There are albums that don’t just accompany our youth — they shape it. Not with lessons or advice, but with that strange emotional honesty that music has when it says the things we’re not ready to admit.

Some records don’t simply reflect who we are. They anticipate us. They arrive before the words, before the courage, before the clarity.

The first time you hear a voice breaking on the microphone, or a chord falling in a way that feels too close to something you can’t name — that’s when growth begins. Quietly, without asking permission.

For me it happened with artists like The 1975, Frank Ocean, The Cure, Fleetwood Mac, Lorde. Not because they were telling their own stories — but because, somehow, they were telling mine. Long before I knew how to.

Music becomes a kind of emotional map: a home you outgrow and a home you return to, all at once. And when you revisit those albums years later, you don’t hear them — you hear yourself, in all the versions you’ve been.

I’m curious: Which albums taught you how to grow up? Which ones helped you understand something about yourself, even when life didn’t make sense yet?

If you want to read the full reflection I wrote, it’s here: https://slavetomusic.com/how-music-teaches-us-to-grow-up-the-bands-that-shape-our-youth/

  • eezeebee@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Third Eye Blind - Self-titled

    Leonard Cohen - Songs of Leonard Cohen

    Deftones - White Pony

    Tool - Aenima

    Gorguts - Considered Dead & The Erosion of Sanity (dual album re-release)

    There could be a lot more, but these ones in particular all stand out from key moments or periods of growing up.

    • SlaveToMusic@leminal.spaceOP
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      2 months ago

      Great list. The Third Eye Blind debut is one of those records that feels bright on the surface but hits much deeper underneath. Cohen’s first album is the opposite — quiet, honest, almost like someone reading your thoughts back to you.

      White Pony and Aenima are a whole different kind of growing-up lesson — more visceral, more physical. And that Gorguts double release is such a specific rite-of-passage record.

      Amazing how these albums line up with the key moments in your life. Music keeps its own kind of timeline.

      • eezeebee@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        The 3EB and Leonard Cohen albums are quite deep lyrically. I was young when I got into those and didn’t have the life experience to truly relate, but as time passed and I grew up, it’s almost like they predicted the future. More like they talked about relatable experiences I would eventually have that would make sense later on. I appreciate them even more now as an adult for that reason.

        The Gorguts one was present in a tough time in life. Maybe it could have been any other artist, but it happened to be this one that gave me strength in that moment. Specifically the high energy of that music was exactly what I needed to vibe with.

  • MynameisAllen@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Three cheers for sweet revenge

    The xx debut album

    Burn the earth leave it behind

    We are beautiful we are doomed

    Remember that I love you

    • SlaveToMusic@leminal.spaceOP
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      2 months ago

      Three cheers for sweet revenge

      The xx debut album

      Burn the earth leave it behind

      We are beautiful we are doomed

      Remember that I love you Beautiful choices. We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed has that intelligent fragility that hits you without making any noise — it feels like it’s written by someone growing up right alongside you, line after line.

      And Remember That I Love You… that one is a gentle knife. It’s one of those songs that doesn’t try to explain what you’re feeling — it just walks with you through it, without judgment.

      Thank you for sharing these. They’re albums that say far more beneath the surface than they do on it.