Ramones Ramones

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
1976

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
09.04.2014

Label: Warner Music Group

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Classic Rock

Interpret: Ramones

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 Blitzkrieg Bop 02:13
  • 2 Beat On The Brat 02:32
  • 3 Judy Is A Punk 01:32
  • 4 I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend 02:24
  • 5 Chain Saw 01:56
  • 6 Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue 01:36
  • 7 I Don't Wanna Go Down To The Basement 02:39
  • 8 Loudmouth 02:14
  • 9 Havana Affair 01:56
  • 10 Listen To My Heart 01:58
  • 11 53rd & 3rd 02:21
  • 12 Let's Dance 01:51
  • 13 I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You 01:43
  • 14 Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World 02:10
  • Total Runtime 29:05

Info zu Ramones

The Ramones' self-titled debut is a justifiably adored album--not just one of the best albums to come out of the initial New York punk explosion of the mid-'70s, but one of the greatest rock and roll albums of all time. „Ramones“ is one of those rare records where there is not a single weak or out-of-place song. Changeups like the bubblegummy near-ballad "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" and the uncharacteristically harsh "53rd and 3rd" (an unsentimental song about Dee Dee Ramone's days as a teenage hustler) vary the album's sound and mood more than its detractors (and even some of its fans) maintain.

"...An intense blast of guitar power, rhythmic simplicity and ferocious brevity..." (Rolling Stone)

"...The most toweringly aggressive, misleadingly primitive, perfectly phrased musical statement ever made....The demos and alternate versions included demonstrate how finely honed every gangly gesture was from the very beginning..." (NME Magazine)

Joey Ramone, vocals
Johnny Ramone, guitar
Dee Dee Ramone, bass, background vocals
Tommy Ramone, drums

Recorded at 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY and Plaza Sound, Radio City Music Hall, N.Y.
Engineered by Rob Freeman, Jack Malken and Don Hunerburgn
Produced by Craig Leon, T. Erdelyi and Marty Thau

Digitally remastered

Ranked #33 in Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Albums Of All Time"


The Ramones
were loud and fast - Everyone knows that, even the poor, blind saps who never loved the band. But the Ramones were many things, and gloriously so, from the moment of their inception in Forest Hills, New York, in 1974, until their final concert, 2,263, in Los Angeles on August 6, 1996.

They were prolific - releasing 21 studio and live albums between 1976 and 1996 - and professional, typically cutting all of the basic tracks for one of those studio LPs in a matter of days. They were stubborn, a marvel of bulldog determination and cast-iron pride in a business greased by negotiation and compromise. And they were fun, rock n' roll's most reliable Great Night Out for nearly a quarter of a century. Which seems like a weird thing to say about about a bunch of guys for whom a show, in 1974 or '75, could be six songs in a quarter of an hour.

The Ramones were also first: the first band of the mid-'70's New York punk rock uprising to get a major-label contract and put an album out; the first to rock the nation on the road and teach the British how noise annoys; the first new American group of the decade to kick the smug, yellow-bellied shit out of a '60s superstar aristrocracy running on cocaine-and-caviar autopilot.

Above all, the Ramones were pop: stone believers in the Top 40 7-inch-vinyl songwriting aesthetic; a nonstop hit-singles machine with everything going for it - hammer-and-sizzle guitars and hallelujah choruses played at runaway-Beatles-velocity - except actual hits. According to an August 1975 article in England's Melody Maker about the crude, new music crashing through the doors of a former country-and-bluegrass bar in lower Manhattan named CBGB, the local press was already hailing the Ramones as - get this - "potentially the greatest singles band since the Velvet Underground." A peculiar compliment since the Velvets' own few 45s were all crushing radio bombs.

But there was one thing you could never, ever say about the Ramones: that they were dumb. In their time, in their brilliantly specialized way, the Ramones - the founding four of Johnny (guitar), Joey (voice), Tommy (drums), and Dee Dee (bass); along with Marky, who spent 15 years and 11 albums behind the drums beginning with "Road To Ruin" and who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with the original four; - later followed by CJ, who stepped out of the Marine Corps and into Dee Dee's king-sized sneakers in 1989; and Richie, who kept the beat while Marky was on hiatus between '83 and '87 - were the sharpest band on the planet. Fully evolved as musicians and songwriters. Confident in their power and the importance of what they had.

The atomic-mono impact of Johnny's Mosrite guitar; Joey's commanding, sour-Queens vocal delivery; the unity of wardrobe and identity; right down to the original, collective songwriting credits and the mutually assumed surname - they were the result of a very simple philosophy. As Tommy puts it: "Eliminate the unneccesary and focus on the substance." That is precicesly what the group did on every record it ever made, on every stage it ever played.

The Ramones' place in rock 'n' roll history was already assured by 1978 with their first three albums: Ramones, Leave Home, and Rocket To Russia, all made in the span of 18 months, between February 1976 and the fall of '77. When it was time to make records, Tommy says, "our art was complete." The art was the combined product four strangely aligned personalities - all living within shouting distance of each other in the conservative, middleclass enclave of Forest Hills, where their mutual needs as fledgling musicians and bored delinquents far the mess of differences and civil wars that could never quite bust them apart. Once a Ramone, always a Ramone.

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