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No Alternative

No Alternative

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Artist: Various Artists
Label: Arista
Category: Music

List Price: $15.98
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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 18 reviews
Sales Rank: 20234

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1

UPC: 078221873727
EAN: 0078221873727
ASIN: B000002VNM

Release Date: November 9, 1993
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Superdeformed - Sweet, Matthew
  • For All to See - Buffalo Tom
  • Sexual Healing - Brown, Odell
  • Take a Walk - Urge Overkill
  • All Your Jeans Were Too Tight - Eitzel, Mark
  • Bitch - Jagger, Mick
  • Unseen Power of the Picket Fence - Pavement
  • Glynis - Corgan, Billy
  • Can't Fight It - Mould, Bob
  • Hold On - McLachlan, Sarah
  • Show Me - Shepherd, Ben
  • Brittle - Carter, Shayne
  • Joed Out - Downes, Graeme
  • Heavy 33 - Downes, Graeme
  • Effigy - Fogerty, John
  • Iris - Deal, Kim
  • Memorial Song - Smith, Patti
  • Verse Chorus Verse - Cobain, Kurt

Similar Items:

  • DGC Rarities, Vol. 1
  • Singles: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  • Sub Pop 200
  • No Alternative
  • Offbeat: A Red Hot Sound Trip

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Among the recent glut of good-cause charity albums, No Alternative stands out as the best, both for its performances and its cause (proceeds benefit the Red Hot organization in the fight against AIDS). The high points are Soul Asylum's unlikely cover of Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing;" outtakes from recent albums by Chicago's Urge Overkill and Smashing Pumpkins; "Unseen Power of the Picket Fence," the major-label debut by Pavement; a surprise hard-rocking Nirvana track, and "Memorial Song," an a capella tribute from punk godmother Patti Smith to the late Robert Mapplethorpe. --Jim DeRogatis


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great transaction   October 11, 2008
John Briggs (Granite City, IL USA)
This is simply a compilation. I bought it when it first came out and then just recently bought my replacement. I am so content. Nothing like a great variety of musical artists.


3 out of 5 stars Generic, with benefits   September 22, 2008
OneLove (so fla)
When this first appeared, No Alternative was an excellent crash course in the budding genre, from popular acts to lesser known artists and many stuck in between. While new songs from Nirvana and the Pumpkins assured wide distribution, and quite a few notable entries including Breeders and Uncle Tupelo live up to those high compilation standards, a good half of the disc has been relegated to the apathetic-audio category.


4 out of 5 stars Many Highlights   October 1, 2006
David Alston (Chapel Hill, NC, USA)
Most compilations are dodgy affairs, and benefit/charity releases are especially guilty, but this sneak hit in the "Red Hot + ___" series of AIDS-benefit/awareness releases was easily the best of the bunch, and presents a surprisingly freethinking travelogue of the rock underground, circa '94, just as that underground was cruising into mainstream consciousness.

The high points here are many - American Music Club and Pavement contribute songs that rank among their best, and several artists present were right on the brink of major breakthroughs: Sarah MacLachlan (who had been kicking around Halifax since the late 80s, briefly in the industrial group Manufacture), and Soundgarden (who first surfaced on the SST label in the mid-80s). Elsewhere, two of the finest groups to emerge from New Zealand's insanely creative (and prolific) Flying Nun Records: The Straitjacket Fits and The Verlaines - also put in fine appearances. Nirvana, The Beasties, Patti Smith, and (to a lesser extent) Matthew Sweet represent the folks who'd already achieved some major recognition, and their contributions are top-notch as well.

Musically the range is all over the place - not quite as wide open as the local college radio station, but about as close as we'd get from a major label - this is perhaps a little more geared towards that same college radio/zine crowd than any sort of alt-rock mainstream. But that's as it should be, and the fact that Arista/BMG got this to be some kind of a hit at the time was a breakthrough for a multitude of reasons - this is a great collection, and it's good to see it still around.

