Weird Tales of the Ramones
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Blitzkrieg Bop
- Beat on the Brat
- Judy Is a Punk
- I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend
- Loudmouth
- 53rd & 3rd
- Havana Affair
- Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue
- Glad to See You Go
- Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment
- I Remember You
- Carbona Not Glue
- Oh, Oh, I Love Her So
- Swallow My Pride
- Commando
- Pinhead
- Sheena Is a Punk Rocker [ABC Single Version]
- I Don't Care [Single Version]
- Rockaway Beach
- Cretin Hop
- Here Today, Gone Tomorrow
- Teenage Lobotomy
- Slug [Demo Version]
- Surfin' Bird
- We're a Happy Family
- I Just Want to Have Something to Do
- I Wanted Everything
- Needles & Pins [Remixed Single Version]
- I Wanna Be Sedated
- Go Mental
- Don't Come Close
- I Don't Want You
- She's the One
- I'm Against It
Disc 2:
- Rock 'N' Roll High School [Ed Stasium Mix]
- I Want You Around [Ed Stasium Mix]
- Do You Remember Rock 'N' Roll Radio?
- I'm Affected
- Danny Says
- KKK Took My Baby Away
- You Sound Like You're Sick
- She's a Sensation
- All's Quiet on the Eastern Front
- Outsider
- Highest Trails Above
- Psycho Therapy
- Time Bomb
- Mama's Boy
- I'm Not Afraid of Life
- Too Tough to Die
- Wart Hog
- Howling at the Moon (Sha-La-La)
- Daytime Dilemma (Dangers of Love)
- Endless Vacation
- My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg) " [UK 12"][Vers
- Somebody Put Something in My Drink
- Animal Boy
- I Don't Want to Live This Life (Anymore) [UK B-Side]
- Love Kills
- Something to Believe In [Single Version]
Disc 3:
- I Wanna Live
- Bop 'Til You Drop
- I Lost My Mind
- Garden of Serenity
- I Believe in Miracles
- Pet Sematary [Single Version]
- Punishment Fits the Crime
- Merry Christmas (I Don't Want to Fight Tonight) [Single Version]
- Main Man
- Strength to Endure
- Poison Heart
- I Won't Let It Happen
- Censorshit
- Journey to the Center of the Mind
- 7 and 7 Is
- When I Was Young
- I Don't Wanna Grow Up
- Scattergun
- Makin Monsters for My Friends
- Crusher
- Spiderman
- Life's a Gas
- She Talks to Rainbows
- Any Way You Want It
- R.A.M.O.N.E.S.
Disc 4:
- Do You Remember Rock 'N' Roll Radio? [DVD]
- Rock 'N' Roll High School [DVD]
- We Want the Airwaves [DVD]
- Psycho Therapy
- Time Has Come Today
- Howling at the Moon (Sha-La-La) [DVD]
- Something to Believe In [DVD]
- I Wanna Live [DVD]
- I Wanna Be Sedated [DVD]
- Pet Sematary [DVD]
- Merry Christmas (I Don't Want to Fight Tonight) [DVD]
- I Believe in Miracles [DVD]
- Strength to Endure [DVD]
- Poison Heart [DVD]
- Substitute [DVD]
- I Don't Wanna Grow Up [DVD]
- Blitzkrieg Bop [DVD][Live]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #67047 in Music
- Released on: 2005-08-09
- Number of discs: 4
- Format: Box set
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
The supreme godfathers of punk-face it, they were on their third album before the Sex Pistols even broke-are true American originals, and their sensational end-of-the-century juggernaut is chronicled as never before in this career-spanning collection. Reducing and scrambling multiple strains of early rock 'n' roll and pop into a signature chainsaw of sound, the Ramones' loud, fast, and hard legacy rocketed out of NYC's CBGB in the early '70s and changed the face of modern music. Johnny Ramone, before his 2004 passing, oversaw the compilation of this first-ever Ramones blitzkrieg box for Rhino.
