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March Albums

This month felt a little different. None of these albums are necessarily the ones critics rush to place at the very top of each artist’s catalog, but all three mean something to me. That matters more here. These are the albums I reached for, listened to front to back, and connected with again.

Born to Die

by Lana Del Rey

Amazing album. I love this album. I have been listening to Born to Die for years, and it still has the same hold on me. Some albums fade with time or lose their impact once the novelty is gone. This one never did. It still sounds rich, dramatic, and emotionally heavy in a way that immediately pulls me in.

There is something very distinctive about it. The mood is thick from the first track. It feels cinematic, sad, glamorous, and slightly dangerous all at once. Lana Del Rey created a world on this album, and whether you like that world or not, it is impossible to confuse it with anyone else.

What I appreciate most is that the album commits fully to its own sound. It does not seem interested in chasing trends or sounding polite. It leans into longing, excess, heartbreak, and performance, and somehow it works. That confidence is part of what makes it memorable.

I have lived with this album for years, and I still enjoy going back to it. That says enough. Some records are just part of your life once they arrive. For me, Born to Die is one of them.

Let’s Dance

by David Bowie

I know this is not considered Bowie’s best album, and that is fine. It still means a lot to me. Sometimes the album that matters most to you is not the one critics are supposed to admire the most. It is the one that found you at the right time and stayed there.

Let’s Dance has that effect on me. It is polished, stylish, and unapologetically of its time, but that is part of its charm. There is confidence in it, and a sense that Bowie knew exactly what he was doing. He could shift into a more commercial sound without losing his presence.

This album also carries strong visual memories for me. It is impossible for me to think about this period without remembering the young Nastassja Kinski in Cat People. That whole era had a look, a mood, and a kind of cool that still lingers. The music and the imagery are tied together in my mind.

So no, this may not be the Bowie album people are expected to pick first. I understand that. But it still means a lot to me, and that matters more. Personal connection wins over ranking every time.

Tango in the Night

by Fleetwood Mac

This is probably not the best Fleetwood Mac album either, but I love it. It has been with me for a long time, and I never get tired of hearing it. There is something immediate and emotional about it that keeps bringing me back.

What stands out is how smooth and polished it sounds without becoming cold. The production is big, layered, and unmistakably of its era, but the songs still carry real feeling. That balance is not easy to achieve. The album feels crafted, but not lifeless.

Seven Wonders and Everywhere are the two songs that always rise to the top for me. Both have that mixture of beauty, longing, and melody that Fleetwood Mac could do so well. They stay with you long after the album is over. They are the kind of songs that make you stop whatever you are doing and listen.

This may not be the record people point to first when they talk about Fleetwood Mac, but that does not matter much to me. I love it for what it is, not for where it lands in some ranking. Sometimes that is the better way to listen.

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