-David Alston



2 out of 5 stars Normally I'm open minded   July 7, 2005
Brittany Schaar (aberdeen, WA, USA)
2 out of 8 found this review helpful

Sorry, this CD just isn't the exact genre that I was thinking. Buying the wrong kind of compilation was my mistake, but with the Soundgarden, Smashing Pumpkins, Nirvana, i thought maybe it was going to be a little heavier than what it was. Turned out to be the light alt-pop bands from the 90's.

This would have gotten three stars, but the song by Pavement that was dissing R.E.M. just threw me over the edge.
I would recommend Sub Pop 200, or maybe DGC Rarities instead of this, but if you like 90's alt-pop, this is for you. If you want heavier, more like Nirvana, get Sub Pop 200.



4 out of 5 stars The kind of CD that never leaves you   January 23, 2005
shaxper (Lakewood, OH)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

No Alternative is one of those CDs that you listen to on your way to work for a month straight, finally tire of, forget for a few years, and then remember all over again, listening to it on your way to work for a month straight. The beauty of compilations and soundtracks is that, when they're done right, they're diverse enough to keep your interest far longer than an album by a single artist ever could.

Yet, what makes No Alternative excel as a compilation is the fact that it does manage to maintain some commonality amongst the diversity; enough to keep things fresh and interesting with each successive track, but all while weaving them together with an emotional thread. Urge Overkill's "Take a Walk" and American Music Club's "All Your Jeans Were Too Tight" sound nothing alike, yet somewhere, in the deep emotional core of these songs, there's some commonality. Virtually every song on this album somehow deals with loss at its center. Some are uplifting, some despairing, some jaded, and some treat it with black humor. No two can be confused for one another; no two feel like they're consciously working for this effect. Yet, on a tribute album for an AIDS foundation, each of these songs seem to have taken the underlying cause to heart in a way that makes song transitions often seamless, even when the tone, beat, and volume change abruptly. The one exception to this is Nirvana's hidden track at the end, which (while worthy of inclusion on a Nirvana's Greatest Hits album) seems to have been contributed arbitrarily.

To provide some background (I guess I should have done this first), No Alternative was compiled in 1993, at the height of the Alternative/Independent movement. As the liner notes explain, the duel purpose of the album was to raise money for AIDS research ("there's no alternative") and to dispel the myth that Alternative could be considered a single style of music with distinguishable characteristics ("there's no such thing as Alternative"). This second notion accurately reflects the variety of talent signed on for this album.

No Alternative incorperates the works of nineteen independent artists, most still on the fringe of public awareness at the time of its release. Perhaps this was a gamble by its producers to inexpensively sign artists that had a chance of making it big right before the album hit stores. However, it's more likely that this was simply an attempt to catch a glimpse at the "true" alternative, occuring right outside the music mainstream, in all its diversity. Smashing Pumpkins, Soul Asylum, and The Breeders were already Alternative brand names by the time of NA's release, Sarah McLachlan and Soundgarden's mainstream breakthroughs were still a few years away, and Urge Overkill and Matthew Sweet continued to remain on the fringe of public awareness, even while attracting large fan bases. Patti Smith and The Beastie Boys aside, I've never heard of the rest of the artists that compile this album, and I don't suspect that I ever will.

There are no bad songs on this album, but the truly best and most memorable songs are the intensely introspective "Take a Walk" (Urge Overkill), the dream-weaving, soul affirming "Glynis" (Smashing Pumpkins), and the desperate lament of "Hold On" (tremendously different alternative version by Sarah McLachlan). Nirvana's hidden "Verse Chorus Verse" is among their best work but, as previously stated, does not match the tone of the album. Fans of Patti Smith will be haunted and touched by how her "Memorial Song" differs from anything they've heard from her previously, but non-fans will be likely to scoff at the song (as I once did).

You don't need to be a fan of Alternative to appreciate No Alternative. After all, there is no Alternative. All you need is an open ear, willing to engage and appreciate various distinctive styles. But even if you approach No Alternative without that open ear, some of these songs will open it for you. There's a passion on this album that simply cannot be missed. You may not immediately hear it in Soul Asylum's cover of "Sexual Healing", but, sooner or later, one of the tracks on this album is going to catch you and, if it treats you the way it treated me, it may never let you go.


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