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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heart drove it home with this one.
Trying to overcome the 'Heart' comeback album, Ann and Nancy, surpassed it with 'Bad Animals'. This album is not only brilliant, but beautiful. 'Wait for an Answer'. was my favorite off this one. Ann's voice is so full of desperation, that anyone who's ever had a broken heart will fall into the trance that this song creates. I always considered this album to be a...
Published on November 23, 1999 by Johny Bottom

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A nice album
Bad Animals--from Heart--was released in 1987. Until recently, I had never bothered getting this album for years even though I had their self-titled album that was put out in 1985. I wish that I had gotten Bad Animals earlier since it is a pleasing piece of work. All ten of the compositions are listenable. Ann and Nancy Wilson turn out solid singing performances...
Published 11 months ago by sauerkraut


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heart drove it home with this one., November 23, 1999
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
Trying to overcome the 'Heart' comeback album, Ann and Nancy, surpassed it with 'Bad Animals'. This album is not only brilliant, but beautiful. 'Wait for an Answer'. was my favorite off this one. Ann's voice is so full of desperation, that anyone who's ever had a broken heart will fall into the trance that this song creates. I always considered this album to be a 'concept' album because of the feel of it and the way the songs go in a particular order. 'Who will you run to?' is a song of breaking up, followed by 'Alone'. The song finally ends with 'RSVP', also a great song which leaves the listener guessing whether they got back together since 'Who Will you run to?' or if it's a new love all together. This album is one of my very favorites when I'm depressed or 'Alone'.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Too much glossy keyboards, but a worthy effort, June 29, 2003
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
Album number 2 produced by Ron Nevison, and it's a lot more polished, but without the cutting edge of songs like "The Wolf" or "Shell Shock" from their eponymous Capitol Records debut. That's been replaced by a slick layer of keyboard synthesizer icing. That could explain why they put more of a rock edge on the followup Brigade. Still, when I first got Bad Animals, I was already immersed into their previous catalog and thought it was a worthy followup to Heart.

The Diane Warren-penned "Who Will You Run To" is a guitar and keyboard rocker warning against foolishly going it alone and with a new woman. "You found a new world and you want to taste it/But that world can turn cold and you better face it/Who will you run to when it all falls down/who's gonna pick your world up off the ground/who's gonna take away the tears you cry/who's gonna love you baby as good as I." Great guitar work at the end!

"Alone" is the "What About Love" of Bad Animals, an archetypal emotional powerhouse of a power ballad, but with piano. It's one of my favourite songs by them. The synthesizers blast out with the refrain: "Till now I always got by on my own/I never really cared until I met you/And now it chills me to the bone/How do I get you alone?" Well, show me some collateral and I'll give you a loan. Alone, a loan, get it? OK, I'll knock it off! Their other #1 singles hit.

Holly Knight gives Heart another wonderful single with the keyboard rocker "There's The Girl" punctuated by solid guitar riffs. And it's sung by Nancy Wilson, who gave Heart their first #1 hit, "These Dreams."

The sad "I Want You So Bad", is highlighted by a backing choir. This used to be a favourite, but they seem to go overboard with the keyboards on this one.

"Wait For An Answer" reminds me at times of Pink Floyd's "Learning To Fly" and Bryan Adams' "Somebody", only with a heavy keyboard frosting.

The title track, written by the band, is another song revelling about nonconformists. These bad animals "got to push the grain or go insane." Ann really belts out the chorus and she gets a crashing drum beat from Denny, so that's good.

"You Ain't So Tough" sounds like something Bon Jovi might do, except heavy on the keyboards. At least the chorus is catchy: "Lovin' you was an endless fight/I was wrong and you were always right/But look what happened when I called your bluff/When the truth comes out, you ain't so tough."

"Strangers Of The Heart" while a good power ballad, wouldn't have made it in the Top Forty. The last two songs are Wilson/Wilson/Ennis compositions. "Easy Target" has more a rock edge, while the power ballad "RSVP" is about an invitation to a private affair.

There's no doubt denying that Heart got to rock prominence in the 1980's. The cost of that is the introduction of songs done by other writers. In fact only three songs are written by the Wilsons. That's not to denigrate Diane Warren, Billy Steinberg, or the great Holly Knight, though. It's just that seeing as how Heart got by in writing their own songs for seven albums, seeing these other people seems to hint that they've sacrificed songcraft for glossy production. Still, Ann and Nancy's vocals are the saving grace of this worthy effort.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent Heart album (IMHO the Best)!!, June 27, 2006
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
This CD is by far my favorite of Heart's. I think it was one of the first CD's I ever bought. I remember listening to 'Alone' and marvelling at the complete lack of hiss in the totally DDD recording.

But the songs hold up too, as I soon discovered. 'Who Will You Run To' is great, but one of my personal faves is 'Wait for an Answer'. I love how the song builds in fervor and intensity. Of course, any song Nancy is lead vocalist on ('There's the Girl' and 'Strangers of the Heart') goes right up there. Nancy has a beautiful voice.

'Alone' is a cool tune as well as 'Bad Animals'. Great stuff. This CD harkens from, what amounts to the Best 6 years of popular music, 1985-1990. This era includes U2 - The Joshua Tree; Peter Gabriel - So; Genesis - No Jacket Required; Midnight Oil - Blue Sky Mining, as well as others I think are slipping my mind right now. That's quality company. It's an awesome follow up to 1985's self-titled album. Sadly, I didn't find the follow-up, 1990's 'Brigade' to be as good, perhaps since this was such an excellent album. Still, if you want to get a great taste of Heart, this is an excellent start.

Heart is an excellent band and they also do some excellent renditions of Led Zeppelin tunes, like 'Rock and Roll' and a personal favorite 'Battle of Evermore'
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Here's the deal...., May 15, 2007
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
You have to understand how different the music was back in the 80's when this was made. Slick, overly produced, heavy keyboards along with the guitars. Everyone had a big sound to go along with their big hair! It was the decade of excess and everything was over the top and overdone. I can't blame Heart for surviving in the 80's. Look at Rod Stewart, he went from doing Maggie May to closing out the 70's with Do Ya' Think I'm Sexy. Yep, old rockin' Rod did disco and even Kiss did a disco song with I was made for Lovin' You. It's called surivial in the crazy world of the music biz. Sometimes you have to roll with things and adapt to the times in order to keep working and selling records. I'm so glad Heart did this even though it was hard to swallow after growing up with them in the 70's and loving their work. Heart and Bad Animals not only saved their career but it launched them into the next stratosphere. Besides, you can still hear and feel their talent streaming through these polished-up songs. Not at all their best work, but I'm so glad they were able to keep going and save their career. Just get Alive in Seattle on DVD. No matter who they play with, Ann and Nancy are two very talented ladies. Rock on...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Music, December 22, 2008
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
This album which was released in 1987, was one of the albums made a big change in Heart's music. It had become soft but beautiful music. These girls (and guys) had no trouble to show their softer side. The songs like "Alone" and "RSVP" indicate that the personal feelings are important in life as well as in music. Yes, they might sound as tough as in "Little Queen" or "Dreamboat Annie", someone would say that they have changed. I disagree with that. They still have rocking songs such as "Easy Target" and "Bad Animals". I like this quite much because it has beautiful songs but I still find "Little Queen" as my favorite album although albums like this and "Brigade" are very good.
Stars: Alone, Who Will You Run to, There's the Girl
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars HEART'S 2ND BEST!, November 15, 2005
By 
David (Seattle,WA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
If there is a song that represents the music of my life it would be "Who Will You Run To"(WWYRT) from Heart's Bad Animals recording.

This was the second best recording I bought in the 1980s(Heart 1985 being the first) and within the top 5 of the best recordings I have ever bought. The high-powered, shotgun-blast effect of WWYRT was Heart's apex in making high-powered rock & glam.

Ann Wilson was at her best musically and professionally with Bad Animals.
At her 1987 stage show she carried herself as someone who had accomplished great things and she sounded the best ever, but she didn't break down into frenzied dances like she did at the 1985 show. In my view, she didn't do the dances at the 1987 show because she already proved what an incredible stage performer she was. Just as in her WWYRT video, she performed and sang mega-cool.

Just as a 1960's young adult might have been impressed by the Beatles and thought of a "Hard Day's Night" as being the song that represented all that was great during the 1960s, "Who Will You Run To" represented the best of the 1980s to me. Being a younger adult at the time, WWYRT also represented a high-powered, energized, exuberant & happy state of mind and style of carrying oneself.

WWYRT sounded so great it made me feel cool that the song I loved was also a big radio hit. To me it also represented an accomplished & mega-cool way of projecting oneself.

That powerful feeling & energized way of carrying myself is gone, but the greatness of hearing Ann Wilson singing "Who Will You Run To" is still there. It's timeless.

The song "Bad Animals" shows off Ann Wilson's high-volume, exquisite voice, but the song is too slow-paced instead of being a fast-paced rocker like it should have been.

All the songs are good on this recording. When I initially bought Bad Animals the day the record store put it out for sale, I thought it was a little soft except for WWYRT, but nonetheless enjoyed all of it. "RSVP" is the best soft song. Now in 2005 I think some soft songs should have been replaced by WWYRT-styled songs.

Without a doubt the WWYRT video is the best music video EVER. Ann Wilson has that captivating, mesmerizing, high-powered, confident, yet mega-cool style & look in the video. She has captured my attention & held it for 1/5 of a century now. WWYRT was out 18 years ago, yet the song and video are still unmatched in their greatness. Ann Wilson is rock music's crowned queen and Bad Animals is one of her many jewels. High-powered rock & glam shows made her music royalty to be cherished forever.

Heart ruled female rock in 1987 yet they didn't get the media mention they deserved for their music & stage shows. Instead the media focused on untalented women churning out dance & pop-soul music.


This cd needs to be redone with bonus tracks added such as the rock version of WWYRT.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not to be Confused With BAD HEART by the Animals, October 1, 2005
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
Just kiddin'. Wanted to see if you were awake.

Well, I'm the first to admit that neither set of Wilson sisters (Ann and Nancy or Carnie and Wendy) ever really grabbed me, musically speaking. But it's also true that periodically, someone will mention to me (or maybe post on Amazon or someplace else) that they think Ann Wilson is just about the greatest female rock singer ever. More than Janis? Grace? Chrissie or Stevie? Yes, they insist, and actually,they have a point.

Ann Wilson does have some set of pipes, no denying. Whether she is superior to any of the artists listed above (or any number of others) will always be moot--and subject to the whims and tastes of individual listeners everywhere. But after listening to this record some 18 years after its release, I would have to concede that Ann is probably the greatest woman ARENA rocker ever. How much stock you want to put in that depends largely on how you feel about that kind of music.

Power ballads and bombastic art rock were NEVER critical faves, and many of us regular Joes and Joannes may not have been exactly enamored of the genre either. But we all have our little guilty pleasures. One of mine was "Magic Man." But that in itself wasn't quite enough to make me a total Ann fan. I thought "Barracuda" was a little screechy and generally over the top. And "Little Queen" and other 70s entries pretty much made no impression.

I was intrigued when I learned that they had briefly taken up co-writing with one of their old school friends who had gone on to major in German literature (as I had). I was curious as to how that would all pan out. The prospect of Rilke-rock seemed pretty intriguing. But I never quite got around to checking it out. (I believe that would be the DOG & BUTTERFLY era, but I could be wrong.) I didn't expect they'd be entering Nico territory, but literate rock'n'roll never did seem like a contradiction in terms to me. Apparently though, that association didn't last, and Heart itself kind of meandered until their mid-80s commercial (and I do mean "commercial") renaissance.

The Diane-Warrenization of popular music was well underway by the mid-80s when Heart jumped on that particular bandwagon. And if anyone was suited to that kind of melodious melodrama, it would have been Ann and Nancy. Grace Slick, who of course, also dabbled in 80s commercialism herself, once said that she came to admire Warren (and presumably other hitmakers) for her ability to do what she did so well--even if it wasn't really her thing. Well, it did seem a particularly bizarre match for Grace, but for Ann and Nancy, it pretty much fit like a glove.

Nancy does her usual one song ("There's the Girl")on BAD ANIMALS, and it's impressively diaphonous a la "These Dreams"--but with a little more bounce than the earlier track. The track shows off her pretty, but not overly dynamic, voice to good advantage. The rest of the album is Ann's to do with as she will. And regardless of how one may feel about the music as a whole, it is a fascinating, almost textbook example of power rock vocal technique. Call it Rock Singing 101. The grit is there on the title track. And the skilled balladeering dominates elsewhere.

All in all, a tour de force performance. Like I say, it's easy to see where all her admirers are coming from. But the album is also fronted with hits. The songs you heard in the 80s are the first songs on the CD. And it's clear the radio hits were selected for a reason. As the album goes on, the music gets less and less interesting. And by the last song, "RSVP" many listeners will be all too glad to see the album come to an end. It's not bad, but by then, the R'n'R 101 class presentation has lost some of its steam. All the stops have been pulled out, and it's time for something else. Or maybe just some peace and quiet.



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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A 23-years-too-late review, November 28, 2010
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
I can't believe such a classic album has only 37 reviews. A monster album like this deserves better. So here I am, giving this album a review a bit too late.

I'll make it short: all the tracks could have been released as singles and reached the Top 40.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My Favorite Heart Lp!!, March 14, 2006
By 
G. Carter "gcmusiclover" (Temple Hills, maryland United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
I wore out my vinyl copy of this record!! in 1987 Heart followed up their mega-hit self-titled lp with the strong 'Bad Animals'!! Great songs!! 'Who Will You Run To' written by Diane Warren touched me so deeply!! 'Alone' shows why Ann has one the most powerful voices in music!! 'There's The Girl' with Nancy on vocals is one of my favorites!!! I love the sound of this record very strong and crisp. Now i wish Heart would record another cd like this!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I have to say, my favorite as well as my boyfriend's favorite, July 11, 2005
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This review is from: Bad Animals (Audio CD)
I have always liked Heart, but never really made a point to get their albums before. Only lately have I really gotten into them since my boyfriend is. His favorite and now mine also is "Bad Animals". I can see the popularity of the 1985 self titled one, but to me there is more talent and melody in "Bad Animals" and it just appeals to me that much more. I also like "Brigade" ,which I just recently purchased as well. It just goes to show that a band like Heart is versatile and talented enough to appeal to a large audience and I hope to see them around for some time. Although mine is probably not popular opinion, I hope it draws interest in checking this one out. It's well worth the time.
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BAD ANIMALS
BAD ANIMALS by Heart (Audio CD)
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