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One Hot Minute | 
| Artist: Red Hot Chili Peppers Label: Warner Bros / Wea Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy Used: $0.60 as of 2/10/2010 03:11 EST details You Save: $18.38 (97%)
New (30) Used (181) Collectible (7) from $0.60
Seller: 2DollarMusic Rating: 188 reviews Sales Rank: 4254
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 45733 UPC: 093624573326 EAN: 0093624573326 ASIN: B000002MTR
Release Date: September 12, 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Warped | | • | Aeroplane | | • | Deep Kick | | • | My Friends | | • | Coffee Shop | | • | Pea | | • | One Big Mob | | • | Walkabout | | • | Tearjerker | | • | One Hot Minute | | • | Falling into Grace | | • | Shallow Be Thy Game | | • | Transcending |
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| Editorial Reviews:
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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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 188
Brave but unfocussed December 16, 2009 H. Jin (Melbourne, Australia) [3.5 stars]
Look, it's not the Chili Peppers' best album. And it's not really representative of their sound, so it's not the place to start for casual fans.
But it is their most interesting album, and definitely their darkest. The macho-but-harmless lyrics of 'Blood, Sugar..' have been replaced by more serious themes of depression, drug addiction, and death. The music, too, is much more ambitious than before, as new guitarist Dave Navarro adds a stronger metal and psychadelic feel to the album. There is also a surprisingly strong prog-rock influence here; several songs run over 6 minutes, and there are many tempo and mood shifts within songs. Good examples of the prog feel include 'One Big Mob' (Faith No More meets 'Mothers Milk' meets psychadelia) and 'Transcending' (softer song that explodes at the end).
Nearly every song tries something different. The driving heavy metal of 'Warped', the vaguely jazzy 'Walkabout', restrained ballads 'My Friends' and 'Tearjerker', Flea's solo piece 'Pea', the spoken-word intro to 'Deep Kick', the near noise-rock of 'Coffee Shop'. The darker lyrics also begin to incorporate more explicit social commentary, as on 'Pea' and the religious critique 'Shallow Be Thy Game'.
However, while their ambition is admirable, the execution doesn't always work. The band doesn't seem as tight as before, and some of the songs sound a bit stiff and forced. Perhaps the long and difficult sessions resulted in a lack of focus, perhaps the band weren't totally convinced about a change in direction, or maybe Navarro just wasn't a good fit for the band, but a few too many songs seem to lack the spark of 'Blood, Sugar...'. At 13 songs and 61 minutes, maybe they could have cut the album down a bit by leaving off one or two of the weaker tracks.
So, how you view 'One Hot Minute' depends on your attitude. If you want another 'Blood, Sugar...' or 'Californication' you can probably give this a miss. But if you're open to some new ideas, and are willing to accept that not every experiment works, you might really enjoy this. It's probably a bit too inconsistent and unfocussed for my taste, but I do respect that fact that the Chili's were brave and ambitious enough to try to expand their sound.
great disc November 22, 2009 Cristhian Recalde more rocker album of the peppers, really great,
one track was scratched but it's acceptable
A lull artistically, commercially and critically. But it wasn't fatal. April 5, 2009 Paul Lawrence (Australia) OK I have a confession to make. I pre ordered this and still have the free sticker they gave you for doing so. So keep that in mind Pepperites later on in the review when I am less than sold on this disc. OK?
Released in 1995 this album was the follow up to the ridiculously successful Blood Sugar Sex Magik opus and the Chilis are to be soundly praised for not just trying to repeat the formula. Used as a single, Warped opens up the albums account with pretty much the closest thing to heavy metal on the album, swirling sounds devolving into a vortex of circular sounds, a feeling used as inspiration for the video. However things move into more familiar quirky rock with track two, Aeroplane.
Taken as a whole this was a brave move in some ways as the band take their predilections to their logical conclusion and the results - such as the rockin' paeon to thinking for yourself Shallow Be Thy Name - are sometimes pretty good. However overly simplistic stuff like Pea doesn't really 'do it'. Funk rock structures abound and for an example of this sample yourself One Big Mob or Deep Kick or ... well most of the album actually is still replete with this bouncy vibe this band pretty much owned on BSSM.
It's also nice to see the band try a few different studio tricks and experiment with new things such as the childrens choir on the aforementioned Aeroplane. As per my earlier statement, the band didn't just try to do BSSM pt2.
But there are problems. Last album, all this was fresh to many in the mainstream and had the element of surprise. Here many of these tricks we've seen before, the overly self conscious 'wacky' musical behaviour. And the problems arise when this descends from wacky to stupid. Like the silly romper room choral inflections on Deep Kick.
Critically this was a bust. It seemed to me at the time to mark the beginning of the end as sales were down, excitement and hype trailed off and even though I thought parts of this were brave it seems the mass public only had the patience/indulgence levels required to accept one album of funk-o-matic hard rock from these guys. And the band took the lesson to heart, morphing into something else entirely and have a second bite at the cherry, producing great music of a different hue.
But all up this isn't their best by far and really only rates three stars.
Classic Chili Peppers December 29, 2008 C. Kavanaugh (Kenosha, WI USA) This is an excellent CD, and I loved almost every track with favorites being "My Friend" and "Aeroplane." If you love the Chili Peppers, you will love this CD! The only negative thing I would say is that it does contain a lot of swear words, so you need to be careful if your pre-teen is listening in.
This was hot for only about a minute December 24, 2008 IRate 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
2 1/2
Perhaps not their absolute worst material (there still seems to be more fire involved on the whole then their extremely competent though mostly lobotomized current work) , but probably the disc with the biggest identity crisis. There are many less-then-funky choices going on here which keep this album from even becoming uniformly good, dragging these sessions down into noisy creative conflict instrumentally at odds with each other.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 188
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