|
| The Smashing Pumpkins - Greatest Hits - Rotten Apples | 
enlarge | Artist: The Smashing Pumpkins Label: Virgin Records Us Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy Used: $8.20 You Save: $10.78 (57%)
New (39) Used (18) from $8.20
Avg. Customer Rating: 241 reviews Sales Rank: 1423
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 11316 UPC: 724381131626 EAN: 0724381131626 ASIN: B00005RGFU
Release Date: November 20, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Tracks:
| • | Siva | | • | Rhinoceros | | • | Drown | | • | Cherub Rock | | • | Today | | • | Disarm | | • | Landslide - The Smashing Pumpkins, Nicks, Stevie | | • | Bullet with Butterfly Wings | | • | 1979 | | • | Zero | | • | Tonight, Tonight | | • | Eye | | • | Ava Adore | | • | Perfect | | • | The Everlasting Gaze | | • | Stand Inside Your Love | | • | Real Love |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The Smashing Pumpkins' greatest-hits album, Rotten Apples, traces the band's evolution (or devolution, depending on your feelings about the band's radical sonic shift in the mid-'90s) from its early days to its status among the kings of alt rock. For fans of the Pumpkins' beginnings as a tripped-out indie/art rock act, Apples opens with some of the band's strongest material. "Siva" and "Rhinoceros" (from Gish, the Pumpkin's first--and arguably best--album) seamlessly mixed dream pop with noisy goth-rock as prime examples of the Pumpkins' early '90s sound. Apples also showcases three stellar tracks ("Cherub Rock," "Today," and "Disarm") from Siamese Dream, the Pumpkins' breakout album. This disc makes the band's mid-'90s directional swing obvious, though, starting with "Bullet with Butterfly Wings," the aggressive alt rock/alt metal concoction released on Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. Fans of songs like "Zero," "Tonight, Tonight," and "The Everlasting Gaze" will be happy to know that pretty much every cage-rattling hit made it to this disc, along with the previously unreleased dream pop track "Real Love" and an untitled new track (that sounds a lot like the Siamese Dream-era Pumpkins) to round out the mix. --Jennifer Maerz
Album Description Limited edition Japanese version of their 2001 'Greatest Hits' collection includes one track unavailable on the US edition, 'Try, Try, Try'. 18 tracks on the first disc and the bonus B-sides & rarities disc carries the same tracks (16) as every other terr
Album Details Includes the Bonus Track "Try Try Try", Not Found on Other Editions.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 236 more reviews...
Most of the "Greatest" December 4, 2004 54 out of 57 found this review helpful
The Smashing Pumpkins were one of the greatest bands of the 90s, a mixture of dreamy pop and stark grungey metal, set against Billy Corgan's poem-like songwriting. And "The Smashing Pumpkins - Greatest Hits" almost lives up to its name -- there are one or two songs that don't quite fit here, but most of them are indeed the "Greatest" that the band produced. The songs are pretty much arranged in chronological order, starting off with the hard-rocker "Siva" and heading off into the mixture of hard rock/metal, and eerie dreampop, climaxing with the rich offerings from "Mellon Collie And the Infinite Sadness." With the songs of "Adore," there's an obvious shift in tone, becoming a bit more gothic and less rockish, only to swing back in the slow-burning songs from "Machina," their swan song. Long after disbanding, the Smashing Pumpkins are still a towering presence in rock -- they debuted in the era of Nirvana, but with a very different kind of music. Their creative use of basic instruments and Billy Corgan's rich songwriting made them much more complex and deeper than almost all rock bands of the time. And "Greatest Hits" follows them through the band's entire lifetime -- from their surprisingly polished debut to the panoramic "Mellon Collie" to their gothic art-rock. The songs included on "Greatest Hits" are not just the most commercially known, but also several of the best -- "Ava Adore," "Siva," "1979" and "Tonight Tonight." An additional track is stuck on, "Real Love," but somehow it just isn't up to the standards of the other songs. It's nice, but not up to the level of the "Greatest" Smashing Pumpkins songs. Corgan was without a doubt the creative center of the Pumpkins -- he wrote the songs, filling them with doubts, anger and anguish, and also provided some mind-blowing guitar riffs and his vocals. His high, reedy voice is woven well into the music, giving his poetic lyrics an unusually heartfelt quality. He's singing about love, death, bombs, loneliness in a metaphorical wasteland. The guitar and bass provide sizzling soundscapes and dense walls of sound, while the percussion is complex and lightning-fast. At the same time, we get the sweeping dreampop (like the haunting "Rhinoceros") and gentler songs, where Corgan slows his guitar down to a gentle acoustic strum. Rock doesn't get much more original than the Smashing Pumpkins, and several of their greatest hits -- both among fans and critics -- are compiled in "The Smashing Pumpkins - Greatest Hits." A good place for beginners, but also a good collection for fans.
A Smashing CD July 6, 2002 31 out of 33 found this review helpful
I was more than happy when the Smashing Pumpkins came out with a greatest hits record. The CD "Rotten Apples" comes complete with all of the classic Pumpkins songs from over the years. From their first CD "Gish", you have the songs Siva and Rhinoceros. From "Siamese Dream", you've got Cherub Rock, Today, and Disarm. From the disc of B-Sides, "Pisces Iscariot", there is the cover of the Fleetwood Mac song, Landslide. From "Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness", there is Bullet with Butterfly Wings, Tonight Tonight, 1979, and Zero. From "Adore", you have Ava Adore and Perfect. From "Machina/The Machines of God", there is The Everlasting Gaze and Stand Inside your Love And two songs not released on Pumpkins CD's in the past but put on other soundtrack albums are Drown and Eye. Some other bright spots are the two previously unreleased tracks that close the album, Real Love and Untitled. Real Love sounds much like the version put on the Machina II album, and internet release that many fans never got to hear. Untitled is a very strong track and a good closing track that has the radio-friendly sound the band masters at. If you were lucky to get the Bonus CD of rarities and b-sides also known as Judas-O with your Rotten Apples disc, you will most definately enjoy the over 15 previously unreleased songs, that is just as good as the greatest hits disc and is sure to be a hit itself. The Smashing Pumpkins have come a long way since their first album, and you can listen to the growth and change in sound over the years throughout this disc. It is well worth the money and even if you're not a Pumpkins fan yet or are thinking of giving them a listen, go with this CD, it is sure to be a favorite in your collection for years to come.
"The world is a vampire, sent to drain" February 26, 2005 20 out of 27 found this review helpful
I've been cleansing my audio palate this week, after my most recent Amazon.com purchased arrived with a copy of The Smashing Pumpkins' Greatest Hits. I gained a new appreciation for them recently, mostly after hearing the track "Bullet with Butterfly Wings" a few times over the last couple of weeks. I mostly ignored this act back in the late 90s, when they were at their height; I'm not sure what put me off at the time, but it might have been radio over-play. Now that the hype has faded, I've been able to go back and listen with an open mind, and have been pleasantly surprised!
I'm Satisfied - It Won't Get Better Than This, I Guess December 9, 2001 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
When making a Smashing Pumpkins Greatest Hits collection, the question isn't what to include, it is what you are forced to leave off. The Pumpkins have one of the most diverse portfolios in the history of music, especially considering that the band was only around for about nine years. On one end, you have the grunge-and-punk influenced sounds of Gish, to the acid-rock of Siamese Dream and Mellon Collie, and the electronica of the Chamberlain-free Adore. Add to that several singles from movie soundtracks and the real gems in the Pumpkins' crown - their incredible b-sides - and compiling a Greatest Hits collection becomes a Herculean task.Thankfully for die-hards and casual fans like, this collection manages to get it just about right. A two-disc set that's rumored to have a limited run, Greatest Hits features all the major singles on its first disc, Rotten Apples, and a healthy dose of b-sides and unreleased stuff on the second, Judas-O. The so-called "radio singles" make up most of Rotten Apples, and these are the songs that most people will instantly recognize - the songs that, rightly, made the Pumpkins famous. There aren't any major, glaring omissions here, although I can hear the fanboys from here yelling, "Why didn't they include x?" Perhaps the fanboys should take note of the second disc, which collects some of the best b-sides stuff the Pumpkins put out. I've been telling people ever since I first heard the band right before Siamese Dream that the Pumpkins really are a b-side band; some of their very best stuff is also some of their hardest-to-locate stuff. I have my own complaints about omissions - as far as I'm concerned, the entire Zero single could have been included here - but, all in all, it's a satisfying helping. There are several unreleased tracks on here that will probably become nothing but a footnote to Pumpkins history, but they should be given their due. I have a feeling that, as time progresses, Rotten Apples and Judas-O well become to the Pumpkins what Hot Rocks! was to the Rolling Stones: the summary collection that people of future generations will turn to when they want to add the band to their music collection. Although diehards will shake their heads and proudly spin their copies of Bullet Train to Osaka, the bottom line is that we couldn't ask for a much better representation of one of the greatest musical acts of all time. If, one day, your kid comes home with this album firmly tucked under arm and you still have a complaint about something missing, remember, that's what CD burners are for.
Decent List, Some Missing August 23, 2004 11 out of 13 found this review helpful
Rotten Apples does exactly what it's supposed to do, it lists the Smashing Pumpkins most notable hit songs. Most of the best are here, including Tonight Tonight, Disarm and 1979, but it's some of the better album songs, such as Mayonaise, Thru The Eyes of Ruby and some of the gems on Machina 2 that we miss here. I'm gonna be one of those people that lists a more appropriate tracklisting here, which is a composite of all albums, many reviews and my own personal opinions. It is a 2 CD, 30 track effort and I have made it myself and find it great.
DISC ONE
1. Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness 2. Tonight Tonight 3. Glass' Theme (Machina 2) 4. Today 5. The Everlasting Gaze 6. Eye 7. Zero 8. Rocket 9. The End Is The Beginning Is The End 10. 1979 11. Luna 12. Galapogos 13. Perfect 14. Le Deux Machina (Machina 2) 15. Untitled
DISC TWO
1. Cherub Rock 2. Bullet With Butterfly Wings 3. Drown 4. Disarm 5. Thru The Eyes of Ruby 6. Landslide 7. Thirty-Three 8. Here Is No Why 9. Rhinoceros 10. Stand Inside Your Love 11. Where Boys Fear To Tread 12. Mayonaise 13. Siva 14. Ava Adore 15. Farewell and Goodnight
Obviously not chronological, but much more comprehensive and encapsulating than the original.
Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness is by far their greatest album, and my compilation reflects that, though the solid nature of the Siamese Dream songs is also impressive.
Hope this is of help to those thinking of buying this CD or making their own alternative track listing.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |