Steady & Co [Import]

Track Listings

 
1. S-T-E-A-D-Y-Intro
2. Chambers
3. Japanese Title
4. Hip Drop
5. Sorrow
6. Japanese Title
7. Time Erases
8. Jammed Train
9. Pass Da Mic
10. Wonderland
11. Only Holy Story
12. Up And Down
13. Japanese Title
14. Stay Gold
15. After Hours

Steady & Co,Steady & Co,Wea,World Music
Boys and Girls in America
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Live Good
  • So Here's the Thing......
  • Another superb effort by one of the most passionate, intelligent bands in the world
  • BORING
  • You call this music? I call it garbage.
Boys and Girls in America
The Hold Steady
Manufacturer: Vagrant Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. The Crane Wife
  2. Return to Cookie Mountain (with Bonus Tracks)
  3. Separation Sunday
  4. Almost Killed Me
  5. The Information

ASIN: B000HIP3X4
Release Date: 2006-10-03

Tracks:

  1. Stuck Between Stations
  2. Chips Ahoy!
  3. Hot Soft Light
  4. Same Kooks
  5. First Night
  6. Party Pit
  7. You Can Make Him Like You
  8. Massive Night
  9. Citrus
  10. Chillout Tent
  11. Southtown Girls

Amazon.com

Craig Finn loves books and bars. It's not just that he pinched the title of he Hold Steady's third album from the ultimate manual for boozehounds, Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" ("Boys and Girls in America have such a sad time together"), but that every leery line of every song is crammed with the wayward poetry and passion of someone who is more familiar with the bottom of a whiskey glass than the sun. Thanks to his raucous Brooklyn band, his music--louder than its predecessors this time, with a few more ballads--also happens to make a great soundtrack for an all-night bender where broken-hearts and broken bottles become one. --Aidin Vaziri

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Live Good.......2007-05-12

Received this CD about an hour before a live, soldout(~600) show. Good show, good CD.

2 out of 5 stars So Here's the Thing.............2007-05-06

Like a lot of previous reviewers, this band caught my attention by making numerous "Best Of" lists from the music press. The reviews led to me to listen to the song samples in a local Borders store. The music reminded me of Bruce Springsteen on a few tracks (a good thing) and the rest of the songs seemed to have a fresh groove to them, so I bought the CD right then.

So here's the thing.......This band is indeed a group of talented musicians, so what I heard in the store had some validity; BUT the problem with this album is that ALL 11 SONGS are essentially either about drug or alchohol experiences, or contain drug/alchohol references. Seriously. As a result, I was bored by track 5 or 6 and skimmed the remaining tracks to make sure that I wasn't missing anything (I wasn't) and have no desire to ever listen to this CD again.

It's a shame, really, because these folks are really innovative and fresh musically - they are simply a one trick pony lyrically, and that gets old real fast. If The Hold Steady could diversify the subject matter of their lyrics, this could have been a decent album. As it is, I can only give it two stars.

5 out of 5 stars Another superb effort by one of the most passionate, intelligent bands in the world.......2007-04-24

I love this album and I love the Hold Steady. I want to get that out of the way at the outset. I say this because I don't want my following comments misconstrued as part of the rather mindless stream of criticism that seems to follow this band around. There is no question that the Hold Steady is the recipient of more unfounded and ill-considered bashing of any bad around. Not by critics! Music critics rightfully praise the band as one of the finest in the world. And the praise is deserved. These guys obviously care passionately about their music and engage in absolutely no poser gamesmanship that their critics foist on them. I've tried hard to understand why people dislike the band. OK, Craig Finn doesn't sing so much as declaim, but he declaims well and is an absolutely brilliant lyricist. Musically, the rest of the band is a bunch of crackerjacks. Tad Kubler is one of the finest guitarists plying his craft in America. On top of all this, they are absolutely brilliant live performers, generous with the audience, working hard to put on a great show. Yet, the critics (again, not by critics or people who actually know what they talk about) persist.

So, on to what I have to say that could be construed as criticism. I give this album five stars because it deserves it. But I will add that I think this is the band's least brilliant album to date. Mind you, I don't think they are in decline or that this represents a disappointing effort. In many ways it is their slickest, most polished album yet. They are obvious masters of their craft and I think they well deserve their #4 ranking in the prestigious Village Voice Pazz & Jop Poll, which I think laps the Grammies several times in terms of credibility. The Poll is voted on by nearly 500 of the most prestigious rock critics in the world. For any album to finish in the top five means it has some serious chops going on. Nonetheless, my favorite Hold Steady album remains ALMOST KILLED ME followed by SEPARATION SUNDAY.

I could very well be wrong, but it seems to me that BOYS AND GIRLS IN AMERICA lacks just a hint of the edge that I found in the earlier albums. And I find that I don't love as many songs on the album as passionately as I do on previous albums. Not that songs like "Chips Ahoy" and "Hot Soft Light" aren't incredible. And they've never played as intensely as on "Same Kooks." But nearly every song on ALMOST KILLS ME simply blows me away. Not so on this one. Also -- and I confess this is a purely personal bias -- I don't like the way that the addition of keyboards to the mix. I didn't like it on SEPARATION SUNDAY and I like it less on BOYS AND GIRLS IN AMERICA. I prefer the band as a quartet than as a quintet.

If you get this as your first Hold Steady album, if you have any musical taste or sophistication at all, it is going to blow you away. You will be amazed at how literate and articulate Craig Finn's lyrics are. He is an amazing front man, though he is also the focus of much of the hatred for the poor souls who mindlessly shut themselves out from the band. His delivery of the lyrics is astonishing, but what he does can barely be described as singing. And he simply doesn't look like a rocker. He looks, in fact, like he should be selling household appliances at Best Buy. Or perhaps doing your taxes at H & R Block. If you saw the guy on the street and were asked to list the 1,000 most likely occupations for him, rock star would not make the list. He doesn't even look like he could be a record store clerk. But he is one of the most brilliant people in rock today. So also is guitarist Tad Kubler. My one regret about the Hold Steady albums is that they don't give Kubler enough room to put his vast skills on guitar on display. Still, this is a great album. And if you love this but don't have their two earlier albums, you've got a lot to look forward to.

1 out of 5 stars BORING.......2007-04-11

I've just listened to all the amazon snippets after reading a positive review from Uncut. Fair enough I have not heard all of every song but what I did hear was basically the same song over and over except for the obligatory ballad. The guy is an awful singer and they sound like a good bar band at best. There are so many bands and singer songwriters who do this style of music who are 100% better than this mess

1 out of 5 stars You call this music? I call it garbage........2007-03-06

I look forward at the end of every year to reading the rock press' "Top Albums" of the year. Bewilderingly, this band's wretched cd appeared on one of them. This is an astonishingly horrible album. The lead "singer" - if you can even label it that - mumbles, rambles incoherently. He is shaming his life, his very existence with what appears to sound like an egregiously awful imitation of Shane MacGowan (Pogues). The difference is that the "vocalist" from this band, has zero talent. There are hundreds of wannabe bar bands making the rounds all over the country - why ON EARTH does this talentless outfit merit any kind of acclaim whatsoever? I agree with the reviewer who said there is not a single memorable note to be remembered. It's utterly pathetic. If there is a song on here that is even REMOTELY worthy of a second spin, perhaps "Chillout Tent" - but that's only because it's a track that features actual singers in guest performances. But the rest is a moronic waste of recording time. Pulling some drunk off the street, filling him up with whiskey, sticking him in front of a mic replete with the most unoriginal "music" would be more entertaining than this...or was that the idea for this all along? I am aghast that this can find it's way into the market as it has. At best, it's the kind of worthless slop that any struggling band sells out of their guitar case, hoping to make a buck. That's where this disastrous release belongs. It is a complete and utter travesty to bestow upon this album anything less than your contempt.
Separation Sunday
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • These guys are great
  • Back to the blues
  • Rock 'n' roll is alive and well thanks to the Hold Steady, amen.
  • a unique band; in a bad way
  • Save your money
Separation Sunday
The Hold Steady
Manufacturer: French Kiss
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Almost Killed Me
  2. Boys and Girls in America
  3. Return to Cookie Mountain (with Bonus Tracks)
  4. The Crane Wife
  5. We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank

ASIN: B0008KLW2C
Release Date: 2005-05-03

Tracks:

  1. Hornets! Hornets!
  2. Cattle And The Creeping Things
  3. Your Little Hoodrat Friend
  4. Banging Camp
  5. Charlemagne In Sweatpants
  6. Stevie Nix
  7. Multitude Of Casualties
  8. Don't Let Me Explode
  9. Chicago Seemed Tired Last Night
  10. Crucifixion Cruise
  11. How A Resurrection Really Feels

Amazon.com

It's only natural that the Hold Steady singer Craig Finn receives all the attention. After all, he's the one with the big mouth. And while his odd and humorous rants are essentially compelling, they wouldn't be half as engrossing if his backing group, especially fellow ex-Minnesotan and Lifter Puller guitarist Tad Kubler, didn't smack up such a glorious din, scabrous punk rock swagger dolled up with classic hard rock power chords. "Separation Sunday" is the NYC-based group's second album and it's every bit as sassy and city wise as their 2004 debut "Almost Killed Me." Finn doesn't know the meaning of the phrase 'hold your tongue' and rudely shouts down the opposition on a number of romantic and religious matters, underscoring his contempt with touching moments of true pathos. Finn's surrounded by self-mutilators, abused lovers and deluded characters desperately chasing faith. It's a good thing he has such a crack band to keep them all in check. -- Jaan Uhelszki

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars These guys are great .......2007-03-13

Well I'm a late convert to the Hold Steady, having just bought the newest CD Boys and Girls in America about a month ago (and listening to it nonstop since then). This weekend I found a copy of Separation Sunday and grabbed it and I love it. This one's probably a little more raw and rough around the edges than Boys and Girls, which has more piano and more "catchy" tunes. However I gotta say---Separation Sunday has absolutely outstanding lyrics, albeit very focused on the subject of how to reconcile a life of sex, drugs, and rock n' roll with religious and spiritual belief. I find it all quite brilliant, and love the Replacements/Stones/E Street Band sound of the music. The only caveat is the singer's voice---it's not for everyone. But that never stopped me from loving the music of Warren Zevon, Tom Waits, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, etc. etc. And I have to say, after 2 CD's, I love the Hold Steady and look forward to all of their future releases.

4 out of 5 stars Back to the blues.......2007-01-30

I thought this album was decent, not the greatest of the year but it had a different feel than most of the rock and roll that was spewed out in the last couple of years. The Hold Steady remind me of The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. I like the references to hoodrats and Christianity, two very different directions but the Hold Steady makes it work. The music definitely outweighs the talent of the singer. His range is very limited, and I think that hurts the band a little. His lyrics however are potent and worth listining to. All in all its a good blues album and worth your money.

5 out of 5 stars Rock 'n' roll is alive and well thanks to the Hold Steady, amen........2007-01-21

This album is a must have for those who love to rock, and it just may hit you where it counts if you're lucky. I remember writing down all the words to Back In Black on a small piece of paper when I was 14, and then reading it over and over during Catholic mass until I had them memorized. My little brother asked me what I was reading. When I told him, he got all wide-eyed and said in a hushed voice, "That's bad." And that's the gist of this album--how do you reconcile your love for rock 'n' roll with the mores of the Christian Faith? Maybe not a question that needs to be answered, but the fact that this band decided to pose it within the context of a classic rock hook-laden album makes this disc more entertaining than 95% of the music that came out in 2005. This band is pretty much the thinking person's Cheap Trick.

1 out of 5 stars a unique band; in a bad way.......2006-11-10

The style of the Hold Steady gets old really fast; the singer doesn't even sing, he only talks while guitar goes on in the background. That sounded fine to me on the first song, but then I listened further and soon was getting bored with the repetitive nature of the songs. THe only song that pulls off this style is "Fire Coming Out of the Monkey's Head" by Gorillaz, which has narration more than singing. Cake also is kind of more narration than singing but only slightly. Anyway, the Hold Steady are an awful band who will probably fade into nothingness soon seeing that only 20 people have bothered to review it on Amazon.

1 out of 5 stars Save your money.......2006-10-07

I bought that last cd and it SUCKED! The singer sings monotone the whole entire time and doesn't have any variations of tone. The music isn't half bad, it isn't great, but it certainly isn't so good that i can ignore the lame-o singer. its just terrible terrible terrible. if you listen to anything that i say hear this: do not buy this album, you will regret it for all of eternity!
-steve (music master)
Almost Killed Me
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Great first album by one of the world's greatest rock bands
  • One of the best rock albums of 2004.
  • Hold Steady
  • A little too raw
  • This is the Album that made The Hold Steady one of my favorite bands...
Almost Killed Me
The Hold Steady
Manufacturer: French Kiss
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Separation Sunday
  2. Boys and Girls in America
  3. Return to Cookie Mountain (with Bonus Tracks)
  4. We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank
  5. Live At Fingerprints

ASIN: B0001IN0VM
Release Date: 2004-04-20

Tracks:

  1. Positive Jam
  2. The Swish
  3. Barfruit Blues
  4. Most People Are DJ's
  5. Certain Songs
  6. Knuckles
  7. Hostile, Mass.
  8. Sketchy Metal
  9. Sweet Payne
  10. Killer Parties

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great first album by one of the world's greatest rock bands.......2007-02-17

There are overhyped bands and then there are underhyped bands, bands that receive scads of unfair and inaccurate criticism. The Hold Steady definitely falls into the latter category. I find it astonishing that a number of people are willing to dismiss them. Rock critics, who are far more finely attuned to chicanery than average, everyday fans (as the dean of American rock critics, Robert Christgau, has pointed out, if you spend almost every one of your waking hours listening to music, you are going to be better at it than someone who spends only a few hours each week), do not detect the villainous flaws that the band's detractors do. In fact, their most recent album, BOYS AND GIRLS IN AMERICA, was voted by the 494 participating critics (definitely a who's who of writers about music) the Village Voice's 2006 Pazz and Jop Poll the #4 album of the year. Getting 494 top critics to agree about something is a pretty impressive feat.

So, it is utterly safe to ignore the people who dismiss The Hold Steady. The fact isn't that they "got" the band and dismissed it, but that they still haven't a clue. I will allow that some people just have trouble with Craig Finn's voice and perhaps his appearance. He looks today like in ten years he will have the archetypal appearance of a used car dealer. He absolutely does not look like the headliner of a great rock band. Furthermore, while it is hard to deny his amazing gifts as a lyricist, he doesn't sing. Instead, he declaims the lyrics of the song. Few people manage a completely unique "singing" style, but Finn definitely has. Myself, I absolutely love the guy. No, he doesn't sing, but his vocal style perfectly suits the band's aesthetic. And I love the way his lyrics combine equally cynicism, humor, weariness, and more than a little self-deprecation.

