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Red Hot Chili Peppers

Red Hot Chili Peppers Album: “By the Way”

Red Hot Chili Peppers Album: “By the Way”
Album Information :
Title: By the Way
Release Date:2002-07-09
Type:Unknown
Genre:Rock, Hard Rock, Mainstream Rock
Label:
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:093624814061
Track Listing :
1 By The Way Video
2 Universally Speaking Video
3 This Is The Place Video
4 Dosed Video
5 Don't Forget Me Video
6 Zephyr Song
7 Can't Stop Video
8 I Could Die For You Video
9 Midnight
10 Throw Away Your Television Video
11 Cabron Video
12 Tear Video
13 On Mercury
14 Minor Thing Video
15 Warm Tape
16 Venice Queen Video
Review - :
{$The Red Hot Chili Peppers}' eighth studio album finds the California foursome exploring the more melodic freeways of harmony and texture, contrasting the gritty, funky side streets of their early days. Luckily, with this more sophisticated sound, {$the Peppers} have not sacrificed any of their trademark energy or passions for life, universal love, and (of course) lust. Although they recorded the spiky {^Abbey Road EP} in 1988, this album actually sounds a lot closer to {$the Beatles}' {^Abbey Road}, with a little of {^Pet Sounds} and elements of {$Phil Spector}'s lushest arrangements all distilled through the band's well-traveled {\funk}-{\pop} stylings. Harmony vocals and string arrangements have replaced some of the aggressive slap bass that the group was initially recognized for, but fans of both the gentle and the fierce {$Chili Peppers} styles will embrace the title track and first single, {&"By the Way."} In fact, this song on its own could almost be a brief history of everything {$the Red Hot Chili Peppers} have recorded: fiery Hollywood {\funk}, gentle harmonies, a little bit of singing about girls, a little bit of hanging out in the streets in the summertime, some rapid-fire raps from {$Anthony Kiedis}, some aggro basslines from {$Flea} -- the song plays like a three-and-a-half-minute audio version of {#Behind the Music}. Overall, the album leans more toward the melodic end of their oeuvre, but they have grown into this kinder, gentler mode organically, progressively working toward this groove little by little, album by album. What once were snapshots of a spastic {\punk}-{\funk} lifestyle have grown into fully realized short stories of introspection and {^Californication}. Though the pace of the album falters at times (particularly in the verses; the choruses are all pretty spectacular), it is refreshing to see that as the four {$Chili Peppers} continue to grow older and more sure of themselves, their composition and performing skills are maturing along with them. ~ Zac Johnson, All Music Guide
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