Rock, Metal The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2843.html Mon, 20 May 2024 03:30:25 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Foreigner ‎– Foreigner Anthology: Jukebox Heroes (2000) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2843-foreigner/10353-foreigner-jukebox-heroes-2011.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2843-foreigner/10353-foreigner-jukebox-heroes-2011.html Foreigner ‎– Foreigner Anthology: Jukebox Heroes (2000)

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CD1:
01 – Cold As Ice
02 – Feels Like The First Time
03 – Hot Blooded
04 – Long Long Way From Home
05 – Double Vision
06 – Juke Box Hero						play
07 – That Was Yesterday
08 – Out Of The Blue
09 – Say You Will
10 – I’ll Get Even With You
11 – Heart Turns To Stone
12 – Tooth And Nail
13 – I Don’t Want To Live Without You
14 – I’ll Fight For You
15 – Only Heaven Knows
16 – When The Night Comes Down
17 – Love Maker (Live)
18 – Fool For You Anyway (Live)
19 – Not Fade Away (Live)

CD2:
01 – I Want To Know What Love Is
02 – Waiting For A Girl Like You
03 – Urgent
04 – Headknocker
05 – Love On The Telephone
06 – Blue Morning, Blue Day
07 – At War With The World
08 – Love Has Taken It’s Toll
09 – Tramontane
10 – Dirty White Boy
11 – Lowdown And Dirty
12 – Head Games
13 – Women								play
14 – Break It Up
15 – Down On Love
16 – Two Different Worlds
17 – Can’t Wait
18 – Inside Information
19 – Sreet Thunder

Lou Gramm – lead vocals
Kelly Hansen – lead vocals 
Mick Jones – lead guitar, keyboards, bass, vocals 
Thom Gimbel – guitar, saxophone, flute, backing vocals 
Michael Bluestein – keyboards, synthesizers, backing vocals 
Jeff Pilson – bass, backing vocals 
Mark Schulman – drums, percussion, backing vocals

 

It's easy to say that Rhino's Jukebox Heroes: The Foreigner Anthology is the definitive Foreigner retrospective, simply because there's so much music here: 39 tracks over the course of two discs, including all the hits, the bulk of notable album tracks, solo cuts from Lou Gramm and Mick Jones, plus two tracks from Jones-era Spooky Tooth. Clearly, that does amount to a clearly comprehensive collection, but the question is, is this a clear-cut choice for most fans? Well, it all depends on a listener's needs. This will be too much Foreigner if you're just looking for nothing but hits, especially since the classic era (roughly defined as pre-Agent Provocateur) stops at the end of the first disc. But, anyone that truly enjoys Foreigner's big, glossy arena rock will find that this doesn't test their patience, even if it runs out of steam toward the end of the collection. Anthology keeps interest because of canny selection and sequencing. The addition of Gramm and Jones songs on the second disc works wonders, since it not only strengthens its value for consumers -- it's terrific to be able to have all Foreigner and Foreigner-related songs in one place, especially since Gramm's peerless "Midnight Blue" is not just the best thing here, it's the last great single of the album-rock era -- it accelerates the pace and keeps things interesting just as the band's output gets a little patchy. So, Anthology winds up more consistently entertaining than skeptics could have imagined. It still may not convert those skeptics, but it will prove to the listener with the curiosity to delve deeper than the hits that it's worth doing so. ---Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic Review

 

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Foreigner Tue, 27 Sep 2011 08:41:02 +0000
Foreigner – Feels Like The First Time (2011) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2843-foreigner/10336-foreigner-feels-like-the-first-time-2011.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2843-foreigner/10336-foreigner-feels-like-the-first-time-2011.html Foreigner – Feels Like The First Time (2011)

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CD1:
01 – Long, Long Way From Home (The Classics Unplugged)
02 – Cold As Ice (The Classics Unplugged)
03 – The Flame Still Burns (The Classics Unplugged)
04 – Double Vision (The Classics Unplugged)
05 – Fool For You Anyway (The Classics Unplugged)
06 – Say You Will (The Classics Unplugged)
07 – Starrider (The Classics Unplugged)
08 – Waiting For A Girl Like You (The Classics Unplugged)
09 – Feels Like The First Time (The Classics Unplugged)				play
10 – Juke Box Hero (The Classics Unplugged)
11 – That’s All Right (The Classics Unplugged) (Bonus Track)

CD2:
01 – Save Me (Bonus Track) (New)
02 – Feels Like The First Time (2011 Recording)
03 – Cold As Ice (2011 Recording)
04 – Long, Long Way From Home (2011 Recording)						play
05 – Hot Blooded (2011 Recording)
06 – Double Vision (2011 Recording)
07 – Head Games (2011 Recording)
08 – Dirty White Boy (2011 Recording)
09 – Urgent (2011 Recording)
10 – Waiting For A Girl Like You (2011 Recording)
11 – I Want To Know What Love Is (2011 Recording)
12 – Juke Box Hero (2011 Recording)

