Version 2.0
|
| List Price: | $18.98 |
| Price: | $14.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
160 new or used available from $0.01
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Temptation Waits
- I Think I'm Paranoid
- When I Grow Up
- Medication
- Special
- Hammering in My Head
- Push It
- Trick Is to Keep Breathing
- Dumb
- Sleep Together
- Wicked Ways
- You Look So Fine
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #21496 in Music
- Released on: 1998-05-12
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .19 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Limited edition pressing of the hit alternative act's second album, 1998's top 20 & platinum 'Version 2.0', with a b onus CD single featuring four tracks recorded live in concert at the Roskide festival in Denmark, 1998. Bonus tracks are 'Temptation Waits', 'Dumb', 'Stupid Girl' and 'Vow'. A combined total of 16 tracks, with the main album featuring the hit singles 'I Think I'm Paranoid', 'When I Grow Up', 'Special', 'Push It' and 'You Look So Fine'. Double slimline jewel case. 1999 release. Limited quantities available!
Amazon.com
It's not that Garbage is doing anything particularly new. At times, singer Shirley Manson borrows Chrissie Hynde's phrasing, Patti Smith's rock beat poetry, and Brian Wilson's chorus from "Don't Worry Baby." But producer Butch Vig provides a modern sheen to Version 2.0 that makes it sound fresh and distinctly modern. Purists may blanch--the album is a hybrid of rock guitars, dance rhythms, and pop choruses--but songs such as "I Think I'm Paranoid" (a rip of Elastica) and "The Trick Is to Keep Breathing" (Depeche Mode, without the chill) sound great no matter what they're called. --Keith Moerer
Rolling Stone
It's rare to hear a rock record so carefully put together that still sounds so fresh and playful.... On Version 2.0, [vocalist Shirley] Manson uses her sultry voice to drag Garbage's intricate guitar textures out of the studio and into the real and scary world of pop emotion, where they belong.
Customer Reviews
still good after all these years
I may not be as passionate about this group as I once was but they're still, and always will be, one of my all-time favorite rock bands. I've seen them in concert twice now and they're just as good, if not better, live, and I absolutely love listening to Shirley Manson breathlessly speak to the hyped up crowd with her heavy English accent after jumping around the stage while singing a familiar tune.
The self-titled debut album by Garbage was my first actual record (the "Queer" video beckoned me to follow) and I've been hooked ever since. Despite the less-than-cheery lyrics, their music helped me through some tough times in my life and kept me sane as my parents moved me from place to place in my early teens. I'm older now and can easily account for the fact that my tastes have broadened over the years (I've got a huge CD collection to prove it) but I always return to 'Version 2.0' when everything else becomes yesterday's news, so to speak. Their sophomore release passed the tragic curse so many groups befall after a successful beginning (or so I should think with all these 5 star reviews), and while their journey forward looks humble indeed, I'm certainly not the only one to think that they deserved the Grammy over Sheryl Crow for best Rock album a few years back. I'm still bitter over that undeserved loss but I'm grateful they were at least nominated for the prestigious award. I do not wish to dwell on the past though. I'm just so impressed with this record and believe it to be their best work to date. Not only did they dodge the possibility of failure their second time around but they also shut the bashful critics up for a while who claimed that Butch Vig was the real genius keeping Garbage together and that Shirley was holding the group back from their true abilities, which is ridiculous because Garbage wouldn't be the same without her special touch. Growth in all corners is evident on 'Version 2.0' and the songs are more refined here. Their hypnotic blend of rock and electronica - not to mention Manson's punk-like attitude - quickly sucks the listener in and keeps them coming back for more. When I first saw them perform live, I couldn't help but notice what an eclectic array of people they draw in, and that's likely the reason for their international fame because so many individuals can identify with their preferred style.
I've been putting off writing a review on this for quite some time now because I've always found it difficult to put words together to give this album justice but 'Version 2.0' should be in everyone's collection.
This will be with me forever. I even had to replace it once because I wore it out from excessive playing.
Sleek, Seductive, and Sexy
Version 2.0 is easily one of the best albums of the past decade. The electronic rhythms blend seamlessly with Shirley Manson's voice. Possessing one of the sexiest voices in music today, Manson is a calculating seductress. In fact, Manson's vocals are the only thing that remains consistent from the band's self-titled debut. The sonic assault of the rest of Garbage is noticeably shiny and polished. This doesn't mean that they've lost their edge though. The songs on Version 2.0 are better than those of the debut, whereas the debut's seemed incomplete and inrealized, Verison 2.0's are complete and competent.
The album's best tracks happen to be the slower songs. "The Trick is to Keep Breathing" and "You Look So Fine" showcase Manson's voice at its most wistful, and quietly sexy. Somehow though, the listener gets the impression that she's hiding her freaky side on "You Look So Fine." For Garbage, the arrangement on "Medication" is relatively sparse, giving it a barren, desolate feel that suits Garbage well. Manson accents "Medication" with gut-wrenching vocals.
The faster numbers are absolute stunners. "Sleep Together" resonates with an intoxicating mix of electronic bleeps and guitars, but it still can't compete with the album's opener, "Temptation Waits," which starts with a wintery aura, and features a blisteringly cold chorus. One of the album's surprise highlights is "Hammering in My Head," with its whirlwind of sonic flourishes and breakneck pace, it also has an unrelenting and memorable guitar riff.
It goes without saying that the four singles from this album combine Garbage's rock-meets-electronic formula with fantastic results. All of their songs combine aggression, sleek sexiness, and sonic polish. Their intricate soundscapes are magnificently assembled collages of sound. Not many bands can pull off such a stunning album in their careers, but Garbage already have a perfect 2.0 record.
Perfection through Complex Genius
You must listen to this album over and over to gain a full appreciation for it. There are so many expertly placed samples and sound combinations. Layers and layers of genius topped off with some spicy vocal performances.