So much attention attaches itself to Craig Finn that sometimes the rest of the band escapes notice. But this truly is a fantastic band from top to bottom. Finn might be the most dominating frontman in America today, but Tad Kubler is one of America's greatest guitarists. Indeed, he may have been born outside his time. He is one of the few guitarists around capable of foisting a song onto his back and dominating it for long stretches of time. He would be a legend had he lived in the seventies instead of today, had he lived when long, eight-minute guitar solos were not only acceptable but in demand. Anyone doubting his ability should listen to the second have of "Everyone's a DJ." The ghosts of Leslie West, Alvin Lee, and Ted Nugent haunt every measure. If Craig Finn gives the band most of its identity, Kubler gives it its musical backbone. Though they sound almost nothing like one another, a Finn-Kubler comparison to Jagger-Richards isn't misleading.

Although BOYS AND GIRLS IN AMERICA is The Hold Steady's break out album, I honestly think ALMOST KILLED ME remains their best album. But I say that with the caveat that all three of their albums fall into the "must own" category. No band on planet earth has produced three such perfect albums in the past three years.

Other reviewers have praised "The Swish," which truly is one of the great rock songs of recent years. I actually like "Everyone's a DJ" even more, mainly because of Kubler's long guitar solo. But for brilliant, funny, clever lyrics it is hard to beat "Knuckles." Every single song, however, is infused with great lyrical content, Finn's passionate declamation of the words, and one of the tightest bands in the world pounding out great music. If you love music, you need this album. They do remind you of some of the great bands of the past, though interestingly of bands that normally you do not think of at the same time. What other band sounds like Bruce Springsteen, Thin Lizzy, and the Replacements all at the same time, while also sounding completely unlike them all?

While all three of the Hold Steady's albums should be in the musical library of any music fan, I also encourage more serious collectors to go in search of two albums by the Minneapolis band Lifter Puller, FIESTAS AND FIASCOS and the compilation album SOFT ROCK, which includes virtually everything else Lifter Puller recorded. The reason this is relevant is that the frontman for that band was Craig Finn and the lead guitarist was Tad Kubler. The sound is different from the Hold Steady, but the music is of the same high quality.

5 out of 5 stars One of the best rock albums of 2004........2007-01-29

If you like power chords and clever, intelligent lyrics, this CD is for you. "The Swish" is in the running for rock song of the decade, and the rest of the album is solid. It manages to be completely original, and at the same time heartily celebrates its influences. Frontman Craig Finn doesn't sing as much as he rants, and in this way his delivery is somewhat similar to that of Joe Strummer.

5 out of 5 stars Hold Steady.......2007-01-09

I love this album. I adore it. I burnt a hole in it. It is not Separation Sunday, but Killer Parties and Most People are DJs are still 2 of my favorite Hold Steady songs.

Why, oh why, hasn't the license holder for Lifter Puller re-released those albums yet?

3 out of 5 stars A little too raw.......2006-12-27

Let me first say that there are no exceptional songs on this album, perhaps with the exception of The Swish. The attitude of the album gives its strength. Another note is that the vocalist, well, doesnt exactly sing much at all. Throughout the album he has an attitude of attempting to bring back "the good old days" and a discontent with the current situation. He seems determined to party, drink, and have a good time. The bar rock side to this music can be easily heard but this gritty and dirty album can rock at times.

4 out of 5 stars This is the Album that made The Hold Steady one of my favorite bands..........2006-11-28

The first thing I heard from them was last year's fantastic "Separation Sunday" - which, although it was great, ended up just outside my top ten for the year.
And then this year, with "Boys & Girls in America" receiving all sorts of praise, and deserving the bulk of it, I managed to pick up a a copy of this, their first album, with only moderate expectations. See, I've heard from various publications (RS and P-fork) that their three-albums-in-three-years were a streak of solid discs reminiscent of Wire's three at the tail end of the 70s - and I'm a sucker for comparisons, so I had to go back to the beginning and hear this one to see if the name-dropping was apt.
And in this case it most definitely is.

"Almost Killed Me" is the kind of album that looks better now than it did when it first came out, I think. Like, given the benefit of hindsight, yeah - this was really great, but had I heard it at the time, I may have written it off as an interesting if ultimately unspectacular debut, which many people did (largely as a result of being turned off by Craig Finn's vocals) - and which is a shame. It's also why I'm glad I came to this album in the way that I did - with the benefit of hindsight.
Going back now and listening to this, with excellent album opener "Positive Jam" leading seamlessly into the rollicking "The Swish," it's clear that this is the genius band that now is the Hold Steady in chyrsalis, and that's a beautiful thing.

....and hard drugs are for bartenders, I think I might've mentioned that before...
Rock Steady
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Why am I reviewing this?.
  • Awesone
  • New Territory But Still Wonderful Music
  • Rock Steady is really lovely underneath it all.
  • Great CD!
Rock Steady
No Doubt
Manufacturer: Interscope Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Tragic Kingdom
  2. Return of Saturn
  3. No Doubt
  4. Love. Angel. Music. Baby.
  5. Everything in Time

ASIN: B00005QDW1
Release Date: 2001-12-11

Tracks:

  1. Rock Steady (Intro)
  2. Hella Good
  3. Hey Baby
  4. Making Out
  5. Underneath It All
  6. Detective
  7. Don't Let Me Down
  8. Start the Fire
  9. Running
  10. In My Head
  11. Platinum Blonde Life
  12. Waiting Room
  13. Rock Steady

Amazon.com

As much as No Doubt have protested that they are a singular unit and not "Gwen and her guys," Gwen Stefani's much-touted duets with rapper Eve and techno mogul Moby did nothing to juice the boys' spotlight, which had been steadily dimming since the release of 2000's Return of Saturn. But all that banter is silenced with Rock Steady, on which the music is definitely the star, unfettered by Gwen's cutesy-clouded feminism or dumped-by-the-boyfriend woes. Having mostly departed from their ska home base, No Doubt's well-navigated exploration of hip-hop beats, reggae, and the reunion of '80s keyboards and guitars finds the group picking up the pop-rock baton that Garbage dropped with an unsettling thud. Rock Steady's delegate of stalwart producers perfectly decorate the disc with their respective expertise; Ric Ocasek (new wave), Prince (R&B), Nellee Hooper (trip-hop), Sly & Robbie (dub), and William Orbit (trance) offer some staying power to music that's always been on the edge of disposable. Despite their disparate styles, the songs complement each other like stars and stripes. This is No Doubt's best album to date, and as they continue to expand their influences, the party only gets bigger. --Beth Massa

Album Description

Album released with 2 slightly different CD covers. One cover will have a black background and the other will have a white background. Orders will be filled at random.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Why am I reviewing this?........2007-02-03

I have always liked No Doubt no matter what everyone says, on this album you can tell what direction the band was heading towards its more pop with a mix of everything from reggae/dance/80's new wave/funk/r'n'b/rock and No Doubt's music has always been diverse but not like this so you can understand why some fans were upset including myself, it wasn't untill I heard this at a party in 2003 thats when I dicided to check out this album cause I wasn't interested at the time and I'm the type of person who listens to heavier music. This album was good but only if you don't compare it with Tragic Kingdom, you have songs like Hella good, underneath it all, platinum blonde life, start the fire and the funky and catchy song with Prince called Waiting room which is my favorite cause it sounds like an 80's r'n'b song from Prince and Gwen does a good job of singing on this she sounds really good or Hella good ;-) bad joke, the whole album has its moments but there are some bad songs like Detective and In my head which just sounds repetitive and some parts sound like a video game with the weird sound fx. Overall this album is quite catchy and fun to listen to especially if your a No Doubt fan atleast it was better then what Gwen Stefani did with her awful solo career.

5 out of 5 stars Awesone.......2007-01-10

I love No Doubt. Great Record. True to Rock Steady sound in Jamaican music. Was even recorded in Jamaica.

