I'll respond to a couple of these just now, most that are imo worthwhile to general music discussions and exchanges.
1. Any and every Beatles album begs to differ. Not that they are bad (not that this one is either), but fuck me are they overrated and over pedestal-ed. They can still be, and are, loved by many.
17. Disagree that 1997 was 'thin', or a couple years around it were bad for music releases. There were some amazing and notable albums then. The same year, we had quite a few really good sophmore albums. Deftones, Around the Fur, Blink's Dude Ranch, Wu- Tang Forever, Foo's Colour and Shape etc. We had longer running artists release strong albums like Nick Cave, Blur and Oasis (neither of the two my thing, but big successful albums non-the-less). And we had some really incredible debuts. Placebo, Queens of the stone age, Jimmy Eat World, Muse, death cab for cutie, Mogwai! I'd argue it was a great year for music, as I said previously, and possibly one of the reasons I at the time was a bit ambivalent about this album, with so much else wowing me.
16. Think most recognised the influence of the pixies. Don't think there is any irony in liking something at the time, and then 30+ years later not liking the prior influence as much. That would be like arguing it is ironic I don't/didn't like Radiohead, given the many indie bands I like today. Incidentally, 'pasty-faced young adults who didn’t cotton to Nirvana’s sonics but needed an anthem to underscore their biological age-based malaise' is a very entitled and derivative comment.
12. At first listen at least, that was the song that caught my attention most readily. In a good way. There you go.
5. A comment on production, or in my case the delivery, is just that. I don't think it matters whether it hides or not melodies, themes or 'integrity'. It is either good or bad. Just like guitars can be good but vocals bad etc, a bass can cover dor the drums etc, production and everything else can exist separately.
6, 7, 15. I really think this is a weird philosophical qualm you have. Is a vegetarian incapable or prohibited from making a good meat dish? You have found an argument for hypocrisy, but true or not, I don't think it matters to the output. Did Paul's troubles really seem so far away the day before he wrote the song? Is a dolled up pretty as hell wall-poster pop-star diva out of line when singing about inner beauty to a huge audience of teenage girls? Do we judge the true extent of heartbreak of someone singing about it. Or whether their heart actually broke, and if so how the fuck they are still alive, etc. I get the point on honesty and integrity being important particularly in how it is recieved, but I don't think it is immediately that dismissible based on a few background articles or perception of someone's life.
4. Can anyone really be 'too busy' for a pretty funfamental core emotion that is part of what makes us as a race who we are. I find that remark a little bit almost inhumane.