New York Dolls - New York Dolls
Facts
| Artist(s) | New York Dolls |
| Studio | Island / Mercury |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 042283275225 |
| Buy this item | $8.49 at Amazon.com As of Jan 5 16:28 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Or 46 new from $4.28, 34 used from $4.00, 1 collectible from $11.99 |
Tracks
- Personality Crisis
- Looking for a Kiss
- Vietnamese Baby
- Lonely Planet Boy
- Frankenstein
- Trash
- Bad Girl
- Subway Train
- Pills - New York Dolls, Diddley, Bo
- Private World
- Jet Boy
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User Reviews
Average user review:| So Freakin' Great |
| New York Dolls 1st Album rocks! |
After listening to it for a couple of days, I knew I had to have more Dolls! This album, their first, is every bit as good as "Too Much Too Soon". I've heard comments that this one is not as good, but I couldn't disagree more. There's not a track on this album I don't like. "Personality Crisis", "Looking For a Kiss", "Trash", "Subway Train", and "Pills" jumped right out as great rockers, but after listening to the album a few times, the tracks that didn't jump right out to me at first started to get their hooks into me. I found myself singing "Jet Boy" in the shower and humming "Lonely Planet Boy" on the way to work.
This is raw, three to five chord, two guitar, music with blistering quick guitar leads and driving drum beat. The subjects covered by the music range from loneliness to addiction to heartbreak, all the basics of great rock & roll.
I would whole heartedly recommend this album to any New York Dolls fan who doesn't already have it (is that even possible?) or to anyone interested in discovering who the New York Dolls are and how they influenced rock & roll as we know it today. September 7, 2008
| NO PERSONALITY CRISIS HERE! |
From the opening scream of David JoHansen's vocals and Johnny Thunders' raw Keith Richards' styled riffing on "Personality Crisis" we are introduced to a dark world where paranoia, drugs and seedy living are ever so delightfully present. The second song "Looking For A Kiss" epitomizes the debauchery that is present throughout the album:
"When everyone goes to your house, they shoot up in your room
Most of them are beautiful, but so obsessed with gloom
I aint gonna be here, when they all get home
They're always lookin at me, they wont leave me alone"
These themes hardly venture into different territory from the hypnotic "Frankenstein," to the sexy imagery of "Bad Girl," and again the paranoia of the funky "Private World." The only reprieve from this dark world is the acoustic ballad "Lonely Planet Boy." Even the cover of Bo Diddley's "Pills" fits in accordingly and showcases the Dolls' ability of interpreting other artist's songs and fully making it their own. As done by The Dolls, the song takes on a whole new meaning than the Diddley version. Throughout the entire CD JoHansen sings like a demon possessed and the tag team guitar frenzy of Johnny Thunders and Sylvain Sylvain provides some of the best and most powerful riffing and soloing this side of the Richards/Taylor combination circa the early 70's.
By the time punk began to take off in the late 70's The Dolls were already no longer. But it's obvious to everyone after listening to this CD that this is where it all began, even if they didn't have a name for it yet. August 15, 2008
| Rock in its purest state |
| required |
Check out Mighty High...In Drug City June 20, 2008
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