5 out of 5 stars New Territory But Still Wonderful Music.......2006-12-29

"Rocky Steady" came just 1 year after "Return of Saturn" but there was a quite big diffrence between the two. "Rock Steady" was full of energic party songs and pretty varied with all kinds of music. On this album they also got unexpected help from other producers. The most interesting combo is perhaps Neptunes that produced "Hella Good" and Prince that co-wrote "Waiting Room" and also sings on it and Jamaican dance hall producers Sly & Robbie that helpef create a somewhat exotic sound on some songs. Nellee Hooper, Ric Ocasek, and William Orbit also helped produce even if they didn't write anything. Combared to "Saturn" this album would become full of hitsingles, but less serious music and more pop sounding then ever before. There are still plenty of Ska/New Wave songs but some longtime No Doubt fans would be dissapointed at this album being too commercial. Gwen Stefani had also apperead on Eve and Moby songs almost at the same time at this one was released and a few years later she released her debut which was a pop album with Hip Hop infleunces, but listening through this album it get's pretty obvious that It's not only Gwen who's in change, but actually the whole band. To be honest, I don't think this album is bad at all. It's diffrent but it's funky and very catchy. A good band must be able to take risks, right?.

First song is called "Hella Good" and is a Neptune production. Strange at first thought maybe, but at second it feels like genius. Bon Jovi got unexpected help from Max Martin on their "It's My Lfe" so why not No Doubt aswell. This song reached a #13 place on the bilboard and is a really catchy pop song that surely will make you up and dance. "Hey Baby" is another uptempo featuring dance hall king Bounty Killer. It's also a catchy pop song which makes you go up and dance and reached the top 5 in US. "Making Out" Is New Wave/Pop and wouldn't have been bad on a Gwen solo album either, it feutures synthesizers and the sound is very cool. One of the best songs of this album. "Underneath It All" is a reggae sounding ballad that reached #3 on the charts, it was co-written between Gwen and Dave Stewart of Eurythmics. Dancehall artist Lady Saw also appears briefly. "Detective" is another great new wave song with good hook and sound. So far the album is sublime.

"Don't Let Me Down" still new wave but sounds like some songs on "Saturn" with more edgy sound. "Start the Fire" is dance hall inspired and quite exotic, it's synthesizer sound is a little 80's. "Running" was the last single of this album, but never became a hit. A Pop ballad, and very good aswell. "In My Head" is a slow paced song, not bad but lacks a good hook and is my least favorite here. "Platinum Blonde Life" is rock, plain and simple. It showes the rougher side of the band. "Waiting Room" is interesting since Prince co-wrote and appear on it. It's a rock-pop song and it is simular to some of Prince's most recent music. The title track is the closer. An exotic midtempo with cool and breezy sound.

Overall, Many bands tend to sound the same album after album, but not No Doubt. All of their albums sound diffrent and while some No Doubt purists didn't like the pop sound of this album it's undeniably one of the catchiest and most hooky albums of 2001. It's very varied though and you got a bit of everything here. Some reggae/ska, some electronic new wave and some catchy pop. Some of the music here quite simular to the music Gwen did on her solo albums. From start to finnish, this album is simply great and very unexpected music from No Doubt at the time. This is an album for your collection.

4 out of 5 stars Rock Steady is really lovely underneath it all........2006-09-06

Rock Steady is a great party album. No Doubt just let their hair down and did the damn thing. No, the music isn't ska, but it still has elements of island, reggae flavor mixed with rock. Their previous album Return of Saturn didn't really grab most people's attention despite being the best album of their career. I still marvel at how much I enjoy Return of Saturn, but I digress. Rock Steady comes one year later, and was met to better fanfare partly because the public was warmed over due to Gwen's solo appearances with Eve and Moby. Also, the music is simpler and catchier, which seems to be what the masses want.

Most of the songs are really good. There are no Don't Speaks, but the album is very consistent.

Hella Good-this song was written by the Neptunes and I suspect they produced it even though the song is credited to being produced by Nellee Hooper. You can hear the Neptunes sound in it regardless.

Hey Baby-it took me forever to like this song. It was released as their first single, and I remember hearing it and going, "nope, I'm not buying the album." Obviously, I changed my mind.

Making Out-has a weird sound but is pretty good. Think of a discoish, electronic, computer game like 80s sound.

Underneath It All-a good song with Lady Saw as a featurette. One of the reggae songs.

Detective-a cute song about a girl catching her guy cheating. "Hey girl save the liar. Can't you see his pants on fire?"

Don't Let Me Down-the worst song on the album.

Start The Fire-another reggae song. It's competent, but I hardly listen to it.

Running-a sentimental song about trying to keep a relationship on track.

In My Head-one of my favorites. It's about a paranoid woman who can't trust her boyfriend. I love it when she chants "...cause everybody wants everybody else! Everybody wants everybody else! Only in my head."

Platinum Blonde Life-I didn't like it initially but it has grown on me. I love the music and the lyrics.

Waiting Room-most seem to really hate this song, but I love it. It's weird sounding, but Prince produced it and is featured in it. I love Prince and No Doubt. If they make a cool song together, it's musical bliss.

Rock Steady-a great song that probably should have been released as a single instead of Running.

5 out of 5 stars Great CD!.......2006-04-14

I have had this for 4 years now, and I am not the least bit tired of it. It is catchy, kind of ska, and has Gwen Stefani's very intense writing. But her lyrics are a bit softer in this CD. The music video for "Hey baby" is included on this CD, and it is just about the best music video I have ever seen. It also has a "making of" feature which is fun too. I love singing along to this CD. Gwen Stefani has such a great voice and such a unique sense of style it's hard not to like her. I recommend this CD to grieving No Doubt lovers. And I'm sorry if I wasn't helpful. I don't really care that much; I just want you to buy a good CD.
Steady On
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • STILL HER BEST WORK....
  • Wearing well with time
  • worth a listen
  • Shawn Colvin, Will You Marry Me, Please?
  • I was born to be hearing this CD
Steady On
Shawn Colvin
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B0000026TH
Release Date: 1989-10-04

Tracks:

  1. Steady On
  2. Diamond In The Rough
  3. Shotgun Down The Avalanche
  4. Stranded
  5. Another Long One
  6. Cry Like An Angel
  7. Something To Believe In
  8. The Story
  9. Ricochet In Time
  10. The Dead Of The Night

Amazon.com

The title track on Shawn Colvin's Steady On fits well as the folk singer's theme song. "I'm Gonna Keep My Head on Straight," she sings, "I Just Hope It's Not Too Late." That Colvin has been one of contemporary folk's most endearing performers not only underscores the subject of her songs but suggests her true appeal--heartfelt, often confessional lyrics and well-crafted melodies that evoke a broad palette of emotions. While she is strong on delicate balladry like "Shotgun Down the Alley," Colvin's forte is turning up the tempo and giving us folk songs with rock & roll gusto. --Nick Heil

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars STILL HER BEST WORK...........2006-09-07

Althgh I have nearly all of Shawn Colvin's albums & have seen her live twice, this album remains her best work to date. I am a great fan of her sound, music, lyrics - but somehow this album is most identifiable from the first cord. Ms. Colvin is a remarkable artist, poet. There are few artists like her and/or could be compared to her : Jann Arden comes to mind @ the moment. If anyone is curious about Shawn Colvin's music - I HIGHLY recommend this album to be where you shld begin your collection.

4 out of 5 stars Wearing well with time.......2005-10-26

My first exposure to Colvin didn't come on this album or even with her pop hit "Sunny Came Home" (from A FEW SMALL REPAIRS). It was in a non-hit duet with Bruce Hornsby on "Lost Soul" (from his A NIGHT ON THE TOWN disc). The voice was clearly special and I checked our local library to see if they had anything by her. I fell in love with the disc and later added it to my own collection. Now, 16 years later I'm reassessing its merits.

