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Red Hot Chili Peppers – Studio Albums Collection 1984-2006 (Japanese Releases)
Genre: Alternative Rock, Funk Rock, Funk Metal, Punk Rock
A collection of 10 CD, which includes 9 studio albums by Red Hot Chili Peppers.
The Red Hot Chili Peppers are an American rock band. They formed
in Los Angeles, California, in 1983. The group’s musical style has fused
traditional funk with elements of other genres, including punk and
psychedelic rock.
Bass player Michael "Flea" Balzary and vocalist
Anthony Kiedis remain the only constant members throughout all the
incarnations of the band. The current line-up consists also of longtime
drummer Chad Smith and new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer.
The
group’s original line-up featured guitarist Hillel Slovak and drummer
Jack Irons, albeit not playing on the debut album, The Red Hot Chili
Peppers. Cliff Martinez was the drummer for the first two records,
filling in for Irons, and guitarist Jack Sherman played on the first
only. Slovak performed on two albums with the band, Freaky Styley and
The Uplift Mofo Party Plan; he died of a heroin overdose in 1988,
resulting in Irons’ departure. Former Dead Kennedys drummer D.H. Peligro
briefly replaced Irons before the band found a permanent replacement in
Smith. Guitarist John Frusciante replaced Slovak. The line-up of Flea,
Kiedis, Frusciante and Smith was the longest-lasting, and recorded the
band’s fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth and ninth albums, Mother’s Milk
(1989), Blood Sugar Sex Magik (1991), Californication (1999), By the Way
(2002), and Stadium Arcadium (2006).
Blood Sugar Sex Magik, the
group’s first commercial success, has sold over thirteen million copies.
Frusciante grew uncomfortable with the success of the band and left
abruptly in 1992, in the middle of the album tour. His use of heroin
increased. After recruiting guitarist Arik Marshall to complete the
tour, Kiedis, Flea, and Smith employed Dave Navarro of Jane’s Addiction
for their subsequent album, One Hot Minute (1995). Although commercially
successful, the album failed to match the critical or popular acclaim
of Blood Sugar Sex Magik, selling less than half as well as its
predecessor. Navarro left the band shortly after the album’s release.
Frusciante, fresh out of drug rehabilitation, rejoined the band in 1998
at Flea’s request. The reunited quartet returned to the studio to record
Californication (1999), which sold fifteen million copies – the band’s
most commercially successful album. That album was followed three years
later by By the Way, which was also successful. In 2006, the group
released the double album Stadium Arcadium, their first number one album
in America. After a world tour, the group went on an extended hiatus.
Frusciante announced he was amicably leaving the band to focus on his
solo career. Josh Klinghoffer, who had worked both as a sideman for the
band on their Stadium Arcadium tour and on Frusciante’s solo projects,
joined as lead guitarist. The band have finished their tenth studio
album, I’m With You, which is to be released on August 30, 2011.
The
Red Hot Chili Peppers have won 7 Grammy Awards. The band has sold over
60 million albums worldwide, charting eight singles in the Top 40 of the
Billboard Hot 100 (including three in the Top 10), five number one
singles on the Mainstream Rock charts, and a record of eleven number one
singles on the Modern Rock charts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hot_Chili_Peppers
Red Hot Chili Peppers – The Red Hot Chili Peppers (1984) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition & Remastered
The Red Hot Chili Peppers’ debut album sketched out their funk-metal
hybrid quite effectively, especially on the warped deep groove of "True
Men Don’t Kill Coyotes." Even though their fusion of heavy guitars and
slapping bass was audacious, their first effort didn’t quite gel into a
cohesive album. [The 2007 Japanese reissue included bonus tracks.]
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 01. True Men Don’t Kill Coyotes
02. Baby Appeal
03. Buckle Down
04. Get Up and Jump
05. Why Don’t You Love Me
06. Green Heaven
07. Mommy, Where’s Daddy?
08. Out in L.A.
09. Police Helicopter
10. You Always Sing the Same
11. Grand Pappy du Plenty
Bonus tracks:
12. Get Up and Jump (demo)
13. Police Helicopter (demo)
14. Out in L.A. (demo)
15. Green Heaven (demo)
16. What It Is (aka Nina’s Song) (demo)
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Freaky Styley (1985) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition Remastered
The closest the Red Hot Chili Peppers ever came to straight funk,
Freaky Styley is the quirkiest, loosest, and most playful album in their
long and winding catalog. It’s also one of the best, if least heard. A
year earlier, in 1984, they’d made their self-titled debut with a stiff
album produced Andrew Gill of Gang of Four fame. The album had its share
of good songs, most notably "True Men Don’t Kill Coyotes" and "Get Up
and Jump," but Gill’s cold and tinny production riddled The Red Hot
Chili Peppers with the same sort of problem that made Gang of Four’s
early-’80s albums so distasteful. Namely, the production sucks all the
life out of the music and makes it seem distant and unapproachable, as
if you were listening to the album in a long tunnel with reflective
metal walls. Here on Freaky Styley that problem is thankfully solved:
enter producer extraordinaire George Clinton. The funk legend not only
gives the Peppers the sort of warm and loose-limbed production that had
graced many a Parliament/Funkadelic album over the years, but he also
seemingly gives the band some serious inspiration. For instance, a pair
of covers of funk classics instantly stand out — "If You Want Me to
Stay" (Sly & the Family Stone) and "Africa" (the Meters), the latter
retitled "Hollywood (Africa)" here — and they’re made all the more
standout with the addition of Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley on horns. The
Peppers also write a number of strong songs of their own. If none stand
out, per se — with the exception of the two covers, that is — that’s
because they’re all fairly good, relatively rough songs. Sure, some are
slight, no question about that, but they help the album flow from one
song to the next, because the songs are all more or less different from
one another in subtle ways. And they’re performed with vigor, as
original guitarist Hillel Slovak is thankfully back aboard (replacing
Jack Sherman, who played guitar on The Red Hot Chili Peppers and
co-wrote the bulk of these songs), and he makes a major contribution to
practically every song, playing straight funk here more so than the
funk-metal that would characterize the band’s subsequent album, The
Uplift Mofo Party Plan. And to make mention of that 1987 follow-up, the
Peppers would move on to a new producer, making this their one
collaboration with Clinton. They’d never quite recapture the pure funk
sound of Freaky Styley again, likely as a result. That’s one reason why
this album is so special, but it’s also because the Peppers have a good
clutch of songs to work with in addition to excellent production. And
too, they seem relaxed and at ease here, playing quirky songs without
any self-consciousness, a quality lacking on their debut. It’s a quality
lacking on subsequent albums also, though to a lesser degree, when the
Peppers would begin sharpening their pop smarts and crafting catchy
songs rather than just fun jams like these. So if you’re feeling
adventurous and are drawn to the idea of the Peppers and Clinton
together in the same studio back in 1985 without any pop-crossover
ambitions, give Freaky Styley a listen by all means. It’s a cult classic
of sorts and a world apart from the where the band would go in later
years, for better and for worse. [The Japanese reissue included bonus
tracks.]
Review by Jason Birchmeier, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 01. Jungle Man
02. Hollywood (Africa)
03. American Ghost Dance
04. If You Want Me to Stay
05. Nevermind
06. Freaky Styley
07. Blackeyed Blonde
08. The Brothers Cup
09. Battleship
10. Lovin’ and Touchin’
11. Catholic School Girls Rule
12. Sex Rap
13. Thirty Dirty Birds
14. Yertle the Turtle
bonus tracks:
15. Nevermind (demo)
16. Sex Rap (demo)
17. Freaky Styley (original long version)
18. Millionaires Against Hunger
Red Hot Chili Peppers – The Uplift Mofo Party Plan (1987) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition Remastered
In a perfect world, the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ breakthrough album
wouldn’t have been 1989′s Mother’s Milk, but 1987′s The Uplift Mofo
Party Plan, and the history of this groundbreaking rock/rap band (and
likely the entire subgenre it created) would’ve been drastically
changed. But the Chili Peppers created most of the imperfections in
their world, especially in the late ’80s, and the unusual scenario of
four original bandmembers recording together for the first time on that
band’s third album would tragically prove to be a one-shot deal.
Veterans Anthony Kiedis (vocals) and Flea (bass) had welcomed back
original guitarist Hillel Slovak for the preceding Freaky Styley album
after using Jack Sherman on their self-titled 1984 debut, doing the same
at this point for original drummer Jack Irons, who replaced Cliff
Martinez. The energy of having these four friends from Los Angeles back
together jumps out of the opening anthem "Fight Like a Brave" and the
experimental "Funky Crime"; tracks like the autobiographical "Me &
My Friends" and closing "Organic Anti-Beat Box Band" would stay in the
group’s live repertoire for the next decade or more. Kiedis’ barking rap
delivery drives the cover of Bob Dylan’s "Subterranean Homesick Blues,"
and Flea’s ahead-of-their-time slapping basslines stand out in "Behind
the Sun" and "Walkin’ on Down the Road," but Slovak and Irons brought
things to the Chili Peppers that no one else ever has. The drummer’s
pounding funk backbeats left a blueprint for his successor, Chad Smith,
and the manic intro to "Skinny Sweaty Man" sounds like Buddy Rich
playing James Brown material. Slovak is at the height of his powers on
the rap-rock reggae "Love Trilogy" and funky "Special Secret Song
Inside," which gained some notoriety for its anatomical undertones. But
Slovak would die of a heroin overdose the following year, with Irons
quitting the band afterward from the depression of the loss. Kiedis and
Flea would come to grips with their own drug habits and return with
Smith and guitarist John Frusciante on Mother’s Milk, breaking into the
arena circuit with a hit cover of Stevie Wonder’s "Higher Ground" — and
leaving Kiedis and Flea to wonder what might have been. [Japanese
edition included bonus tracks.]
Review by Bill Meredith, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 01. Fight Like a Brave
02. Funky Crime
03. Me and My Friends
04. Backwoods
05. Skinny Sweaty Man
06. Behind the Sun
07. Subterranean Homesick Blues
08. Party on Your Pussy (formerly Special Secret Song Inside)
09. No Chump Love Sucker
10. Walkin’ on Down the Road
11. Love Trilogy
12. Organic Anti-Beat Box Band
Bonus tracks:
13. Behind the Sun (instrumental demo)
14. Me and My Friends (instrumental demo)
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Mother’s Milk (1989) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition Remastered
A pivotal album for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, 1989′s Mother’s Milk
turned the tide and transformed the band from underground funk-rocking
rappers to mainstream bad boys with seemingly very little effort.
Mother’s Milk brought them to MTV, scored them a deal with Warner
Brothers, and let both frontman Anthony Kiedis and the ubiquitous Flea
get back out into a good groove following the death of co-founding
member Hillel Slovak. With a new lineup coalescing around the remaining
duo with new drummer Chad Smith and guitarist John Frusciante, and with
producer Michael Beinhorn again behind the boards, the band took
everything that The Uplift Mofo Party Plan hinted at, and brought it
fully to bear for this new venture. If anyone doubted the pulsating
power that leapt from the blistering opener, "Good Time Boys," it took
only a few bars of the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ outrageous, and brilliant,
interpretation of the Stevie Wonder classic "Higher Ground" to prove
that this new lineup was onto something special. Wrapping up with the
aptly titled and truly punked-out "Punk Rock Classic" and the band’s own
punched-up tribute to "Magic Johnson," Mother’s Milk was everything the
band had hoped for, and a little more besides. Effortlessly going gold
as "Knock Me Down" and "Taste the Pain" careened into the charts, the
album not only set the stage for the band’s Blood Sugar Sex Magic
domination, it also proved that funk never died; it had just swapped
skins. [Japanese reissue included bonus tracks.]
Review by Amy Hanson, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 1. Good Time Boys
2. Higher Ground
3. Subway To Venus
4. Magic Johnson
5. Nobody Weird Like Me
6. Knock Me Down
7. Taste The Pain
8. Stone Cold Bush
9. Fire
10. Pretty Little Ditty
11. Punk Rock Classic
12. Sexy Mexican Maid
13. Johnny Kick A Hole In The Sky
Вonus tracks:
14. Song That Made Us What We Are Today – demo
15. Knock Me Down – original long version
16. Sexy Mexican Maid – original long version
17. Salute To Kareem – demo
18. Castles Made Of Sand live
19. Crosstown Traffic – live
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Blood Sugar Sex Magik (1991) 2006 Japanese Reissue
The Red Hot Chili Peppers’ best album, Blood Sugar Sex Magik benefits
immensely from Rick Rubin’s production — John Frusciante’s guitar is
less overpoweringly noisy, leaving room for differing textures and
clearer lines, while the band overall is more focused and less
indulgent, even if some of the grooves drag on too long. Lyrically,
Anthony Kiedis is as preoccupied with sex as ever, whether invoking it
as his muse, begging for it, or boasting in great detail about his
prowess, best showcased on the infectiously funky singles "Give It Away"
and "Suck My Kiss." However, he tempers his testosterone with a more
sensitive side, writing about the emotional side of failed relationships
("Breaking the Girl," "I Could Have Lied"), his drug addictions ("Under
the Bridge" and an elegy for Hillel Slovak, "My Lovely Man"), and some
hippie-ish calls for a peaceful utopia. Three of those last four songs
(excluding "My Lovely Man") mark the band’s first consistent embrace of
lilting acoustic balladry, and while it’s not what Kiedis does best as a
vocalist, these are some of the album’s finest moments, varying and
expanding the group’s musical and emotional range. Frusciante departed
after the supporting tour, leaving Blood Sugar Sex Magik as probably the
best album the Chili Peppers will ever make.
Review by Steve Huey, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 1. Power Of Equality
2. If You Have To Ask
3. Breaking The Girl
4. Funky Monks
5. Suck My Kiss
6. I Could Have Lied
7. Mellowship Slinky In B Major
8. Righteous And The Wicked
9. Give It Away
10. Blood Sugar Sex Magik
11. Under The Bridge
12. Naked In The Rain
13. Apache Rose Peacock
14. Greeting Song
15. My Lovely Man
16. Sir Psycho Sexy
17. They’re Red Hot
Red Hot Chili Peppers – One Hot Minute (1995) 2006 Japanese Reissue
Following up Blood Sugar Sex Magik proved to be a difficult task for
the Red Hot Chili Peppers. In 1993, two years after Blood Sugar, former
Jane’s Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro joined up, but it was still
another two years before One Hot Minute appeared, due to various
personal problems. Navarro’s metallic guitar shredding should have added
some weight to the Chili Peppers’ punk-inflected heavy-guitar funk, but
tends to make it plodding. By emphasizing the metal, the funk is
gradually phased out of the blend, as is melody; the grinding chant of
"Warped" is hardly as twisted as anything on Freaky Styley, or even
"Give It Away." The ballads "My Friends" and "Transcending" are blatant
attempts to hold on to the mainstream audience gained by "Under the
Bridge," but the melodies are weak and the lyrics are even more feeble.
One Hot Minute is as musically ambitious as Blood Sugar Sex Magik, but
is even more unfocused, which means it provides the fewest thrills of
any of the group’s albums.
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 1. Warped
2. Aeroplane
3. Deep Kick
4. My Friends
5. Coffee Shop
6. Pea
7. One Big Mob
8. Walkabout
9. Tearjerker
10. One Hot Minute
11. Falling Into Grace
12. Shallow Be Thy Name
13. Transcending
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Californication (1999) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition Reissue
Many figured that the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ days as undisputed
alternative kings were numbered after their lackluster 1995 release One
Hot Minute, but like the great phoenix rising from the ashes, this
legendary and influential outfit returned back to greatness with 1999′s
Californication. An obvious reason for their rebirth is the reappearance
of guitarist John Frusciante (replacing Dave Navarro), who left the
Peppers in 1992 and disappeared into a haze of hard drugs before
cleaning up and returning to the fold in 1998. Frusciante was a main
reason for such past band classics as 1989′s Mother’s Milk and 1991′s
Blood Sugar Sex Magik, and proves once and for all to be the
quintessential RHCP guitarist. Anthony Kiedis’ vocals have improved
dramatically as well, while the rhythm section of bassist Flea and
drummer Chad Smith remains one of rock’s best. The quartet’s trademark
punk-funk can be sampled on such tracks as "Around the World," "I Like
Dirt," and "Parallel Universe," but the more pop-oriented material
proves to be a pleasant surprise — "Scar Tissue," "Otherside," "Easily,"
and "Purple Stain" all contain strong melodies and instantly memorable
choruses. And like their 1992 introspective hit "Under the Bridge,"
there are even a few mellow moments — "Porcelain," "Road Trippin’," and
the title track. With the instrumentalists’ interplay at an all-time
telepathic high and Kiedis peaking as a vocalist, Californication is a
bona fide Chili Peppers classic. [A Japanese version added a bonus
track.]
Review by Greg Prato, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 1. Around The World
2. Parallel Universe
3. Scar Tissue
4. Otherside
5. Get On Top
6. Californication
7. Easily
8. Porcelain
9. Emitremmus
10. I Like Dirt
11. This Velvet Glove
12. Savior
13. Purple Stain
14. Right On Time
15. Road Trippin
Bonus:
16. Gong Li
Red Hot Chili Peppers – By the Way (2002) 2006 Japanese Limited Edition Issue
The Red Hot Chili Peppers’ eighth studio album finds the California
foursome exploring the more melodic freeways of harmony and texture,
contrasting the gritty, funky side streets of their early days. Luckily,
with this more sophisticated sound, the Peppers have not sacrificed any
of their trademark energy or passions for life, universal love, and (of
course) lust. Although they recorded the spiky Abbey Road EP in 1988,
this album actually sounds a lot closer to the Beatles’ Abbey Road, with
a little of Pet Sounds and elements of Phil Spector’s lushest
arrangements all distilled through the band’s well-traveled funk-pop
stylings. Harmony vocals and string arrangements have replaced some of
the aggressive slap bass that the group was initially recognized for,
but fans of both the gentle and the fierce Chili Peppers styles will
embrace the title track and first single, "By the Way." In fact, this
song on its own could almost be a brief history of everything the Red
Hot Chili Peppers have recorded: fiery Hollywood funk, gentle harmonies,
a little bit of singing about girls, a little bit of hanging out in the
streets in the summertime, some rapid-fire raps from Anthony Kiedis,
some aggro basslines from Flea — the song plays like a
three-and-a-half-minute audio version of Behind the Music. Overall, the
album leans more toward the melodic end of their oeuvre, but they have
grown into this kinder, gentler mode organically, progressively working
toward this groove little by little, album by album. What once were
snapshots of a spastic punk-funk lifestyle have grown into fully
realized short stories of introspection and Californication. Though the
pace of the album falters at times (particularly in the verses; the
choruses are all pretty spectacular), it is refreshing to see that as
the four Chili Peppers continue to grow older and more sure of
themselves, their composition and performing skills are maturing along
with them.
Review by Zac Johnson, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: 01. By the Way (3:37)
02. Universally Speaking (4:19)
03. This Is the Place (4:17)
04. Dosed (5:12)
05. Don’t Forget Me (4:37)
06. The Zephyr Song (3:52)
07. Can’t Stop (4:29)
08. I Could Die for You (3:13)
09. Midnight (4:55)
10. Throw Away Your Television (3:44)
11. Cabron (3:38)
12. Tear (5:17)
13. On Mercury (3:28)
14. Minor Thing (3:37)
15. Warm Tape (4:16)
16. Venice Queen (6:07)
17. Time [Bonus Track] (3:47)
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Stadium Arcadium 2CD (2006) Japanese Edition
Indulgence has long been a way of life for the Red Hot Chili Peppers,
yet they resisted the siren’s call of the double album until 2006′s
Stadium Arcadium. Sure, 1991′s breakthrough Blood Sugar Sex Magik was as
long as a classic double LP, but such distinctions mattered little in
the era when vinyl gave way to CD, and they matter less now, as the CD
gradually gives way to digital-only releases. In fact, like how Blood
Sugar was the tipping point when the LPs ceded ground to CDs, Stadium
Arcadium could be seen as the point when albums were seen as a
collection of digital playlists. Yes, it’s pressed up as a two-disc set —
including an extravagant but pointless special edition housed in a
clunky box that includes a make-yer-own-spinning-top — but this is an
album that’s designed for you to mix and match, create your own
playlist, rip and burn on your own. It’s designed for you to sequence
its 28 songs in some kind of cohesive manner, since the band sure didn’t
take the time to do that here; it’s the first major album by a major
band that makes as much sense on random as it does in its proper
sequencing. Well, that’s not entirely true: the official 28-song album
does begin with "Dani California," the clearest single here, the one
thing that truly grabs attention upon first listen and worms its way
into your subconscious, where it just won’t let go, as so much of
Anthony Kiedis’ catchiest melodies do. After that, it’s a long, winding
path of alternately spacey and sunny pop, ballads, and the occasional
funk workout that used to be the Chili Peppers’ signature but now
functions as a way to break up the monotony. And there needs to be
something to break up the monotony, not because the music is bad but
because it all exists at the same level and is given a flat, colorless
production that has become the signature of Rick Rubin as of late.
Rubin
may be able to create the right atmosphere for Flea and John Frusciante
to run wild creatively — an opportunity that they seize here, which is
indeed a pleasure to hear — but he does nothing to encourage them to
brighten the finished recording up with some different textures, or even
a greater variety of guitar tones. As such, the bare-bone production
combined with the relentless march of songs gives Stadium Arcadium the
undeniable feel of wading through the demos for a promising project
instead of a sprawling statement of purpose; there’s not enough purpose
here for it to be a statement. That fault is down to the band not
forming the raw material into something palatable for the listener, but
there’s also the problem that as a lyricist Anthony Kiedis just isn’t
that deep or clever enough to provide cohesive themes for an album of
this length; he tackles no new themes here, nor does he provide new
insight to familiar topics. To his credit, he does display a greater
versatility as a vocalist, cutting back on the hambone rapping that used
to be his signature and crooning throughout the bulk of this album,
usually on key. That said, he still has enough goofy tics to undercut
his attempts at sincerity, and he tends to be a bit of a liability to
the band as a whole; with a different singer, who could help shape and
deliver these songs, this album might not seem as formless and gormless.
But there is a fair amount of pleasures here, all down to the interplay
between Flea and Frusciante. While drummer Chad Smith does prove
himself quite versatile here, gracefully following the eccentric turns
and meanderings of the bassist and guitarist, the string instruments are
the reason to listen to Stadium Arcadium. That’s always been the case
to a certain extent with the Chili Peppers, but here it’s especially
true, as they push and pull, rave and rumble, lie back and rock out —
pretty much spit out anything they can do on their instruments over the
course of 28 songs. As good as much of this is, there is a little bit of
monotony here, since they’re working variations on their signature
themes, and they haven’t found a way to make these variations either
transcendent or new; they’re just very good renditions on familiar
themes. These tracks rarely betray their origins as studio jams — more
than ever, it’s possible to hear that the track came first, then the
song — and while that can result in some good listening, it all does
kind of drift together. That said, there are no bad tracks here — it’s
all of a relatively high quality — but there are no standouts either, so
it takes a very dedicated fan to start sorting out the subtleties
between the tracks (not the wheat from the chaff, since it’s all wheat).
And while those hardcore fans may certainly enjoy the
make-your-own-adventure spirit of Stadium Arcadium, it’s hard not to
feel that it’s the band’s responsibility to take this very good
repetitive album and mold it into something sharper and more effective.
So call it the rock version of Peter Jackson’s King Kong: there’s
something pretty great and lean buried beneath the excess, but it’s so
indulgent, it’s a work that only a fanboy could truly love.
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Allmusic.com
Tracklist: CD1: Jupiter
01 Dani California 4:42
02 Snow (Hey Oh) 5:34
03 Charlie 4:37
04 Stadium Arcadium 5:15
05 Hump de Bump 3:33
06 She’s Only 18 3:25
07 Slow Cheetah 5:19
08 Torture Me 3:44
09 Strip My Mind 4:19
10 Especially in Michigan 4:01
11 Warlocks 3:25
12 С’mon Girl 3:48
13 Wet Sand 5:09
14 Hey 5:39
CD2: Mars
01 Desecration Smile 5:04
02 Tell Me Baby 4:07
03 Hard to Concentrate 4:01
04 21st Century 4:22
05 She Looks to Me 4:06
06 Readymade 4:30
07 If 2:52
08 Make You Feel Better 3:51
09 Animal Bar 5:25
10 So Much I 3:44
11 Storm in a Teacup 3:45
12 We Believe 3:36
13 Turn It Again 6:06
14 Death of a Martian 4:24