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Add It Up (1981-1993)
 
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Add It Up (1981-1993)

Violent Femmes
4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (46 customer reviews) More about this product

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Add It Up (1981-1993) + Violent Femmes + Why Do Birds Sing?
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (September 14, 1993)
  • Original Release Date: September 14, 1993
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Reprise / Wea
  • ASIN: B000002MML
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (46 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,123 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #17 in  Music > Alternative Rock > New Wave & Post-Punk > Post-Punk
    #52 in  Music > Pop > New Wave
    #99 in  Music > Alternative Rock > Hardcore & Punk

Listen to Samples

To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
 
1. Intro
2. Waiting for the Bus [#]
3. Blister in the Sun
4. Gone Daddy Gone
5. Gordon's Message [#]
6. Gimme the Car
7. Country Death Song
8. Black Girls
9. Jesus Walking on the Water
10. 36-24-36 [#]
11. I Held Her in My Arms [#]
12. I Hate the TV [#]
13. America Is [#]
14. Old Mother Reagan
15. Degradation [#]
16. Dance, Motherfucker, Dance!
17. Lies [Live][#]
18. American Music
19. Out the Window
20. Kiss Off [Live]
See all 23 tracks on this disc

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Aside from the Milwaukee trio's 1981 debut, the Violent Femmes have made a career of tacking one or two great songs onto otherwise mediocre albums--so this 1993 best-of is perfect for consumers. It has all the good stuff, from the retro radio hour staples "Blister in the Sun" and "Gone Daddy Gone," plus the creepy murder-suicide story "Country Death Song," the should've-been-a-hit "American Music" and ephemera like live versions of "Add It Up" and "Kiss Off." With Gordon Gano's never-aging teen whine and a crack rhythm section, the Femmes have had brief moments as America's best rock & roll band. This collection captures some of them. --Steve Knopper

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Customer Reviews

46 Reviews
5 star:
 (35)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (46 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Definitely the ultimate VF-album!!!, August 9, 1999
By A Customer
This album is a must-get for anybody who doesn't already have a decent collection of Violent Femmes albums! It's got all their great songs, from Blister in the Sun to Kiss Off, the latter one in a VERY delightful live-version. Features many other great tunes such as Jesus Walking on the Water and Lies. If you like the Violent Femmes but can't afford to go and buy all of their albums, this is definitely the way to go about it!
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely essential for Violent Femmes fans, August 18, 2003
By Daniel Jolley "darkgenius" (Shelby, North Carolina USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
If you are like me and think that the Violent Femmes are one of if not the very best rock group of the last twenty-five years, you will already own this album because it is, in a word, essential. Those who may just be discovering this band for the first time, and this timeless music full of angst and fury and questions and passion speaks as strongly to the present generation of youth as it did to my own, will definitely want to procure this album as soon as possible. There is just no other band like the Violent Femmes (as the Intro to this album states in its own special way); these guys have energized and heavily influenced modern rock music as we know it now and will know it in the future, yet they stay below the radar of many a music fan out there, seemingly happy about the fact as they do their own thing their own way at all times. The popular success this band has always deserved would almost spoil everything, though; these guys are so incredible that I really don't want to share them with the mass public out there who really wouldn't understand the power of the music and lyrics.

Add It Up is a compilation album, containing a number of songs available elsewhere alongside some amazing tracks you can't find anywhere else. Much of this material draws from the band's early days. Prereleased tracks include Blister in the Sun, Gone Daddy Gone, and Gimme the Car from the incredible self-titled debut album, the unique and unforgettable Country Death Song, Black Girls, and Jesus Walking on the Water from Hallowed Ground, Old Mother Reagan from The Blind Leading the Naked, and American Music and Out the Window from Why Do Birds Sing? Add it up, and you will find eleven previously unreleased tracks, two tracks previously unreleased in the U.S., and four live performances unavailable elsewhere.

