Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc.
All rights reserved.
All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Nine Lives 2. Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees) - (live) 3. Hole in My Soul - (live) 4. Taste of India 5. Full Circle 6. Something's Gotta Give 7. Ain't That a Bitch 8. Farm, The 9. Crash 10. Kiss Your Past Good-Bye 11. Pink 12. Attitude Adjustment 13. Fallen Angels
Album Notes Aerosmith: Steven Tyler (vocals, hammered dulcimer, harmonica, piano, hand organ, keyboards, percussion); Brad Whitford (acoustic guitar, guitar); Joe Perry (guitar, slide guitar, dulcimer, background vocals); Tom Hamilton (bass, Chapman stick); Joey Kramer (drums). Additional personnel includes: Ramesh Mishra (sarengi); John Webster (keyboards). Principally recorded at Avatar Studios, New York, New York. NINE LIVES was nominated for a 1998 Grammy Award for Best Rock Album. "Falling In Love (Is Hard On The Knees)" was nominated for a 1998 Grammy for Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal. "Pink" won the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal and was nominated for Best Short Form Music Video. This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. NINE LIVES marks Aerosmith's return to Columbia Records, the label for which it had its first round of stardom in the 1970s, and the label with which the band nearly slid off the rock and roll map altogether in the 1980s. Columbia shelled out a lot of money to woo back the now-bigger-than-ever band, and ends up getting exactly the kind of over-the-top pop-rock it was paying for. Working with producer Kevin Shirley (Silverchair, Journey), the seemingly ageless combo from Boston has made another record overflowing with sexual innuendo ("Pink", "Falling In Love [Is Hard On The Knees]"), power ballads ("Fallen Angels," "Hole In My Soul") and hard-hitting riffs ("Nine Lives," "Crash"). Continuing its recent fascination with sounds alien to hard rock (didja notice the Polynesian log drums on 1993's GET A GRIP?), Aerosmith dabbles with Indian culture on NINE LIVES. You can see it in the colorful packaging of the album, and hear it on "Taste Of India," which picks up where Led Zeppelin's classic "Kashmir" left off. The culturally confused epic features qawwali-esque vocalizing (a la Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan), a sarangi (an Indian fiddle) and, of course, some old-fashioned rock and roll. Editorial Reviews Rolling Stone (03/20/1997) Q (04/01/1997) Rolling Stone (03/20/1997) | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||||
Reviews Review created: 05/12/08 by: I decided to buy it because of the Photo of the album cover and i didnt get the same thing it was a fraudulant auction. the cd was also scuffed due to someone trying to clean it. Ebay should look into this Review ID: 10000000007146714 Was this review helpful? Report this review Review created: 05/05/08 by: This cd is very underrated, this is some very good songs on this Cd.The title pretty much says what their history was.They definitly have Nine Lives(after what they've been through)Just a little tid-bit,The song "Full Circle", at the end you can hear Steven Tyler winding one of those musical boxes. His wife at the time(Threasa Barrick)Bought that musical box at a Flea Market for $3.00 Review ID: 10000000007000901 Was this review helpful? Report this review |
All rights reserved.| Replace this search |
Email me daily when new items match my search for | |