Picking an album from you past can involve a bit of self adoration. I think this may be partly why Thunder and Consolation is regarded so highly (as well as it being a superb album).
When I think back to first hearing and loving that album, I am also thinking back to the time I was in my late teens, and at the prime of my young life. People tend to look back on that period of their life with nostalgia.
Its a bit like, people of my my parents age now in their 60s always seem to go on about how good the 1960s were. People 10 years older than them may well say the 1950s,were better, 10 year younger, the 1970s, etc.
Are we always remembering the things we liked and were better then, or are we remembering what it felt like being 18 years old ? Its a bit like which is your favorite James Bond.? As a 1970s youngster, for me its Roger Moore.
For many, T&C was there first encounter with NMA, and it will always have that extra special place of fondness for it.
I heard the first three at around the same time and No Rest has always been my favorite. When I was most into that album in the late 1980s, I was on the dole, and I related very much to the lyrics, especially, Young Gifted and Skint. It is still my favorite of the 12 studio albums, but I accept this choice may be heavily laden with sentimentality, and also the fact that I have been listening to it for over 25 years.
When my elder Son started to show an interest in NMA, my first reaction was to lend him T&C, which he did like. I lent him a couple more, and he picked Eight as his favorite. To him at the time, all fresh music.
When (god willing) I have been listening to BDAW for 25 years and old and decrepit, by then, that may well be my favorite album when I think -- Oh to be in my 40s when I could still see this band live and my legs still worked.
