music.wikisort.org - CompositionSladest is a compilation album by the British rock band Slade. It was released by Polydor on 28 September 1973 and was certified UK Silver by BPI that month. It remained in the charts for 24 weeks.[1] The album was certified UK Gold by BPI in November 1973.[2] In America, Sladest was released by Reprise and featured a significantly different track listing. It reached No. 129 on the Billboard 200.[3]
1973 compilation album by Slade
Sladest |
---|
 |
|
Released | 28 September 1973 |
---|
Genre | Glam rock, hard rock |
---|
Length | 45:47 |
---|
Label | Polydor (UK), Reprise (US) |
---|
Producer | Chas Chandler |
---|
|
Slayed? (1972) |
Sladest (1973) |
Old, New, Borrowed and Blue (1974) |
|
Background
In 1973, Slade were one of the most popular bands in Britain, having achieved two number one singles - "Cum On Feel The Noize" and "Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me" - in three months. Both had entered the charts straight at number one, which was a rare feat at the time and had not been achieved since The Beatles with "Get Back" in 1969. However, soon after the release of "Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me", drummer Don Powell was involved in a near fatal car crash in July 1973. The accident threw the band's future into doubt and despite his critical condition, Powell was able to make a recovery.[4]
While recording their next studio album, Old New Borrowed and Blue, Slade decided to release a compilation album to maintain the band's momentum. Sladest was released in September 1973, on the same day as the band's new single "My Friend Stan". Sladest topped the UK charts and was a success in Europe and beyond too. In its first week of release, it was awarded a UK Silver Disc and in November, it received a UK Gold Disc and was set to surpass 200,000 sales at the time.[5][6] Having remained at No. 1 for its first three weeks of release, Sladest later returned to the top spot in mid-January 1974, following the success of "Merry Xmas Everybody".[1]
Release
Sladest was originally going to be titled "The Best of Slade".[7][8] It contained fourteen tracks and included the band's eight hit singles up to that time, along with six other tracks, five of which pre-dated Slade's commercial breakthrough in 1971. In America, the album was released by Reprise (Warner Bros. Records), and was the band's first release on the label. The release featured ten tracks, including the band's eight hit singles, along with "My Friend Stan" and its B-Side "My Town".
Sladest was first released on CD in Japan in 1988.[9] A UK and European CD release followed in 1993.[10][11] In 2011, the album was remastered and re-issued on CD by Salvo. It included four extra tracks, one of which was a previously unreleased studio version of "Hear Me Calling".[12]
Critical reception
Professional ratingsReview scores |
---|
Source | Rating |
---|
AllMusic |     [13] |
Christgau's Record Guide | B+[14] |
Record Collector |     [15] |
Upon release in America, Ken Barnes of Rolling Stone described the album as a "comprehensive collection", providing an "unimprovable perspective on their past successes, as well as some of the wildest all-stops-out rock & roll you'll ever hear". He summarised the album as being "the best rocking album of the year".[16] Robert Christgau felt that although Slayed? was "less tuneful", he preferred the album to Sladest, which contained material which saw "these Anglopop phenoms [turning] into raving maniacs".[17] Billboard felt the album was an "extremely smart maneuver", serving the "dual purpose of introducing them as a singles band as well as giving them an almost fresh start with the American listening public".[18]
In a retrospective review, Paul Tinelli of AllMusic believed the album contained "all of the material that helped the band sell tons of records and fill arenas in the U.K. in the early '70s." He felt that the material straying from their "successful formula of catchy guitar riffs and big choruses tend to fall flat".[13] In 2003, Spin included the album in their "Essential Glam Rock" guide. They noted the material's "wind-tunnel guitar and choruses even the most lager-headed yob could chant", adding "the stadium-stomp anthems collected here run the gamut from dumb to dumberer."[19]
Track listing
Side oneTitle | Writer(s) |
---|
1. | "Cum On Feel the Noize" | Noddy Holder, Jim Lea | 4:29 |
---|
2. | "Look Wot You Dun" | Holder, Lea, Don Powell | 2:57 |
---|
3. | "Gudbuy T'Jane" | Holder, Lea | 3:31 |
---|
4. | "One Way Hotel" | Holder, Lea, Powell | 2:39 |
---|
5. | "Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me" | Holder, Lea | 4:35 |
---|
6. | "Pouk Hill" | Holder, Lea, Powell | 2:24 |
---|
7. | "The Shape of Things to Come" | Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil | 2:17 |
---|
Bonus tracks on the 2011 Salvo remaster
Title | Writer(s) |
---|
15. | "Hear Me Calling (Studio Version)" | Alvin Lee | 2:45 |
---|
16. | "My Friend Stan" | Holder, Lea | 2:41 |
---|
17. | "My Town" | Holder, Lea | 3:06 |
---|
18. | "Kill 'Em at the Hot Club Tonite" | Holder, Lea | 3:20 |
---|
US track listing
Weekly charts
Chart (1973) |
Peak position |
Australia (Kent Music Report)[20] |
3 |
Austrian Albums Chart[21] |
10 |
Canadian Albums Chart[22] |
75 |
Finnish Albums Chart[citation needed] |
1 |
German Albums Chart[23] |
3 |
Norwegian Albums Chart[24] |
4 |
UK Albums Chart[25] |
1 |
US Billboard 200[3] |
129 |
|
|
Personnel
- Slade
- Additional personnel
References
Slade |
---|
|
Studio albums | |
---|
Live albums | |
---|
Compilations | |
---|
Box sets | |
---|
Extended plays | |
---|
Singles | |
---|
Video | |
---|
Related articles | |
---|
Authority control  | |
---|
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии