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Posted: Mon Apr 20, 2009 2:56 pm
by Mike
mothra665 wrote:Give 'em Hell Handsome! :twisted: :mad:
I could have I suppose but I didn't want to get the girl in trouble.
She was after all just doing her job.

It's just frustrating after waiting for the Box all this time.
Then to be so close yet so far away.
O well tomorrow will be here soon enough! :party:
mothra665 wrote:NS - FYI:
I Just went to my local BB and tried to use your experience to squeeze one out of them a day early.
To my dismay I was denied :cry: , but I also was able to see one (out of the four they had).
You described the packaging to a "T", the bonus CD tracks I remember seeing were:
Then She Did, Standing In, Of Course, Mt.Sng...Sorry can't remember the fifth.
The bonus CD must be inside the box, I did not notice it shrink wrapped to the outside.
Nothing ventured nothing gained as they say.
Nice to know I nailed down the packaging.

Glad your memory is better than mine as far as the bonus CD. :lol:
I too assume it's inside the box.

There is a chance that they will have it at the register and give it to you as you check out.
I've seen them do this in the past with other releases.
Either way it won't be long now.

Me -> :redguydancing: <- doing the Happy Dance tomorrow morning! :dance2:

Posted: Mon Apr 20, 2009 3:14 pm
by Mike
Jane's Addiction three-CD box set a fan treat of unreleased tracks
1 hour ago

"A Cabinet of Curiosities"

Jane's Addiction (Rhino)

A multimedia treat for fans, Jane's Addiction's box set is more than a collection of videos and rare tracks. It's a celebration of the band's influence on music and pop culture.

Open the "Cabinet of Curiosities" and you will find three CDs of music (mostly unreleased demos and live recordings), a DVD of music videos and personal footage from the band, a booklet that tells their story in words and pictures, trading cards featuring the four original members and four tiny worry dolls.

The DVD opens with "Soul Kiss: The Fan's Video," first released in 1989. Travel back 20 years and see frontman Perry Farrell frolicking with a girlfriend, literally lighting firecrackers in bed.

A pre-tattoo Dave Navarro shows off his pet eel, taking it from its aquarium and whacking it against a table. Drummer Stephen Perkins bangs away on pots and pans with spoons, and bassist Eric Avery gives a book report from the bathroom, sitting on the toilet. The DVD also includes six original music videos and live performances from a Milan show in 1990.

The visuals are great but the music is better: A total of 43 tracks, almost all previously unreleased.

Disc one is filled with demos recorded in 1986 and '87 - songs that ended up on the band's 1988 major-label debut, "Nothing's Shocking," and its 1990 follow-up, "Ritual de lo Habitual." Discover a piano tinkling behind the hard rock in "Mountain Song," reverb-free vocals on "City" and a wah-wah intro to "Stop!"

Disc two is a mix of demos, covers and live recordings, including a rehearsal version of "My Time" featuring Farrell's harmonica skills and his post-song critique. The band covers The Doors' "L.A. Woman," X's "Nausea," the Grateful Dead's "Ripple" and Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love," among others.

Disc three, all live tracks recorded at the Hollywood Palladium in 1990, pulses with edgy energy. Highlights include 10-minute-plus versions of "Then She Did" and "Three Days."

In the companion booklet, Navarro calls the latter a song that "touches on every musical element of Jane's within one composition. It's dark, sexy, sexual, aggressive." Featuring interviews with the quartet and rockers influenced by their music, the booklet offers a chronology of Jane's evolution, demise and return.

Taken together, "A Cabinet of Curiosities" is an immersive trip down memory lane with one of the most influential bands of the late '80s. With a collection this comprehensive, there's no need for the worry dolls.

Copyright © 2009 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadi ... ncwwfAOJrw

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 4:12 pm
by Mike
Here's a few pics of the Box and some of it's contents.

Image

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Exclusive Best Buy Bonus Live Disc: front

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Exclusive Best Buy Bonus Live Disc: rear

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Exclusive Best Buy Bonus Live Disc: disc

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I'm sure some of you will remember me trying to figure out the date for this image.
It turns out it's a new show for the gig listing.
07/31/1986 - Lhasa Club, Hollywood, CA :biggrin:

Image
I swiped Best Buy's price display thingy.
I hope they don't miss it. :lol:

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 9:05 pm
by mothra665
This is too good to be true, please :please: don't wake me :dance2:

Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 5:16 am
by Mike
mothra665 wrote:This is too good to be true, please :please: don't wake me :dance2:
It really is unfuckingbelievably awesome isn't it! :yeay:
I've been listening all day and I really am a happy camper.

Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 4:23 pm
by Mudget
You know, I don't think I've gotten these kinds of chills listening to music since the old days when I was hearing Jane's Addiction for the very first time.

Seriously, this shit just fucking rocks.

Posted: Sun Apr 26, 2009 5:10 am
by scabdates
I really really love the photo behind Disc 2. For serious. Oh, and the disc itself is probably my favorite.

Ted, Just Admit It..., Maceo, No One's Leaving, My Time -- are all incredible, nice mix of songs to open the CD. I really do love all of the covers, more every time I listen to them (never even really gave L.A. Medley much attention in the past, though I've had it). And this Kettle Whistle is just great also... I really hope they strive toward this again. So excited to know that Of Course will return.

Palladium 1990 is massive, of course. Too bad I paid $60 for Live & Insane back in high school, only to have this officially released, IN FULL, a few years later.

It think it's funny how Jane's now has less studio recordings than other various types of releases.


P.S. City (Demo) is the shiiiiiiiit

Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2009 12:38 pm
by Mike
Mudget wrote:You know, I don't think I've gotten these kinds of chills listening to music since the old days when I was hearing Jane's Addiction for the very first time.

Seriously, this shit just fucking rocks.
For real!
Chills and some memory flashes back to yesteryear.

I love this band and this Box Set! :oldtimer:

Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2009 12:52 pm
by Mike
scabdates wrote:I really really love the photo behind Disc 2. For serious. Oh, and the disc itself is probably my favorite.

Ted, Just Admit It..., Maceo, No One's Leaving, My Time -- are all incredible, nice mix of songs to open the CD. I really do love all of the covers, more every time I listen to them (never even really gave L.A. Medley much attention in the past, though I've had it). And this Kettle Whistle is just great also... I really hope they strive toward this again. So excited to know that Of Course will return.

Palladium 1990 is massive, of course. Too bad I paid $60 for Live & Insane back in high school, only to have this officially released, IN FULL, a few years later.

It think it's funny how Jane's now has less studio recordings than other various types of releases.


P.S. City (Demo) is the shiiiiiiiit
I picked up the Live & Insane and Song List boots back it the early '90.
I think I paid about $25 for each of them.
Well worth having them all this time and to me the Box Set is a big upgrade of sorts for those two boots anyway.

I totally agree with you as far as City goes.
It's a much more complete song with the drums.

Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2009 12:57 pm
by Mike
Jane's Addiction
A Cabinet of Curiosities

[Rhino; 2009]
6.0


Every great rock band has its quiet conscience, the in-house bullshit detector who keeps the band grounded while the egos and bank balances get too inflated, or who knows when to let things be once the thrill is gone. Perhaps not coincidentally, these people are invariably bassists: John Paul Jones in Led Zeppelin, Bill Wyman in the Rolling Stones and, in the case of Jane's Addiction, Eric Avery, who-- not wishing to tarnish the band's trailblazing 1987-1991 legacy-- opted out of lucrative reunion tours in 1997 and 2001. Perry Farrell may have gotten all the "Alternative Nation"–spokesman plaudits, Stephen Perkins may have gotten all the Modern Drummer covers, and Dave Navarro may have gotten all the Carmen Electra, but Avery was the band's pulse. His brooding, PiL-popping basslines provided the ominous undercurrent that gave depth to the band's glam-metal veneeer. Take him out of the equation, and Jane's veer dangerously close to becoming just another flashy L.A. rock band-- a point driven home by 2003's Avery-less reunion album, Strays, which, fittingly, is survived only by its Aerosmithy single "Superhero" becoming the opening theme to flashy L.A. TV show "Entourage".

Avery's surprising re-entry into the Jane's fold last year is therefore significant-- so much so, it warrants a box-set celebration. The 4xCD A Cabinet of Curiosities-- two CDs of demos/rarities from 1986-91, a third featuring a 1990 live-show recording, and a DVD of assorted video ephemera-- could've theoretically been released at any point in the past 18 years, but the bassist's return provides the band with a somewhat justifiable reason to cash in now, honey. And what a lovely piece of furniture it is: A Cabinet of Curiosities arrives in a wooden, latched-door case, which opens up into a shrine-like assemblage of album and poster art, a thick booklet featuring testimonials from fans like Slash, Flea, and Billy Corgan, plus tarot cards and miniature worry dolls for each member. Leave it to Jane's Addiction-- a band who, at the height of 80s hair-metal, revitalized such hoary, unfashionable devices as goth, funk, proggy dinosaur-rock, and drum circles-- to raise the standard for CD box sets just as the medium is about to die.

Unfortunately, all that elaborate packaging can't mask the fact there aren't very many curiosities to uncover here. As previous odds'n'sods collections Live and Rare and Kettle Whistle attested, Jane's didn't leave many leftovers behind; of the 29 outtakes compiled on Cabinet's first two discs, only four are originals that didn't feature on the band's first three albums, and three of those (the psych reverie "Kettle Whistle", the Stonesy folk ditty "City", and Farrell's woefully silly tribute to his cat, "Maceo") were already unveiled on Kettle Whistle, makinging an embryonic version of future Strays track "Suffer Some" (elements of which would be repurposed into "No One's Leaving") the lone revelation.

The real lure, then, should be a handsome batch of previously unreleased demos that would form the foundation for 1987's self-titled live-album debut and 1988's breakthrough Nothing's Shocking. However, for all the tales of druggy decadence that surrounded their early years, Jane's showed up in the studio with their shit pretty much together, which means there's little mercurial mystique to be heard in early rips through "Had a Dad" and "Pigs in Zen". The purpose may be to showcase Jane's in their most primal state; however, unlike most products of the 1980s punk underground, Jane's were never built for lo-fi-- they demanded a wide-screened sound as big as the mountains and oceans Farrell sang about. And hearing Farrell strain his voice on "Jane Says", you realize how much of his androgynous charisma owed to the multi-tracked vocal effects favored by producer Dave Jerden. The most notable thing about the demos aren't the performances so much as the recording dates: Even as far back as 1987, Jane's had already mapped out the multi-sectional intricacies of "Stop!" and "Three Days", three years before they would surface on 1990's Ritual de lo Habitual.

The rest of Cabinet's first two discs is filled out with covers that cheekily acknowledge the band's internal hippie/punk contradictions, particularly on "Bobhaus" (Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" set to Bauhaus' "Burning From the Inside") and "L.A. Medley", a blitzkrieged blast through the Doors' "L.A. Woman", the Germs' "Lexicon Devil", and X's "Nausea" (though, 18 years after the track first appeared on the "Classic Girl" single, its components are still listed in the wrong order). Concert recordings of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" and the Stooges' "1970" don't transcend garage-band trashiness; by contrast, Jane's Addiction have never sounded more blissful and beautiful than on their tribute-album transformation of the Grateful Dead's "Ripple", which grafts the original's campfire melody onto a rolling jungle-rumble groove and practically invents Animal Collective 10 years early.

A showdown between Farrell and Ice-T on Sly Stone's "Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey" is more leadfooted, but, in retrospect, it serves a prescient soundtrack to an L.A. whose simmering racial tensions were about to explode into riots. The set's third disc-- a complete concert recorded at the Hollywood Palladium in December 1990-- provides an even more vivid sense of time and place. If the preceding demos and cover versions mostly deconstruct the Jane's myth, this live set reasserts their majesty, with thundering versions of "Three Days" and "Ocean Size" that evoke that scary/ecstatic feeling of losing your footing in the mosh pit and getting swept up in the tide.

The Palladium performance of "Ain't No Right"-- the one followed by Farrell's rant about Birkenstocks-- is presented in visual form on Cabinet's fourth disc, which charts Jane's evolution through their videos, short films, and concert footage. While Nirvana's Nevermind is often credited with wiping hair-metal off the charts in one fell swoop, Jane's catalogue of videos shows them mobilizing the masses away from 80s Sunset Strip sleaze to the 90s alt-rock uprising. Like so many California rock bands of its time, Jane's Addiction filled their videos with images of the Hollywood Hills, surfing, pool parties, and (when network censors permitted them) naked chicks. But their aesthetic remove from the L.A. scene is best exemplified by the 1989 hodgepodge short-film Soul Kiss, reproduced here from a VHS copy and comprised of candid shots of Avery discussing his toilet reading while taking a dump; Navarro providing a "Cribs"-like tour of his squalid apartment (anticipating his future as reality-TV show huckster); and everyone in the band making out with each other.

However, Cabinet is lacking one crucial video curio: Gift, Farrell's feature-length, fictionalized account of his heroin-fuelled romance with then-girlfriend Casey Niccoli. History, of course, would show Farrell to be more adept at staging musical festivals than making films; Gift is a mess, its central narrative concerning the Niccoli character's OD routinely upended by tangential Jane's concert footage (including the aforementioned "Ain't No Right" clip) and other episodic silliness. But at the time of its 1993 release, Gift was a suitably absurd epitaph to an absurd band whose excesses initially got the better of them. For a box set that indulges die-hard fandom as eagerly as this one, A Cabinet of Curiosities feels a little barren without it. Or maybe they're just saving the reissue for the next reunion tour.

— Stuart Berman, April 28, 2009
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/129 ... riosities/