
Photo: American Talent International (management), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Our Ten Favorite Bob Seger Albums list looks at the entire Bob Seger catalog and picks ten of what we believe were the best Bob Seger albums that we have enjoyed the most. It was no easy task just to pick 10 Bob Seger albums. Throughout his career, Bob Seger has released eighteen studio albums. The man has also released two sensational live albums, and of course, there’s the traditional set of compilation albums. Bob Seger has sold close to 50 million records throughout his career. Bob Seger has easily enjoyed one of the greatest rock and roll careers in classic rock history. It took a while for his career to take off, but Bob Seger hit it big in the mid-70s, starting with the Beautiful Loser album in 1975. However, the album that turned him into one of the decade’s most prominent stars was the sensational Night Moves record in 1976.
From then on, Bob Seger released album after album and hit single after hit single. He has continued to release albums into the 21st century, with his latest, I Knew You When, released in 2017. At times, he released albums under the name Bob Seger, and at other times, under the name Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band. We hope you enjoy this great Bob Seger albums list, and we’re sorry if one of your favorites didn’t make the cut; there just wasn’t enough room.
# 10 – Mongrel
We open our top 10 Bob Seger albums list with the legendary rock star’s third album of his career, entitled Mongrel. The album was released in August 1970. The Mongrel album was issued on Capitol Records. The Mongrel album contained the hit single “Lucifer,” which was by far the strongest track on the record. However, there were many other great songs, including the album opener “Song to Rufus,” “Highway Child,” “Teachin’ Blues,” and “Leaning on my Dream.” The musicians on the album included Bob Seger on guitar and vocals, Dan Honaker on bass, Pep Perrine on drums, Dan Watson on keys, and Bob Schultz on organ.
This was the first Bob Seger album to break into the Billboard top album charts, although it only reached as high as 171. The song “Lucifer” broke into the Billboard Top 100, peaking at number 84. This is the best of the early Bob Seger albums and shows the potential that Bob Seger had to become a major rock star.
# 9 – I Knew You When
Continuing on this Bob Seger album list, we go from one of his earliest albums to his most recent album, I Knew You When. The album was released on November 17th, 2017. This was a tremendous new Bob Seger album, recorded in both Nashville and Detroit. It was his first album since 2014’s Ride Out. The album’s lead single, “Busload Of Faith,” was a cover of a great Lou Reed song. Many of the songs released on this album are actually old tunes that Bob Seger had written earlier in his career. Some of them even appeared on some of Bob Seger’s already-released albums, like the song “Runaway Train,” released on It’s A Mystery. There’s just something about this album that feels good. The man still had it so many years later.
# 8 – Face The Promise
In the number eight spot on our Bob Seger albums list, we present the album Face The Promise. This was a much-anticipated album, as Bob Seger had not released one in 11 years. The Face The Promise album was released on September 12th, 2006. This was a very successful album for Bob Seger, as it peaked at number four on the US Billboard 200. It reached even higher on the U.S. top rock album charts, peaking at number two. However, there were no big hit singles from the album; the first single, “Wait For Me,” only charted on the US Country and US Adult Contemporary charts, though it reached number 16 on the latter.
Overall, though, this was a fantastic rock album. It included 13 new songs written by Bob Seger and a collaboration with Vince Gill on “Real Mean Bottle,” which was also produced by Kid Rock. Bob Seger also sang a duet with Patty Loveless on the song “The Answer In The Question.” This is truly the last great Bob Seger album.
# 7 – The Fire Inside
The Fire Inside sounds like the perfect Bob Seger album title. The album was released on August 27th, 1991, when grunge music completely dominated radio and the entire music scene. Nonetheless, we, old rock-and-roll fans, were really happy to hit the stores and buy a new Bob Seger album. And this was a good one. One of the great attributes of Bob Seger’s The Fire Inside album was the number of legendary rock and roll stars on the record. I guess everyone wanted to play with Bob Seger at one point in their career.
The album included guest appearances by the legendary Bruce Hornsby and Springsteen’s pianist, Roy Bittan. Bob Seger could not have gotten better guitar players than the ones he got for this record, including the very talented Joe Walsh, Toto’s Steve Lukather, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell. On backing vocals, he had one of the most gifted singers in the rock and roll business, Patty Smyth. Kenny Aronoff, who stands as one of the greatest drummers in the rock and roll business of all time, sat behind that drum seat.
There were many standout tracks on the album. The album’s first single, titled “Take A Chance,” reached number 10 on the Mainstream Rock chart. The album’s second single ‘The Fire Inside,” hit number six on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks. The album itself broke the Billboard Top 200, peaking at number seven. One of the things that we loved so much about this Bob Seger album was that he covered two great Tom Waits songs, entitled “New Coat Of Paint” and “Blind Love.”
