Music : By the Way

By the Way

by: Red Hot Chili Peppers




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Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 2179







Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0093624814023
Label: Warner Bros / Wea
Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Warner Bros / Wea
Release Date: July 09, 2002
Sales Rank: 2179
Studio: Warner Bros / Wea









Editorial Review:

Album Description:
2002 album.

Amazon.com:
When the Red Hot Chili Peppers first appeared smeared in neon body paint with socks dangling precariously from their wieners, even the most faithful funk-metal convert couldn't have conceived they would be around some 20 years later, carrying on in much the same fashion. Despite a long history of tragedies and personnel upheavals, the California quartet's eighth album is mostly business as usual--and business, as usual, is quite good. The title track, 'By the Way,' is a powerful, bruised piece of slap-bass and intermediary white-boy rapping. 'Universally Speaking' pays sweaty, soulful tribute to singer Anthony Kiedis's hometown of Detroit. And 'Lemon Trees on Mercury' sounds eerily like it could have been lifted from 1984's Freaky Styley. The band's reliable eclectic side, meanwhile, surfaces on the Latin-flavored 'Cabron' and moody 'Venice Queen.' But the biggest surprise is 'Tear,' a masterful homage to the Beach Boys that suggests the Chili Peppers' perpetual state of arrested development may someday lift. --Aidin Vaziri









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Disc 1:
  1. By The Way
  2. Universally Speaking
  3. This Is The Place
  4. Dosed
  5. Don't Forget Me
  6. The Zephyr Song
  7. Can't Stop
  8. I Could Die For You
  9. Midnight
  10. Throw Away Your Television
  11. Cabron
  12. Tear
  13. On Mercury
  14. Minor Thing
  15. Warm Tape
  16. Venice Queen


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great, essential, classic album
How can this not get five stars from someone? It takes many, many listens and all the songs grow on you at their own rates. My favorites are the title track, Universally Speaking, Dosed, The Zephyr Song, Cabron, On Mercury, Minor thing, and Venice Queeen, which are all essential. This group has taken it upon themselves to get our generation out of the shadows of the Beatles the Doors, and Hendrix. Fortunately, they are succeeding. Stadium Arcadium is also very good.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - The Not-So-Hot Chili Peppers
I've been a RHCP fan since their debut. As such, I'm much a fan of the style of music they pioneered in the 1980's and played on their early efforts, even as late as 1995's One Hot Minute. I faithfully bought By The Way right when it came out, as a loyal RHCP fan. Boy.... What a let down. Where, uh, is the "red hot?" The band took the musical idea behind "Otherside" from Californication (probably the most annoying song on that album) and created a whole album of "Otherside" remixes and reworkings. Well, almost. There are maybe 4 or 5 tracks here that are listenable. One or two of them are actually really good. But the rest is just slow, boring, mostly acoustical stuff that lacks energy or drive. They should have changed their name for this album to the Tired Chili Peppers. Or maybe the Medium Mild Chili Peppers. Or maybe the Weak Pepperoncinis. Or.... You get the idea. It actually makes me upset to see all these kids that are "hardcore RHCP fans" and their only exposure to the band is By the Way and Californication. These people have no idea what the RHCP are about. It's appalling. "OMG 'BY THE WAY' IS SOOOOO COOL DOOD OMG1!!!!!!!!!11!! RHCP ROCKS$%#$#@!!" Umm, yeah. Right. Let's go rock out to "The Zephyr Song" together.

The good: "Can't Stop" and "Throw Away Your Television" are far and away the best tracks on the record and are actually really good. The band must have decided not to take any downers the day they wrote those. Too bad they didn't make that decision for the rest of the album sessions. The title track tries to be good, and succeeds at times, but it all comes crashing down for the awful chorus.

The bad, boring, bland: Everything else. The only reason this album didn't earn 1 star is because of the two tracks mentioned above. There are a few tracks that actually make you want to throw away your *stereo*, they're THAT BAD.

"By the Way" singlehandedly turned me off of all future RHCP efforts. To this day I haven't listened to Stadium Arcadium for fear I may do something rash. If you're a teen punk who's music-listening life started in 2001 or later, do yourself a favor and go buy the Red Hot Chili Pepper's debut album (self-titled), "Freaky Styley", "The Uplift Mofo Party Plan", and hell even "Mother's Milk" and find out what the Red Hot Chili Peppers are REALLY all about.

On the other hand, this is a great album to listen to if you want to go to sleep. Red Hot Chili Pepper's worst effort of their 24-year career.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - close to flawless album
Some reviewers said they lost their passion and energy during this album. I'd like to state clearly that they certainly did not, but they definitely redirected it into a somewhat slower-paced but more introspective group of songs. I see this album as so much more of a reflection on what the group had done as a whole, the obstacles they overcame, the people they lost along the way (Hillel is def. referenced), and a great bunch of somber-type love songs. The California sun-drenched melodies permeate through the entire album and although it ends up feeling bittersweet, the mix of emotions through the whole CD are a perfect blend. I especially like Warm Tape and Venice Queen as songs that took some time to grow on me, but after a few years of loving this album, these two have come back into my favor. Venice Queen is such a great epic song how it goes into an acoustic transition at the end, but still keeps it's energy. It's more poppy of an album as a whole, but it makes it much more listenable than their early funk stuff and what it might lack in musicianship, it makes up for with very, very catch songwriting. To me musicianship is a misnomer for playing incredibly fast and intricate stuff. But as a guitar player myself and really "listening" to John's work, musicianship is also about playing what "fits" the song or sometimes when not to play. It's having that clever taste and writing "music", not shred or super funk. Frusciante is at his finest in the studio, layering his Brian Wilson-type vocals with incredible precision. I think as a production piece, this one is definitely the Chili's finest by far. It's such a THICK album and that's what I love about it - all the textures. It's fully playable from beginning to end, no need to skip songs, but I'd say my favorite is 'Don't Forget Me'. That song is so haunting and powerful and to any reviewers who said they lost their energy on this album, I suggest viewing the Slane Castle live version of this song, then try to tell me they put more passion into their wildly ridiculous funk from the early 80's and 90's. Not to take anything away from their older stuff, but they have matured into songwriters as opposed to untamed virtuosos back then. And even now on Stadium Arcadium, they've found a happy medium of both. Still, any Chili's fan should have this album and I think many of you sincerely love it as much as I do.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - What happened to the intensity?
Man, what happened to the Chili peppers? I love the vocal harmonies, but the passion and intensity are nowhere to be found on this CD. It bored the hell out of me.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - my favorite band,my favorite album
this is by far the best rhcp album ever.i listen to every track of this cd.each track is filled with awsomeness.people diss this beacause ''its not like the chili peppers to make this kind of album'' it is awsome.i highly recomend.

Way the By




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