Sixteen Stone

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 52:22

eMusic Review

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Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

10.07.08
The hairdo that launched a thousand fantasies and the singles that rescued post-Nirvana modern rock radio
2008 | Label: Kirtland Records

The story of Bush is the story of a hairdo. Dashing frontman Gavin Rossdale's greasy, Harlequin Romance-ready mane launched a thousand fantasies, and Sixteen Stone, his UK quartet's 1994 debut, launched nearly a half-dozen singles that rescued modern rock radio from its post-Nirvana lull. While Bush certainly owe much to the Seattle trio, the influence has been greatly overstated — indeed, Cobain & Co. deftly paired melody and crunch, but never to Sixteen Stone's extent. Rossdale injects Nevermind's lazy melodies into In Utero's unkempt decor as guitarist Nigel Pulsford's riffs heave like overloaded barges.

If you owned a radio in the mid '90s, you know this album already. "Everything Zen," "Little Things," "Comedown" and "Machinehead" ably encompass modern rock's workman-like efficiency, guitar pedaling from chorus to verse to bridge with nary an organic sound. Rossdale's vocals alternate between halting (rarely does he add the final consonant to a word) and seething (in "Everything Zen," he repeatedly bellows, "There's no sex in your violence" with bewildering conviction). "Glycerine," the album's big single, was the power-ballad of the '90s, and it delivers cringes and shivers equally. True, the neo-grunge of Nickelback and Creed originates here, but Bush's confident debut should hardly bear that… read more »

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1995 in one big dose

KrisWright

This is one of those records that's very much of its time. The critics hated Bush, of course, but then mid-90s critics were a very insular bunch, obsessed with credibility as much as an artist's ability to crank out a good song. Rossdale briefly had that latter ability, though, and Sixteen Stone is packed with some of the era's best post-grunge rock tunes. But if you want to save a few pennies just pick up the singles and "Alien" - probably the band's best song. At the very least, you will probably agree that they weren't the worst Bush of the last 20 years.

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Not a Guilty Pleasure

Pikg

It's quite good and no need to feel guilty about it whatsoever --- in fact, it's a classic album in it's genre.

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Still have the CD from the early 90s..

EMUSIC-021A19EB

One of my favorite albums of all time!

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Gotta Love Bush!

pixiedrea

As one of my favorite bands from high school, I have to tell you, I'm still in lust with the band! Great album to own.

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If you gotta own a Bush disc, this is the one.

Cman

Bush gets a bad rap, and some of its valid, as they really never did move on from this sound. Sure its derivative of Kurt Cobain and the boys, but its so well executed you can easily look past that. Sixteen Stone remains a good listen when you're feeling edgy and need to musically vent for a bit.

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Finally

filterfan23

I've been looking around eMusic for all my favorite 90s grunge bands and at least I found Bush. If you haven't already downloaded all their albums do so now. You won't regret it.

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Guilty Pleasue

Music-Master

Surprised to see these early Bush album here on Emusic. I know there are a lot of Bush haters but this first album is great. I know it's a guilty pleasure and I don't care. Download this classic, turn up the volume and enjoy.

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They Say All Media Guide

Under the guidance of Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley — the kings of early-’80s British pop — Bush turn in an album that follows all the rules and sounds of American hard rock, specifically Nirvana and Pearl Jam. The group’s two major hits, “Everything Zen” and “Little Things,” are slick, assured professional replications of Nirvana’s trademarks, but Bush also have a flair for big hooks and in Gavin Rossdale a frontman who has movie star charisma, all elements that turn Sixteen Stone into successful pop-grunge. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine