|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
great music, awful packaging,
By
This review is from: Anthology (Audio CD)
First things first, the "rare" stuff. "Sweet Revenge" is what should have been the third Generation X album with the original line-up, but wasn't released at the time. It shares some tracks (though in different versions) with what was released as the third album, "Kiss Me Deadly". It's a pretty fine record, but in comparing the tracks the two albums share, it's clear that "Kiss Me Deadly" enjoys better recording and production. But it's a treat to hear the "new" songs, which are pretty good, and a few - most notably "Girls" - about as good as anything the band did. "Live At Osaka" is a pretty fair recording of the band around the same period of time as the unreleased album. A good selection of hits, b-sides and album tracks and reasonably good sound quality. The first disc claims "the complete singles", but what you're really getting is all the a-sides, not chronologically, as well as a few b-sides and album tracks, plus three rarities - covers of Led Zeppelin and Free (interesting but not that great) and "New Order", which previously was found on the (totally redundant if you own this) "Perfect Hits" CD. In fact, disc one is essentially that CD with some extra tracks. All of this would be fine, except the packaging is awful. A shame when "Perfect Hits" was pretty well packaged. The liner notes are pretty skimpy with details, have LOTS of annoying misspellings and ZILLIONS of typos and not many pictures or anything. (In fact the bootleg version of "Sweet Revenge" was much more professionally packaged.) There's not much of an excuse for this; the package was delayed a year and there was ample opportunity to get some real fans or professional critics to contribute notes that would have been worthwhile. The interview track with Tony James is very open to discussing the drug problems that [messed] up the band - kudoos for his honesty - so it's a shame that the same sort of thoroughness didn't enhance the packaging. The other perplexing thing is why so many album tracks are on this set to the exclusion of the few remaining non-CD b-sides which would have made this the perfect completist's set. Where are Loopy Dub, Rock On, Ugly Rash and Ugly Dub? Two other notes: "This Heat" on the live disc is actually not that song but "Trying For Kicks". I don't know how they [messed] that up. And all the studio tracks from "Valley Of The Dolls" are way remixed and sound pretty different than any other version of the album - almost painfully "hot" compared to the songs from other records. No mention of this is made in the notes or anywhere.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Revenge is Sweet,
By Harold Grey "Post-punk progressive pop junkie" (San Jose, CA United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Anthology (Audio CD)
I had been looking for the Sweet Revenge bootleg for a long time, and it has been worth the wait. Disc 1 is mostly songs from the first 2 LPs. Disc 2 is the real value here. It is real interesting to hear the early versions of the songs that later appeared on Kiss Me Deadly. And an even bigger treat to hear Derwood Andrews playing the songs instead of James Stevenson or Steve New or Steve Jones. I never realized Andrews came up with the riffs for Dancing with Myself, Triumph and Others. Of the unreleased songs, I really like Girls, Modern Boys and Cathy Comes Home. The interview with Tony James is also good in that he talks about the drug abuse that marred the Kiss Me Deadly sessions. I haven't gotten to Disc 3 yet, a concert from Osaka, Japan. I always though Derwood Andrews was one of the underrated guitarists of the punk generation. One minor disappointment: the liner notes and artwork are kind of [bad]. They could have done a better job. A must have for any GenX fan.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gen X Fan's Dream Release,
By will zumm (NEW YORK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Anthology (Audio CD)
Every Gen X fan has disc one in one form or another. What's new is disc two (unreleased album by org line-up) and disc three (unreleased concert).Purchased this two weeks ago and it's been on steady rotation on my player since; and I'm a person who's easily bored. The versions of Triumph and Stars Looked Down on the unreleased album that were redone for the Kiss Me Deadly album easily SURPASS the later versions. The guy who wrote the 2 star review is an idiot! Yeah, the liner notes suck and are filled with grammatical errors and misspellings: so what? I buy CDs for music, not liner notes! Get it - you won't regret it!
4.0 out of 5 stars
Kick ass compilation!,
By
This review is from: Anthology (Audio CD)
I was extremely pleased to get my hands on this collection. I've been listening to Generation X for well over 15 years now, and never get tired of them! The first compilation ("Perfect Hits 1976-1981") had a couple of songs I wish was included with this anthology (hence, the four stars), especially "Running with the Boss Sound". Other than that, it's a collection worthy of any Idol/GenX fan.
The "Sweet Revenge" album is almost worth the price of the set. The version of "Dancing With Myself" on this album is better than the later releases; a little rawer with that not-so-polished punk sound to it -- vintage stuff! The "Girls" song is sure to be a favorite among GenX fans... "Psycho Beat" was a little grating, but hey, you can't have a perfect song every time, right? It was GenX that introduced me to the 70's punk scene, and for that I'll always be a fan!
3 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Overpriced, Watered Down & Wimpy....,
By "The Woj" (Downers Grove, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Anthology (Audio CD)
The first disc collects most of Gen X's hits in excellent sound quality. However, the track selection on the previously released "Perfect Hits" cd is much better, plus it flat out rocks harder. Strike one.
Disc two is the "unreleased album" and comes off sounding like a bunch of American English demos (the band that sang that dreadful "I'll Melt With You" song), with a extremely mellow Billy Idol on vocals. No Idol sneer on this disc; more like a quaint, perky little smile. The guitar work is brutal and the lead riffs are almost non-existent. The guitar during the fade out of the song "Triumph" sounds like a 1st graders first guitar lesson. The "Kiss Me Deadly" album which shares a similar tracklist, has "way" better production value, rocks much harder, has the guitars way up fron in the mix, and is a better purchase. This is Billy Idol-lite. Strike two. Disc three contains a live concert recorded in Osaka, Japan. Why Japan and not Europe is beyond me. The band seems totally lifeless and out of their element. I never viewed Japan as much of a "punk" rock country. Heavy Metal, yes (as in Made In Japan... "Ian Paice on the drums, yes!"); but not punk. Anyway, this 3rd disc does nothing to endear one to the band's proficiency as musicians. The sound is fair and the mix is borderline brutal. You'll maybe listen to it once. Strike three. So after pulling another Sammy Sosa and whiffing on this one, here's my advice. "Perfect Hits", "Kiss Me Deadly" if you can find it & "Radio One Sessions". ps....don't forget Billy's VH-1 album. Now there's all killer, no filler. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Anthology by Generation X (Audio CD - 2003)
Used & New from: $25.49
| ||