Yeah, that's ridiculous. I'm not even a Pearl Jam fanboy.Teslag said:
No Pearl Jam Ten?
No Chili Peppers or Green Day (Dookie) either?!
Yeah, that's ridiculous. I'm not even a Pearl Jam fanboy.Teslag said:
No Pearl Jam Ten?
maroon man said:
No Boston? No list.
Quote:
It is indeed possible that Apple employees utilized AI to curate this list, leveraging several points that could guide an AI-driven selection process:
### Genre Diversity
AI algorithms can analyze vast amounts of music data across different genres, identifying influential and popular albums within each genre. By examining streaming data, critical reviews, and social media mentions, AI can curate a diverse list that includes rock, hip-hop, pop, R&B, electronic, alternative, and more.
### Temporal Range
AI can track the historical popularity and critical acclaim of albums over time. By analyzing trends and patterns in music consumption from different eras, AI can ensure the list includes classic albums from the 60s, 70s, and 80s, modern classics from the 90s and 2000s, and recent releases.
### Iconic Artists and Albums
AI can identify artists with significant cultural impact by aggregating data from music awards, critic reviews, and fan ratings. By recognizing artists with multiple influential albums, the AI ensures that icons like Beyonc, Radiohead, and The Beatles are appropriately represented.
### Gender Representation
AI can be programmed to consider diversity, including gender representation, by analyzing the contributions of female artists in various genres. Ensuring a balanced representation of influential female musicians can be part of the curation algorithm.
### Critical Acclaim vs. Popular Success
AI can balance critical acclaim and commercial success by weighing different metrics, such as sales data, streaming numbers, and critic scores. This allows the list to feature both critically lauded albums like "A Love Supreme" and commercially successful ones like "21."
### Unique Choices
AI can identify unique and innovative albums by analyzing niche music communities, specialist critic reviews, and genre-specific discussions. This ensures the inclusion of albums like "Untrue" by Burial, which may not be mainstream but are highly influential within their genres.
### Data Sources and AI Algorithms
AI curation would likely involve a combination of data sources and machine learning algorithms:
- **Streaming Data**: Analysis of streaming platforms to identify frequently played and highly rated albums.
- **Critic Reviews**: Natural language processing (NLP) to analyze reviews from music critics and aggregate scores from sites like Metacritic and Pitchfork.
- **Social Media Analysis**: Sentiment analysis on social media platforms to gauge public opinion and buzz around certain albums.
- **Historical Data**: Historical sales and chart performance to understand long-term popularity and impact.
### Implementation
To implement AI in curating such a list, Apple employees could have followed these steps:
1. **Data Collection**: Gather data from streaming platforms, music review sites, social media, and historical charts.
2. **Algorithm Development**: Develop machine learning models to analyze the data, identify patterns, and rank albums based on the criteria mentioned.
3. **Validation and Refinement**: Validate the AI-generated list against expert opinions and known benchmarks, refining the model to address any discrepancies or biases.
4. **Final Curation**: Combine AI insights with human expertise to finalize the list, ensuring it aligns with the intended diversity, representation, and balance.
### Conclusion
Given the complexity and multi-faceted nature of curating a list of top 100 albums, it's plausible that Apple employees employed AI to assist in this process. AI can efficiently handle large datasets, identify trends, and ensure a balanced representation across various dimensions, making it a valuable tool in compiling such a comprehensive and diverse list.
Big Al 1992 said:
Just AI'd this list and it's better than Apple's.
Meh.Big Al 1992 said:
Just AI'd this list and it's better than Apple's.
MD1993 said:
I would change songs/stations with anything in that top 20 (as far as a read.).
Brian Earl Spilner said:
I mean the reason for that is because most music from the past 20 years is *****
As already mentioned the whole idea of an album is a bit nebulous in the current streaming era. That being said I would put Eclipse- Momentum and Pretty Reckless- Death by Rock n Roll on my list at least. It is just that there is no significant money being poured into new rock by radio & producers so you have to seek it out a bit. Luckily many classic bands are helping by having the young bands open. For example The Pretty Reckless is opening for AC/DC now and we saw Dirty Honey opening for Black Crowes last tour.Chipotlemonger said:
BES did say "most". Also, just listing good new bands doesn't dispel the argument. Have any of the ones you mentioned had a full album that belongs up there with Abbey Road, Master of Puppets, or Ten? Doubtful. We are talking top 100 albums all time here.
G.I.Bro said:
MoP was 69 (nice)
Definitely up there.Cynic said:
Is Radiohead the most overrated band of all-time?
I never hear any of their songs on any 90s playlist yet they are always on these greatest whatever lists.