Stevie Blacke 	String Arrangements, Viola, Violin
Michael Bluestein 	Clavinet, Keyboards, Organ, Piano, Synthesizer, Vocals (Background)
Jason Bonham 	Drums
Lisa Dondlinger 	Violin
Dukedale Gil Ellis Choir 	Choir, Chorus
Tom Gimbel 	Flute, Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic), Saxophone, Vocals (Background)
Gilmar Gomes 	Percussion
Kelly Hansen 	Percussion, Vocals
Tita Hutchison 	Scat
Jeff Jacobs 	Keyboards
Mick Jones 	Executive Producer, Guitars, Organ, Piano (Electric), Synthesizer, Vocals
Paul Mirkovich 	Keyboards
Jeff Pilson 	Bass, Guitar, Guitar (12 String), Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals (Background)
Mark Schulman 	Drums, Percussion
Aaron Sterling 	Drums
Jacob Szekely 	Cello
Erika Walczak 	Violin

 

Wal-Mart exclusive releases are a funny thing: the concept alone is absurd. As successful as the nationwide mega-store is, releasing one’s album solely through that outlet seems a strange way to sell a record. The album will no doubt sell; the store’s low-price guarantee, after all, is just so darn hard to resist. Still, there are plenty of other stores that could sell the album just as well. It isn’t as if the exclusivity of the Wal-Mart deal gives the album prestige of any sort – panache is a word that no one on earth would ascribe to the retailer. However, people still continue to do it. The most notable recent example would be the Eagles’ most recent LP, 2007’s Long Road Out of Eden. The album did end up moving over seven million copies (it seems that one Lebowski’s vitriol toward the band is wasted on the public), so it seems that the deal was far from a failure, even though the album’s exclusivity ended up giving way to having the album put on iTunes.

Maybe it’s fate that the success of the Wal-Mart model and Foreigner’s 35th anniversary align. The former is a symbol of how fiscal conservatism can move product; the latter is, in reality, a meaningless date that has no particular significance in the history of contemporary rock music. Nonetheless, fate’s power would not relent, and as a result these two forces have teamed up and have given us Feels Like the First Time, a two-CD set comprised of acoustic covers of older material and digitally remastered tracks of, you guessed it, older material. Never has a title been such an apt summation of an entire double-disc record.

Indeed, it does feel very much like the “first time” Foreigner’s music was released. The only substantive difference is the vocalist, and even that doesn’t necessitate re-recording the material. New vocalist Kelly Hansen, while not a bad singer by any measure, isn’t that far different from former singer Lou Gramm; at moments they’re indistinguishable. Like most albums of its kind, Feels Like a First Time is a perfunctory re-release, something that Foreigner diehards would buy in a heartbeat, but for those non-fans it amounts to nothing more than yet another greatest hits compilation disguised as a re-envisioning. The album shows no shortage of the band’s successes, but as time has gone on, it’s the bands flaws that are more evident than anything (“Well I cried for you so long / My river of tears ran dry” — yep, still corny 35 years later).

The acoustic disc (“classily” titled “Acoustique”) and the remastered disc (not-so-classily titled “Juke Box Heroes”) are both deeply flawed, though both for different reasons. The acoustic disc succumbs to what many acoustic albums do: they do absolutely nothing to invigorate the original tracks. Instead, all of the songs here play just like the originals, only diverging sonically in timbre. Even on the tracks that sound pretty good in a stripped-down style, such as “Fool for You Anyway” and (oddly enough) “Double Vision,” the instrumentation is basically note for note. If one is a fan of the originals, then she’s likely to enjoy the stuff here. Nonetheless, the fact remains that the enjoyment of the songs is contingent on how good they were twenty or thirty years ago; a pleasant listen, perhaps, but one that’s too predictable for its own good. (And as far as predictability is concerned, this is Foreigner we are talking about here).

The second disc is even worse off. As if the initial premise of Feels Like the First Time wasn’t bad enough, it only gets worse on disc two. Thus far, Foreigner have released ten greatest hits LPs (that actually outnumbers their studio output); with this album, make it eleven. Based on those numbers, it seems more as if the band isn’t interested in releasing studio records, but are comfortable in merely revisiting all of its old material over and over again, making sure to take the time to call it something else. This trend might not exactly be revelatory (around greatest hits compilation number three this all probably started coming together), but it is nonetheless true for this record, and frustratingly so. The only real thing different on this remastered disc is that the production quality is slightly better; the extra garnishes of synthesizer on some of the tracks hardly amount to anything exciting. This means that while this is basically another Foreigner greatest hits compilation, it does have the benefit of … being more polished. For people who were concerned about Foreigner’s lack of said polish, this album is worth the time. Otherwise, the ten other greatest hits collections in Foreigner’s repetitive oeuvre should suffice. ---Brice Ezell, popmatters.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Foreigner Sun, 25 Sep 2011 08:41:50 +0000