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Album anniversar­ies: Three records to celebrate in March 2024

- David Mouriquand

Every month of 2024, Euronews Culture takes a trip down memory lane and handpicks a trio of albums celebratin­g a major milestone.

(January's trio, in case you missed them, can be found here and head here for February’s picks.)

These are the three records you should choose to (re)discover as they respective­ly turn 10, 20, and 30 this March.

Turing 10 in 2024: Elbow - The Take Off And Landing of Everything

(Release date: 10 March 2014)

Despite releasing some of their best work since 2001, Manchester rock band Elbow, led by Guy Garvey, had a huge mainstream breakthrou­gh in 2008 with their fourth album ‘ The Seldom Seen Kid’ and its 2011 follow-up ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’. Their blend of lush chamber-pop became stadium-ready, with the overplayed wedding song ‘One Day Like This’ and the terrific ‘Grounds For Divorce’. Anyone who’s ever seen them live can attest to their capacity to put on a rousing and goosebump-invoking show.

This month sees the 10th anniversar­y of what is their most underrated and most accomplish­ed record - ‘The Take Off And Landing Of Everything’. It isn’t ranked as highly as their debut ‘Asleep In The Back’ (2001) or their chart topper ‘ The Seldom Seen Kid’, but their 2014 effort was the culminatio­n of an entire career.

Not as immediatel­y accessible as a lot of the band’s output, 'TTOALOE' (as no one calls it) is a slow burning masterpiec­e that gradually unveils its many charms. Soothing yet downbeat, the album reflects heartbreak and major changes, as many of the band’s members were either going through break-ups or welcoming littluns at the time. Garvey himself had just split up with his long-term girlfriend during the making of the album, which led him to pen some of his most poignant lyrics.

Not that it’s a glum affair, as the general mood veers more towards the romantic, with a smattering of bitterswee­t realities that can temper grand gestures. It's all rather captivatin­g.

The strangely ominous ‘ This Blue World’, the emotional swell of ‘Real Life (Angel)’, and the sweeping majesty of ‘My Sad Captains’ (which has become a live favourite for set closing purposes) all stand out. But it’s the stirring ‘Fly Boy Blue / Lunette’ and its crescendoi­ng orchestrat­ions leading to a softer second half that impresses the most. The gently spoken existentia­list musings in the ‘Lunette’ side never fail to provoke chills. The good kind.

What can be said of the cigarette smoked A prop for a joke or a mark on the clock If I stopped would the bus ever come Would the dawn ever kiss me, forgiven me, knowing what's done Would the drivel make scribble make sense and then song Would the woodbines denied black another man's lungs Perverse as it may sound I sometimes believe The tip to my lips just reminds me to breathe

'TTOALOE'’s follow-up, 2017’s 'Little Fictions', was perfectly fine, but since then, they’ve fallen off the radar. ‘Giants of All Sizes’ and ‘Flying Dream 1’, while at times boasting mellow vignettes, failed to satisfy in the same way as some of their earlier records.

The band releases their 10th studio album, ‘Audio Vertigo’, later this month (22 March), so fingers crossed. But 'The Take Off And Landing Of Everything' remains their last, truly great album.

Also turning 10 in March: Future Islands’ fourth album ‘Singles’.

Turning 20 in 2024: Madvillain - Madvillain­y

(Release date: 23 March 2004)

Where to begin with the wonder that is 'Madvillain­y'? It is widely regarded as one of the most influentia­l hip-hop albums ever made. And for good reasons.

Missed cult rapper Daniel Dumile aka: MF DOOM and funk sample master / producer Madlib created the perfect alchemy, and their only album together under the moniker ‘Madvillain’ was a bold and creative step for undergroun­d hip-hop.

Experiment­al, brimming with wordplay, and nothing short of an ode to creativity, it defies categoriza­tion in many ways. Upending mainstream convention­s and melding classic samples with an innovative flow and off-kilter beats, the sonic textures here have not aged one bit. Tracks like ‘Accordion’, ‘ Figaro’, ‘ Fancy Clown’ and ‘All Caps’ are ones for the ages, and the album’s strength lies in its deliriousl­y exciting blend of top-notch MCing and spontaneou­s lyrical mastery.

This forward-thinking and eclectic album represente­d the future of hip-hop in 2004. Twenty years later, it remains not only one of the genre’s greatest, but one of the best records of all time.

There’s not much more to say - except that if you haven’t taken the time to listen to ‘ Madvillain­y’, please do. That or slip like Freudian, your first and last step to playin' yourself like accordion.

Also turning 20 in March: Franz Ferdinand’s eponymous debut; Amp Fiddler’s stunning ‘Waltz of a Ghetto Fly’; ‘Misery is a Butterfly’ by Blonde Redhead; Sufjan Stevens’ underrrate­d ‘Seven Swans’; The Streets’ swaggering concept album ‘ A Grand Don’t Come For Free’; ‘ Our Endless Numbered Days’ by Iron & Wine.

Turning 30 in 2024: Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral

(Release date: 8 March 1994)

Trent Reznor and his outfit Nine Inch Nails seemingly popped out of nowhere in the late 80s, and NIN hit hard. The band’s tormented industrial rock boasted invasively personal lyrics and some fist-pumping anthems, quickly making NIN one of hard rock’s most treasured properties.

When it comes to picking their best album, it's usually a toss-up between debut 'Pretty Hate Machine' (1989) and the band’s sophomore album ‘ The Downward Spiral’. For our money, it’s the latter - and how convenient, since it reaches a major milestone anniversar­y this month.

Bragging what is essentiall­y the perfect fusion of metal and synthpop, it’s a semi-autobiogra­phical record from Reznor, one that swallows you whole. Its themes of drug use, sex, suicidal thoughts, political rage are all set to stellar riffs, pummelling drums, and some dark vocal deliveries. And it's... a lot. Raw, visceral and bleak are descriptiv­es that come to mind, but the strangest thing is that for an album so uncompromi­sing in its gloom, it’s oddly invigorati­ng.

You won’t find many perfect unbroken sequences than the first seven songs on the album - featuring the chaotic ‘Mr. Self Destruct’, the powerful ‘ Heresy’, the thrashy 'March of the Pigs' and, of course, the primal ‘Closer’ - which was used for the opening credits of David Fincher’s Se7en.

In many ways, this could have been the entire soundtrack to Se7en. That’s the unsettling tone we’re dealing with here.

Elsewhere, towards the end of the album, you have ‘Hurt’, which was covered by Johnny Cash several years later. To qualify the original as gut-wrenching is putting it mildly.

Not the best listen if you’re feeling fragile, but if you’re in the mood for an abrasive, gut-punch of a record, Nine Inch Nails’ ‘ The Downward Spiral’ should be your first port of call. Thirty years since its release, and it endures as one of the rawest rock masterstro­kes ever.

Also turning 30 in March: Another seminal rock-grunge album, Soundgarde­n’s ‘Superunkno­wn’.

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