The Spin Alternative Record Guide is a music reference book compiled by the American music magazine Spin and published in 1995 by Vintage Books. It was edited by the rock critic Eric Weisbard and Craig Marks, who was the magazine's editor-in-chief at the time. The book has essays and reviews from a number of prominent critics on albums, artists and genres considered relevant to the alternative music movement. Contributors who were consulted for the guide include Ann Powers, Rob Sheffield, Simon Reynolds and Michael Azerrad.

The book did not sell particularly well and received a mixed reaction from reviewers in 1995. The quality and relevance of the contributors' writing were praised, while the editors' concept and comprehensiveness of alternative music were seen as ill-defined. Nonetheless, it inspired a number of future music critics and helped to revive the career of the folk artist John Fahey, whose music was covered in the guide.

Content

Ann Powers (right) contributed to the book, while Robert Christgau (left) loaned records from his personal collection to assist in the creation of the guide.

Spanning 468 pages, the Spin Alternative Record Guide compiles essays by 64 music critics on recording artists and bands who either predated, were involved in, or had developed from alternative rock. Each artist's entry is accompanied by their discography, with albums rated with a score between one and ten. Unlike the third edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992), which limited its discographies to albums currently in-print on CD, the Spin Alternative Record Guide offered more comprehensive album discographies. The entries are accompanied by album artwork.

The book's editors included contributions from noted journalists and critics such as Charles Aaron, Gina Arnold, Michael Azerrad, Byron Coley, Ann Powers, Simon Reynolds, Alex Ross, Rob Sheffield and Neil Strauss. Sheffield wrote the bulk of the guide's entries, while Powers "allowed her home to become command central on the book for many months". Though he did not contribute his own writing, Robert Christgau assisted in the creation of the guide by loaning out records from his personal collection as needed.

The contributors curated an overall "Top 100 Alternative Albums" list in an appendix, ranking the Ramones' 1976 self-titled debut album at number one. A few dozen personal top-ten record lists from contributors and musicians are interspersed throughout the book. The musicians who provided their own top-ten lists are Mark Arm, Lori Barbero, Lou Barlow, Kurt Bloch, King Coffey, Digable Planets (members Craig "Knowledge" Irving and Mariana "Ladybug" Vieira), Tanya Donelly, Greg Dulli, Gordon Gano, Greg Graffin, Kristin Hersh, Georgia Hubley, Calvin Johnson, Jon Langford, Courtney Love, Barbara Manning, Mac McCaughan, Buzz Osborne (listed as King Buzzo), Joey Ramone, Jim Reid, Lætitia Sadier, Sally Timms, Steve Turner and Josephine Wiggs.

Scope and definition of "alternative"

Even by the standards of the time, the Spin Alternative Record Guide took an unusually inclusive approach to the boundaries of what "alternative" could mean. Before 1991, the genre "alternative rock" conventionally referred to post-punk and college rock. Within a few years, "alternative" had broadened into a catchall term for any rock bands outside the mainstream, regardless of their particular style — even as, paradoxically, "alternative" music became hugely popular and commercially successful. As a result, "alternative" was increasingly derided as a vague or even incoherent category.

As summarized by the scholar Gayle Wald, the book's introduction defined "alternative" rock as "an aesthetic that disavows, or evinces critical mistrust of, earlier rock subjectivities as well as the music industry itself". Rather than limiting its scope strictly within the musical genre of "rock" per se, the guide's coverage encompassed a wide range of non-rock artists who had adopted an anti-commercial stance or were aligned with a particular subculture. In an introductory essay titled "What Is Alternative Rock?", Weisbard explored the genre's origins and, more broadly, "alternative sensibilities" in other musical traditions. "Alternative rock lacks the proud boundaries that rock's original tradition kept so well guarded," he wrote:

More than jazz, blues, country, or any other musical genre, old-style rock was defined by a mass appeal you didn't have to sneer at, the mythic popularity of the universal youth music that turned the repressed fifties into the rebellious sixties... Alternative rock, on the other hand, is still anti-generationally dystopian, subculturally presuming fragmentation; it's built on an often neurotic discomfort over massified culture, takes as its archetype bohemia far more than youth, and never expects that its popular appeal, such as it is, will have much of a social impact.
Black and white photo of a group of four singers—two women and two men—all in flamboyant costumes
ABBA, 1979

The book's selection of music was shaped by the generation gap between the baby boomers and Generation X. Marks said that he and Weisbard "saw [the book] as a way to give definition to second-generation rock 'n' roll". In this respect, the book was both intended and received as a generational counterpoint to The Rolling Stone Album Guide.

The guide has 379 entries in total. An entry in the book typically covers a single artist or band, a set of closely affiliated artists, a multi-volume series of various artists compilations or a selected discography representing an entire musical genre. Records in the guide were chosen from a variety of genres considered relevant to alternative music's development. These include 1970s punk rock, 1980s college rock, 1990s indie rock, noise music, reggae, electronic, new wave, heavy metal, krautrock, synthpop, disco, alternative country, hip hop, grunge, worldbeat and avant-garde jazz. Acknowledging the possibility that their selections and exclusions would be objectionable to some readers, Weisbard wrote in the introduction, "Not all these choices are defensible: As stated at the onset, alternative lacks strong boundaries. But we had to draw the line somewhere." Weisbard and Marks said the book was meant to be "suggestive" of alternative music, rather than "comprehensive".

Most artists associated with classic rock are excluded. For example, the guide omits the Beatles, the Beach Boys, Cream, Peter Gabriel, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, the Rolling Stones, Van Halen and Frank Zappa — even though each of these artists meaningfully influenced "alternative" music to some extent. However, a handful of artists associated with the "classic rock" era can be found in the guide, among them Iggy Pop, Lou Reed, Neil Young and AC/DC.

A range of mainstream pop artists spanning a variety of styles are given entries, including Culture Club, Duran Duran and Lenny Kravitz. Some pop musicians are afforded prominent placement and a perhaps surprisingly high degree of acclaim. For instance, the very first alphabetical entry is the Swedish pop supergroup ABBA. Madonna's 1990 greatest hits album The Immaculate Collection is ranked as the 11th best alternative record. Other non-rock artists reviewed in the book include the jazz composer Sun Ra, the country singer-songwriter Lyle Lovett and the Qawwali singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

Rating system

  1. 1950s (2.20%)
  2. 1960s (8.90%)
  3. 1970s (35.8%)
  4. 1980s (36.6%)
  5. 1990–1995 (16.5%)

Records received a rating between one and ten points based on the judgment of the reviewer. A red dingbat beside a record's title indicated that it also appeared in the Top 100 at the back of the book. Several records in the Top 100 received a score lower than 10, while many records that received a 10 did not appear in the Top 100, because an individual reviewer's assessment could conflict with the list's collective consensus (and vice versa). Still, there was some editorial oversight and control of the ratings, as Weisbard later explained:

I don't remember messing too much with what writers said. I remember Byron Coley wanted to give every single thing he wrote about practically a 10 [laughs], and I thought that was a little excessive, so I remember taking all of his number scores down a couple of pegs—and that's probably in some ways reflective of me not being as close to Byron Coley—but in most cases, I didn't worry about it too much. I have a vague memory of arguing with Rob Sheffield about giving Madonna's Immaculate Collection less than a 10 when we were going to put it in the Top 100... Rob is somebody who very much has his own vision of things, but has earned the right to have that. But so, if I remember correctly—and I might not, it's been twenty years—we let that one go and it's just a difference of opinion within the book.

Records that received a 10

The following 172 records received the guide's highest score from the reviewer who rated the discography of the given artist, compilation series, or genre. A record with a 10 was deemed to be either "[a]n unimpeachable masterpiece or a flawed album of crucial historical significance".

Key
Indicates a various artists compilation album; the name listed is either the name of the compilation series or the name of the record label.
#Indicates the record is a compilation of either a particular artist or various artists.
Records assigned a score of 10 in the Spin Alternative Record Guide
Artist / series / labelTitleYearReviewed byRef.
ABBAThe Singles: The First Ten Years #1982Barry Walters
ABBA Gold #1992
AirAir Lore1979K. Leander Williams
Albert AylerSpiritual Unity1964K. Leander Williams
Nuits de la Fondation Maeght, Volume 11971
Beastie BoysLicensed to Ill1986Rob Sheffield
Paul's Boutique1989
BeckMellow Gold1994Eric Weisbard
The B-52'sThe B-52's1979Johnny Huston
Big StarRadio City1974Eric Weisbard
#1 Record/Radio City #1992
Third/Sister Lovers1978
Black FlagDamaged1981Eric Weisbard
BlondieParallel Lines1978Rob Sheffield
Boogie Down ProductionsCriminal Minded1987dream hampton
David BowieChangesbowie #1990Rob Sheffield
BuzzcocksSingles Going Steady #1979Barry Walters
John CageThe 25-Year Retrospective Concert of the Music of John Cage1994Neil Strauss
John CaleParis 19191973Ann Powers
CanSoon Over Babaluma1974Simon Reynolds
Captain BeefheartShiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller)1978Jeff Salamon
Cheap TrickCheap Trick1977Jim Greer
ChicDance, Dance, Dance: The Best of Chic #1991Barry Walters
The ClashThe Clash1977Rob Sheffield
The Clash [US version]1979
The CleanCompilation #1986
Ornette ColemanSomething Else!!!!: The Music of Ornette Coleman1958K. Leander Williams
The Shape of Jazz to Come1959
Ornette!1962
Ornette on Tenor
The Unprecedented Music of Ornette Coleman1968
Dancing in Your Head1977
Of Human Feelings1982
Ornette Coleman & Pat MethenySong X1986
Elvis CostelloThis Year's Model1978Bill Wyman
2½ Years #1993
DescendentsMilo Goes to College1982Eric Weisbard
Two Things at Once #1987
Dinosaur Jr.You're Living All Over Me1987Rob Sheffield
The Disco Years series †The Disco Years, Volume One: Turn the Beat Around (1974–1978) #1990Chuck Eddy
Joe ElyHonky Tonk Masquerade1978Terri Sutton
The English BeatI Just Can't Stop It1980Will Hermes
Brian EnoAnother Green World1975Ann Powers
Brian Eno II: Vocal #1993
Brian Eno I: Vocal #1994
Fairport ConventionUnhalfbricking1969Derk Richardson
The FallSlates1981Mike Rubin
This Nation's Saving Grace1985
458489 A Sides #1990
The FeeliesCrazy Rhythms1980Eric Weisbard
The Flesh EatersA Minute to Pray, a Second to Die1981Byron Coley
FlipperAlbum – Generic Flipper1981Andy Newman
The Flying Burrito BrothersThe Gilded Palace of Sin1969Eric Weisbard
Farther Along: The Best of the Flying Burrito Brothers #1988
FunkadelicMaggot Brain1971Mike Rubin
The Best of the Early Years Volume One #1977
One Nation Under a Groove1978
Music for Your Mother: Funkadelic 45s #1992
Gang of FourEntertainment!1979Ivan Kreilkamp
The Go-Betweens1978–1990 #1990Eric Weisbard
The Go-Go'sBeauty and the Beat1981Rob Sheffield
PJ HarveyRid of Me1993Ann Powers
To Bring You My Love1995
HoleLive Through This1994Ann Powers
Michael Hurley/ The Unholy Modal Rounders/ Jeffrey Frederick & the ClamtonesHave Moicy!1976Craig Marks and Jeff Salamon
Hüsker DüZen Arcade1984Eric Weisbard
New Day Rising1985
Ice CubeDeath Certificate1991Michael Eric Dyson
The JamSound Affects1980Rob Sheffield
Freedy JohnstonCan You Fly1992Eric Weisbard
Joy DivisionCloser1980Evelyn McDonnell
Kronos QuartetMorton Feldman: Piano and String Quartet1993Evelyn McDonnell
Fela KutiZombie1977K. Leander Williams
Original Sufferhead1984
Army Arrangement1985
Original Sufferhead: Classic Fela #1991
Lyle LovettPontiac1987Greg Sandow
Luaka Bop (label) †Brazil Classics 1: Beleza Tropical #1989Will Hermes
MadonnaLike a Prayer1989Rob Sheffield
Meat PuppetsMeat Puppets II1984
The MekonsFear and Whiskey1985Eric Weisbard
Original Sin #1989
The Mekons Rock 'n Roll [UK version]
Mercury RecordsElectronic Music/Musique Concrète #1979Neil Strauss
Minor ThreatComplete #1989Terri Sutton
MinutemenDouble Nickels on the Dime1984Rob Sheffield
Mission of BurmaMission of Burma #1988
MobyEverything Is Wrong1995Charles Aaron
The Modern LoversThe Modern Lovers1976Rob Sheffield
MotörheadNo Sleep 'til Hammersmith1981Jonathan Gold
My Bloody ValentineLoveless1991James Hunter
New OrderSubstance #1987Andrew Goodwin
New York DollsNew York Dolls1973Andrew Goodwin
Rock'n Roll #1994
NirvanaNevermind1991Eric Weisbard
NRBQAt Yankee Stadium1978Jim Walsh
Peek-A-Boo: The Best of NRBQ 1969–1989 #1990
Nuggets seriesNuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968 #1972Byron Coley
N.W.AStraight Outta Compton1989Greg Sandow
The Only OnesThe Only Ones1978Jim Walsh
Special View #1979
ParliamentMothership Connection1975Mike Rubin
Parliament's Greatest Hits #1984
Gram ParsonsGrievous Angel1974Eric Weisbard
GP/Grievous Angel #1990
PavementSlanted and Enchanted1992
Pere UbuThe Modern Dance1978
Dub Housing
Lee "Scratch" PerrySome of the Best #1985Milo Miles
Pet Shop BoysIntrospective1991Rob Sheffield
Liz PhairExile in Guyville1993
PixiesSurfer Rosa1993Eric Weisbard
PoguesRum Sodomy & the Lash1985Rob Sheffield
The PretendersThe Pretenders1979Ann Powers
PrinceDirty Mind1980Eric Weisbard
Sign o' the Times1987
The Hits/The B-Sides #1993
Public EnemyIt Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back1988Michael Eric Dyson
Public Image LtdMetal Box1979Simon Reynolds
Second Edition1980
The RaincoatsThe Raincoats1993Rob Sheffield
RamonesRamones1976
Rocket to Russia1977
R.E.M.Murmur1983Eric Weisbard
The ReplacementsLet It Be1984Rob Sheffield
The RochesThe Roches1979Ann Powers
Roxy MusicSiren1975Rob Sheffield
Run-DMCRaising Hell1986Eric Weisbard
Together Forever: Greatest Hits 1983–1991 #1991
Sasha & John DigweedRenaissance: The Mix Collection #1994Barry Walters
Sex PistolsNever Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols1977Eric Weisbard
Shanachie (label) †The Indestructible Beat of Soweto #1985Will Hermes
Sonny SharrockGuitar1986Mike Rubin
Ask the Ages1991
Siouxsie and the BansheesOnce Upon a Time: The Singles #1981Joy Press
SlayerReign in Blood1986Greg Sandow
The SlitsCut1979Joy Press
The Smashing PumpkinsSiamese Dream1993James Hunter
Patti SmithHorses1975Rob Sheffield
The SmithsThe Queen Is Dead1986
Sonic YouthDaydream Nation1988Eric Weisbard
The StoogesThe Stooges1969Mike Rubin
Fun House1970
Sugar Hill RecordsOld School Rap – The Sugar Hill Story (To the Beat Y'all) #1992Milo Miles
Sun RaSun Song1957K. Leander Williams
The Futuristic Sounds of Sun Ra1961
The Magic City1965
Sound of Joy1968
Solo Piano1977
Somewhere Else1993
Talking HeadsRemain in Light1980Jeff Salamon
TelevisionMarquee Moon1977Rob Sheffield
Richard and Linda ThompsonI Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight1974Derk Richardson
Shoot Out the Lights1982
Henry ThreadgillJust the Facts and Pass the Bucket1983K. Leander Williams
Throwing MusesThrowing Muses (1986)1986Evelyn McDonnell
A Tribe Called QuestThe Low End Theory1991Colson Whitehead
U2Achtung Baby1991Ann Powers
Edgard VarèsePoème Électronique1990Neil Strauss
The VaselinesThe Way of The Vaselines: A Complete History #1992Eric Weisbard
Caetano VelosoA Arte de Caetano Veloso #1988Will Hermes
The Velvet UndergroundThe Velvet Underground & Nico1967Eric Weisbard
The Velvet Underground1969
1969: The Velvet Underground Live1974
Violent FemmesViolent Femmes1983Bill Wyman
Lucinda WilliamsLucinda Williams1988Craig Marks
WirePink Flag1977Eric Weisbard
XWild Gift1981Rob Sheffield
X-Ray SpexGermfree Adolescents1978
Young Marble GiantsColossal Youth1980Eric Weisbard
Neil YoungTonight's the Night1975
Rust Never Sleeps1979
Notes

