Red Hot Chili Peppers - One Hot Minute
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 See Larger Image | One Hot Minute Artist : Red Hot Chili Peppers List Price : $18.98 USD Your Price : $14.99 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1995-09-12 Studio : Warner Bros / Wea Label : Warner Bros / Wea Avg. Customer Rating : (183 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for One Hot Minute The Best RHCP Album Rating: I really don't care much for the people behind the music, but the music itself.
Looking at it that way, this is probably the best of the Chili Peppers catalog. It's a wonderful, fluid, albeit slightly chaotic mix of funk, metal, jazz, progressive, psychedelia, gothic, and punk, filled with thick grooves from Flea, textured guitar from Navarro, powerful drumming from Smith, and suave to aggressive vocals from Kiedis.
A true, bold experimental record, and the epicenter of a mixed reaction amongst the Chili Peppers fan base, it is still a good album to listen to and worth the listen. It's nice detour from the typical, predictable songwriting pattern that they follow with Frusciante, and this album shows how creative the instrumentalist can be in how the utilize their knowledge and talent at their respective instruments, and how well Kiedis can write very thought-provoking, nostalgic, personal lyrics that are more than just verbal expressions of the sound.
Customer Reviews for One Hot Minute Cd i will give it 5 just for the fact it only has a 4 star rating. Rating: I think this is a great album.not there best but there most rocking!so i give it 4.5 out of 5 stars.the only song i cant stand is pea,why bother putting a song like that on an album?I say this album is half rock and half funk.
Editorial Reviews for One Hot Minute Audio Cd Amazon.com At the time of its release, One Hot Minute was viewed as the beginning of a new direction for the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Guitarist John Frusciante had departed and former Jane's Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro joined the ranks after some false starts with short-lived replacements. Band chemistry here isn't quite up to past standards. Navarro stretches out throughout the album, imbuing tunes with a heavy dose of hard rock and psychedelia and providing a stark contrast from Frusciante's dexterous noodling. Tracks such as "Warped" and "Aeroplane" display a band prone to exploring a less frenetic hard rock, while "Shallow Be Thy Game" sounds like the old band. Frusciante eventually returned to the fold, so this 1995 collection now stands as a curious intermission for the Peppers. --Rob O'Connor
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