Spinal Tap - Break Like the Wind
Facts
| Artist(s) | Spinal Tap |
| Studio | Mca Special Products |
| Release Date | August 29, 2000 |
| UPC Code | 008811237028 |
| Buy this item | $6.98 at Amazon.com As of Jan 3 10:27 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- Bitch School
- The Majesty Of Rock
- Diva Fever
- Just Begin Again
- Cash On Delivery
- The Sun Never Sweats
- Rainy Day Sun
- Break Like The Wind
- Stinkin' Up The Great Outdoors
- Springtime
- Clam Caraban
- Christmas With the Devil
- All The Way Home
Similar CDs
| This Is Spinal Tap | The Return of Spinal Tap | This Is Spinal Tap | A Mighty Wind: The Album | Waiting for Guffman |
User Reviews
Average user review:| A cataclysmic of the Mind |
Break like the wind is a transgenic odyssey of musical integrity.
A music have for any true fan of music October 10, 2007
| Better than most "real" heavy metal |
| Break like the WIND! |
It opens with the roaring male dominance rocker "Bitch School," which would be offensive if it weren't tongue-in-cheek, then lurches on to the wonderfully bloated "Majesty of Rock," a gloriously ghastly duet with Cher, the insanely pretentious "The Sun Never Sweats" ("Bolder than the pirates who used to rule the sea/Braver than the natives, who never heard of tea...")
The peak of this album may be the song "Break Like the Wind," which aspires to be deep and inspirational despite lyrics like "We are the thumb on a stranger's hand." And two of the most priceless songs are at the end: the mope ballad "All the Way Home," and the truly twisted Christmas song, "Christmas With the Devil."
The world was first introduced to Spinal Tap in "This is Spinal Tap," the classic rockumentary about England's loudest band. With the help of Cher (yes, that Cher) and Dweezil Zappa, they take it upon themselves to roundly mock metal, hard rock, rock ballads, and quite a few other things as well -- they're funny because they put so much effort into doing a nudge-wink bad job.
The music itself is pretty standard hard rock riffs -- it's merely okay, and therein lies the irony. What's really startling is that while the music is not amazing in the technical sense, it's actually much better than many real-life bands were. Scary, no? It does have its moments of brilliance, due to Zappa and Jeff Beck mostly, as well as some gloriously ghastly sitar.
It's not the music but the lyrics that are genius. Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer are true geniuses of the bad song -- what's even better, these are the sort of bad songs that people write, but don't know that they are bad. "And that's the Majesty of Rock!/The Mystery of Roll!/The darning of the sock,/the scoring of the goal!" Does it get worse than that? Yes, if you include lines like "Rise! for you are cream" and "We may be gods or big marionettes/But the sun never sweats."
This particular edition includes some extra goodies -- the rambly little song "All The Way Home," which was a pre-band song that the guys sort-of-sing in the movie. And then there's the "Bitch School" video -- an all-girls school, where a leather-clad Monroe-lookalike turns up to be the new teacher, and teaches the girls to get in touch with their inner S&M madam.
"Break Like the Wind" is a wonderful album by the loudest band in Britain, and the best band that never technically existed. Tap into this! April 2, 2007
| Almost better than the first! |
| Sh*t Sandwich |
Good cd...definitely worth getting if you liked the original Tap music. June 21, 2005
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