Products in this catalogue
visit stack.com.au ara, borne by airy and sashaying harmonies), Christine cVie (the gorgeously hazy and rippling Never Make Ee un ee cena FLEETWOOD MAG TUSK (1978) Envisioned by Lindsay Buckingham as an anti-Rumo eum er) RAE Meo the double album to jab at, and nest rewarding counter to the ban ; platinum in multiple Ri aeUeSe Rese) ‘accessible’ album a) CRS) Ga CCRT ae ALICE IN CHAINS DIRT (1992) REMASTERED LIMITED EDITION OPAQUE YELLOW VINYL Thirty years ago, Alice in Chains’ most acclaimed release landed with fury and tore through the music landscape like a firestorm. The band is often cited as a grunge progenitor, and Dirt, the band’s second album, would prove to be a pathfinder. Ravaged with internal problems from drug addiction to the black dog, the songs primarily explore vocalist Layne Staley's personal torment with uncompromising honesty. Loud and raw, its power and anguish are palpable with songwriting and vocal duties shared between Staley and axeman Jerry Cantrell. This telease features remastered audio and comes as a 2x LP set pressed in opaque yellow vinyl. It sounds as potent now as it did 30 long years ago. TOP TRACK: Would? FAST FACT: Dirt was the last album to feature all four original members. Bassist Mike Starr was fired during the tour to support the release, ironically, for his escalating drug addiction. 6 OCTOBER 2022 RY (1971) 2015 REMASTERED VERSION Through his near 50-year career, David Bowie was never one to be pigeonholed stylistically, and even before this, his fourth album, he'd careened from novelty song (The Laughing Gnome) to a timeless ode to alienation (Space Oddity) and beyond to the still mesmerising The Man Who Sold the World. For Hunky Dory Bowie changed tack again, moving away from the guitar as his principal writing tool to the piano, This gentler vibe is reflected from the first notes of opener Changes, an enduring classic that remains unsullied despite being used in ads for nappies. Track two — Oh! You Pretty Things — continues Bowie's knack for iresistible hooks, while singing of future fear. The gentle Eight Line Poem follows, before one of Bowie's finest ever tunes in Life on Mars?— not bad for a song that started life as a parody of Sinatra's ‘My Way. The jaunty Kooks was dedicated to newborn son, Duncan, and precedes side one closer, the acoustic beauty Quicksand. Side two kicks off with the lilting Fill Your Heart, before a trio of American icon tributes in the cacophonous Andy Warhol, Song for Bab Dylan and Queen B-tch, the latter inspired by the Velvet Underground and, in particular, Lou Reed (whose seminal Transformer Bowie would soon co-produce), A touch of the surreal in The Bewlay Brothers closes proceedings. Initially unloved upon release, Hunky Dory has since deservedly set up home in many greatest albums of alltime lists TOP TRACK: Life on Mars? FAST FACT: Bowie's cover pose was inspired by actresses of Hollywood's Golden Age, such as Lauren Bacall, Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo. The shot was photographed in black and white before being recoloured. jbhificom.au J HIFFE
Name | Details |
---|