Amorica
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Gone
- Conspiracy
- High Head Blues
- Cursed Diamond
- Nonfiction
- She Gave Good Sunflower
- P. 25 London
- Ballad in Urgency
- Wiser Time
- Downtown Money Waster
- Descending
- Song of the Flesh [*]
- Sunday Night Buttermilk Waltz [*]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #389304 in Music
- Released on: 2000-12-26
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Enhanced, Original recording remastered
Customer Reviews
The Crowes' Masterpiece
"The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion", which followed the Crowes' massively popular debut album, "Shake Your Money Maker," showed some musical and lyrical growth, and showcased new-found guitar whiz Marc Ford. However, it was with "amorica." (If it appears "amorica." on the cover, why do people spell it otherwise?) that The Black Crowes fully realized their potential as a band. The result was the deepest, most soulful, amazing CD the Crowes have ever produced.
However, of course, critics at the time of its release panned it as nonsensical hippy rock, lacking the "fire" of "SYMM". If by "fire" they meant simple hooks and substance-free lyrics, "amorica." certainly lacked fire. The sound on "amorica." ranges back and forth from the trippy ("Gone") to the dark ("Cursed Diamond") to the uplifting ("She Gave Good Sunflower") to the simply beautiful ("Ballad In Urgency/Wiser Time"). The Crowes, on this album, sacrificed catchy hooks for musical diversity and beauty, and the result was lower sales, but a much higher CD-replay value.
Of course, the album didn't really lack fire. In fact, it was their most fiery album to date, in the emotional sense. The album is a flowing emotional journey, from "A Conspiracy"'s tainted love ("Be my conspiracy," a somewhat tongue-in-cheek way of saying that love isn't always great.), to the dark depths of "Cursed Diamond" ("I hate myself, Doesn't everybody hate themselves, I scare myself, Then I tell myself it's all in my mind, So I let the poison go, 'Cause I always know, It will be there for me"), to the plead for love of "She Gave Good Sunflower" ("Be the sun that bursts through my clouds, it's hard enough just livin' on this ground."), to the lessons learned from "Wiser Time" ("Tired but wiser for the time."), to the impending doom of the strangely beautiful "Descending" ("So help me baby, I'm descending again."). "amorica." is an emotional journey, an honest, pure expression of the band's collective soul and where it was in this point in their lives.
If you're looking for "Hard to Handle" and "She Talks to Angels" all over again, look elsewhere. If you're looking for deep, emotionally-impacting, diverse, soul-felt music, "amorica." is your best bet, not only of the Crowes' catalog, but perhaps your best bet, period.
This album is like a fungus....
it just never wants to go away...All I can say is, I wish every band put this much thought and music into a record...Even tough every song is completely different, the disc flows very well and the varying styles and sounds, not to mention the lyrics, are absolutely amazing...This is the best band of the '90's at their peak...Buy the Southern Harmony first and then this one..Take this record for what it is and please don't expect to hear She Talks To Angels...Amorica told me this band could make a record and call it their own without any silly music critic trying to compare them to some '70's band...The chemistry of the band was amazing...Now, without Marc Ford on lead, they aren't the same....Find some live recordings and pick up this album, you will not be dissapointed...There are songs one here that are beautiful and will not be easy to just forget..."Wiser Time", "Descending", Cursed Diamond", Ballad In Urgency", "She Gave Good Sunflower", "Nonfiction" and "Gone" are the standouts...This should have been a double album, but to no avail...This band's back catalogue is more potent than most bands best efforts and the Crowes makes the radio friendly pop bands of today look childish and trite...Pick this one up, it's a desert isle record...Good luck putting it away too..
WHY this is essential Crowes
No, it didn't sell millions. No, it didn't have a nice, radio friendly hit exactly. But this album contains some of Chris Robinson's best lyrics... heck, some of the best lyrics EVER put on a rock and roll record! And Chris sings every note, every word with the right amount of sass or soul or lilt or power to get his point across. And the band delivers some of the best music it ever put to tape to help him do that. Drugs would destroy Marc Ford on the next record, but he shines on this one, along with Eddie Harsch's brilliant keyboards (the organ intro on "She Gave Good Sunflower" and the beautiful piano work on "Descending", he can do it all), Steve Gorman's driving drum work (don't kid yourself, he is to this band what Charlie Watts is to the Stones; listen to "Wiser Time": yes, he does that ALL live, too) and Johnny Colt's thundering bass. And the man who does all the rest, the Keith Richards to Chris' Jagger, the criminally under-rated Rich Robinson... lordy, lordy, lordy. What a BAND!
The songs veer a little between here and there. "Gone", "Conspiracy" and "High Head Blues" kick off the album with great sleazy giant guitar driven slabs (with a little Latin backbeat on "Gone" and "High Head"), then lad into the slower "Cursed Diamond" and sad, reflective acourstic "Non Fiction" (better that that "angels" song they play on the radio, both of them) then into the playful "Sunflower", the talk box driven "P.25 London", and the crowning point of the album, "Ballad In Urgency" which slides into "Wiser Time". These two songs are woth the price alone. When CR cranks up for the screaming chorus on "Wiser" ("And on a good day/ I know it's not every day/ We can part the sea/ And on a bad day/ I know it's not every day/ Glory beyond our reach")you WILL find youself shouting yourself hoarse right along with him EVERY TIME. And then the album ends with the playful blues ala Taj Mahal of "Downtown Money Waster" and the shimmeringly beautiful "Descending."
It's not a dark record like Southern Harmony is, but it's not as light as Money Maker... this is the Black Crowes Rocks {Aerosmith} or Exile on Main Street {Stones}. This is the Crowes at their sleazy, gritty best.