Publication and reception

Co-editor Eric Weisbard at the Pop Conference in 2015

In October 1995, Vintage Books published the Spin Alternative Record Guide in the United States. It was the first book compiled by Spin. After nine years in the red, the magazine had its first profitable year in 1994. Looking to expand into other print media, its founder and publisher, Bob Guccione Jr., struck a deal to publish three books through Vintage. Its release was roughly timed to commemorate the magazine's 10th anniversary. The book's suggested retail price was US$20 (equivalent to $42 in 2025). The price was comparable with its competitors, with most music reference books priced at or below $25 in 1995. It was published simultaneously by Random House of Canada, where it retailed for CA$27.95 (equivalent to $52 in 2025). According to Matthew Perpetua, the guide was reportedly "not a huge seller".

Reviewing the book in 1995, Adam Mazmanian from Library Journal recommended the Spin Alternative Record Guide to "both public and academic libraries". He found its reviews superior in "length and scope" to The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992), which also offered complete discographies of artists ranging from Jonathan Richman to Throbbing Gristle. Mazmanian further argued that "this guide fills a gap in the literature of modern music" at a time when "alternative" has developed a ubiquitous presence in the marketing of popular music. In New York magazine, Kim France called it "a well-edited, unpretentious, and comprehensive look at all the crazy stuff the kids are listening to these days". Matt Kopka of Publishers Weekly wrote that Spin's guide "may be as close to a surefire hit as the season can offer".

The Booklist critic Gordon Flagg was more qualified in his praise. He applauded the accuracy of the artist entries and the quality of the contributors' reviews, but found Weisbard's conception of "alternative" ill-defined and recommended The Trouser Press Record Guide (1991) as a more comprehensive option. Even more critical was Billboard magazine's Beth Renaud, who called much of the writing biased and the organization unencyclopedic. She said Weisbard's "obligatory" essay is outdated and vague in defining alternative rock and that the contributors "gush" over artists usually covered by Spin's magazine publication, with many relevant artists omitted in place of more perplexing additions. In a 1999 survey of various music guides for the Riverfront Times, Jason Toon labeled the Spin Alternative Record Guide as a "must to avoid" and dismissed it as a "flimsy, shallow... slicked-up cash-in job".

