Five Albums Worth Another Listen

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Five Albums Worth Another Listen

Words by The Daily Team

21 August 2017

Our peerless Style Council members reveal their desert-island discs.

The main job of our , well-connected  is to recommend  and  so that we, the ill-informed, have somewhere interesting to eat, drink and stay the next time we go away. But when we leverage a slot in their diaries to ask them for this information, we can’t help but ask a few more questions. Because, as well as being some of the most  on the , they’re also rather interesting, too. And they have as many opinions on the best restaurants in  or where to get an  in  as they do on ,  and albums. Below, we open our ears to some of their desert-island discs.

Naturally by J.J. Cale

If you’ve ever wondered what  listen to in their downtime – or, indeed, when they’re hard at  – well, now you know. At least, you know what New York architect  has downloaded on Spotify: the debut album by legendary American guitarist J.J. Cale. Mr Sanders describes it thusly: “Feels like you’re relaxing on the front porch with a loved one on a warm summer’s day.”

MTV Unplugged in New York by Nirvana

As the founder of Haydenshapes,  probably has own of the  in the world. And, given he’s been designing surfboards for 20 years – since he was 15, in fact – he’s rather good at it, too. He also strikes us as the type of man with great taste in music. And he didn’t disappoint when we asked him for his favourite album. This Nirvana classic, he says, “just doesn’t seem to date. It’s a favourite of mine to play when I’m in the shaping bay.”

Music Has the Right to Children by Boards of Canada

“Since its release in the late 1990s, this album has never grown old,” says  of this Boards of Canada record. “And it holds a nostalgic, special place in my heart with its timeless melodies.” Praise indeed from a man who has forged a career spinning records in clubs and producing them in the studio.

Exile on Main St. by The Rolling Stones

 is a close friend of MR PORTER, and he is well known for his encyclopaedic love of music. So it must have been tricky to whittle down his impressive album collection to one favourite. But, his thoughts on this seminal release from  go some way to explaining why it might have been an easy choice after all: “It’s all there: rock and roll, blues, soul, country, gospel. There are tracks for when you’re down (“Shine a Light”), for when you’re up (“Loving Cup”) or when you want to put the  in drive (“Rocks Off”).”

Vivaldi, The Four Seasons by Max Richter

And now for something a little different, as chosen by , editor-in-chief of Luncheon magazine (and previously responsible for Acne Paper). Preferring the classical route when choosing his favourite album, Mr Persson says of this reimagination of the Vivaldi classic, “It transports me to a better place.”

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