Amazon.com
Given their irreverent sensibilities, it's almost ironic to lionize the comic deconstruction of ossified rock history that was the Ramones' stock in trade, or note the decades of punk and alt.rock that remain their legacy. Instead, this collection smartly recasts the punk pioneers as literal pulp culture icons via its EC Comics-inspired packaging and the brilliantly executed comic book history of the band that accompanies it. Musically, the set's first three discs offer up 85 highlights of the band's recording career, personally compiled by founder/guitarist Johnny Ramone and seasoned with rarities like the demo for "Slug," the UK B-side "I Don't Want to Live This Life," and the single mixes of "Sheena.." and others. Its accompanying Lifestyles of the Ramones documentary DVD intersperses 14 videos with the often bittersweet recollections of the band and key family members, as well as such notables as Sire's Seymour Stein, Talking Head Tina Weymouth and producer Ed Stasium; another bonus six clips (including covers of the Who's "Substitute" and the '60s' "Spiderman" theme) round out that history. But it's the dizzying visual eclecticism of the included graphic history (executed in color b&w and 3-D by 25 top comic artists including Matt Groening, Zippy creator Bill Griffith, Mad magazine vet Sergio Argones, bootleg cover legend William Stout and Love and Rockets' Xaime Hernandez) that becomes the set's unusual focal point, a loving visual evocation of both their infectious music and shrewd, if willfully low-brow public persona. -- Jerry McCulley
Customer Reviews
10 Stars for each component of this set
If you don't know a lot about the Ramones, some of the other reviewers provide a very accurate account. But if you are already a Ramones fan - then you know the history, the impact, the sound, the look, the realism - and I know you are going to keep your original LP's, but this package will keep you entertained for, well, as long as the materials hold up. 85 songs! The 3 CD's hold a whopping 25 to 34 songs each. Plus there is a DVD that plays their music videos with only short attention span commentaries and interviews in between. The comic book captures the essence of the Ramones, and changes style enough to keep you turning the pages and laughing along the way. If you are here reading these reviews, that's enough for me to be able to tell you in confidence, "go ahead and get it, you will love it, you will experience premium nostalgic fun."
The Only Problem...
I'm not even going to attempt to defend my adulation of the Ramones or define their cultural importance, since a great many have already done so here. Rather, I think it important to point out the only major flaw with the set: the selection of post-TOO TOUGH TO DIE songs. This set was compiled by Johnny Ramone, and the third disc of the set reflects his bias (and I say this with the utmost respect; Johnny Ramone was perhaps the most perfect rock n roll guitarist since Chuck Berry). Strangely, he opted to include such dreck as Dee Dee's "Love Kills" (from ANIMAL BOY), an ode to Sid and Nancy which I've always felt greatly diminished the Ramones' punk authority, and marked the unfortunate downslide in Dee Dee's songwriting abilities (other Dee Dee songs, especially "Poison Heart" from MONDO BIZARRO, are still painful to listen to, and difficult to justify). Further, the inclusion of so many C.J.-sung songs, rather than the still-great Joey tunes on ADIOS AMIGOS is inexplicable, especially the execrable "Scattergun" (at least "Life's A Gas" and "Spiderman" are included). Lastly, HALFWAY TO SANITY and BRAIN DRAIN, their two most consistent late-period albums, are inexplicably under-represented.
The point of this gripe is simply to point out a missed opportunity; everybody already knows by now that the first four albums are peerless, even if they don't "get" the Ramones. The misguided survey of their waning years only furthers the assumption that they went downhill precipitously after 1984 (which is somewhat true, yet predominantly exaggerated). I can't help but wonder what it would have been like had Joey and Johnny been forced to collaborate on this compilation. If nothing else, it would have been more balanced.
Otherwise, the remastering sounds great (a further improvement over the already-wonderful album reissues) and the comic book is ingenious.
Why the Ramones Rule
Let's be straight about it: all these tunes have come out before. Most of them have been repackaged a few times in a few different configurations. If you're a major Ramones fan, there's probably nothing here you haven't seen or heard.
But then, if you're a major Ramones fan, none of this matters; you want pretty much anything you can find related in any way to the Ramones. If you DON'T have all these songs, it doesn't matter either. So let's dispense with any handwringing over whether this box set is really necessary. Hey, pizza isn't really necessary either, but aren't you glad it exists? Thought so.
So let's cut to the chase. This set, you see, serves a higher purpose than just placing dozens of GREAT Ramones tunes onto a new batch of plastic discs. It serves a higher purpose than mere commerce. This set is about cementing and furthering the legacy of one of the rarest, most endangered beasts in the history of rock & roll: the Perfect Band.
The Perfect Band, after all, must possess every last piece of the rock puzzle. Its members must all be cool in their own way. They must all have their own, distinct personalities and charisma. They don't have to be individually handsome or pretty, but they must look good together. As far as the music goes, the playing of the members must serve the song and must NEVER become the focal point INSTEAD of the song. The Perfect Band must function as a unit with each member making a viable contribution to the group's overall sound and image. The Perfect Band absolutely MUST have the capacity to come up with one great song after another. In fact, the Perfect Band must have dozens and dozens of great songs under its belt.
With so many prerequisites, it's little wonder that there's only been a tiny handful of Perfect Bands in the history of rock & roll. The Beatles - especially in their early years - are an obvious example. The Stones are another, though their Perfect status was on vacation when the too-well-scrubbed Mick Taylor was in the fold. The Who? Maybe early on. The Beach Boys? Yes, but only before they started growing beards. The Kinks? Great band, not perfect. The Ramones? You bet your leather jacket, baby.
But to get to the point - and it is coming - of why this box set is worthwhile, it's important to note that the other Perfect Bands in rock all sold MILLIONS of records. These bands were/are absolutely huge. They filled stadiums, fer chrissakes. But the Ramones? Ah, commercial success was in shorter supply for the Fast Four than for the Fab Four, wasn't it? You know the story: no hit singles, no gold records (save for their collection, "RamonesMania"), no stadium tours - at least not in these United States. So, while other Perfect Bands became a part of the cultural landscape via radio play and selling LOTS of records, the Ramones did it by earning their fans one at a time. Fortunately for all of us, those fans have added up over the years, and they've rarely defected. They've continued to add up thanks - in some measure - to the steady availability and reissuing of Ramones music. Thus the viability of an 85-song Ramones retrospective such as this.
Oh, sure there will be cynics. Some folks see any repackaging such as this as nothing more than crass commercialism - an affront to their punk rock sensibilities! But just think of that one kid out there whose dad buys this set just for old time's sake. Just think of that kid getting that same rush you got the first time you heard "Loudmouth." Or "Havana Affair." Or "I Don't Want You." Or "She's the One." Or, heck, about a hundred other Ramones songs that flat WAILED but never got to be hits, even by Ramone standards. Think of that kid discovering a band that doesn't have just three or four really good songs, but DOZENS of really good songs. And think of that kid figuring out that, hey, this punk rock stuff didn't start with Blink 182. It didn't even start with the Sex Pistols or the Clash. IT STARTED WITH THE RAMONES!!!
So, yes, you already have this music. But if you're a true Ramones fan, you won't care. You'll dig the comic book, the packaging. You'll dig that there's still SOMETHING you can get and be excited about related to a band you love. You'll dig that a set like this confirms that the Ramones have become huge after all (something - if you're really a fan - you were praying for throughout their career). You'll dig that after all these years, other people still care about the Ramones. And most of all, you'll dig that somewhere along the line, this set is going to give some kid his first blast of, say, "Carbona Not Glue." Hey, maybe that kid will even start a band some day.