Influence and reappraisal

The guide's entry on John Fahey (pictured in 1984) helped revive the folk guitarist's career.

Having edited the book, Weisbard put his pursuit of a PhD at UC Berkeley on hold and accepted a job offer from Spin, which was the beginning of his career as a rock critic.[citation needed] Meanwhile, the guide's entry on the folk guitarist John Fahey introduced his music to a new generation of listeners. His entry in the guide was written by Byron Coley, who had previously profiled Fahey for Spin in 1994 at a time when the musician lived in reclusion and was commonly believed to be dead. According to Ben Ratliff at the New York Times, Coley's writings helped to revive Fahey's career by drawing renewed attention from record labels and the alternative scene. For his part, Fahey appreciated the guide's effect on his career and especially its association of his music with contemporary alternative subculture. With the arrival of a younger audience, Fahey felt vindicated in his long-standing misgivings about the marketing of his back catalog to an older demographic of listeners interested in traditionalist folk and new-age music. He wrote about the Spin guide in the liner notes of his 1997 album City of Refuge:

My category is alternative, period. I object to another categorization.... For many years I was listed in the Schwann Catalogue [sic] under popular. That is a much more accurate category than folk or new age. But, the most accurate category is Alternative. If you will only take the time to read the spread on me in the 1995 Spin Alternative Record Guide... and look at who is included in this book and who is not, and what it says about various people, then you will have a very clear understanding of what I have always tried to do. These people understand what I am doing more than any other group of people ever has.

The book has been cited as a bellwether of trends in critical consensus from the time of its publication. For example, the book's favorable treatment of ABBA marked a significant step in the revival of the band's reputation among critics. While ABBA had always been massively popular on an international scale, earlier critics had tended to dismiss their music as frivolous, unhip, or otherwise unworthy of serious attention. Conversely, the guide's omission of the English band Talk Talk — who had released commercially successful synth-pop before adopting an experimental approach on their last two albums, which were later seen as forebears of post-rock — signaled the low point of that group's reputation among American critics.

Personally, the book introduced me to a wide range of artists, gave me historical perspective, and got me hooked on a style of criticism that is extremely knowledgeable but also conversational and funny.

The Spin Alternative Record Guide was a landmark in the construction of an "alternative canon", alongside The Trouser Press Record Guide and Martin C. Strong's The Great Alternative and Indie Discography. It exerted a major influence on the next generation of music critics. American pop culture critic Chuck Klosterman cited the Spin Alternative Record Guide as one of his five favorite books, saying in 2011, "I fear this might be out of print, but it's probably my favorite music book of all time. Since its 1995 publication, I doubt a year has passed when I didn't reread at least part of it." In response to a question from a 2019 interview with The New York Times Book Review, Klosterman named it as the one book he would require Donald Trump to read, providing no further explanation of his choice. Robert Christgau wrote that while most music guides and encyclopedia books were unremarkable, the Spin Alternative Record Guide was one of the few "useful exceptions" because of what he felt was the "sharpest writing" from contributors such as Weisbard and Sheffield. Idolator's Chris Molanphy, on the other hand, said in retrospect that the book's list of the 100 best albums catered to "hipper, Gen-Xier tastes".

In 2011, the Spin Alternative Record Guide was included in the Pitchfork staff's list of their favorite music books. In an essay accompanying the list, Perpetua said the book's writers — either top critics at the time or those who have since become important figures in music journalism — outline the "alternative sensibility" by recognizing and connecting music from disparate genres in "an inclusive, open-minded survey, but it's defined as much by what's left out — pretty much all Boomer-oriented rock — as what it includes". According to Perpetua, the "number of young readers [who] pursued music criticism" because of the book was far greater than the copies it sold. Matthew Schnipper, editor of The Fader, bought the book after it was published and said he used it as a consumer guide for ten years. Along with its influence on future critics, the book was cited by the guitarist William Tyler as his only source of music education growing up in the pre-Internet age, having found it in a bookstore around the time it was published. "They had entries for all these different people that I had never heard of: Can, John Zorn, [John] Fahey, whatever."

