Latest news with #IsThisIt


NBC Sports
2 days ago
- Sport
- NBC Sports
Simms' '25 QB Countdown: ‘Is This It?
Chris Simms explains to Ahmed Fareed why Dak Prescott, Tua Tagovailoa and Trevor Lawrence belong in the "Is This It?" tier of the 2025 QB Countdown.


Indian Express
16-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Indian Express
Top 10 greatest albums of 21st century: Not Taylor Swift; Grammy's most-awarded artiste takes the top spot
Top 10 greatest albums of 21st century: The 21st century didn't just change how we listen to music, it transformed the very nature of what music means. At the turn of the millennium, building a music collection meant spending thousands on physical CDs. Fast forward, and now the entire history of recorded music fits in your pocket. It is streamable, sharable, and algorithmically sorted. From the rise of Napster to the reign of Spotify, the way we consume music has been completely rewritten. And yet, through all the technological upheaval – from MP3s to iPods, from torrents to TikTok – the album has endured. Even as playlists and singles took over the mainstream, the best artists doubled down on the long-form format, treating it not just as a collection of songs, but as a statement of vision and purpose. Today, a major album release is treated as a cultural moment, complete with countdown clocks, viral theories, and $40 vinyl reissues for records fans already stream daily. Artists like Beyonce and Taylor Swift evolved from hitmakers to era-defining auteurs. Others – like Kendrick Lamar, SZA, Bad Bunny, and Radiohead – reshaped the sound and soul of entire genres. They built new worlds in the wreckage of the old. Rolling Stone recently undertook the monumental task of ranking the 250 greatest albums of the 21st century, a list that spans continents, genres, and decades, showcasing the vibrant evolution of modern music. We've sifted through their ranking and curated a definitive Top 10 – the crème de la crème. These are the records that defined eras, elevated artistry, and changed the game. Whether you're a lifelong fan or a curious explorer, this list is a reminder of how powerful and transcendent music can be. With the drop of Is This It, The Strokes sparked a cultural reset. With their effortlessly cool, downtown NYC swagger and a sound that felt both vintage and vital, they delivered a debut that lit a fire under the rock scene. Drawing from the sharp edges of bands like Television and the Cars, and the laid-back attitude of Lou Reed and Tom Petty, they weaponised their influences. But it wasn't just nostalgia; The Strokes fused it all into something nervy, slick, and impossibly catchy. The album became the blueprint for a new wave of indie rock in the 2000s. Un Verano Sin Ti was Bad Bunny's sun-soaked tribute to Puerto Rico, a mix of dreamy nostalgia and political defiance. Packed with summer anthems like Después de la Playa and emotional cuts like Otro Atardecer, the album became 2022's most-streamed release globally and the first Spanish-language LP ever nominated for Album of the Year at the Grammys. It was a bold cultural statement, capped off in concerts with El Apagón, where Bad Bunny celebrated his island while confronting its colonial struggles. Kanye West's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy is hip-hop at its most extravagant and visionary. A maximalist masterpiece, it fuses grand orchestration with raw emotion, pairing soaring production with deeply introspective lyrics. Featuring an all-star cast, from Nicki Minaj's career-making verse on Monster to Bon Iver's unexpected transformation on Lost in the World,' the album is a genre-blurring triumph. With its lush soundscapes, bold sampling, and cinematic ambition, MBDTF remains a towering artistic achievement that few albums since have dared to rival. SZA made fans wait five years after her stunning debut CTRL, but SOS was more than worth it. With fearless honesty and genre-blurring sound, she delivered a raw, emotionally charged exploration of heartbreak, identity, and self-worth. Blending R&B with hip-hop, rock, and even country on the breakout hit Kill Bill, SZA showed there's no lane she can't own. Kendrick Lamar's good kid, m.A.A.d city stands as a defining hip-hop album of the 21st century, a gripping coming-of-age narrative set against the backdrop of Compton. Released in 2012, it's both deeply personal and universally resonant, tracing Lamar's struggles with violence, addiction, and identity. Blending intricate storytelling with rich production and features from the likes of Pharrell and MC Eiht, the album is cinematic in scope and lyrical in depth. On Folklore, Taylor Swift shed the stadium lights for candlelight, trading pop bombast for hushed introspection. Written in isolation with Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff, the album marks her boldest creative pivot — a moody, indie-folk departure filled with fictional storytelling and haunting melodies. From the aching grace of The 1 to the wistful high school love triangle spanning Cardigan, August, and Betty, Swift crafted a masterpiece. OutKast kicked off the 2000s by blowing open the boundaries of hip-hop with Stankonia, a fearless, genre-bending explosion of sound and style. From the frenetic energy of B.O.B. to the timeless soul of Ms. Jackson, the duo fused everything from gospel to funk to psychedelia into a singular vision. It marked the last time André 3000 and Big Boi's creative worlds fully aligned, resulting in a dazzling, chaotic, and deeply influential masterpiece. Frank Ocean took four years to create Blonde, a deeply personal and experimental follow-up to his acclaimed debut Channel Orange. After fulfilling his Def Jam contract with the visual album Endless, he surprised fans by releasing Blonde just hours later. The album blends futuristic R&B with dreamy, psychedelic textures, drawing inspiration from legends like Marvin Gaye and Brian Wilson. Featuring collaborations with Andre 3000 and Beyonce, Blonde explores themes of nostalgia, vulnerability, and self-discovery, capturing Ocean's raw emotions with a unique, introspective sound. When Kid A dropped in October 2000, the world was still optimistic and unfamiliar with the upheavals to come. Radiohead's fourth album broke new ground by fusing electronic textures, experimental sounds, and unconventional instrumentation to capture a growing sense of alienation and uncertainty. Songs like Idioteque and Everything in Its Right Place initially puzzled listeners but quickly gained acclaim. Since her 2013 self-titled album, Beyoncé has pushed boundaries, but Lemonade stands as her most raw and powerful work. It turns personal pain into a bold exploration of identity, blending genres from reggae to rock to country. It is a cinematic statement on Black womanhood and resilience, influencing culture and politics. Lemonade cemented Beyonce's legacy as one of the greatest artists of all time.