HIGHLIGHTS:
The title track is Colvin's defiant yawp after another relationship implosion (the "the nuclear winter of another love affair" as Colvin refers to it.) "Diamond in the Rough" takes a childhood fantasy of ordinary rocks as priceless gems to become a metaphor for lost innocence. ("But in a little while I got steeped in authority/Heaven only knows what went wrong/There is nothing so cruel than to bury that jewel.."). Fellow folkies Suzanne Vega and Lucy Kaplansky join Colvin on backing vocals. If "Steady" is Colvin's ode to romantic persistence, "Shotgun down the Avalanche" is Colvin aching for what was lost. ("After countless appeals/we keep spinning our wheels/On this mountain of new fallen snow/So I let go the catch and we are over the edge/You have left me nowhere to go..") A spectral backing vocal from co-producer John Leventhal is a nice sonic touch to the somewhat country-ish shuffle. "Another Long One" is the most musically adventurous, folding in a panoply of percussion (I think I hear Chinese cymbals, bongo and perhaps aluminum pie pan?), cello, fiddle, and an electric guitar that toys with effects that stretch its tone so much in a couple occasions it sounds like an old warped vinyl record. It also probably has one of the more "pop" sounding hooks, belying the singer's tortured insomnia as she thinks about the man she's lost and can't forget. ("It's just me and my well-intentioned spite/I said someone did this to me/But no one did, there's no injustices..") While I find the 2nd half of the disc to be weaker than the first, there's one last highwater mark in the tender "Something to Believe In". The song is the antidote to the despair in so many of the other songs, hopeful without Pollyanna-isms. ("There will always be stars in the wind/Little lines on your face when you grin/When it looks like you've done it again/And you just don't know where to begin/There will always be something to believe in..."). Hornsby returns the favour here, guesting on piano, though the filigrees he adds here are somewhat more restrained than is typical on his own works.

LOWS:
While there's nothing truly substandard here, I find "Ricochet in Time" and "The Dead of the Night" to be the least involving tracks. They simply don't draw me in.

BOTTOM LINE:
Those who found Colvin on the strength of the effervescent "Sunny Came Home" and the poppier material on A FEW SMALL REPAIRS may be put off by the difference in sound here. It's definitely not an "immediate" listen. But if you spend some time with the CD, it will grow to become among your favourites. Recommended especially for pop fans who want more "adult" fare lyrically.

5 out of 5 stars worth a listen.......2005-06-28

Thank goodness for brothers and sisters, otherwise I may have never discovered this cd.I heard the song "steady on " playing at my sisters house and borrowed the cd. I have since bought it and several other cds by Shawn Colvin but it is by far my favorite. I was happy to see Shawn have some comercial success with " A Few Small Repairs" But I would reccommend "Steady On " if you only buy one disc. Like one of the other people that reviewed this cd my tw favorite SC songs are "Diamond In The Rough" and "Shotgun Down The Avalanch" SDTA is a song that almost perfectly describes my feelings towards a dear friend. Its a song I wish I would have written, just like "solsbury Hill by Peter Gabriel. Except I don't write songs. But really I think all the songs on Steady On are great. Its nice to think that Shawn Colvin is the type of artist that will be around awhile and another "Steady On" could be right around the corner. Its a cd you can buy right here on amazon for dirt cheap used. I am not endorsing Amazon I am endorsing Shawn Colvin. But what do I know?? By the way, I got to see Shawn in Atlanta in concert along with Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, and Bruce Hornsby, What a great line up and show..........Good Day!!

5 out of 5 stars Shawn Colvin, Will You Marry Me, Please?.......2004-07-24

I'd give this CD 10 stars if Amazon allowed it!..But I can't, say enough superlatives about how fine Shawn Colvin's vocals, guitar licks, and lyrics are..I saw a concert with Jackson Browne and he introduced Shawn as the most talented artist he knew!..Shocking, but true!..Jackson Browne's legacy has always been to kickstart the careers of less visible talent..Because Jackson is so adroit himself, he doesn't envy other people's gifts, but rather salutes them..And Shawn Colvin is well, a rock angel for the ages!..She just needs to hit the road with an amped "live" tour, with the same class band she had years ago when I saw her sing "Tennessee" on the Tonite Show, before she was remotely well known: to build that Shawn Colvin Legion of Tye-Dye-Hard Core Followers, like The Dead Heads: a mobile symphonic gas, The Colvin Cars, rolling right into your hometown, "alive"..And not play acoustic only all the time, though that's serious picking too..People I know and respect, see her acoustic concerts and often dont "get" Shawn, regrettably..Sorry, you whiney purists out there, but Shawn is just better, backed by an all star, electrified, rock band..This is a must own CD..I've played it countless times and it remains as fresh as rain water..Curiously, every song on the CD is pure gold..That's rare, to nail every cut..I've never understood why Shawn isn't a people's express..Her banner hanging on every street lamp in Austin..It's mystifying because all the raw talent natural law allows in one entity is there..One better, Shawn is a Dylan..Songwriter par excellence.."Riding Shotgun Down the Avalanche" is way smart, hip!..And that middle guitar solo is note-bending magic!..But not better than "In the Dead of the Night," the dark queen of all ballads! "I live in a dream, I brought it here, everynight it dies but it is reborn"..No fooling, buy this CD for yourself, or give it away: you'll earn instant karma points..Tell your best friends and your worst enemies about Shawn: It's positively 4th street for a Hatfield to educate a McCoy now and again, for a worthy cause..Pay it forward..Shawn Colvin has been unfairly compared to Joni Mitchell ad naseum, but that's not righteous either, because she's too original to be compared to yet another superstar..Though I myself, did compare her to Bob..I'm sharing this because I'm paying it forward..And I'm happy to recommend Shawn in the same way Jackson Browne does, because Shawn Colvin is the real deal, just like Patsy Cline, The Texas Tornado, was!..Believe it!..It's the down and dirty truth! Not a hyperbolic West Texas dust storm!

5 out of 5 stars I was born to be hearing this CD.......2003-10-23

OK, that's a bit of an exageration, but I love it! This CD is a gem. It's the one that I come back to over and over. And then I listen to it over and over. Not a bad one in the batch. Every time I hear the lines like to The Story I'm amazed. I don't know why, but this verse just amazes me:

Well our father married our mother too young
And he took on a world like a fortunate son
But in the cellar downstairs waiting for the bomb scare
He would hide from us under the kitchen
Where she simmered so soft with her weapons of tin
And like so many suppers she just gave us to him
And he never did guess in her cast iron dress
She was burning beyond recognition

PERFECTION! The title song is strong and determined. The lines: Cause he seemed like a miracle, I ate it up like cereal, but it was something like shrapnel" rank up there with the absolute best descriptions of relationships gone wrong. Shotgun is a marvel of emotional expression. Something To Believe In is tender and touching but not in the least saccharine sweet. Shawn Colvin's delivery is always 100% on the money. The production is great. The instrumentation never outweighs the songs.

