Cheap Trick

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (164 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 56:59

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Essential.

Tabbycat

A crazy bug-eyed guitar freak teams up with a matinee-idol lead singer, an 8 string bass virtuoso and a drummer who wilfully chose the stage name Bun E. Carlos, and together they make the most vital and dynamic 70's rock/punk statement that no one has ever heard.

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The Real Deal

headbiznatch

Expertly forged and razor sharp, this Samurai sword of a record slices you in half so perfectly you are left standing there, seemingly untouched. It is a stunning debut. BTW: Mandocello is one of the most criminally ignored love songs ever recorded - simply gorgeous.

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On my top 5 list -all time...

Roadiepig

I have so many different versions of this seminal classic it shows my age (that would be 50, going back to LP and cassette, on through remastered cd I have something like 8 copies of the album). "The Ballad of TV Violence" might be my favorite rock song of all-time (and I have a collection that covers the last 40+ years of my life)

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Hard Rock

Flotasum

Hard Rock buzz and drone can be found on this record. The reords that followed were cleaned up. I wanted them to make another first. Thanks Rick!

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good place to start....

strat69

if your exposure to Cheap Trick was "The Flame" or whatever...you need to ratchet back to where the boys started.Kinda strange, the original LP (yay vinyl) ended at track 10 actually (?). Regardless, my first intro to these guys was in a Chicago club and I had no idea who they were, I just walked in and heard an amazing cover of some Beatles tune (Paperback Writer?)and saw the freak show that was Rick Neilsen back in that day running and leaping with about a half dozen guitars around his neck; you really had to see it to believe it. I was hooked immediately and really feel that this album is truly indicative of the flat out power-pop geniuses these guys were. Pick this up, it's raw and in your face but with Robin Zander's "pretty" vocals mixed in to keep you off balance. You'll be saying the same thing I did the the first time I saw them: "what the f**k?"

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Turn it up

Rambler77

This is not your parents Cheap Trick album. This is filled with so many excellent cuts from fast to slow that it is almost pure perfection. Tracks 12 on were not on the original release and "I want you to want me" should never be on this. It just doesn't flow. Even if you despise Cheap Trick you need to hear this one!

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Fantastic debut

oldpunkandrew

An underrated album, one of Cheap Trick's best.

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One of Rock's Finest Moments !!!

stevep4172

If you are not all that familiar with Cheap Trick, this 1st album is a great start .... Great talent in this band and Zander's vocals are amazing ....

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Hell Yeah!

Hubcap

OH, Shit. OK, you know how people say, oh, this is a drums record, or, this is a guitar record, well, this is the ultimate rock 'n' roll BASS record. Dude plays a super beefy fuzzed out 8-string bass, that give these songs a fucking powerful underarm odor and onslaught. This is an amazing record - it's like the Arena Rock version of Big Star Sister Lovers.

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They Say All Media Guide

Cheap Trick’s eponymous debut is an explosive fusion of Beatlesque melodic hooks, Who-styled power, and a twisted sense of humor partially borrowed from the Move. But that only begins to scratch the surface of what makes Cheap Trick a dynamic record. Guitarist Rick Nielsen has a powerful sense of dynamics and arrangements, which gives the music an extra kick, but he also can write exceptionally melodic and subversive songs. Nothing on Cheap Trick is quite what it seems. While the songs have hooks and attitude that arena rock was sorely lacking in the late ’70s, they are also informed by a bizarre sensibility, whether it’s the driving “He’s a Whore,” the dreamy “Mandocello,” or the thumping Gary Glitter perversion “ELO Kiddies.” “The Ballad of TV Violence” is about mass murder, while “Daddy Should Have Stayed in High School” concerns pedophiles. All of it is told with a sense of humor, but it doesn’t come off as cheap or smirking because of the group’s hard-rocking drive and Robin Zander’s pop-idol vocals. Even “Oh, Candy,” apparently a love song on first listen, is an affecting tribute to a friend who committed suicide. In short, Cheap Trick revel in taboo subjects with abandon, devoting themselves to the power of the hook, as well as sheer volume and gut-wrenching rock & roll — though the record is more musically accomplished than punk rock, it shares the same aesthetic. The combination of off-kilter humor, bizarre subjects, and blissful power pop made Cheap Trick one of the defining albums of its era, as well as one of the most influential. [The 1998 Epic/Legacy reissue of Cheap Trick features a different track sequence than the original and also adds several bonus tracks, many of which are previously unreleased.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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