Home Home Theater Systems TVs & HDTVs DVD Players & Recorders Satellite Radio GPS Units  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

Jane's Addiction

Jane's Addiction
MSRP: $15.98
Your Price: $13.99
Savings: $ 1.99 ( 12% )
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Triple X Records
Buy Jane's Addiction

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

Related Jane's Addiction Products

Addiction Jane's
Jane's Addiction
Addiction Jane's
Jane's Addiction
Jane's Addiction
 

Additional Jane's Addiction Information

It may have taken until 1991 for punk to break as a commercial form, but the genre was hardly new. In that story, even Jane's Addiction were latecomers to the revolution. But it was the frenzied trailblazing rock of this quirky Los Angeles quartet that made the later successes of Nirvana, etc. somehow inevitable. In this recording of a hometown club gig, Jane's offer raw versions of songs that would appear in a more refined form on their debut album, along with a dubious cover of "Sympathy for the Devil." Hear a noticeably younger and shriller Perry Farrell while guitarist Dave Navarro plays out his Jimmy Page dreams across a punk canvas the rest of the world would soon discover. --Steve Appleford

 

What Customers Say About Jane's Addiction:

This is just as good, if not better than Nothings Shocking. Jane's Addiction were far ahead of their time. I Would For You is still one of my favorite sappy songs, and 1% is one of my favorite songs period. This is an amazing CD. It's hard for me to imagine it was released in 1987.

Also check out Brutal Juice's "Mutilation Makes Identification Difficult" I've had this album for 20 years and have listened to it more times than any other recording. This is one of the best (for lack of a better term) hard rock albums ever released. Completely underrated and overlooked.

It is a raw, clean sound of old that makes it magical. This in my opinion is the best Janes CD yet. The vocals are great and Dave's guitar work is amazing.

Why don't we make passionate love." "All right. So, that's my take. The funky "Trip Away"; blazing, obscenity-laden rocker "Whores"; and tender ballad "I Would for You" (okay, "tender" isn't the proper word, since it's one of those "Hey, Perry, the world is ending. Now I can show you those new positions I learned in that dirty magazine I got from my friend." "What dirty magazine." "Um, let's just skip straight to the passionate lovemaking." type songs, but the way Farrell sings it makes it seem tender.

I mean, I just started this thing, and I've already spun out of direction. But only if you've got the other two. A lot of people like "Chip Away", but it leaves me kind of cold - that "Up from the catacombs" lyric is pretty inspired, though, and ended up being the title of a compilation that didn't even contain the song it was named for. The group's backing vocals screw "Rock and Roll" (yes, the Velvet Underground song). There.

Basically what I see here is a band that knew what it wanted to do, but didn't quite have the songs straightened out. It's way too harsh, and I normally like his singing. But let's get focused. Okay, this review will probably be even more rambling than most of my reviews, since I'm writing it at 1:45 AM on a Saturday coming after a long week that involved having to put up with high-school drama while being sick.

To be honest, I think this is about even with, or maybe a bit worse than, the more famous studio version. And you don't hear a steel drum on the studio version, do you. Otherwise, it just slips off my radar. I've heard praise for its homespun, campfire vibe, and while I feel that, and I love the acoustic guitar solo Navarro lets out, Farrell's voice kind of ruins it for me. Goodbye.

Growing up isn't fun. See. All I remember about "My Time" is that it has a harmonica. Plus Farrell puts so much echo on his voice, it gives me reason to believe that this is a studio recording with crowd noises dubbed in. Anyway, "Trip Away", "Whores", "I Would for You", "Jane Says" and maybe "1%" (just to round out the dream team) mean that this is worth digging through your bargain bins for.

Unlike "Pigs in Zen", which by some anomaly found its way onto Nothing's Shocking when it's my least favorite Jane's Addiction song by a long shot - yes, it's worse than even the several bags of crap on Strays. That's okay, but the echo wears out its welcome quite quickly. Farrell's no match for Mick Jagger, and when Navarro distorts his guitar, it's torturous. Too bad none of them are widely known, they all deserve a mass audience.

And while a mostly acoustic "Sympathy for the Devil", here titled "Sympathy", sounds like a good idea in theory, it fails in practice. It's rambling already. The rest doesn't do much for me. But "Jane Says" deserved to make it onto an album, and of course it ended up their signature song and all that jazz.

Let's buckle down, and review this thing. I heard it in the same record store I bought it at, months prior to actually making the transaction, and since the only lyrics I could make out were the title words, I thought it was a love song), three of the main attractions that would've been perfectly in step with Nothing's Shocking had they tweaked them a bit.

CD i know of. the music is great best J.A. I love the group and the disk but I collect and when I pay for new products I don't like to get cracked cases. I just did not want to deal with it thats why I went with a 4.

Buy Jane's Addiction
© 2006 - 2010 TopRankProducts.com - Home Theater Store : Privacy Policy