The simple yet catchy Waiting For the Bus takes us back to 1980 (this track can also now be found on the Deluxe Edition of the original Violent Femmes album). Gordon's Message is a voice mail message lead singer Gordon Gano left to explain why he was going to be late for an early recording session in 1982. 36-24-36 is an incredibly infectious, fun song recorded in 1984 for a movie that was never made. I Held Her in My Arms is an alternate version of the song from The Blind Leading the Naked, espousing a heavier and slightly more serious sound than the album track. From the mid-1980s come the short and interesting tracks I Hate the TV and America Is. Degradation is a strange, half-minute carnival-like pitch of the band written by Brian Ritchie and Victor Delorenzo. Dance, M.F., Dance is a rather weird, hard-hitting pseudo-dance song previously released only in Australia and Europe; interestingly, this version of the song turned up out of nowhere several years after the original master tape was lost. Lies is interesting because it begins with the studio cut from the album 3 and morphs into a live version of the song featuring an extended jam session. Vancouver is by far the strangest thing on here; this two-minute-plus track is an instrumental that sounds like a band warming up before a concert. With the exception of Vancouver, which was indeed recorded in Vancouver, the album closes out with some powerful live tracks. We get a rocking version of the youth anthem Kiss Off recorded in a 1990 concert in Australia, followed by a fantastic live performance of Add It Up from a 1991 concert in Virginia. I never tire of hearing the crowd erupt when Gano unleashes the first a cappella word of the song. Finally, we have Johnny, a simply amazing song written by Gordon Gano and performed in a café in Milwaukee way back in 1981; this is about as soft and tender as the Violent Femmes get, and the haunting lyrics make sure you come away from this essential album having felt your soul touched by the music.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars All you'll ever need...almost, April 4, 2003
This, combined with the deluxe version of the Femmes' first album, is all the Violent Femmes you'll ever need. As has been noted elsewhere on this page, the other Femmes albums tend to contain one or two good songs among easily forgettable filler. This album begins with the catchy "Waiting for the Bus". While the subject matter is not deep or earthshaking, I dare you to hear this song and then not have it run through your head every time you wait for a bus from then on. Following that are three songs from the classic self-titled debut. Everyone probably has their picks as to which songs from the first album are the most representative of the album as a whole, but to me these work just as well as anything else. They give you an idea of the sound and wit of that debut album. Following that is "Country Death Song", a twangy song with a straightforward story of a man inexplicably driven to murder his young daughter. The spare arrangements makes the song positively chilling. The next three songs comprise my least favorite section of the CD. Dealing with race, religion, and sexism, these songs treat such serious issues a little glibly, although the music is the same you have come to expect from the Femmes at this point in the compilation. The lyrics just aren't up to par, though. "I Held Her In My Arms" redeems the previous songs. Lively, bouncy, and with more instruments than the earlier works, this is a classic example of Gordon Gano's ability to write great lyrics about losing a girl, and what comes next after heartbreak. A trio of songs dealing with politics and society comes next: "I Hate the TV", a stark statement of very clear political feelings; "America Is", a repetitive and pointed social statement; and "Old Mother Reagan", which now sounds slightly dated but is still humorous. "Dance, M.F., Dance" is the strange result of the Femmes apparently trying to make a dance song. The result is catchy and almost danceable, but not quite. Then come "Lies" and "American Music", two absoulutely terrific songs. The former implies that you can't go anywhere in life without encountering someone who is lying to you; the latter covers proms, drugs, and codependence all in one song and is a great song to play in the car on your second date with someone you really like. "Out The Window" follows these, a cute enough song but just not up to par with some others on this album. Then we get live versions of two songs from the debut album, and they are terrific though they sound slightly different from the original. "Vancouver", an instrumental, is a nice break after the intensity of the live performances. But then you get "Johnny", which surpasses anything else on the album in sheer intensity. Gano's shifting volume and the theme of death make this an absolute spine-tingler for me. Overall this is an album everyone who is interested in alternative rock should own. Buy the first album and you will be set, unless you're a die-hard Femmes fan in which case you will prbably have most of this material anyway.

Items mentioned in the track list which I have not reviewed are interludes, ads, or phone messages.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Add It Up (1981-1993)
Violent Femmes-Add It Up (1981-1993)*****

As far as greatest hits packages go this is something special. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Morton

5.0 out of 5 stars Dresden on my mind
Strange music I found years ago in Eastern Germany. Among Yiddish and acoustic German music, I only have on cassette, I heard in one of the many arty bars this band's music... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Bas Van Der Veen

5.0 out of 5 stars love it
Great CD from My Childhood, brings back so many good memories. Love it.
Published on May 12, 2007 by Michael Siebenaller

5.0 out of 5 stars Simply a classic
This was a vinyl that I wanted to upgrade for all the energetic, hectic, and powerful memories it brings. Simply a great album.
Published on March 16, 2007 by likestowin

4.0 out of 5 stars Best of Violent Femmes?
You know what's interesting about this compilation is that while usually this sort of thing is used for people to "sell" new fans to the band, this "best of" seems more geared... Read more
Published on October 29, 2006 by Zen Station

5.0 out of 5 stars Oh what an album.
I heard "blister in the sun" from a mixed CD my friend gave me and I decided to check out the femmes. This is the first CD I bought of theres, and I absolutely loved it. Read more
Published on April 17, 2006 by Rachel E. Spence

5.0 out of 5 stars so good and way ahead of their time
HEY... If you're not already, start listening to the Violent Femmes! This collection, along with the reissue of their first album (at least), is a must-have for any fan. Read more
Published on March 11, 2006 by J. Hutson

4.0 out of 5 stars Why bother with this review?
It's the Femmes. What else needs to be said?
Published on March 10, 2006 by AV Guy

5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing but the Femmes!!!
I was turned on to the Violent Femmes in the 80's and I've never looked back!! There just isn't music made today like this, why is that? Read more
Published on December 14, 2005 by Heidi P :)

5.0 out of 5 stars Oh So Sweet
This is one of my Top Ten favorites........
They are musicians musicians.....
Can still remember the first time I was turned on to the Femmes..

Published on July 17, 2005 by Colleen Thomas

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Add It Up: 1981-1993 opens new browser window by Violent Femmes opens new browser window is mainly Rock and Roll, quite Alternative Rock, with hints of Folk-Punk”

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Add It Up (1981-1993)
59% buy the item featured on this page:
Add It Up (1981-1993) 4.7 out of 5 stars (46)
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Violent Femmes
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$6.97
Permanent Record: The Very Best of Violent Femmes
10% buy
Permanent Record: The Very Best of Violent Femmes 3.4 out of 5 stars (5)
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Why Do Birds Sing?
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