Probably the Rolling Stones best album since Some Girls (1978). Despite these guys being 80 years old, they’re more lively on here than they were on anything from the 80’s or 90’s.
The first Rolling Stones album to have good deep cuts. The country songs on here suck but they’re balanced out by some truly great songs like Gimme Shelter and You Can’t Always Get What You Want which are two of their best songs.
An interesting detour that finds The Rolling Stones at their most experimental and psychedelic. I don’t really think it works, Sgt. Pepper’s and Piper at the Gates of Dawn are both much better psychedelic rock albums but it is interesting.
I don’t have any negative or positive feelings about this. I just remember finding this in a vinyl store and seriously wondering what person would ever buy this on vinyl.
Yeah it’s bad but I don’t hate it and I find it funny that Rivers saw that the last two albums were the most critically acclaimed material the band had made in years and just said fuck you we’re making Radi2de.
The middle of the album kind of drags but man are the beginning and end of this album excellent. Futurescope trilogy is probably the best Weezer song.
Raditude and Green Day’s Father of All Motherfuckers are very similar albums. Both are made by aging rock bands who hit their commercial and critical acclaim peak in the 90’s and early 2000’s and are now aimless. Both albums start deceptively okay. The first song on here is pretty decent, it’s not bad but holy shit I felt like Dante slowly descending into the hell that is Raditude, the album only gets worse and worse just like the Green Day album. Also one of the most ... read more
The two big singles off this album, Hash Pipe and Island in the Sun are by far the two best songs on here. Everything else is fine, I’m just not a big fan of this very clean sanitized pop rock sound.
I don’t think it’s perfect and I think it works better as a solo Roger Waters Rock Opera than a Pink Floyd album but this thing is great.
An insane work of art that I have a hard time imagining humans creating.