On this album Shawn Colvin shows that she is not just another girl with a guitar but an incredible talent. There isn't a bad number on this CD. Highly recommended!
Singles Going Steady
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Question marks in song titles are a good thing
  • A classic collection from overlooked punk greats
  • I'm a Buzzcocks addict!
  • Cuz You're an Orgasm Addict!!!
  • I just want a lover like any other. what do I get?
Singles Going Steady
Buzzcocks
Manufacturer: Capitol
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000000QGE
Release Date: 1992-07-14

Tracks:

  1. Orgasm Addict
  2. What Do I Get?
  3. I Don't Mind
  4. Love You More
  5. Ever Fallen In Love?
  6. Promises
  7. Everybody's Happy Nowadays
  8. Harmony In My Head
  9. What Ever Happened To?
  10. Oh Shit!
  11. Autonomy
  12. Noise Annoys
  13. Just Lust
  14. Lipstick
  15. Why Can't I Touch It?
  16. Something's Gone Wrong Again

Amazon.com

With a name designed to shock, and song titles like "Oh Shit?" and "Orgasm Addict" the Buzzcocks were proud proponents of British late-'70s punk rock. But in retrospect, it's easier to see what else they accomplished--some of the catchiest, most provocative pop singles ever. Pete Shelley expressed heartbreak and frustration ("Ever fallen in love with someone you shouldn't have fallen in love with?" goes one catchy chorus) without falling victim to lovey-dovey cliches. This definitive 1979 collection nicely captures the Manchester quartet's tight melodies, economic writing and appropriately fast pace. --Steve Knopper

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Question marks in song titles are a good thing .......2007-07-14

The Buzzcocks are the perfect mesh of punk and pop, a cleaned up version of the grittier Sex Pistols, but still pretty bratty themselves. Pete Shelley's voice has a melodic, high-register flair. He sounds downright desperate and pleading on songs like "What do I Get?" and "Ever Fallen in Love?," but it's OK because the chunky music that surrounds him is so easy on the ears. For every teenage angst-ridden fireball like "Orgasm Addict" and "Oh S*@#!," the Buzzcocks churn out more substantial, riff-driven tunes like "Autonomy," "Why Can't I Touch It?" and "Something's Gone Wrong Again." The quick-and-to-the-point "I Don't Mind" displays the best attributes of this band: a gritty guitar riff, indecipherable lyrics that seem to hint at a jaded romantic experience, and a swirling sing-along chorus that's completely addictive. "Ever Fallen in Love?" might be the Buzzcock's best-known song, and it's the one that attracted me to the band in the first place. Shelley's vocals come across as genuinely perplexed, hurt and questioning, but once again, the chorus of the song is so disgustingly saccharin and ultra-catchy, you can't help but mouth the words and bob your head in time with the music.

Shelley bemoans the lighthearted, overly satisfied outlook he observes from people in society on "Everybody's Happy Nowadays" (heard incessantly in some recent TV commercial, unfortunately), the irony being that his song is one of the most cheerful-sounding ditties ever put to tape. "Harmony in My Head," written by Steve Diggle, kind of reminds me of a Roger Waters-sung Pink Floyd tune on steroids. The irony here, of course, is that Waters couldn't write or sing a decent harmony himself if it was hand-delivered from Kurt Cobain via Heaven.

Shelley's ranting on "What Ever Happened to?," "Oh S*@#," "Noise Annoys" and "Just Lust" are true punk rock gems, infinitely better and more genuine than what studio-polished bands like Green Day and its ilk were doing years later. "Singles Going Steady" ends with "Why Can't I Touch It?" and "Something's Gone Wrong Again," respectively, two epic songs for a band whose songs usually cut off around the three-minute mark, on average. "Touch It" (6:32) is a mid-tempo tune with cool lyrics, a great riff and smooth groove, an almost danceable track. Unlike the rest of these songs, it lingers for a while. "Something's Gone Wrong" (4:29) ends the CD on a more urgent, troubled note, and, like all these songs, makes you want to discover more of the Buzzcocks' music.

5 out of 5 stars A classic collection from overlooked punk greats.......2007-01-10

Tight, sparse tunes, pissed off cockney vocals and barbed wire guitars make this a great look back at a seminal British punk band. A must have for fans of the genre.
DaveR

5 out of 5 stars I'm a Buzzcocks addict!.......2007-01-04

A collection of the Buzzcocks' first eight singles (tracks 1-8 are the A sides, while tracks 9-16 are the corresponding B-sides), Singles Going Steady is one of the greatest punk-pop records ever assembled. The songs are fast, fun, and energetic, complete with sophomoric humor ("Orgasm Addict"), relentlessly catchy choruses ("I Don't Mind"), simple, pointed lyrics ("Ever Fallen In Love," "Harmony In My Head"), and rip-roaring guitar work ("Autonomy"). Although they've been somewhat overlooked in favor of contemporaries such as the Sex Pistols and the Clash, the Buzzcocks were one of Britain's finest punk groups, and this is a great introduction to their catalogue, and a monumental addition to any punk library.

5 out of 5 stars Cuz You're an Orgasm Addict!!!.......2006-07-15

The first song "Orgasm Addict" is in my opinion the best. "Love you More" and "Running Free" are also faves of mine. I find the ones most other reviewers rave about arent nearly as good. As a whole, this album is essential to any rock/punk collection. It comes in at #358 on the RS500.. Enjoy

5 out of 5 stars I just want a lover like any other. what do I get? .......2006-01-06

Amazing Buzzcocks collection. One guy posted that the sound quality was lacking but I think it sounds just fine. I play this album all the time. Everyone should have these classics in their collection. Definitely 5 stars, these are timeless late-70s pop/punk gems.
Live At Fingerprints
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Live At Fingerprints
    The Hold Steady
    Manufacturer: Vagrant Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B000PFI412

    Product Description

    Official release of The Hold Steady's in-store performance at Fingerprints in Long Beach, CA. Track Listing: 1) Cattle and The Creeping Things, 2) Chips Ahoy, 3) You Can Make Him Like You, 4) Citrus, 5) You Gotta Dance With Who You Came To Dance With.
    Singles Going Steady
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • Great introduction to a great band
    • Improve on perfection?
    • Modified perfection
    • The Greatest Singles Album of All Time Just Got Better
    Singles Going Steady
    Buzzcocks
    Manufacturer: EMI Int'l
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B00005MAGA
    Release Date: 2001-08-27

    Tracks:

    1. Orgasm Addict
    2. What Do I Get?
    3. I Don't Mind
    4. Love You More
    5. Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)?
    6. Promises
    7. Everybody's Happy Nowadays
    8. Harmony In My Head
    9. You Say Don't Love Me
    10. Are Everything
    11. Strange Thing
    12. Running Free
    13. Whatever Happened To...?
    14. Oh Shit!
    15. Autonomy
    16. Noise Annoys
    17. Just Lust
    18. Lipstick
    19. Why Can't I Touch It?
    20. Something's Gone Wrong Again
    21. Raison D'etre
    22. Why She's The Girl From The Chainstore
    23. Airwaves Dream
    24. What Do You Know

    Album Description

    Import Re-Mastered reissue of the classic 1979 compilation features 24 tracks including 8 bonus tracks, 'You Say You Don't Love Me', 'Are Everything', 'Strange Thing', 'Running Free', 'Raison D'etre', 'Why She's A Girl From The Chainstore', 'Airwaves Dream' & 'What Do You Know'. EMI. 2001.

    Album Details

    Digitally remastered and expanded collection of the best of Pete Shelley, Steve Diggle and their mates. A compendium of both the single A-sides and B-sides, it now has 24 great tracks.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Great introduction to a great band.......2006-08-14

    Singles Going Steady is a great compilation of songs that span the most important years of this band's career. There are a ton of solid songs on this CD (24), which, when bought used, makes it a steal. This is a major staple worth jamming into your music library. It's also a great introduction to Buzzcocks music if you've never heard much of their stuff before. You can really hear the influence these guys have had on younger bands that try to copy the punk/post-punk sound. But of course, Buzzcocks do it better every time.

    4 out of 5 stars Improve on perfection?.......2006-03-22

    It would be hard to give "Singles Going Steady" anything less than 5 stars, ever. In any context.

    This remaster is, in most cases, excellent. The sound quality is generally better -- but I kept my old, unremastered copy too, if that tells you anything. The new mix is thicker, but I like the rawness of the original mix just as well for high-volume listening.

    A few of the bonus tracks sap the energy from the original release. But a few of the bonus tracks nest like litter-mates with this already awesome collection of non-album singles.

    Get this album one way or another -- whether this souped-up version or the older, clankier (but just as pleasing) version.

    And the "Spiral Scratch" EP too.

    4 out of 5 stars Modified perfection.......2003-10-01

    The US version of "Singles Going Steady" is my all-time favorite album, and all the tracks on the US version are included here (the 16 non-bonus tracks). The eight original A-sides are pure punk pop perfection, proving our lovelorn hero Pete Shelley was the most talented songwriter of the punk generation. The Buzzcocks had three winning aspects to all of their singles: (1) bright, bristling energy, delivered at a 100 mph pace courtesy of virtuoso drummer John Maher; (2) killer hooks from the twin guitar attack of Shelley and Steve Diggle; (3) sensitivity and sincerity to their lyrics. No other punk band can really claim to beat the Buzzcocks at any one of these three keys to success. I mean, just try and picture Johnny Rotten singing, "So why would I cry if you ever left me?/Maybe 'cause you're all I'm living for", with Sid Vicious providing beautiful harmonies in the background. Well, that's precisely what Pete Shelley and Steve Diggle did, without ever sounding remotely whimpy. It's hard to pick highlights, but the well-recognized classics "What Do I Get?" ("I only get sleepless niiiights!") and "Ever Fallen in Love?" ("...with someone you shouldn't've fallen in love with") will serve nicely, as will the more obscure gems "I Don't Mind" and the ferocious "Harmony in My Head", the only song Steve Diggle gets to sing on (aside from bonus tracks).

    And, surprise surprise, the original eight B-sides are every bit as good. They show the Buzzcocks branching out a bit into new directions, but they always manage to drive home great songs, like the harshly melodic punk epic "Autonomy", the bitter rockabilly of "Just Lust" ("There's bed in your eyes, but there's nothing to trust...just lust."), and the Cole Porter-esque "Lipstick" ("Does the lipstick on your lip stick on my face?"), along with any other you'd care to pick.

    So if it has all that, why only four stars? Well, it's the bonus tracks. If you're going to add material to a masterwork, the supplementals need to be as brilliant as the original material, otherwise the work will suffer as a whole. And that's just what happened here. Parts 1-3 suffer from absolutely deplorable production (thank heavy drug use for that...just say "no", kids), with the vocals buried at the bottom of the mix. And beyond that, the songs are weaker, too. The band was breaking apart at this point and as a result the creative focus was wandering quite a bit.

    You DO get two bona fide classics: Shelley's wistful "You Say You Don't Love Me", and Diggle's fiery character sketch "Why She's a Girl from the Chainstore", the only track from Parts 1-3 where the production isn't bad enough to ruin the song. Each of these sound just fine next to other classics like "Love You More" and "Everybody's Happy Nowadays". But the other six tracks range from pretty good (Diggle's "Running Free", which could have been a classic if not for vocals-at-the-bottom junkie production and, believe it or not, the excessive use of cheesy keyboards...in a Buzzcocks song!) to absolutely unlistenable (Shelley's terrible "Are Everything", easily beating out "Hollow Inside" as the worst Buzzcocks song of all time...to give you an idea of how bad it is, Heaven 17 covered it.)

    This CD is not a bad purchase at all. It's got the complete Buzzcocks UK 7" singles discography. And as the Buzzcocks rank with the Beatles when it comes to singles bands, this is a great album. But the more enjoyable listen is unquestionably the more compact US version, which is why I must give the UK version 4 stars.

    5 out of 5 stars The Greatest Singles Album of All Time Just Got Better.......2003-09-23

    The Buzzcocks' Singles Going Steady not only boasts superior sound, but now includes two singles from 1979's "A Different Kind of Tension" ("You Say You Don't Love Me" and "Raison D'Etre"), and 1980's "Parts 1,2,3" EP. Superior melodic pop - some of Shelley's and Diggle's finest work. Essential to any undertanding of UK punk and pop music of the late 70's early 80's.
    Steady Diet of Nothing
    Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    • Fugazi's most underrated effort
    • Steady Diet of Stagnation
    • the change is beginning
    • The most cohesive offering from the vets...
    • A downslide, but still good.
    Steady Diet of Nothing
    Fugazi
    Manufacturer: Dischord
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B000000JOM
    Release Date: 1991-07-01

    Tracks:

    1. Exit Only
    2. Reclamation
    3. Nice New Outfit
    4. Stacks
    5. Latin Roots
    6. Steady Diet
    7. Long Division
    8. Runaway Return
    9. Polish
    10. Dear Justice Letter
    11. KYEO

    Amazon.com

    This is punk rock slowed down to a lope, transformed into angry meditations on, well, a number of things--sometimes alienation, sometimes the fashion industry, and sometimes things too vague really to specify. Fugazi are always interesting, if only because of their absolute willingness to overturn every established punk rock convention (and what could be more punk rock?). On this record, inventiveness generally outpaces quality, and protest songs without catchy melodies--for all their good intentions--are pretty quickly forgotten. Regardless, their trademark staccato guitar attack and fractured rhythms are here in force, and at least two songs, "Reclamation" and "Nice New Outfit," rank with their best. --Percy Keegan

    Customer Reviews:

    4 out of 5 stars Fugazi's most underrated effort.......2006-02-22

    You know, I don't know why everyone dislikes this album so much. Sure, the production could've been better - cut them some slack, this was their first attempt at self-production - and "Reclamation" and "Dear Justice Letter" aren't up to par with Fugazi's other tunes, but this is an overall good cd.

    Highlights include "Exit Only", "KYEO", "Runaway Return", "Long Division", "Latin Roots" and the title track. Though not quite as good as "In on the Killtaker" or "Red Medecine", this is a worthy addition to the Fugazi catalogue and I highly recommend it.

    4 out of 5 stars Steady Diet of Stagnation.......2005-10-24

    Other reviewers have said that "Steady Diet..." is perhaps Fugazi's most cohesive effort. They would be right, if by cohesive they meant stagnant. Yes, that's right; this album, though a solid rock album, is definitely no stand-out of Fugazi's. Sure, there are good songs on here, and the band does tackle the subjects of women's rights ("Reclamation") and war ("K.Y.E.O."), but these simply do not stack up to classics like "Merchandise" and "Suggestion". A song like "Nice New Outfit" simply does not contain the enthusiasm of a song like "Bulldog Front"; while both were indeed written about the same topic, the former seems like it was simply being made to emulate the latter, with the end result being that "Nice New Outfit" falls tragically short.

    A good album nonetheless.

    3 out of 5 stars the change is beginning.......2005-10-10

    although a good Fugazi record, this one struggles to find it's step. the production sounds really flat and boring to me. nothing pops out. everything just sort of lies in this grey audio mass that never moves. given a proper production, some of these songs could have really come to life. Fugazi is beginning to experiment a bit in the song structures and musical ideas on this record; and it's a progression that doesn't come accross as fully developed yet. "Reclamation" has some nice lines in it, but is marred by uninspired guitar noise that doesn't lift up the song, but merely drags it along from verse to verse. and "Dear Justice Letter" has some strong political statements (which is rare for Fugazi to sing about such things in literal language); but the song's momentum seems to never really take off. the band tries a semi quiet song (as in, no distorted guitar) with "Long Division" and it's a nice tune and a sign of what's to come on future albums. "Steady Diet Of Nothing" works well with songs like the quirky "Stacks" and "Nice New Outfit" which sounds like it could have been written at the same time as the Repeater sessions. not a bad record...but def. not the one i would recommend to newcomers.

    5 out of 5 stars The most cohesive offering from the vets..........2004-04-19

    My opinion of this Album may be colored by the fact that it was the first one i got by the band in question. First impressions and all. I think is their high-water mark, their best score... But...

    Here's a way of handling this quandary, or illustrating my take on it- I have burned a two CD set of Fugazi tunes- a running/lifting/driving set, my fave songs from their (currently)8 running CDs. Not one song from 'Steady Diet,' is included...

    I think this one stands by its own virtues. And I don't like the way the songs go when they're removed from the context of the album- everything just flows together- drives into each other. A perfect album. So perfect in fact, that removing songs to other contexts (a running mix) makes them weaker. Perhaps that actually works against these songs- the album is so strong on its own virtues, it makes the songs less effective, song for song, pound for pound...

    Every other Fugazi album has a number of great tunes, usually 3-5 per album, and some good ones and a couple filler tracks ('In on the Kill Taker' being a notable exception- beyond the first two incredible and incendiary songs the album is nigh-unlistenable). But 'Steady Diet,' is just a phenomenally badass work that not only pushes through the limits of the genre- it's a damn fine rock album in and of itself.

    All just my opinion. But if you're looking for a good jumping in point for Fugazi- this was mine and i haven't regretted one damn second!

    4 out of 5 stars A downslide, but still good........2004-04-16

    This isn't as strong 13 Songs or Repeater. They take some chances, instead of staying with the tried and true, but some fall a bit flat and the songs aren't as strong.
    Stand Ye Steady: Songs of Courage & Inspiration
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • bowersreview
    • USMA Glee Club scores a real hit
    • Reverent, Full of Love
    • Good CD
    • A real disappointment...
    Stand Ye Steady: Songs of Courage & Inspiration

    Manufacturer: Curtain Call Prod
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B000ATQYVU
    Release Date: 2005-09-06

    Tracks:

    1. Men Of Freedom
    2. The Longest Day
    3. Into The Fire
    4. Rise Up, O Men Of God
    5. On Great Lone Hills
    6. Lest We Forget
    7. Mansions Of The Lord (Interlude)
    8. Mansions Of The Lord
    9. Jerusalem
    10. Via Dolorosa
    11. Non Nobis
    12. The Star-Spangled Banner
    13. Take Me Home (With I Am A Soldier)
    14. America (My Country 'Tis Of Thee)
    15. Men Of Freedom
    16. This Christmastide

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars bowersreview.......2007-01-04

    Exceptional CD. Inspirational and motivational. Highy recommend this for anyone seeking great quality music.

    5 out of 5 stars USMA Glee Club scores a real hit.......2006-11-14

    This album is awe-inspiring. I bought the album after hearing an out take from "Men of Freedom", the tune is from an old Welsh battle song. You will recognize the tune if you saw Zulu Dawn with Michael Caine. Many of the other songs are equally powerful and mesmerizing. The only songs I didn't like were when the Glee club used guest soloists. They were less impressive and, in my opinion, took away from the strength of the group.

    I liked the multiple verses sung from America, I wished they would have given the Star Spangled Banner the same treatment. The Mansions of the Lord is powerful and supremely reverent, as is Rise Up. I would dearly like to hear more from this talented group of soldiers.

    5 out of 5 stars Reverent, Full of Love.......2006-09-26

    When I saw and heard this music broadcast Veteran's Day on TBN and my friends serving in our Armed Forces in Iraq saw it broadcast on Armed Forces Network, I was so happy to find the stereo CD and companion Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound DVD on Amazon. I cannot stop listening to it! The 60 minute musical program, reminiscent of the great concept albums of years ago, is one of the most reverent, intelligent and passionate portrayals of America's character ever produced. It contains many styles of choral music - all superbly performed by the world famous Cadet Glee Club of West Point arrayed in breathtaking formation on the altar of the massive 100 year old Cadet Chapel. There are richly textured vocal a capella songs such as "Rise Up O Men of God", "Manisons of the Lord", one of the most popular new hymns written, and "America (My Country `Tis of Thee)". Your buttons will burst with pride when you hear the brand new song "Men of Freedom" introduced by a single Cadet then followed by a cascade of additional voices building to a unified and thunderous declaration of defiant freedom in a style reminiscent of the great Welsh Male Choirs. Four songs highlight the power and majesty of the largest church organ in the world. You'll have to fight the urge to stand at attention when you hear and feel its power kick in on "Lest We Forget", "On Great Lone Hills", "Jerusalem" and "This Christmastide". The musical variety is further enhanced by the addition of brass and percussion for the rousing marches, "The Longest Day" and "Non Nobis". When was the last time you heard these two songs - one by world famous singer, songwriter and teen idol, Paul Anka and the other a medieval celebration of thanksgiving sung in Latin! The rich background vocals of the Cadet Glee Club musically frame two songs that underpin the message of this album - Bravery and Sacrifice. "Into the Fire" by NYPD's Daniel Rodriguez made me want to immediately rise up and rush to anyone's aid and when he holds that note at the end - wow! Tony Award Winner Lea Salonga's performance of the classic Christian hit, "Via Dolorosa", (one of the top 50 Christian songs of all time), is "The Passion of the Christ" embodied in a 5 minute song. You will alternate between tears and goose bumps. Her performance of the Spanish stanza will overwhelm you. Finally, Irish song writing master, Phil Coulter's wistful "Take Me Home" is accompanied by beautiful piano and guitar and introduced by a new poem entitled "I Am A Soldier" that is sobering reminder of the oath our soldiers swear to and the actions they are bound to take. God bless them!

    A great bonus of the CD and DVD is that they both include a stylish lyric booklet as well as commentary by the producer on why he chose each song.

    On the back cover of the CD and DVD cases is the statement that this production was created to honor the men and women of our Armed Forces, past and present, and the great values of America that they defend. This it surely does!! Also, it states that the producer is contributing a portion of his wholesale proceeds from its sale to organizations assisting our wounded soldiers. Bravo, Mr. Coppi.

    4 out of 5 stars Good CD.......2006-07-19

    Wonderful songs and wonderful renditions of the songs. I must say, though, that the numbers would have been better if they were performed with more "ooomph" (for instance, "The Star Spangled Banner" could have been sung with more power and the arrangement could have used more creativity). The wisest decision on this CD was the inclusion of the numbers from Ms. Lea Salonga (whose hauntingly beautiful voice is able to effectively draw listeners in) and Daniel Rodriguez, one of America's newest tenors. Overall a good CD.

    3 out of 5 stars A real disappointment..........2006-06-10

    I was so excited to stumble upon this album when a local music store was going out of business and selling CD's at great discounts. I love Glee Club music, I love patriotic music, and I love cathedral/chapel accoustics. Unfortunately, this album did not live up to its billing.

    My primary complaints with this recording are twofold: the overuse of unison singing and the unnecessary inclusion of guest soloists. The beauty of glee club music is the rich chords, which are thankfully heard in many songs. To my dismay, though, there are many songs that mostly or entirely omit the beautiful harmonies that make glee clubs great.

    As for the guest soloists, I don't understand why a singing group which obviously has many wonderful voices would bring in outsiders for an album like this. Actually, I do know why they would do it, and it's obviously a marketing thing that has financial implications. As reasonable as this may seem, it just cheapens the experience for me. Another great feature of glee clubs (and college choirs more generally) is the lack of polished, perfect, professional singers. There is something raw, authentic, and refreshing about a bunch of college kids singing together. Why bring in random people with no particular connection to the group?

    To be fair, "Rise Up, O Men of God" and "Mansions of the Lord" are fantastic. I'll continue to play this album to listen to those songs. However, much of the remainder is somewhat forgettable.

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