Crate Digging is our recurring feature series that takes a deep dive into music history to turn up several albums all music fans should know. In this edition, comedian and musician Tim Heidecker makes his picks for the best concept albums of all time.
Tim Heidecker, when given the opportunity to suggest a topic for a Crate Digging, chose concept albums. This is because, he tells Consequence, “in a self-serving manner, I think I tend to put out concept albums” — including his newest studio album Slipping Away, as well as past releases like Fear of Death and High School.
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In terms of his own creative process, Heidecker says that when he’s working on a record, “I’m trying to think of what’s connecting it all — what I am trying to say or what I am trying to talk about, and how the songs can inform that idea. I think the record is obviously like not doing well as a concept, as a piece of art — like, the idea of an album. I think kids aren’t quite so tuned into that, but I’m a believer in it and I like albums that do that.”
Of course, the question of what a concept album is becomes important, and Heidecker fully acknowledges that it’s “kind of hard” to answer it. His definition, though, is a record with a point of view: “There’s a continuity to the songs, but it doesn’t verge into full-on rock opera or musical. There’s a lot of thought put into how the songs work together, and you could write a caption for what the album is about, more or less…”
He laughs. “Which I’ll attempt to do with these.”
Elvis Costello — The Juliet Letters

I discovered this when it came out, because I was a big Elvis Costello fan. He’s such a great lyricist. I’m such an admirer of his way with words, and this was a great exercise in showing how clever he can be.
The Juliet Letters: Stream | Buy
Randy Newman — Good Old Boys

It’s a controversial record because the first song has got the N-word all over it. But he’s coming from the satirical place of talking about race and racism and definitely putting putting it on trial, or commenting on it from the right perspective. And it’s a beautiful record. I love the continuity of the music, the band that plays on it is top-notch, it’s got Southern flavor to it, and the songs are very funny. There are some very sad songs on it, too. It’s just a great capturing of a Northerner’s perspective of the South.
The great thing about the redneck song is he’s singing about this idea of a white man in the South, but he is also very critical of the North when it comes to race relations and how the ghettos of the big cities have been treating African-Americans, in a lot of ways just as bad as the South. Everybody’s on trial, on Randy’s record.
The Band — The Band

I mean, obviously, “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” is a fascinating song, because it’s from the point of view of a poor Southern soldier, someone who isn’t too interested in the issues of the war itself, just kind of like, “I gotta do my duty.” And the whole record has this continuity of sound, that feels like these are characters who know each other or spend time together. A snapshot of a long-gone period of time.
Bob Dylan — Blood on the Tracks

