Toys In The Attic (Remastered) Aerosmith

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
1975

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
25.01.2018

Label: Columbia

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Hard Rock

Interpret: Aerosmith

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 Toys In The Attic (Album Version) 03:05
  • 2 Uncle Salty (Album Version) 04:10
  • 3 Adam's Apple (Album Version) 04:34
  • 4 Walk This Way 03:40
  • 5 Big Ten Inch Record (Album Version) 02:16
  • 6 Sweet Emotion 04:34
  • 7 No More No More (Album Version) 04:34
  • 8 Round And Round (Album Version) 05:03
  • 9 You See Me Crying 05:12
  • Total Runtime 37:08

Info zu Toys In The Attic (Remastered)

Originally released in 1975, this was Aerosmith's breakout recording. A truly inventive Aerosmith album, still suffused with a gloriously raspy sense of the blues, but quietly evocative in its timbre and approach. It showed Tyler working out lyrics that were so much more than simple cars and girls fodder, 'Adam's Apple' theorizing that creation could quite possibly have occurred with an alien mothership landing on earth and setting the wheels of the human race in motion. 'Sweet Emotion' throbbed slowly into life, 'Big Ten Inch Record', a salty R&B work-out, while 'You See Me Crying' was heightened and given body by a warm orchestration. A clear steeple of great work amid a skyline of repeating successes.

"After nearly getting off the ground with Get Your Wings, Aerosmith finally perfected their mix of Stonesy raunch and Zeppelin-esque riffing with their third album, Toys in the Attic. The success of the album derives from a combination of an increased sense of songwriting skills and purpose. Not only does Joe Perry turn out indelible riffs like "Walk This Way," "Toys in the Attic," and "Sweet Emotion," but Steven Tyler has fully embraced sleaziness as his artistic muse. Taking his cue from the old dirty blues "Big Ten Inch Record," Tyler writes with a gleeful impishness about sex throughout Toys in the Attic, whether it's the teenage heavy petting of "Walk This Way," the promiscuous "Sweet Emotion," or the double-entendres of "Uncle Salty" and "Adam's Apple." The rest of Aerosmith, led by Perry's dirty, exaggerated riffing, provide an appropriately greasy backing. Before Toys in the Attic, no other hard rock band sounded like this. Sure, Aerosmith cribbed heavily from the records of the Rolling Stones, New York Dolls, and Led Zeppelin, but they didn't have any of the menace of their influences, nor any of their mystique. Aerosmith was a gritty, street-wise hard rock band who played their blues as blooze and were in it for a good time; Toys in the Attic crystallizes that attitude." (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG)

Steven Tyler, vocals, keyboards, percussion, harmonica, piano
Joe Perry, guitar, backing vocals, slide guitar, acoustic guitar, talkbox
Brad Whitford, guitar
Tom Hamilton, bass, rhythm guitar (on "Uncle Salty")
Joey Kramer, drums, percussion

Produced by Jack Douglas

Digitally remastered



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