Neon Ballroom

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (108 ratings)
Neon Ballroom album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Silverchair (See All Albums by Silverchair)
  • Date Released: Mar 16, 1999

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Rock, Alternative, Commercial Alternative, Indie Rock

  • Label: Epic

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 50:03

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Underrated

efDisk

This is by far one of those great finds. You want to think to yourself, Silverchair are those Nirvana wannabes from Australia. Then you hear this, and you are wrong. Every song on this disc is golden, but crank "Spawn Again" to 11. This band can do pop punk, metal, and everything in between. They also kill when seen live.

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Understated & Sadly Missed

conceptina

It's interesting looking at Silverchair here, and what they created with their later albums. Suffice to say, "Ana's Song" and "Emotion Sickiness" are really some of the best tracks they've recorded in their career. Despite the dark context behind the songs, the album still remains a standout. Highlights: "Emotion Sickness" has all the depth and epic musical score reminiscent of GnR's November Rain. Love It!

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They Say All Music Guide

Silverchair’s third full-length release is a confusing affair that reveals a band more talented than their critics realized and more confused than their fans could tolerate. The Australian trio never made any secret of their respect for Nirvana, and on Neon Ballroom Silverchair does one of the best impersonations of their Seattle counterparts on record. It would be easy to convince any Kurt Cobain fan that “Spawn Again” and “Dearest Helpless” are actually In Utero outtakes, and quite good ones at that! When the weepy ballads, like the Goo Goo Dolls-esque “Miss You Love,” pull Neon Ballroom into an overtly radio-friendly direction, all the promise of a gritty grunge tribute fades, and Silverchair appears to be serving two masters. The resultingly incongruent musical textures stifled Neon Ballroom and assured a certain amount of fan disenchantment despite the minor airplay success of “Ana’s Song (Open Fire).” There are still enough nice moments on this CD to recommend it to even casual fans of the Aussie outfit. Those who had enough of Silverchair when modern rock radio played their mid-’90s hits to death need not concern themselves with this mixed effort. – Jason Anderson

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