Song of the Day #5,816: ‘No More “I Love You’s”‘ – Annie Lennox

Today’s 1995 album isn’t exactly new to me — it found a home in my CD collection when I married my wife 27 years ago. But I haven’t spent enough time with it over the years to consider it a favorite.

Annie Lennox’s Medusa was her second solo album after taking a break from Eurythmics in 1990. Her first release, Diva, was a very successful collection of original pop soul songs. This one had a similar sound but focused entirely on covers of other artists’ material.

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Song of the Day #5,815: ‘1979’ – Smashing Pumpkins

Smashing Pumpkins’ third studio album was a sprawling, two-disc opus that became an unlikely hit in 1975. Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness combines the band’s typical heavy metal and grunge sound with softer, more experimental songs, resulting in a 28-track marathon.

There’s a theory that every double album would be better if culled down to its best 12 songs (see my recent editing of Taylor Swift’s The Tortured Poets Department). That is definitely the case with this one.

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Song of the Day #5,814: ‘Always Be My Baby’ – Mariah Carey

As Throwback Weekends have made clear, Mariah Carey was dominant in the mid-90s. The singer’s fifth studio album, 1995’s Daydream, became the most biggest her career and one of the top-selling albums of all time.

Buoyed by three #1 hits, the album reached Diamond status. Those three chart-toppers (‘Fantasy,’ ‘One Sweet Day,’ and ‘Always Be My Baby’) spent a collective six months atop the Hot 200.

This sort of pop-inflect R&B is definitely not my thing, so I didn’t find a ton to like in this album. But I will admit an affection for two of those hit singles.

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Song of the Day #5,813: ‘Big Me’ – Foo Fighters

I’m far more intrigued by the story of Foo Fighters’ debut album than I am by the album itself.

Six months after the suicide of Kurt Cobain, Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl channeled his grief into a six-day recording session, hoping to have some fun in the studio and take his mind off the loss of his friend.

He recorded songs he had written during his time with Nirvana but never shared with the band for fear of not stacking up to Cobain as a songwriter.

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Song of the Day #5,812: ‘You Oughta Know’ – Alanis Morissette

Over the next two weeks, I’ll look at 1995 albums that didn’t make my personal top ten, either because I’ve never heard them or I haven’t heard them enough to qualify.

Or, in today’s case, because the album isn’t a favorite but it’s too big to deny.

Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill was not only the top-selling album of 1995, it is the 14th top-selling album worldwide of all time, and the highest-selling debut album in history.

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