His 5 Essential Albums, From Television And Beyond
William Taylor
Punk pioneer Tom Verlaine has died at 73. For serious rock and punk fans, the loss of this guitarist and singer cuts deep. But, if youāre unfamiliar with Verlaineās brilliant music, or itās been a while since youāve revisited his excellent music, thereās never been a better time. Certainly best known as the founder of the ā70s punk band Television, Verlaineās music spans five decades and is way more varied than his early reputation suggests.
In honor of the passing of Tom Verlaine, here are five essential albums every rock fan and cool human needs to listen to right now.
5. Tom Verlaine (1979)
Verlaine released his first solo album just two years after his band Television dropped their iconic album, Marquee Moon. The stand-out track here is probably the last one, āBreakinā My Heart,ā though āLast Nightā and āThe Grip of Love,ā are both solid, too. Thereās more of a ā70s glam rock feeling to this album than his work with Television, but as ā70s rock albums go, this one is tragically underrated. The hugeness of āKingdom Comeā alone is worth the whole album.
4. Adventure (1978)
The second album from Verlaineās band Television is often overshadowed by the first, which is a bit of a shame. From the opening stomper āGlory,ā to the brilliant āAināt That Nothing,ā itās easy to see the entire crossroads of various genres of rock right here. On this record, Verlaineās voice sounds like its time traveling: This is a ā70s album, but it sounds like it could have been released either in the mid-'60s and given The Rolling Stones a run for their money or existed in the early aughts, right alongside The Strokes. Somehow, Adventure is either the greatest faux-60s rock album ever or the best aughts alternative record youāve never heard.
3. Warm and Cool (1992)
Like Brian Eno, Verlaineās brilliance wasnāt just signing, he was also a fantastic composer. And the proof of his range of artistic talent can be found on his first entirely instrumental album, Warm and Cool. This one is hard to track down, but itās worth it. At times, itās tempting to say this album is closer to sound art than rock, but that genre-busting is also the point.
2. Dreamtime (1981)
Easily Verlaineās most accessible and wonderful solo effort, the power of Dreamtime is the fact that you feel like youāve heard it before, even if you havenāt. Itās the kind of album you imagine Bowie wish heād made, and the sort of energy you long for today. One of the coolest tracks here is āThe Future is Noise,ā the soundtrack of being a little hungover and trying to figure it all out.
1. Marquee Moon (1977)
This is the completely perfect debut from Television, Verlaineās voice is timeless here. The title track is just shy of 10 minutes long and is truly one of the most epic rock songs of all time. Also, if you have little kids who are even a little bit into old-school rock, you may find that they will love this record. (Mine does!) Television toured with Blondie when this album dropped. So, if you want to listen to this, follow it up with Blondieās Parallel Lines and youāll have a perfect combo.
Hot tip: Thereās a 2003 reissue of Marquee Moon with a bunch of bonus tracks. If you donāt have the album at all, get that one!