I mean, at this point, I'm pretty set in my ways, I think this is probably the same list I've provided every single time we've ever done this
1. U2 - The Unforgettable Fire - I still have the strongest memories of being mesmerized by the title track to this album when I first received Best of 1980-1990, but the album itself was one of the last I heard. Funny enough, a friend of mine in high school bought it for me as a last minute Christmas gift. I haven't talked to her in a decade, but I can't thank her enough for introducing me to something so wonderful.
2. U2 - Achtung Baby - God, I still can't believe how strongly this album stirs my emotions. I've told you all this story before, but when I was 14 years old in Jr. High, I would listen to this album on repeat while I was working on a play as a stage hand. One of my strongest and longest lasting crushes was also working on that play, and U2 was one of the only things we ever had a semi-normal conversation about. I'm embarrassed to think back on it, on one hand, but on the other, boy is that a fun childhood memory. I also remember sitting at lunch carrying the lyric book with me around almost all of the time and thinking that So Cruel was the deepest song ever written.
3. U2 - The Joshua Tree - Funny enough, this was the second to last U2 album I heard >_>. I have no strong memories, besides laying in my room in the dark and just focusing in on it as I FINALLY heard it, way too late into my fandom at that point (The first time I heard it straight through was after my mom bought it for me when the 20th anniversary addition came out. So 7 years after I got into U2.)
4. Bruce Springsteen - Born in the U.S.A. - No real explanation, just whenever I hear this album, I'm sucked in until the end, despite kinda hating two tracks on it.
> 5. The Cure - Disintegration - Notating that this is a change on my list, this album used to come in at #7. It honestly might really be my 3rd or 4th favorite album at this point, I'm not really sure. But when I listen to it, it's the fastest 70 minutes of my life. I cry evrytime.
6. James Horner - The Land Before Time Soundtrack - speaking of crying everytime. This album is almost too much for me, most of the time I can't get through it without shedding a few tears. And since Horner's untimely passing in 2015, I've been even more emotional whenever I hear that familiar theme.
7. Pink Floyd - The Wall - Part memory, part true love. I was about 8 or 9 years old the first time I listened to The Wall with my dad in his new truck. When I was in college, I decided I was going to be "into music" in the sense that I was now going to listen to more albums. One of the first things I did was decide to see if I actually liked The Wall or not, since I hadn't heard it in about 11 years at that point. It turned out that I did.
8. Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago - I am noticing that a lot of the albums on this list make me very emotional

. There's not deeper reason to this one, really, it's just a beautiful album and I love it.
9. The Killers - Hot Fuss - The first CD I bought for the radio in my first car. I listened to this and L.A.M.B. by Gwen Stefani on constant loop, when I wasn't listening to my mix CDs. It's never stopped being one of the most important musical pieces in my life.
10. Bruce Springsteen - Born to Run - Another of those, "well I liked this when I was little, I wonder if I still do" moments. Except that instead of the album, I used to be obsessed with the Sesame Street song Born to Add. The very first time I ever bought a song because it was on the front page of iTunes was when I was in college and Radio Nowhere first came out. They were advertising it, and I thought, "hmm, I was always told I like Bruce Springsteen." So I bought it. That was in 2007. Nearly 10 years later and the Boss and I are pretty much inseparable. This was the first thing I got after I went ahead and purchased
Magic. It was at the top of my list for the longest time. The only reason I think it's fallen so low, at this point, is that I've listened to it TOO many times.
11. Peter Gabriel - Peter Gabriel IV (Security)- Picking my favorite album by Peter Gabriel is one of the hardest decisions for me to make, but in the end I always default to this one, as I think it's his most successfully ambitious.
And of course, I could go on....the next few albums on the list are also those albums that I almost feel define me:
Full Moon Fever
Feed the Animals
The Hurting
Lonesome Jubilee
Rumors
Get that classic rock, pop plunderphonics nonsense, new wave, heartland music, and Fleetwood Mac all mashed together and you get yourself a bono_212