believe the Hype.

5 Nirvana, Nevermind

The video seemingly came out of nowhere, this guy in a striped shirt with scruffy hair and scruffier voice, tearing it up in a high school gym. But the video — and the song — Smells Like Teen Spirit became ubiquitous in the late summer of ’91. The album Nevermind provided a soundtrack for a generation, and Kurt Cobain became that generation’s reluctant spokespers­on.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada