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Damage (Dig)
 
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Damage (Dig) [Enhanced, Limited Edition]

Jon Spencer Blues ExplosionAudio CD
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

Price: $16.56 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Audio CD, Import, 2004 $25.65  
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 5, 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced, Limited Edition
  • Label: Sanctuary Records
  • ASIN: B0002WZT02
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Vinyl
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #261,967 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Damage
2. Burn It Off
3. Spoiled
4. Crunchy
5. Hot Gossip
6. Mars, Arizona
7. You Been My Baby
8. Rivals
9. Help These Blues
10. Fed Up and Low Down
11. Rattling
12. Blowing My Mind

Editorial Reviews

MoJo

"Damage! retains Blues Explosion’s trademark sweat-drenched feel for soul **** (4 stars)."

Time Out London

"If variety's the spice of life, ‘Damage!’ is a red hot treat ready to send your speakers up in flames."

 

Customer Reviews

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

27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Definitive - THE Blues Explosion album, October 5, 2004
By 
Troy Collins (Lancaster, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Damage (Dig) (Audio CD)
"Damage," first album from the artists formerly known as The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, kicks off with the aptly named title track. Jon Spencer and company are back, and with a sonic vengeance so pure and raw, it'll make you wanna' weep. "Damage," no middle of the road "Plastic Fang" or over produced "Acme," is easily the heaviest, most primal and gritty Blues Explosion album to come along in a long, long time.

This is not to say the entire album will throttle you into catatonia, there is a generous selection of Stonesy pop ("Crunchy"), bluesy ballads ("Spoiled") hip-hop ("Hot Gossip") and some DJ workouts ("Fed Up and Low Down") scattered about the album as well. Special guests include former Tricky singer Martina Topley-Bird, No-Wave icon James Chance, Public Enemy's Chuck D, DJ Shadow, Dan The Automator and the usual cast of dozens. Although all these collaborators make noticeable contributions to the tracks they're featured on, they never dominate the session.

"Damage," the first album for their new label, Sanctuary, arrives just in time to blow the dust off the JSBX collection slot on your shelf. Where "Plastic Fang" was all tepid rockers, "Acme" a stab at Stonesy pop coupled with DJ grooves, and "Now I Got Worry" their punk blues album, "Damage" hearkens back to the kick ass party grind that 1994's "Orange" laid claim to. For pure intensity and soul, Damage is now THE album in the Blues Explosion catalog, and essential listening at that.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Blues Explosion Diversifies, Matures, December 1, 2004
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Damage (Dig) (Audio CD)
The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion (from heretofore with this very album known as Blues Explosion) has put out volumes of WEAK stuff. Now I Got Worry was a great album, but at times was full of filler. Orange was a classic, but ridiculously short and at times meandering through giant chunks of funk that didn't seem to go anywhere but to more riffing. Acme, the project with Dub Narcotic, (aside from Sideways Soul) was also texturally interesting but got incredibly monotonous after the first few stellar tracks. Then Plastic Fang, the last album, was good but had a certain vague albatross on it. I can't say, but the album just never really felt right at all despite the fact that the Blues Explosion were probably never really produced right. All of these albums I like, but had obvious weak spots.

The newest album, Damage, is good. Watch the video for "Burn it Off" and that's enough, really. But, like the others, it has a lot of the normal weaknesses of the other albums. One minor weakness to a Blues Explosion album, however, has been totally removed. All of the previous albums in some way attempted a single coherent sound for the entire album in the tradition of most alterna/punk rock albums. Because the Blues Explosion is 2 guitarists and a drummer, this naturally posed problems by the time they crossed the 20 minute mark. Despite summoning more noise from those three people than probably physically possible, the trademark sounds they were trying to create each album, whether it be gritty old blues with Now I Got Worry, more mainstream rock with Plastic Fang, or funk with Acme, the pounding Russell Simmins drums and Spencer and Judah's guitar assaults just got monotonous and old. Damage is the first Blues Explosion album in memory to avoid that by simply having different sounds for every song. This feels more like a hip hop album than a rock album because they enlisted a ton of producers (like Dan the Automator, DJ Shadow, and Steve Jordan) to diversify the sound. Even Chuck D appears! (For a Spencer interview that details the production process and the writing process for the album, here's the Sun-Times to the rescue)

Damage feels fresh with each new track. There's the slow grind of "Damage" to kick things off, then the first single with it's churning shuffle "Burn It Off." The real treats in this album though are some of the more interesting tracks the Blues Explosion has ever done. "Spoiled" is a light piece with acoustic guitar and what sounds like a little girl's voice for the chorus. "Hot Gossip" is solid poltiical blues-rock, but with Chuck D rapping the chorus. You'd only expect that from Spencer, who actually studied Semiotics at a grad level at Brown University (bet you didn't see that one coming). One of the album's most provocative pieces is the stop-and-go blues/hiphop/punk rock track DJ Shadow produced and scratched on, "Fed Up and Low Down." Classic rock sounds pop in, especially with "Rattling", and with "Mars, Arizona." In general, the Blues Explosion is a lot less afraid to stray away from their punk rock and rowdy RL Burnside fast blues roots and play the slow jams and grooves. It lends a much more soleful tone to Damage than other albums where there were only a few token slow pieces. All in all, Damage reveals not only keen musicianship, but a diversity and maturity a lot of the previous work failed at really nailing down. It may have taken this long, but Spencer and Co. finally appear to have grown into serious musicians moving beyond some "This is not the devil's music, the blues is number one, etc. etc." shtick and into a steely, tough, and versatile band.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Damage control, November 8, 2004
By 
Roy Pearl (Vancouver, BC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Damage (Dig) (Audio CD)
I have to admit I really disliked the Blues Explosion's previous disc "Plastic Fang." It was an album which seemed to fossilize leader Jon Spencer's every impulse and utterance as mere schtick while presenting the band as tired and played-out. It sounded to me like a once-vital band ending their run with a sad whimper. And that would've been tragic because, in the Blues Explosion, Spencer has got one of the world's hottest bands at his disposal, and chaining them to the half-hearted po-mo noisewanks and static boogie sludgery of "Plastic Fang" was like buying the Batmobile to commute to a desk job at Sears.

Thankfully, any damage done by "Plastic Fang" is completely undone by "Damage," easily the most satisfying album the Blues Explosion have ever released. It hits the ground running, moving imediately from the introductory bump'n'grind of the title track into "Burn It Off", a molten hot chunk of rock'n'roll sleaze that absolutely perfects the band's jones for the Stones. From there it's an eclectic journey through every variation on the Blues Explosion theme, allowing the impressive guest list to move the groove in a variety of directions. From the cut'n'paste clamor of the great "Fed Up and Low Down" to the hip hop undercurrents of "Hot Gossip" and the gutbucket rhythm'n'blues of "Chunky" (which may be the Blues Explosion's most straightforward song ever), "Damage" sounds like a band reclaiming its greatness.

The Blues Explosion has always been about brash confidence, typified most usually by Spencer's gutteral howls and come-ons, promises of blooze power and rock'n'roll detonation. But that was merely lip service, teasing promises of some glory to come. "Damage" finally delivers.
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Damage is Blues Explosion's eighth studio release.
Russell Simins, Jon Spencer, and Judah Bauerhave been a member of Blues Explosion.

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