The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Discobahn: Annivyrsary 1974

When I started gathering my research for this Annivyrsary back in January, one thing became clear—1974 was not a good year for music. This was very much a puberty period, an awkward personality vacuum that comes between shedding the old and fully realizing the new. This was to be my Waterloo.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

The Beatles and Change: Annivyrsary 1964

Something preposterous happened in 1964: On the week of April 4, one artist had the top five songs on the Billboard Hot 100. It’d never happened before and it hasn’t been matched since. Mere weeks before, in the warming days of March, America found that no fewer than 60% of all records sold were songs by the Beatles.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Yeezus Wept: Annivyrsary 2013

Safe to say three of the most consequential albums of my life came out in 2013, and that list doesn’t even touch the dozen other nearly perfect albums from this year—Trouble Will Find Me, Modern Vampires of the City, Cupid Deluxe, Yeezus… 2013 changed music as we know it, and a lot of the biggest artists today cemented their status or debuted this year, from The 1975 to Beyoncé.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

‘03 and Me: Annivyrsary 2003

I do remember that this is the year I got a Nintendo Power subscription though. And I do remember one day, flipping through said Nintendo Power in the back seat of the family van, my parents slid a revolution into the CD player. That was the day I first heard Now!That’s What I Call Music! 14.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Enter the Riot Grrrl: Annivyrsary 1993

So for me, ‘93 was the first year of the 90s, and its evidence lies in several places: in the birth of the Riot Grrrl movement and third wave feminism with Bikini Kill’s “Rebel Girl”; in Nirvana’s dyspeptic final album before Cobain’s untimely death; and in Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), the harbinger for the soon-to-be golden age of hip hop.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Max Rebo, King of Indie: Annivyrsary 1983

Some stories of note in 1983: the invention of Detroit techno, as embodied by the single “Clear” by Cybotron; the birth of English indie rock as we know it with The Smiths debut and follow up singles (“Hand in Glove” and “This Charming Man,” respectively); and the birth of American indie rock as we know it with R.E.M.’s Murmur.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Blockbuster Thrillers: Annivyrsary 1982

The first time I went crowd-surfing was in a stranger’s dark living room to “Come On Eileen.” I remember being lifted on shaky hands and the warm breeze borne from the drunken crowd. It was during that thumping chant of the bridge, every foot moving to the brow-beating stomp. My nose scraped the ceiling as I sang along.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

King Ziggy: Annivyrsary 1972

At the height of his fame, David Bowie forged Ziggy Stardust to help him withstand the heat of the limelight. He quickly came to resent it. He was starting to think that he was Ziggy. He even went as far as trying to kill Stardust off one summer in London. “That fucker would not leave me alone for years,” he once said.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Young Turks: Annivyrsary 1981

She and I stood face-to-face—cheeks rolling as we chewed in calculated fury—in a bathroom flooded so many times you could see from peeling paint the location of each waterline. Moments ago, we’d scoured the concrete for bright strips of green between the rippling sheet of the Mississippi River and the faded auditorium where we now conspired.

Read More
The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman The Annivyrsaries Jeff Lehman

Sound & Wonkavision: Annivyrsary 1971

At 11:59 p.m. on the first day of 1971, families watching The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson witnessed the last ad for cigarettes ever broadcast on television. 60 seconds dedicated to Virginia Slims. Those who preferred CBS’s Merv Griffin saw the same but for a different pack—Marlboros. Dick Cavett fans got Benson & Hedges.

Read More