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21 albums every millennial played in their Walkmans
Columbia Pictures

21 albums every millennial played in their Walkmans

Millennials are the last generation to truly understand the value of physical media because, when they heard a song, they couldn’t just hop online and immediately have it in their possession. They either waited all day for the radio or MTV to play it, or they saved up their allowance and purchased the album. Yes, entire albums that they then cherished as if they were gold because to them, they were. However, some were more golden than others, as the following are albums that every millennial owned growing up.

 
1 of 21

Mariah Carey, ‘Number 1’s’

Mariah Carey, ‘Number 1’s’
Shutterstock

Mariah Carey was the only artist in the ‘90s to have a No. 1 single every year of the decade. Not an easy feat back in the day, before streaming, and artists were able to release more than a dozen variants of their albums. So with that, Mariah dropped a compilation of her hits up until the fall of 1998. That’s because the following year she’d add a few more #1 songs to her resume, and even more after that.

 
2 of 21

Snoop Dogg, ‘Dogġystyle’

Snoop Dogg, ‘Dogġystyle’
Shutterstock/Death Row

Snoop Dogg’s Dogġystyle was definitely one of the first “parental advisory” records that millennials got their hands on, whether it was from an older sibling or borrowed from a friend at work. It was some of the best West Coast hip hop music had to offer, it was naughty, and the album art itself was insane. All that said, millennials will forever know that it ain’t fun if the homies can’t have none.

 
3 of 21

No Doubt, ‘Tragic Kingdom’

No Doubt, ‘Tragic Kingdom’
Shutterstock

For many millennials, Tragic Kingdom was their first rock record in elementary school.

 
4 of 21

Limp Bizkit, ‘Significant Other’

Limp Bizkit, ‘Significant Other’
Shutterstock/Interscope

Limp Bizkit is fully aware that they belonged to a certain time in history. At their shows, they remark about 1999, the year Significant Other was blasting in the bedrooms of almost every kid in America. Was it the best music? No. Was it probably the most fun? Many would say yes.

 
5 of 21

Backstreet Boys, ‘Millennium’

Backstreet Boys, ‘Millennium’
Shutterstock

Backstreet Boys’ Millennium was the first album to sell over a million copies in a week. The record would be broken a handful of times, but those artists can never claim to be the first. Anyways, Millennium is such a millennial staple, when Backstreet Boys announced they’d be playing it in full at the Sphere in Las Vegas, making them the first pop act to headline the innovative venue, dates sold out left and right, leaving a whole generation of fans to flock to Sin City.

 
6 of 21

My Chemical Romance, ‘The Black Parade’

My Chemical Romance, ‘The Black Parade’
Shutterstock/Reprise

If the millennial was emo at any point in their adolescence or young adult life, they had The Black Parade.

 
7 of 21

Usher, ‘Confessions’

Usher, ‘Confessions’
Shutterstock

Usher solidified himself with millennials back in 1997 with My Way, and, over time, became increasingly synonymous with the musical makeup of that generation with each release, including 2004’s Confessions. Packed with R&B goodness and songs that highlight just why millennials are the last “in the club” generation, like “Yeah!” and “Caught Up,” Confessions is forever a standard.

 
8 of 21

Eminem, ‘The Marshall Mathers LP’

Eminem, ‘The Marshall Mathers LP’
Shutterstock/Aftermath

While his debut was definitely a hit among millennial middle schoolers in 1999, it was Eminem’s sophomore release a year later that really made the Walkman rounds with songs like "The Real Slim Shady" and “Stan” being ingrained into pop culture forever, especially the latter, which went on to become a widely used term to describe obsessed fans.  

 
9 of 21

Green Day, ‘American Idiot’

Green Day, ‘American Idiot’
Shutterstock

Decades later, and millennials still don't want to be American idiots. 

 
10 of 21

OutKast, ‘Stankonia’

OutKast, ‘Stankonia’
Shutterstock/Arista

One of the finest moments in hip hop was, well, whenever Outkast decided to grace the world with new music, but it is 2000’s Stankonia that means a little more to millennials because most of their school days started with the video for "Ms. Jackson" playing in the background on either MTV, VH1, or BET; it was inescapable.

 
11 of 21

Black Eyed Peas, ‘Elephunk’

Black Eyed Peas, ‘Elephunk’
Shutterstock

There was a point in time where every other song on the radio felt like it was by the Black Eyed Peas. At the time, it seemed grand, as it got “it” started, whatever it was, no one was sure, but they were the music the world apparently needed at the time, and they served their purpose.

 
12 of 21

Destiny’s Child, ‘The Writing's on the Wall’

Destiny’s Child, ‘The Writing's on the Wall’
Shutterstock/Columbia

With four amazing singles, The Writing's on the Wall from Destiny’s Child wasn’t an album anyone was worried about spending a chunk of change on because they knew it was going to be worth it, and it was.

 
13 of 21

Korn, ‘Follow the Leader’

Korn, ‘Follow the Leader’
Shutterstock

The ‘90s had grunge and the ‘00s had emo, but nestled between those two, for a few years, was a genre called Nu Metal. It was basically what Affliction t-shirts would sound like if put to music. At the forefront of that, really, was a band who helped bring the genre to the masses thanks to their appeal to the MTV generation who spent their afternoons glued to Total Request Live. While many of their records from the late ‘90s and early ‘00s fared well, it was Follow the Leader that left the biggest mark on millennials.

 
14 of 21

‘Now That's What I Call Music!’

‘Now That's What I Call Music!’
Virgin

Now compilations are the grandparents of the mixes that Spotify curates for listeners.

 
15 of 21

NSYNC, ‘No Strings Attached’

NSYNC, ‘No Strings Attached’
Shutterstock

NSYNC’s No Strings Attached didn’t sell two million copies in a week to not be on this list.

 
16 of 21

Fall Out Boy, ‘From Under the Cork Tree’

Fall Out Boy, ‘From Under the Cork Tree’
Shutterstock/Island

In 2005, a huge chunk of millennials were getting ready for school one morning, saw the video for Fall Out Boy’s “Sugar, We're Goin Down,” and immediately made it their entire personality. That would then lead them to listen to the Chicago band’s sophomore studio LP, From Under the Cork Tree, repeatedly for the next two decades and counting.

 
17 of 21

Christina Aguilera, ‘Stripped’

Christina Aguilera, ‘Stripped’
Shutterstock

Christina Aguilera came about in 1999 when there was a blonde pop star everywhere one turned. However, unlike the countless singers in the pages of Tiger Beat, Christina had the vocal chops to stick around and maintain. After her ‘99 debut, she released a Spanish record and one for the holidays, but it was 2002’s Stripped that reintroduced her to the world in a big way. She was no longer the pint-sized pop star. She was back, “Dirrrty,” and ready to dominate, which she did.

 
18 of 21

Nelly, ‘Country Grammar’

Nelly, ‘Country Grammar’
Shutterstock/Universal

If there is one artist who encapsulates the sound of the 2000s, it’s Nelly.

 
19 of 21

Linkin Park, ‘Hybrid Theory’

Linkin Park, ‘Hybrid Theory’
Shutterstock

Linkin Park’s music was raw, emotional, and really built a bridge between the intensity of Nu Metal and the emotional depths of emo music. It was also a nice blend of rap and rock that felt so genuine that it satisfied listeners of both genres in a major way. 

 
20 of 21

Britney Spears, ‘Oops!... I Did It Again’

Britney Spears, ‘Oops!... I Did It Again’
Shutterstock

Every millennial has their favorite Britney Spears record, but many can agree that Oops!... I Did It Again is her best.

 
21 of 21

50 Cent, ‘Get Rich or Die Tryin’’

50 Cent, ‘Get Rich or Die Tryin’’
Shutterstock

The lore around 50 Cent when he hit the scene, his ties to Eminem, and his catchy as heck take on hip hop in songs like "P.I.M.P." and "In da Club" are why his debut went platinum nine times over.

Kendra Beltran

Kendra Beltran is a pop culture obsessed writer who spent her youth tirelessly jotting down ‘Total Request Live’ data after school. She took that obsession and a useless college degree, and spun it into enough to pay her rent by writing for MTV Geek, Collider, Popverse, and more. Over the years her interest in pop culture has only grown, and today she finds herself baking while streaming ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race,’ running (slowly) while listening to podcasts about the ‘90s, and hanging out with her dog while taking in emo playlists

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