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Aerosmith

Disco de Aerosmith: “Just Push Play [Japan Bonus Disc]”

Disco de Aerosmith: “Just Push Play [Japan Bonus Disc]”
Información del disco :
Título: Just Push Play [Japan Bonus Disc]
Fecha de Publicación:2002-01-22
Tipo:Desconocido
Género:Rock, Classic Rock, Mainstream Rock
Sello Discográfico:Sony International
Letras Explícitas:Si
UPC:4547366002881
Lista de temas :
1 - 1 .
1 - 2 .
1 - 3 .
1 - 4 .
1 - 5 .
1 - 6 .
1 - 7 .
1 - 8 .
1 - 9 .
1 - 10 .
1 - 11 .
1 - 12 .
1 - 13 .
1 - 14 .
2 - 15 . Just Push Play [Radio Remix]
2 - 16 . Same Old Song and Dance [Live from California Jam II '78]
2 - 17 . Draw the Line [Live from California Jam II '78]
2 - 18 . Chip Away the Stone [Live from California Jam II '78]
2 - 19 . Big Ten Inch Record [Live from Texxas Jam '78]
2 - 20 . Lord of the Thighs [Live from Texxas Jam '78]
Análisis (en inglés) - :
Give {$Aerosmith} credit for not only realizing something was wrong after {^Nine Lives} relatively flat-lined, but deciding to do something about it. Ditching the outside producers who initially liberated but eventually straitjacketed them, {$Steve Tyler} and {$Joe Perry} seized control of the boards, working with the assistance of {$Mark Hudson} and {$Marti Frederiksen}. (Forever the {$Stones} fanatics, {$Tyler} and {$Perry} dubbed this crew the Boneyard Boys, just like how {$Mick}-n-{$Keef} are the Glimmer Twins.) So, this isn't really a full-fledged band affair and {$Hudson} and {$Frederiksen}'s fingerprints are all over the place, but that doesn't matter since the end result is tighter, savvier, and better than anything since {^Pump}. It's still far from perfect, however, since it suffers from a surfeit of memorable material, and the group members' steadfast refusal to act their age results in a couple of embarrassing slips into stodginess (the "f*ckin' A" chorus on the title track, a song improbably titled {&"Trip Hoppin',"} or the ludicrous {&"Avant Garden"}). These mean that the record doesn't come close to matching the twin comebacks of {^Permanent Vacation} and {^Pump}, but it's a sleek, classicist {\hard rock} record that sounds good -- better than {$Aerosmith} had sounded in nearly a decade, as a matter of fact, particularly when the group gets a hook as tuneful as that of {&"Jaded."} {$Aerosmith} sounds good enough on {^Just Push Play} that it almost makes you forgive the {~Heavy Metal} refugee on the front cover, a sexy robot illustration that looks far more out of date than the music sounds. [The Japanese release includes two songs not found on the original -- {&"Won't Let You Down"} and {&"I Don't Want to Miss a Thing"} -- along with a bonus disc that includes a "Radio Remix" of {&"Just Push Play"} and also several live recordings from 1978.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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