Jump to content

Bret Michaels - 'Custom Built'


Geoff

Recommended Posts

bretcustom.jpg

 

Track list:

 

01. Riding Against The Wind

02. Lie To Me

03. Nothing To Lose (featuring Miley Cyrus)

04. Wasted Time

05. What I Got

06. Every Rose Has Its Thorn (country version feat. Brad Arnold of 3 DOORS DOWN, Chris Cagle, Mark Wills)

07. Go That Far (club mix by Jason Miller of GODHEAD)

08. Driven (rock mix)

09. Open Road

10. Rock N My Country

11. Nothing To Lose (Bret-only demo)

12. I'd Die For You

 

Honestly, I think if I hear Bret Michaels sing the words "... that famous final scene" or something of the like in another one of his songs, I will forsake him. Seriously, I think there are about three songs on this that refer to "the famous final scene," and on every album since and including 'Native Tongue' (the brilliant 'Theatre of my soul' - should have been the first and last reference). What is his obsession with this line?

 

Anyway, aside from that this is a completely mixed bag. Some utter garbage, a )literal) couple of good pop rock tunes... production varies too. The opener is probably the best song, and aside from some awful chorus production (though the verses sound fine?!) the 2nd song is okay too. 'Nothing to lose' is boring but okay, and 'Wasted time' is pretty cool. And that's where it get's ugly. 'What I got' is terrible, the country version of 'Every rose' is a crime, 'Go that far' is shithouse, 'Driven' is a dance track (seriously, from country to dance in the space of a few songs - awful!) and of the rest we have a repeat song, another country song which is terrible and a couple of average songs. So yeah, overall, gotta admit it's a pretty piss-weak album imo. I'll pick it up from a bargain bin at one stage, but I won't rush for the hard copy at all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What is his obsession with this line?

 

I would think it's very apropos considering he came pretty damn close to his own "final scene" a couple of times in the past year, if you know what I mean.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I haven't heard this yet but besides the four good songs from Power to the People he hasn't wrote to many good tunes since Crack A Smile. Not sure why he can't write good songs anymore. Maybe he needs CC, Bobby and Ricki more than he thinks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have to disagree on most of whats said above, as I feel Bret has written some truly great tunes over his solo career.

I also like the fact he does some country stuff, as its better that he keeps it to his solo releases, but then again, we aint exactly getting any new Poison material anyway.

 

I'd also make a slight correction, Driven is not a dance track, Go that far is.

 

While for me, the only weak track is the aforementioned Go that far, and I couldnt give a rats arse if a lyric has been used more than once (you show me a rock band that hasnt reused a lyric a few times during their career), my biggest problem with this album is the same problem I have had with the bulk of Brets solo albums ... the fact that he keeps using the same songs over and over again. Instead of getting an album of all new material, we seem to always get a re-recorded version/remixed version or even a totally unchanged version of songs that have been on previous solo albums.

Go that far, Rock n my country, Every rose (country version), Driven, I'd die for you & Open road have all been on previous albums in one form or another.

Now if you take out those six and the second version of Nothing to lose, thats only five new tracks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have to disagree on most of whats said above, as I feel Bret has written some truly great tunes over his solo career.

I also like the fact he does some country stuff, as its better that he keeps it to his solo releases, but then again, we aint exactly getting any new Poison material anyway.

 

I'd also make a slight correction, Driven is not a dance track, Go that far is.

 

While for me, the only weak track is the aforementioned Go that far, and I couldnt give a rats arse if a lyric has been used more than once (you show me a rock band that hasnt reused a lyric a few times during their career), my biggest problem with this album is the same problem I have had with the bulk of Brets solo albums ... the fact that he keeps using the same songs over and over again. Instead of getting an album of all new material, we seem to always get a re-recorded version/remixed version or even a totally unchanged version of songs that have been on previous solo albums.

Go that far, Rock n my country, Every rose (country version), Driven, I'd die for you & Open road have all been on previous albums in one form or another.

Now if you take out those six and the second version of Nothing to lose, thats only five new tracks.

Whoops. Yep, my mistake. Basically, for me I pretty much switched off after the first 4 songs to be honest and the rest was just a mixture of badness.

 

I'd still love to see a new Poison CD, but the more I hear these solo releases from Bret the less I have desire for new Poison. I do seriously hope there would still be magic if he got back with CC, Bobby and Rikki to write some new songs... but I dunno. Like Wes says, maybe the magic has died? :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Posts

    • So finally got around to listening to the album (still waiting for CD to arrive but at least a digital version came with the order). This is defo the best album he has released since leaving Skid Row, and is better than anything released by his former band (even the Erik fronted album). I liked his solo stuff, but he was always trying too hard to be modern and heavy, so there were very few actual stand out tracks. On here though it really is more of a throwback. While not quite classic Skid Row, it is probably as close as we will ever get, kinda sitting somewhere sonically between the first two albums. The only downside for me is the fact there is only one ballad and it doesn't even come close to the two that featured on Angel Down. Seb took a long break between this and his previous album, and I think in that time he has taken time to reevaluate what he wants to do musically. As stated earlier, even the album cover is a throwback with it being a painting his father started decades ago. Hopefully any future releases will stick to this style, and not return to the style used on his last few albums.
    • Not sure, but sounds like christian lyrics to me. And could'nt find it on HH yet. 25 years ago I would have loved this, today I'm atheist and do not listen anymore to such... explicit lyrics.  
    • Spider of Destiny-Frank Zappa
    • I got it for free when I bought the Dirty Americans album. It's a cool little sampler.
    • Ha, I remember them. Good stuff.
    • Better than I expected, honestly, as GUN was never my thing.
    • Agree. Have been a fan of Halestorm and Lzzy....she's fantastic. That said though, this Skid Row thing just feels "off" to me.  She sounds fine but I think it's simply that hearing a female voice do the songs just doesn't seem right after listening to the originals for so long.   I much prefer hearing Lzzy in Halestorm.  I'd rather see her concentrate on that and also concentrate on doing new music that's more in line with their first 2 albums!
    • From memory it was recorded after the original pledge release of Beautiful things and was added as a bonus song when it became available to the general public.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.