Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Alice Cooper Fotos
Artista:
Alice Cooper
Origen:
Estados Unidos, Detroit - MichiganEstados Unidos
Nacido el día:
4 de Febrero de 1948
Disco de Alice Cooper: «Constrictor»
Disco de Alice Cooper: «Constrictor» (Anverso)
    Información del disco
  • Valoración de usuarios: (3.7 de 5)
  • Título:Constrictor
  • Fecha de publicación:
  • Tipo:Audio CD
  • Sello discográfico:
  • UPC:
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15 personas de un total de 15 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Alice takes on Hair Metal......and Wins!!

"Constrictor" was the very first CD I ever bought and this was my first Alice Cooper CD. I had heard "School's Out" of course, but had never really paid attention to who performed it. I went to see "Friday the 13, Part 6" and was immediately taken by "He's Back (The Man Behind the Mask)" during the end credits. So decided to pick up Alice's disk to see how the rest of the album was. Thanks to Jason and another batch of hapless counselors at Camp Crystal Lake, I found Alice Cooper. "Constrictor" features what is best about Alice's music. Great songwriting, laden with wit and catchy hooks and chorus'. The songs on "Constrictor" are some of Alice's best. "Teenage Frankenstein" is a song only Alice Cooper could pull off. The guitar driven ode to teenage angst is fun and catchy, and Kane Roberts guitar work is just made for cranking up the car stereo. "Life and Death of the Party" is a personal favorite with fantasic guitar work, and a song that is hurt in no way by the electro-drumming. "He's Back" should become part of your Halloween mix CD! I think one of the best songs on the disk is "Simple Disobedience". The chorus is catchy and again the electro-drumming really keeps the song moving. "The World Needs Guts" is a great, in your face metal track, with some of the coolest lyrics Alice ever penned.

I see several reveiwers slammed Alice for the electric drums, and synth use on this disk, but that was just a product of the times. What is great about Alice Cooper is that he wasn't using the latest technology as a crutch, but rather he used it to enhance his songs. It's great that Alice Cooper is willing to take risks and try out various musical styles. As a fan, I may not always care for the end product, but I can appreciate how Alice is always giving something new to his fans. Look beyond the techno stuff and you will see that "Constrictor" still features simply great songwriting.

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3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Cooper Goes Hair Metal

Alice takes 3 years off to sober up and get his life back together. With the release of "Constrictor" Alice teams up with guitarist Kane Roberts and bassist Kip Winger to re-invent himself as a hair metal rocker. "Constrictor" would be the first in a series of 4 albums with Roberts and Winger that would eventually get Cooper back to the top of the rock n roll heap. With the release of "Constrictor" Cooper made a very successful comeback mounting "The Nightmare Returns" tour which was also made into a very successful live video concert recording. The album gets mixed reviews from Cooper fans. Many new fans discovered Cooper during the late 80's period and love this stuff, but most older fans find it somewhat lacking. I have to give Cooper credit for totally updating his sound at the time and doing something completely different from what had made him famous. Most of this album is pretty average hair metal, but there are a few exceptions. The opening track "Teenage Frankenstein" is a good one mining similar territory to the Cooper classic "18" about teenage angst and coming of age. "Life And The Death Of The Party:" has a killer hook and seems like it could have been a hit. The final track "He's Back" was the theme from the motion picture "Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives". It actually got Cooper back on the radio and the video got some airplay on MTV. It was not a big hit, but enough to remind people that Cooper was still around and by far his most successful single since "Clones". The song is actually completely different than the rest of the album with keyboard synths being the main instrument instead of Robert's metal guitar. Overall I find this to be an average Cooper release, but it does have it's moments.

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3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Awesome 80's metal

This is 80's at its best, I love Alice Cooper's lyrics and fun antics on his albums. This album has guitarist Kane Roberts, who was a bodybuilder and wieghed in at 230lbs. Check out his website www.kaneroberts.com for his pictures and information, he is a great guitarist and really shines on this album along with the followup album to this called "Raise Your Fist and Yell" which is an 80's metal masterpiece, plenty of hair raising solo's, Hammer on's and Pull off's, squeals, vibrato and scale runs. This is the best era of rock as we know it, pick it up and taste what rock used to be like and how great it sounded in the 80's, also check out Kane Roberts Saints and Sinners solo album and his newer Phoenix Down CD, which he formed his own band and it is wonderful.

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3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- MY FIRST ALICE COOPER ALBUM

This was the first Alice Cooper album I bought. I first heard some of the songs from the horror move Friday The 13th Part 6 and decided to give the album a listen. I really wanted to hear the song "Hard Rock Summer" but it wasn't until a decade later that it was released on the box set "The Life And crimes Of Alice Cooper" as it was not on this album. The song "He's Back(The Man Behind The Mask)" was another I wanted to have on cd but the version on here is not the same as the movie mix which I think is a far better version(and can be found on the box set). "Teenage Frankenstein" is on this album as well and one that will get you hooked after a few listens. The rest of the album features some good 80's rock/metal. You have "Trick Bag" and "Give It Up" with a catchy chorus. There are hard rock songs like "The World Needs Guts" as well as a nice rock ballad with "Life And Death Of The Party."

This album is supposed to be the comeback for Alice Cooper. That makes sense as the popularity of Horror/Slasher films as well as hard rock was at an all time high when this came out. I think his true comeback was with the album 'Trash' but this one got me into Alice Cooper to begin with. It led me to buying a VHS copy of "The Nightmare Returns" that featured some classic Cooper songs and that led me to buying the original "Greatest Hit's" album. Then "Welcome To My Nightmare" and then.....you get the picture. But for me it all started here. This album is one I listen to near Halloween as well as his next release and his heaviest with "Raise Your Fist And Yell."

Stand Out songs "Life And Death Of The Party" "Crawlin'" "The Great American Success Story" and "Give It Up"

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2 personas de un total de 2 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- It Thrills My Gorilla!

Yeah, yeah, so it's not the best album Alice has come out with. In fact, it's straight up hair metal-The first in a series of four that Alice would do. I don't totally dump on him for doing it, in fact, if it weren't for this hair metal comeback, we might not have ever been treated to albums like Last Temptation or Brutal Planet. Alice(like David Bowie) has a knack for surviving by sneaking themselves into modern music trends. This has kept him alive(and just barely above water in the early 80s) and active within the music scene so he was able to tour and release more albums. Constrictor helped him alot after Dada(which was a much more superior album ironically) to get himself known again. I'll bet alot of people thought he had retired. Although this is my least favorite era of Alice, I'm glad he did it. If staying alive in the music industry meant that Alice had to be a hair rocker for awhile, so be it. It hasn't tarnished his reputation any. This album is probably one of the best of that era; It's actually pretty solid throughout. If you ask me, it's a helluva lot better than Trash because it's still the makeup-wearing, horror movie image as opposed to the Bon Jovi one. So, ultimately this one's recommended to die hards and hair metal fans. Not a good one to start off with if you're a newcomer.