Product Details
Ultraphobic

Ultraphobic
Warrant

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Undertow
  2. Followed
  3. Family Picnic
  4. Sum of One
  5. Chameleon
  6. Crawlspace
  7. Live Inside of You
  8. High
  9. Ride #2
  10. Ultraphobic
  11. Stronger Now

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #33430 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-01-13
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

Some of Warrant's finest work...5
This album was Warrant's "comeback" album in 1995 with a new lineup. The new guys shred on here. There is no glam/party stuff on here but rather more personal songwriting. The singer, Jani Lane, went through a ugly divorce while writing this. He states that none of these songs have anything to do with it, but by listening and reading the lyrics, you know they do. A stripped down back-to-basics album. Quite diverse and has the fair share of ballads for everyones taste. The first 3 tracks are the heaviest this band has ever done! "Sum of one" has some great guitar riffs, "Stronger now" is a heartfelt acoustic ballad, the single that you probably didn't hear on radio was "Family Picnic" a tune about child abuse. While not ALL the old fans will like it, I'm sure the majority would after a couple listens. This is some of the bands finest work, bar none!

Easily Warrant's best effort5
Critics will slap this with one-star and push it aside just because of the fact that it's a Warrant album. I am giving it 5 stars, not because I'm a Warrant fan, but because this is a fantastic album. Hard as hell and very crisp...this is Warrant's best effort to date. Who would have thought they had it in them? As a test, I played this album for a bunch of friends, both male and female, without revealing the artist. The reaction was the same from all...they loved it. When I revealed that the band was Warrant, they were blown away. Don't judge an album by its cover, folks. You might be pleasantly surprised.

The Warrant album for Warrant-haters5
After a hiatus and line-up shake-up, Warrant return unrecognizable. Back in their hair-metal pop days they always said they wanted to be heavier, and here's where they proved it. This album can hold its own against any of Seattle's grunge heavyweights: all it needs are unbiased ears that can put aside "Heaven" and "Cherry Pie" long enough to dig the first three tracks. They can make a believer out of any hard music fan. The other material maintains this level of power and quality, but the album definitely starts off with a bang.