RHCP - Stadium Arcadium

So I picked this up at target today for 12something, not bad for a 2cd set.

Nothing earthshattering...but with a few caveats

These guys do not make a bad cd especially with Rubin

Flea is fucking flea...he is a god.

Kiedis is limited as as a singer but he has made the best ever yet of his talents, which only emphasizes Frusciante's PERFECT harmony vocals

And his guitar seasonings, shadings, and just plain taking charge leads...he is an unaknoweldged guitar god.

There are few double albums worth the cash. If you like the Peppers, this is easily worth the price...a 8/10 for sure, if this is your cup of tea
 
Is this worth looking into for me if the last one did little for me and the previous one was very spotty?
 
Yeah I hated* By The Way, but totally loved Californication. I'll be getting this either way, Flea and Frusciante are two of my most loved musicians.

*was extremely disappointed with
 
Everytime I've tried listening to this album, I've taken a nap.

I NEVER take naps, but each time I've heard it, I've had the most wonderful naps imaginable.

COINCIDENCE?

No, I could elaborate on why the album does this to me, but meh, I might fall into another slumber.


in other news, I was listening to Jane's Addiction - Ritual de lo Habitual a lot recently.. and HOLY SHIT this is perhaps one of the greatest albums of all time.
 
Chromatose said:
Everytime I've tried listening to this album, I've taken a nap.

I NEVER take naps, but each time I've heard it, I've had the most wonderful naps imaginable.

COINCIDENCE?
Dude I used to know an album was a BONAFIDE CLASSIC if I could fall asleep to it, because when I was a teenager I had trouble sleeping, so that was quite the compliment. The two best back then:

B0002IQDVU.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg


B0000027RL.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg


COINCIDENCE?
 
then maybe that's a good thing for this peppers!

It really isn't bad, in the least, it's just.. uh...... hypnotizingly monotonous. The slick production plus Flea's pulsing base, fryguy's airy tones.....
 
Chromatose said:
then maybe that's a good thing for this peppers!

It really isn't bad, in the least, it's just.. uh...... hypnotizingly monotonous.
hahaha SOLD! :lol:
 
They sell a special edition that comes in a big box with toys (like a yoyo or top or dredel or who knows)

but I think the toys are there to keep you awake.
 
Chromatose said:
in other news, I was listening to Jane's Addiction - Ritual de lo Habitual a lot recently.. and HOLY SHIT this is perhaps one of the greatest albums of all time.
Crap I love Jane's Addiction. Except, you know, fuckin Strays. Nothings Shocking is my favorite though. Ritual may actually be my least favorite of the first three but I still adore it. Three Days is one of their best songs.
 
Yes, three days is one of the most incredible songs. It's been years since I've heard any Jane's, really forgot how amazing they were.

Ugh, strays, yeah. Actually that's what spurred me to bust out the old albums, I heard some commercial on TV last night that used the first track off strays, whatever the name of it is :/
 
I do wish I had gotten a chance to see them on their tour--I don't think I'll get another chance. Saw them a couple times back when they still had their shit together, and it was godly.
 
I remember stealing Kalifornication from some bitch I fucked in college...If I remember correctly, I was rolling hard off ecstacy and just put it in my pocket without even thinkning about it.....

...with that being said, I had no idea about this release.
 
Eminor said:
Is this worth looking into for me if the last one did little for me and the previous one was very spotty?
for some reason I did not ever even listen to "By the Way", after being a fan since Mother's Milk...and keeping in mind I still own a copy of One Hot Minute.:goggly:

I think (and a listen to disc one only, double discs are always alot to absorb) that, especially for the price, it's well worth it. And keeping in mind that as with most decent two disc sets, it could have easily been boiled down to a killer single set. In fact I'll probably grab my favorite tracks and put them onto a single CD for the car, cause the Peppers are loose and greasy, perfect summer driving music.

Rubin and the band must have figured they had a boatload of good shit.

Listening to tracks you have little pieces jump out at you, like the bass and then Chad's drums, and of course Frusciante, with both his vocals which perfectly compliment Kiedis (and speaking of which, I need to read his book)...and the guitar....the guitar.

lurch70 said:
is there a need to own more than one Chilli Peppers release?
yes...cause with any decent band with longevity, there is a certain degree of maturation and growth.
that being said, avoid their earliest three or four unless you are a hardcore fan, or just can't live without "Party on your Pussy.":goggly:

And...(edit) shouldn't Rick Rubin be given like a whole mantlepiece worth of grammys or something? He's got to be the facilitator of the last 50 years, even above George Martin.
 
Erik said:
lmfao, was it you that sent the cd to me

because i know i have that cd at home but i dont remember who of all you funnypants sent it

hahaha I DID send it to you!!! :lol: :rock: Oh, the misadventures that CD.

Now you know the story behind it, so dont break it cuz it has some kind of sentimental attachment. :kickass:
 
lizard said:
that being said, avoid their earliest three or four unless you are a hardcore fan, or just can't live without "Party on your Pussy.":goggly:
mother's milk is fuckin awesome though, "knock me down" is one of their best :erk:

and no, and i can't live without "jungle man", "yertle the turtle", or "catholic school girls rule" either :loco:

@nad: i was disappointed with by the way at first, then i put it away for a loong time and when i came back it made a much more favorable impression...it's still <californication but there's a lot of gold in there nonetheless. the peppers are a pretty damn occasional listen for me so i can live with pressing the "skip track" button every other song :tickled:
 
Mother's Milk is a classic album, indeed! Not up to the classic stature of BSSM, but I would recommend Mother's Milk before anything that came after that.

Also, I just read this Allmusic review and I am appreciating all the similarites between their thoughts and my own!

Indulgence has long been a way of life for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, yet they resisted the siren's call of the double album until 2006's Stadium Arcadium. Sure, 1991's breakthrough Blood Sugar Sex Magik was as long as a classic double LP, but such distinctions mattered little in the era when vinyl gave way to CD, and they matter less now, as the CD gradually gives way to digital-only releases. In fact, like how Blood Sugar was the tipping point when the LPs ceded ground to CDs, Stadium Arcadium could be seen as the point when albums were seen as a collection of digital playlists. Yes, it's pressed up as a two-disc set &#8212; including an extravagant but pointless special edition housed in a clunky box that includes a make-yer-own-spinning-top &#8212; but this is an album that's designed for you to mix and match, create your own playlist, rip and burn on your own. It's designed for you to sequence its 28 songs in some kind of cohesive manner, since the band sure didn't take the time to do that here; it's the first major album by a major band that makes as much sense on random as it does in its proper sequencing. Well, that's not entirely true: the official 28-song album does begin with "Dani California," the clearest single here, the one thing that truly grabs attention upon first listen and worms its way into your subconscious, where it just won't let go, as so much of Anthony Kiedis' catchiest melodies do. After that, it's a long, winding path of alternately spacey and sunny pop, ballads, and the occasional funk workout that used to be the Chili Peppers' signature but now functions as a way to break up the monotony. And there needs to be something to break up the monotony, not because the music is bad but because it all exists at the same level and is given a flat, colorless production that has become the signature of Rick Rubin as of late.

Rubin may be able to create the right atmosphere for Flea and John Frusciante to run wild creatively &#8212; an opportunity that they seize here, which is indeed a pleasure to hear &#8212; but he does nothing to encourage them to brighten the finished recording up with some different textures, or even a greater variety of guitar tones. As such, the bare-bone production combined with the relentless march of songs gives Stadium Arcadium the undeniable feel of wading through the demos for a promising project instead of a sprawling statement of purpose; there's not enough purpose here for it to be a statement. That fault is down to the band not forming the raw material into something palatable for the listener, but there's also the problem that as a lyricist Anthony Kiedis just isn't that deep or clever enough to provide cohesive themes for an album of this length; he tackles no new themes here, nor does he provide new insight to familiar topics. To his credit, he does display a greater versatility as a vocalist, cutting back on the hambone rapping that used to be his signature and crooning throughout the bulk of this album, usually on key. That said, he still has enough goofy tics to undercut his attempts at sincerity, and he tends to be a bit of a liability to the band as a whole; with a different singer, who could help shape and deliver these songs, this album might not seem as formless and gormless. But there is a fair amount of pleasures here, all down to the interplay between Flea and Frusciante. While drummer Chad Smith does prove himself quite versatile here, gracefully following the eccentric turns and meanderings of the bassist and guitarist, the string instruments are the reason to listen to Stadium Arcadium. That's always been the case to a certain extent with the Chili Peppers, but here it's especially true, as they push and pull, rave and rumble, lie back and rock out &#8212; pretty much spit out anything they can do on their instruments over the course of 28 songs. As good as much of this is, there is a little bit of monotony here, since they're working variations on their signature themes, and they haven't found a way to make these variations either transcendent or new; they're just very good renditions on familiar themes. These tracks rarely betray their origins as studio jams &#8212; more than ever, it's possible to hear that the track came first, then the song &#8212; and while that can result in some good listening, it all does kind of drift together. That said, there are no bad tracks here &#8212; it's all of a relatively high quality &#8212; but there are no standouts either, so it takes a very dedicated fan to start sorting out the subtleties between the tracks (not the wheat from the chafe, since it's all wheat). And while those hardcore fans may certainly enjoy the make-your-own-adventure spirit of Stadium Arcadium, it's hard not to feel that it's the band's responsibility to take this very good repetitive album and mold it into something sharper and more effective. So call it the rock version of Peter Jackson's King Kong: there's something pretty great and lean buried beneath the excess, but it's so indulgent, it's a work that only a fanboy could truly love.

ok, except I really liked king kong.