The BandAn Independent Fan Archive

The Records

The Band's albums, ranked

A fan's honest buyer's guide to the studio catalogue and the essential live records — where to start, what to own, and which to leave for later.

Some links below are affiliate links. If you buy through them, this site may earn a small commission — at no extra cost to you.

Where to start

If you own nothing, buy the first two: Music from Big Pink (1968) and The Band (1969). Between them they hold most of the songs the group is remembered for. Then add the 1975 late-peak Northern Lights – Southern Cross and the live Rock of Ages.

The studio albums, ranked

1

The Band (1969)

“The Brown Album.” Their masterpiece — “Dixie Down,” “Cripple Creek,” “King Harvest.” American music distilled.

2

Music from Big Pink (1968)

The debut that changed the direction of rock. “The Weight,” “I Shall Be Released,” “Tears of Rage.”

3

Northern Lights – Southern Cross (1975)

The great late return to form. “It Makes No Difference,” “Acadian Driftwood,” “Ophelia.”

4

Stage Fright (1970)

Tighter and darker. The title track and “The Shape I'm In” are first-rate.

5

Cahoots (1971)

Patchier, but “Life Is a Carnival” and the Dylan-penned “When I Paint My Masterpiece” shine.

6

Moondog Matinee (1973)

A covers album of the rock & roll they grew up on — loose, fun, inessential but charming.

7

Islands (1977)

The contractual final album of the original run. For completists.

The essential live albums

Rock of Ages (1972) catches them at their peak with Allen Toussaint horn arrangements — arguably their best live document. Before the Flood (1974) captures the roaring reunion tour with Bob Dylan. And The Last Waltz (1978) is the star-studded farewell.

The reunion albums

The four members minus Robbie Robertson reformed and made three later studio albums — Jericho (1993), High on the Hog (1996) and Jubilation (1998). They're for devoted fans rather than newcomers.

Build the collection

Affiliate links · supports this archive

The remastered vinyl reissues sound superb. Original first pressings turn up regularly on eBay.