Someone on Reddit posed a simple question: give me the most beautiful album you’ve ever heard. Any genre, any timeframe. The thread exploded. Hundreds of answers poured in, covering jazz and goth and ambient and folk and everything in between. Here are twenty of the best responses, and honestly, it’s a pretty great list.
‘Kind of Blue’ — Miles Davis
The most upvoted jazz answer in the thread, and no one should be surprised. This is the album that invented a mood. Cool, unhurried, and so perfectly recorded it sounds like the musicians are in the room with you.
‘Dark Side of the Moon’ — Pink Floyd
It showed up multiple times, and with good reason. One commenter who played through it for a New Year’s gig said that learning all its brilliant thematic connections and back-door transitions made them love it even more. Fifty-plus years in and it still sounds like the future.
‘In Rainbows’ — Radiohead
Multiple commenters called it out without hesitation. It’s the album where Radiohead stopped being cold and started being warm, all without sacrificing a single ounce of what made them great. Side two alone is worth the price of admission.
‘Disintegration’ — The Cure
The thread had genuine enthusiasm for this one. One commenter pointed out that the opener ‘Plainsong’ alone is a gorgeous piece of music, and they’re right. Lush, oceanic, and genuinely moving in a way that goth rock rarely gets credit for.
‘Astral Weeks’ — Van Morrison
Two separate commenters called it, one of them with a response that can only be described as enthusiastic punctuation. Recorded in two days in 1968, it sounds like it came from another dimension entirely. Nothing before or since sounds quite like it.
‘Heaven or Las Vegas’ — Cocteau Twins
Paired with ‘Mezzanine’ by Massive Attack in one of the thread’s best double picks. Elizabeth Fraser’s voice operates at a frequency that bypasses the brain entirely and goes straight somewhere deeper. Lush and completely otherworldly.
‘Mezzanine’ — Massive Attack
Dense, cinematic, and unsettling in the best possible way. This is trip-hop at its absolute peak, a record that sounds equally at home in a late-night headphone session or a film you’ll never forget.
‘Ágætis byrjun’ — Sigur Rós
The thread had enormous love for Sigur Rós across several albums, but this one and ‘( )’ came up the most. One commenter described discovering ‘Svefn-g-englar’ on college radio a quarter century ago and being changed by it. That tracks.
‘( )’ — Sigur Rós
Called an art rock dark masterpiece in the thread, and that’s about right. An album sung in a language the band invented, which somehow makes it more emotionally direct, not less. You don’t need to understand it to feel it.
‘Vespertine’ — Björk
Two separate commenters landed on this one. Intimate, wintry, and constructed from the tiniest sounds imaginable, harps and music boxes and whispers, built into something genuinely majestic. One of her very best.
‘The Seeds of Love’ — Tears for Fears
One commenter called it gorgeously recorded, and that’s the word. An album that took four years to make and sounds like it. Layered, ambitious, and emotionally enormous in ways that still catch people off guard.
‘Pet Sounds’ — The Beach Boys
It showed up and kept showing up in the replies. Brian Wilson building a cathedral out of car horns and sleigh bells and heartbreak. Still the most audacious thing anyone has ever done with a pop album.
‘Five Leaves Left’ — Nick Drake
Quiet, fingerpicked, and deeply melancholy in a way that feels like autumn afternoon light. Nick Drake barely got to make three albums, but this debut announced someone operating at a level most artists spend careers chasing.
‘Automatic for the People’ — R.E.M.
One commenter grouped it with Kraftwerk and Julien Baker, which is a very good triple bill. This is R.E.M. at their most spare and grief-stricken, an album about loss that somehow never feels hopeless.
‘Avalon’ — Roxy Music
Came up more than once, and one commenter said they were glad to see it right off the bat. Brian Ferry at his most cinematic and seductive, an album that sounds like the last slow dance of the evening and makes you wish it never ended.
‘Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots’ — The Flaming Lips
One commenter said they think ‘The Soft Bulletin’ might edge it out, which is a perfectly reasonable argument to have. But ‘Yoshimi’ has a warmth and gentle sadness that sneaks up on you completely.
‘What’s Going On’ — Marvin Gaye
One commenter said it’s the only album that can make them cry. That’s as good a definition of beautiful as any. A concept album about war and poverty and love that feels, impossibly, more relevant with every passing decade.
‘Wildflowers’ — Tom Petty
Called a masterpiece in the thread, and the response to that was pure emoji and gratitude. Petty at his most open-hearted, an album that sounds like driving somewhere good with the windows down and nothing on your mind.
‘Ghosteen’ — Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
One commenter described it as saturated with the spirit of his deceased son but also so beautiful and hopeful. Made in the wake of profound grief, it somehow transcends it. One of the most quietly devastating albums of the last decade.
‘Carrie and Lowell’ — Sufjan Stevens
Called haunting by the commenter who suggested it, which undersells it slightly. This is one of the most intimate and gut-wrenching records ever made, a meditation on loss and memory so personal it almost feels wrong to listen to, and yet completely impossible to stop.


