Album Releases by Genre
Shangri-La Dee Da
by Stone Temple Pilots
June 19, 2001
|
||
Deep Down & Dirty
by Stereo MC's
June 12, 2001
|
||
Sugar Ray
by Sugar Ray
June 12, 2001
|
||
Take off Your Pants & Jacket
by blink-182
June 12, 2001
|
||
The Invisible Band
by Travis
June 12, 2001
|
Poses
by Rufus Wainwright
June 5, 2001
|
||
Beyond Good & Evil
by The Cult
June 5, 2001
|
||
Amnesiac
by Radiohead
June 5, 2001
|
||
10,000 Hz Legend
by Air
May 29, 2001
The French indie-electronica band made waves with their 1998 debut 'Moon Safari,' but since then their only release has been the motion picture score to Sofia Coppola's "The Virgin Suicides." The wait for their true sophomore album is over with the release of '10,000 Hz Legend,' which includes guest vocal contributions from Beck and Buffalo Daughter.
|
||
Flowers
by Echo & the Bunnymen
May 22, 2001
|
The Invisible Man
by Mark Eitzel
May 22, 2001
|
||
People Are Expensive
by Echobelly
May 21, 2001
|
||
Lateralus
by Tool
May 15, 2001
|
||
Open
by Cowboy Junkies
May 15, 2001
|
||
God Bless The Go-Go's
by The Go-Go's
May 15, 2001
Believe it or not, this is indeed a brand-new album from L.A.'s Go-Go's -- their first in 17 years, to be exact. The original lineup (including Belinda Carlisle and Jane Wiedlin) is intact for this 13-track outing, produced by Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade (Hole, Radiohead). Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong is featured on the first single, "Unforgiven."
|
Exciter
by Depeche Mode
May 15, 2001
This is the first album of new material since 1997's 'Ultra' for Depeche Mode, which again sees the band as a trio (consisting of David Gahan, Martin L. Gore, and Andy Fletcher) but also sees them experimenting more with a wider variety of sounds, including acoustic guitar. It is DM's first time in the studio with producer Mark Bell, who has previously worked with Bjork and was a member of the early-90s techno outfit LFO. The lead single from the 13-track album is "Dream On."
|
||
Stay Human
by Michael Franti & Spearhead
May 15, 2001
|
||
Weezer [2001]
by Weezer
May 15, 2001
This "green album," produced by Ric Ocasek, is actually the second untitled album for the Los Angeles band, not to be confused with 1994's "blue album." The album is the band's first since leader Rivers Cuomo's graduation from Harvard -- in fact, it is their first since their 1996 sophomore effort, 'Pinkerton,' which alienated some fans with a shift toward an angrier sound.
|
||
Reveal
by R.E.M.
May 15, 2001
'Reveal,' the Athens, GA band's 12th full-length album, marks the 20-year anniversary of the group. Operating as a trio for the second consecutive outing, R.E.M. offer up 12 new tracks, mainly of the mid-tempo acoustic guitar and keyboard variety. Guests include Joey Waronker, Ken Stringfellow (The Posies), and Scott McCaughey (The Young Fresh Fellows).
|
||
Break The Cycle
by Staind
May 8, 2001
|
||
Look Into The Eyeball
by David Byrne
May 8, 2001
|
||
Black Market Music
by Placebo
May 8, 2001
|
||
Mechanical Wonder
by Ocean Colour Scene
May 1, 2001
|
||
The Optimist LP
by Turin Brakes
May 1, 2001
|
||
Know Your Enemy
by Manic Street Preachers
April 24, 2001
|
||
The Electric Mile
by G Love & Special Sauce
April 24, 2001
|
||
Take Back The Universe (And Give Me Yesterday)
by Creeper Lagoon
April 17, 2001
|
||
Just Enough Education To Perform
by Stereophonics
April 17, 2001
|
||
No More Shall We Part
by Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
April 10, 2001
|
||
Old Ramon
by Red House Painters
April 10, 2001
Stuck in label limbo since 1997, 'Old Ramon' finally sees the light of day, thanks to Sub Pop records. It is the first official RHP release since 1996's 'Songs For A Blue Guitar,' although frontman Mark Kozelek released the solo album 'What's Next to the Moon' and appeared in the film "Almost Famous" in the interim.
|
||
The Negatives
by Lloyd Cole
April 3, 2001
|
||
Isolation Drills
by Guided by Voices
April 3, 2001
|
||
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
by Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
April 3, 2001
|
||
Drops Of Jupiter
by Train
March 27, 2001
|
||
God Says No
by Monster Magnet
March 27, 2001
|
||
Interlude
by Saint Etienne
March 20, 2001
|
||
The Facts Of Life
by Black Box Recorder
March 20, 2001
|
||
All About Chemistry
by Semisonic
March 13, 2001
|
||
Sunny Border Blue
by Kristin Hersh
March 6, 2001
|
||
Nice Cheekbones and a Ph.D
by The Posies
March 6, 2001
|
||
Duke Lion Fights The Terror!!
by Bigdumbface
March 6, 2001
|
||
Group Sounds
by Rocket From The Crypt
March 6, 2001
|
||
Driving A Million
by Gwenmars
March 6, 2001
|
||
ANThology
by Alien Ant Farm
March 6, 2001
|
||
God Bless The Blake Babies
by The Blake Babies
March 6, 2001
|
||
Cydonia
by The Orb
February 27, 2001
|
||
Phantom Moon
by Duncan Sheik
February 27, 2001
|
||
Let The War Against Music Begin
by The Minus 5
February 27, 2001
|
||
The Red Thread
by Arab Strap
February 27, 2001
|
||
Because We Hate You
by The Young Fresh Fellows
February 27, 2001
|
||
What's Next To The Moon
by Mark Kozelek
February 20, 2001
The first full-length solo album from Red House Painters frontman Mark Kozelek (following his 2000 EP, 'Rock N Roll Singer') consists entirely, believe it or not, of Bon Scott-era AC/DC covers. You'd never guess it by listening to the album, however, as Kozelek transforms them into something entirely new.
|
||
A Rollins In The Wry
by Henry Rollins
February 20, 2001
|
||
Stephen Malkmus
by Stephen Malkmus
February 13, 2001
|
||
Complete B-Sides
by The Pixies
February 13, 2001
|
||
To Record Only Water For Ten Days
by John Frusciante
February 13, 2001
|
||
Mission Accomplished [EP]
by Tricky
February 6, 2001
|
||
Live!
by Luna
February 6, 2001
Luna's first live recording compiles performances from New York's Knitting Factory and Washington D.C.'s 9:30 Club, including the band's final show with bassist Justin Harwood and one of its first with Harwood's replacement Britta Phillips. The disc includes songs from each of Luna's five studio albums, as well as one track ("4th of July") from frontman Dean Wareham's previous band, Galaxie 500.
|
||
Things We Lost In The Fire
by Low
February 6, 2001
|
||
From The Desk Of Mr. Lady [EP]
by Le Tigre
January 30, 2001
|
||
Dog In The Sand
by Frank Black & The Catholics
January 30, 2001
|
||
York Blvd
by Acetone
January 16, 2001
|
||
Salival
by Tool
December 12, 2000
|
||
Live
by Alice in Chains
December 5, 2000
|
||
Renegades
by Rage Against the Machine
December 5, 2000
|
||
The Best Of Blur
by Blur
November 21, 2000
|
||
Volume 2
by Echoboy
November 21, 2000
|
||
Poem
by Delerium
November 21, 2000
|
||
Familiar To Millions
by Oasis
November 21, 2000
|
||
Songs From An American Movie, Vol. 2: Good Time For A Bad Attitude
by Everclear
November 21, 2000
|
||
The Fifth Release From Matador
by Pizzicato Five
November 21, 2000
|
||
Danelectro EP
by Yo La Tengo
November 14, 2000
|
||
Conspiracy of One
by The Offspring
November 14, 2000
|
||
Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)
by Marilyn Manson
November 14, 2000
|
||
Everything & Nothing
by David Sylvian
November 7, 2000
|
||
Pure
by Gary Numan
November 7, 2000
|
||
Pelo
by The Aluminum Group
November 7, 2000
|
||
Live at the Mark, Tom & Travis Show (The Enema Strikes Back)
by blink-182
November 7, 2000
|
||
Parachutes
by Coldplay
November 7, 2000
|
||
I Guess Sometimes I Need to Be Reminded Of How Much You Love Me
by Magnetophone
November 7, 2000
|
||
Halfway Between the Gutter and the Stars
by Fatboy Slim
November 7, 2000
|
||
All That You Can't Leave Behind
by U2
October 31, 2000
|
||
Haunted
by Poe
October 31, 2000
Poe's second album is a concept album, of sorts, about the death of her father (noted documentarian Tad Danielewski). Partially based on the autobiographical novel House of Leaves by Poe's brother Mark Z. Danielewski, 'Haunted' utilizes tapes of her father's voice as well as a mix of dark electronic and organic sounds.
|
||
Buzzle Bee
by High Llamas
October 24, 2000
|
||
More Light
by J. Mascis & the Fog
October 24, 2000
|
||
Whoa, Nelly!
by Nelly Furtado
October 24, 2000
|
||
Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea
by PJ Harvey
October 24, 2000
PJ Harvey's fifth, and possibly best, album sees her venturing away from the electronic experimentation of 1998's 'Is This Desire?' and returning to the purer rock sound prevalent on her early releases. Radiohead's Thom Yorke guests on the duet "This Mess We're In." Winner of the 2001 Mercury Music Prize.
|
||
Disco Volante
by Cinerama
October 24, 2000
|
||
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
by Limp Bizkit
October 17, 2000
|
||
Eat at Whitey's
by Everlast
October 17, 2000
|
||
Bedlam Ballroom
by Squirrel Nut Zippers
October 17, 2000
|
||
Vapor Transmissions
by Orgy
October 10, 2000
|
||
Abandoned Shopping Trolley Hotline
by Gomez
October 10, 2000
|
||
Breach
by The Wallflowers
October 10, 2000
|
||
Kid A
by Radiohead
October 3, 2000
Seemingly unwilling to stick to a successful formula, Radiohead follow their breakthrough album 'OK Computer' with this much more experimental work (recorded during sessions that also spawned the later-released 'Amnesiac' album), which ventures even further away from conventional song structure and embraces electronica more fully (even sounding at times like Aphex Twin).
|
||
Bowie At The Beeb
by David Bowie
October 3, 2000
|
||
Oui
by The Sea and Cake
October 3, 2000
|
||
The Hour of Bewilderbeast
by Badly Drawn Boy
October 3, 2000
|
||
Warning
by Green Day
October 3, 2000
|
||
Bootleg: Detroit
by Morphine
September 26, 2000
|
||
The Magnificent Tree
by Hooverphonic
September 26, 2000
|


















![Weezer [2001]](https://static.metacritic.com/images/products/music/0/d16c24fdb58e0d26fbcff77907e597b5-98.jpg)





































![Mission Accomplished [EP]](https://static.metacritic.com/images/products/music/7/1598c8e247ced63a5daabc8d3931b1dd-98.jpg)


![From The Desk Of Mr. Lady [EP]](https://static.metacritic.com/images/products/music/6/b9a8dbbdbb2fb3d97d569ab0d1f03117-98.jpg)








































