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Johnny Thunders (–1991)

Auteur de So Alone

24 oeuvres 37 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

Œuvres de Johnny Thunders

So Alone (1992) 6 exemplaires
L.A.M.F. Revisited (1994) 3 exemplaires
Gang War (1998) 3 exemplaires
L.A.M.F. (2000) 2 exemplaires
In Cold Blood (2014) 2 exemplaires
What Goes Around 2 exemplaires
Que Sera Sera 2 exemplaires
Bootlegging the Bootleggers (2004) 1 exemplaire
Live From Zurich '85 1 exemplaire
Sad Vacation (1999) 1 exemplaire
New Too Much Junkey Business (1999) 1 exemplaire
Acoustic Thunders (2008) 1 exemplaire
Belfasts Rocks (2002) 1 exemplaire
Stations of the Cross 1 exemplaire
After the Dolls: 1977-1987 (2006) 1 exemplaire
Studio Bootlegs 1 exemplaire
So Alive 1 exemplaire
Looking for Johnny (2015) 1 exemplaire
So Alone 1 exemplaire

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Product Details

* Audio CD (July 14, 1992)
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording remastered
* Label: Sire / London/Rhino
* Catalog Number: 26982
* ASIN: B000005JBG
* Also Available in: Audio Cassette
* Average Customer Review: based on 17 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #13,676 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #27,241 in Music

Listen to Samples
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1. Pipeline Listen Listen
2. You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory Listen Listen
3. Great Big Kiss Listen Listen
4. Ask Me No Questions Listen Listen
5. Leave Me Alone Listen Listen
6. Daddy Rollin' Stone Listen
7. London Boys Listen
8. (She's So) Untouchable Listen
9. Subway Train Listen
10. Downtown Listen
11. Dead Or Alive Listen
12. Hurtin' Listen
13. So Alone (Previously Unreleased) Listen
14. The Wizard (Previously Unreleased) Listen
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Johnny Thunders's principal solo claim to fame, So Alone consists of Dollsy covers (the Shangri-Las' "Give Him a Great Big Kiss," the Chantays' surf chestnut "Pipeline," even the Dolls' "Subway Train") and gems of self-piteous wretchedness like "Leave Me Alone" and "You Can't Put Your Arms Round a Memory." The memory of what Junkie Johnny had been before heroin was almost enough to make So Alone a poignant experience--almost, but not quite. Oh, and "London Boys" was Thunders's sneering putdown of the London punk fraternity, several of whom (Steve Jones and Paul Cook, among others) are playing on the album. --Barney Hoskyns
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
The Unexpected Masterwork From The Classic Punk Flameout, March 26, 2001
Reviewer: BluesDuke "A sacred cow is worth but one thing...STEAK" (Huntington Beach, California) - See all my reviews
By the time his Heartbreakers were reduced to playing the occasional gig to raise the rent money (it's anyone's guess why the quartet couldn't make it in a punk revolution which they had a hefty hand in stirring up, when they formed in the aftermath of the New York Dolls's crackup), Johnny Thunders was as renowned for his seeming determination to cripple his own faculties as for his furiously amateurish, angry-hornets-on-speed guitar playing and attitude. He might well have been the last one from whom to expect any kind of even passable solo project - but he may well have surprised himself as well as punk watchers with this 1978 gem. He didn't lack for distinguished help - Sex Pistols mainstays Steve Jones (guitar) and Paul Cook (drums) repaid the Pistols' debt to the Dolls by providing yeoman bandsmanship to Thunders's greatest post-Dolls blast (anyone who thinks the Heartbreakers - even on their own surprising "Live At Max's Kansas City" - were better than this should have their inner ears checked); Thin Lizzy mastermind Phil Lynott chipped in with some stellar bassmanship; and, above all, there was Thunders himself, spinning out lick after lick of buzzing, pinpoint controlled guitar, singing with surprising feeling for a fellow with one of the thinnest voices in rock and roll, and generally cranking out an album which in hindsight proves introspective in a way its creator probably didn't expect.

The highlights: Thunders beats himself at his own game with "Leave Me Alone" (the umpteenth re-write of his underappreciated Dolls chestnut, "Chatterbox"), brings the two ex-Pistols in on the gag with "London Boys," an obvious answer to the Pistols's Dolls cop "New York," and exposes himself as a self-immolating romantic via "(She's So) Untouchable," laying back just so for a classic doo-woppish saxophone break. It probably wasn't that bright an idea for him to cover a couple of Dolls tracks; not that he drops the ball when he remakes "Subway Train" but his crunchy, stomping version isn't quite as panoramic as the Dolls's original (and he'd been the key to making the Dolls version work, with his dead-on impressionistic guitar sounding just as though it had come up from the Canarsie local). On the other hand, his take of "Daddy Rollin' Stone" (a Dolls cut that band never nailed in the studio) is now a rather haunting epitaph, if you consider that three of the five players who make that dripping cut work here - Thunders, Lynott, and erstwhile Humble Pie frontman Steve Marriott - would be dead within a decade of cutting it.

And if you wonder about some of his rock and roll heart, give a nod to the leadoff track, a shattering, roaring cover of the ancient surf hit, "Pipeline". Thunders sounds like he's having real fun for one of the few times in his career, and he's infectious enough that the two ex-Pistols forget their own selves and just get lost in the ride with him. But then, there's "You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory," which follows immediately, ostensibly a love song but sounding as much as though Thunders was trying to gain closure on a past which made him both an underground rock legend and his own worst enemy. The edge of fear in his sensitive vocal says it only too well. Behind the glazed, diffident stage style [...], there seems to have been a lost soul scraping to find his way home, only to discover he didn't have the grip it took to reach the door once it came to within his sight, but somehow finding through the glaze and the haze an occasional ability to savour the journey without collapsing under his own dissembling weight. "So Alone" was such a finding, and it made for the most powerful recording of Johnny Thunders's career.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
pantufla | Feb 26, 2006 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
24
Membres
37
Popularité
#390,572
Évaluation
½ 4.5
Critiques
1
ISBN
1