TELL any *best album* to learn at school life
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Life would not be the same without music. That sentiment holds twice as true when it comes to talking about one's school years. At a time when you are going through seemingly-infinite transitional phases and overwhelming confusion is at an all-time high, music exists as both an escape and connecting force to the world outside your immediate purview; music can become something larger than yourself.
Quite possibly the only thing in existence capable of connecting The Plastics and the rest of us, how would middle school, high school, and college us existed without those albums that quite literally defined teenage us? After all, we all didn't grow up with lofi hip hop radio - beats to study/relax to. So, we asked ourselves what one album served as our guiding light through those tumultuous school years.
Avril Lavigne - Let Go
From the palpable agony in "Losing Grip," to the innocent infatuation in "Sk8er boi," to the tear-worthy loneliness in "I'm with You," there's no album that guided me through the early 2000s more than Avril Lavigne's Let Go. Introducing an emo side of pop music, Lavigne's dark and relatable lyrics undoubtedly rescued countless young women in the face of hormonal angst. Truth be told, I still bump it in the car more often than not.
-Yasmin Damoui
Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
In terms of pure listening time, Panic! at the Disco's debut or Green Day's American Idiot likely takes the prize for scoring my school years. However, no album embodied the overwhelming teenage urge to grow up quite like Neutral Milk Hotel's landmark album In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Released over a decade before I would ever dare to play Jeff Magnum's haunting fuzz-folk's meditations over the school's PA system (the result of a misguided initiative to allow students greater control over the lunch playlist) to this day, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea exists as a nostalgia-ridden reminder to days and nights spent trying to uncover a greater, hidden meaning behind all the noise.
-Maxamillion Polo
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Answer:
“All the Things You Are” is a perfect starting piece. Dating back to 1939, this song was played by Jerome Kern. This song is the epitome of classic jazz composition. Chord progressions and other dynamic changes make this song