The Strokes Last Nite review
1. The Strokes
Last Nite
The White Stripes Hotel Yorba review
2. The White Stripes
Hotel Yorba
The Strokes Hard To Explain review
3. The Strokes
Hard To Explain

Here we come to probably to most pivotal year for music in the 00s. The first year of the 21st century had felt like a complete washout, pop culture-wise. When it came to rock music, we were still very much dealing with our Britpop hangover, feeling a little weepy and able to manage nothing stronger than the bland and inoffensive gruel of Travis and Coldplay. Meanwhile, the charts were overrun with Godforsaken kiddie pop peddled by Steps and S Club 7. For anyone looking for something fierce, messy and glamorous from pop and rock, for anyone who still came to these apparently used-up and spent art forms looking for something life changing, for some Goddamn passion... Well, they just had to make do with Starsailor. In short, things sucked.

Then, just when it looked like the most exciting music event of 2001 was some woebegone mithering NME dubbed ‘The New Acoustic Movement’, along came two bands who, in retrospect, demand to be granted equal billing in our rock revival narrative: The Strokes and The White Stripes. The former were sharp-suited posh boys slumming it in an imaginary New York they pieced together from cherished records by Television, Blondie and The Velvet Underground. The latter were a truly, gloriously weird coupling who claimed to be brother and sister but were actually former husband and wife. Their explosive mix of punk and the blues, introduced to the wider world via the excellent Sympathetic Sounds of Detroit compilation, existed in an imaginary Americana wonderland they pieced together from forgotten blues records and half-remembered, half-concocted mythology.

In some ways, they were poles apart, but it’s important to grasp the vital ingredient these two bands shared: imagination. Like all the greatest bands, they imagined the kind of band they wanted to exist and the world they wanted that band to exist in, and then they invented both. Both bands understood and intuitively grasped the importance to pop culture of sex, glamour, violence, misery, defiance and a splash of seedy sexual ambiguity. And they brought all of this with them when they gained international attention in 2001, the first bands for years to do so. They were also the first bands for an age to build a genuine rapport with their audience; an intimacy which bands such as The Libertines would adopt and build on in the coming years. Not to put too fine a point on it, but without them, it’s a fair bet the 00s would have been pretty shit.

However, leaving these two bands aside, plenty else was happening in 2001 to get excited about, and on an international scale. From the gritty garage soul of The Dirtbombs’ Ultraglide in Black to the murky, mercurial instrumentals of Eletrelane’s Rock It to the Moon; from the spasming punk funk of !!!’s debut to the hushed, autumnal wonder of múm’s Yesterday was Dramatic, Today was OK; from Squarepusher’s jaw-dropping ‘My Red Hot Car’ to Missy Elliott’s ‘Get Yr Freak On’, which carved a deep chasm of funk out of a sparse scattering of bhangra samples, it was like the world’s music makers suddenly woke up to the possibilities of their craft. So, as it turned out, 2001 was a great year, full of music which was messy, confident and as diverse as you could possibly wish for. Take a noisy trip down memory lane with our list of the best of the best.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs Bang review
4. Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Bang
System Of A Down Chop Suey review
5. System Of A Down
Chop Suey
PJ Harvey This Is Love review
6. PJ Harvey
This Is Love
Gorillaz Clint Eastwood review
7. Gorillaz
Clint Eastwood
Pulp Trees review
8. Pulp
Trees
Squarepusher My Red Hot Car review
9. Squarepusher
My Red Hot Car
The Coral Shadows Fall review
10. The Coral
Shadows Fall
Andrew W.K. Party Hard review
11. Andrew W.K.
Party Hard
The Moldy Peaches Who Got The Crack review
12. The Moldy Peaches
Who Got The Crack
Radiohead Pyramid Song review
13. Radiohead
Pyramid Song
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Whatever Happened To My Rock n Roll review
14. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
Whatever Happened To My Rock n Roll
Saloon Impact review
15. Saloon
Impact
Rival Schools Used For Glue review
16. Rival Schools
Used For Glue
Super Furry Animals (Drawing) Rings Around The World review
17. Super Furry Animals
(Drawing) Rings Around The World
Mercury Rev The Dark Is Rising review
18. Mercury Rev
The Dark Is Rising
The Coral Skeleton Key review
19. The Coral
Skeleton Key
NERD Lapdance review
20. NERD
Lapdance
Missy Elliott Get Ur Freak On review
21. Missy Elliott
Get Ur Freak On
Pulp Sunrise review
22. Pulp
Sunrise
Mogwai My Father My King review
23. Mogwai
My Father My King
Radio 4 Dance To The Underground review
24. Radio 4
Dance To The Underground
Belle and Sebastian I'm Waking Up To Us review
25. Belle and Sebastian
I'm Waking Up To Us
The Strokes The Modern Age review
26. The Strokes
The Modern Age
Daft Punk Aerodynamic review
27. Daft Punk
Aerodynamic
Meanwhile Back In Communist Russia Morning After Pill review
28. Meanwhile Back In Communist Russia
Morning After Pill
Andrew W.K. Party Til You Puke review
29. Andrew W.K.
Party Til You Puke
The Shins New Slang review
30. The Shins
New Slang
Radiohead Knives Out review
31. Radiohead
Knives Out
Cinerama Health & Efficiency review
32. Cinerama
Health & Efficiency
Ian Brown F.E.A.R. review
33. Ian Brown
F.E.A.R.
The Avalanches Since I Left You review
34. The Avalanches
Since I Left You
The Detroit Cobras Shout Bama Lama review
35. The Detroit Cobras
Shout Bama Lama
Bearsuit Hey Charlie, Hey Chuck review
36. Bearsuit
Hey Charlie, Hey Chuck
The Rock of Travolta Giant Robo review
37. The Rock of Travolta
Giant Robo
Daft Punk Digital Love review
38. Daft Punk
Digital Love
Stephen Malkmus Discretion Grove review
39. Stephen Malkmus
Discretion Grove
Ikara Colt One Note review
40. Ikara Colt
One Note
The Avalanches Frontier Psychiatrist review
41. The Avalanches
Frontier Psychiatrist
The Fall I Wake Up In The City review
42. The Fall
I Wake Up In The City
Saloon Freefall review
43. Saloon
Freefall
Stereolab Captain Easychord review
44. Stereolab
Captain Easychord
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