Contributors

The full list of 64 contributors appears at the back of the book. Each write-up in the guide has a single author with the exception of the entry on the 1976 album Have Moicy! and its associated artists, co-written by Marks and Salamon. The table below notes the number of entries written by each contributor, as well as the number-one record on their top ten list (if one was provided).

Spin Alternative Record Guide contributors
Name of contributor#Top record choiceRef.
TitleArtist
Charles Aaron5NevermindNirvana
Grant Alden1—N/a
Steve Anderson5Marquee MoonTelevision
Gina Arnold14—N/a
Michael Azerrad1NevermindNirvana
Jonathan Bernstein10The Lexicon of LoveABC
Jesse Berrett1—N/a
Jason Cohen1Singles Going SteadyBuzzcocks
Cheo Coker2—N/a
Byron Coley11—N/a
Carol Cooper4—N/a
Renee Crist4Slanted and EnchantedPavement
Michael Eric Dyson2—N/a
Chuck Eddy3Appetite for DestructionGuns N' Roses
S. H. Fernando Jr.2—N/a
Jen Fleissner5Wild GiftX
Lee Foust1—N/a
Elysa Gardner2—N/a
Richard Gehr1Lick My Decals Off, BabyCaptain Beefheart and the Magic Band
Jonathan Gold3—N/a
Andrew Goodwin2—N/a
Jim Greer2—N/a
dream hampton2Ask RufusRufus & Chaka Khan
Howard Hampton1—N/a
James Hannaham6Entertainment!Gang of Four
Will Hermes7The Velvet Underground & NicoThe Velvet Underground
James Hunter9GentlemenThe Afghan Whigs
Johnny Huston6Throwing Muses (1986)Throwing Muses
Frank Kogan2—N/a
Ivan Kreilkamp5Fear and WhiskeyThe Mekons
Bob Mack1—N/a
Peter Margasak1—N/a
Craig Marks4Wild GiftX
Evelyn McDonnell5EasterPatti Smith
Rob Michaels2—N/a
Milo Miles9Soul MakossaManu Dibango
Paul Miller2—N/a
Ed Morales1—N/a
Andy Newman3—N/a
Chris Norris8It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us BackPublic Enemy
Ann Powers14Entertainment!Gang of Four
Joy Press7Throwing Muses (1986)Throwing Muses
David Prince2—N/a
Simon Reynolds9Fun HouseThe Stooges
Derk Richardson1—N/a
Alex Ross5Terminal Tower: An Archival CollectionPere Ubu
Jeffrey Rotter1Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)Brian Eno
Mike Rowell1—N/a
Mike Rubin6Fun HouseThe Stooges
Jeff Salamon7—N/a
Greg Sandow4—N/a
Rob Sheffield54Germfree AdolescentsX-Ray Spex
Doug Simmons1—N/a
Mark Sinker1The Modern DancePere Ubu
Natasha Stovall5Paid in FullEric B. & Rakim
Neil Strauss8Forever ChangesLove
Terri Sutton8London CallingThe Clash
Stephen Tignor1—N/a
Jim Walsh3The ClashThe Clash
Barry Walters5Aladdin SaneDavid Bowie
Eric Weisbard58Zen ArcadeHüsker Dü
Colson Whitehead6—N/a
K. Leander Williams5—N/a
Bill Wyman5—N/a

See also

Secondary sources

Citations to the Spin Alternative Record Guide

Bibliography

External links

  • in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • at Google Books ("snippet view")
  • , from the appendix of the Spin Alternative Record Guide, at RockListMusic.co.uk