# 6 – Like A Rock
Bob Seger’s Like a Rock album was released in 1986. Everyone knows this album for the title track, which is used heavily in Chevrolet Truck commercials. The album featured a great cover of John Fogerty’s “Fortunate Son.” The Like a Rock album was a great success, reaching number three on the Billboard Top 200. Seven songs were released as singles from the album, with “Like a Rock” peaking at number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 1 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks.
# 5 – The Distance
We turn to the album The Distance at the halfway point on our Bob Seger albums list. This great record was released in December 1982. This is one of our favorite Bob Seger albums for many reasons. Three of those big reasons stand in the singles released from the album. Three spectacular songs began with “Shame On The Moon,” which peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100. The album’s second single, “Even Now,” reached number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100. However, the album’s third single is our favorite Bob Seger song of all time, titled “Roll Me Away.” It’s just a fabulous rock and roll tune with a spectacular piano riff, a die-for chorus, and a vocal for which Bob Seger should have won a Grammy award. Rock and roll is no better than Bob Seger’s “Roll Me Away.”
# 4 – Beautiful Loser
Bob Seger’s Beautiful Loser album was released in 1975. This was Bob Seger’s first album back on Capitol Records after a four-year hiatus. This great rock and roll record features some fabulous Bob Seger songs, including the title track, “Beautiful Loser.” However, the big hit was the great song “Katmandu.” A song that would become a Bob Seger standard. There were many great classic Bob Seger songs on the album, including “Jody Girl,” “Travelin’ Man,” and the rock and roll spectacular “Nutbush City Limits.”
# 3 – Against The Wind
From 1976 to 1980, Bob Seger had an incredible run of three classic rock and roll albums, almost unmatched in Rock and Roll history. Those three albums appear in the next three spots on this Bob Seger albums list. We will look at these three albums, starting with the 1980 album Against the Wind, released on February 25th, 1980. It would become Bob Seger’s only number one album of his career.
So many spectacular songs were on the record, including the four incredible singles starting with “Fire Lake, ” then “Against the Wind, You’ll Accompany Me,” and “Horizontal Bop.” Of the three album runs Bob Seger had from 1976 to 1980, Against the Wind is usually considered the weakest. However, it’s still such an excellent classic rock record. No one back then realized just how great these albums were.
# 2 – Stranger In Town
We turn to the Stranger in Town album in the number two spot on our Bob Seger albums list. This phenomenal album served as the follow-up to Night Moves. And what a follow-up album, Stranger in Town, it was. The Stranger in Town album was released on May 5th, 1978. Four huge singles were released from the album, the first being “Still The Same.” The song reached number four on the US Billboard Hot 100. Bob Seger wrote it. The album’s second single was the great rock and roll song “Hollywood Nights,” which also opened the album. However, the next two singles would become huge songs in classic rock history, starting with the ballad “We’ve Got Tonight.”
The song became a hit twice: Kenny Rogers and Sheena Easton recorded it, and it became a monster hit, reaching number one on the Hot Country Songs Charts and number two on the US Adult Contemporary Charts. The album’s final single would become an all-time rock and roll classic, “Old Time Rock and Roll.” The song’s popularity soared when it was included in the Tom Cruise film Risky Business in one of the most iconic Movie scenes ever.
The Stranger in Town album wasn’t just about hit singles, even though the first three songs on side one were released as hit singles. The album has so many more great songs, including the side one closer, “Feel Like A Number.” And we can’t forget about “Brave Strangers” and the songs “Till It Shines,” “The Famous Final Scene,” and “Ain’t Got no Money,” written by Frankie Miller.
# 1 – Night Moves
We close out our Bob Seger albums list with our favorite Bob Seger album of all time, entitled Night Moves. Bob Seger brought the Silver Bullet Band and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section to play on this excellent record. The album opened up with the roaring tune “Rock and Roll Never Forgets,” and that blew our minds when we heard it for the first time. Up next was the hit single “Night Moves,” one of the all-time excellent 1970s classic rock songs. Side one finished with “Fire Down Below” and “Sunburst.” What a spectacular side one.
Bob Seger’s Night Moves album opened side two with a complementary song to “Sunburst,” titled “Sunspot Baby,” whose lyrics answered the side one closing verse. And then we were off to our favorite song on the record, “Main Street.” “Come to Papa” was a great track to follow up that song with, and then, of course, there was “Ship of Fools” and the old rock standard “Mary Lou.:What a spectacular album and easily in our top 10 albums of the 1970s.
Updated February 9, 2026
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“And we’d steal away, every chance we could –
To the backroom, to the alley, or the trusty woods.
I used her, she used me, but neither one cared –
We were gettin’ our share.
Workin’ on our Night Moves.
Tryin to lose the awkward teenage blues
Workin’ on our Night Moves”
Aah yes, the freedom of expression and discovery in the ’70s – how it is sorely missed in today’s world.