๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ - ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐จ๐ย ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ & ๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐โฆ
38 years ago today, the โCity Boy Bluesโ got โLouder Than Hellโ, and a Mรถtley looking crew were caught โSmokinโ In the Boys Roomโ.
On this day (June 21) in 1985, Mรถtley Crรผe released their third full-length studio album, โTheatre of Painโ via Elektra Records. Released in the aftermath of lead vocalist Vince Neil's arrest for manslaughter on a drunk driving charge, the album marked the beginning of the band's transition away from the traditional Heavy Metal sound of โToo Fast for Loveโ and โShout at the Devilโ, towards a more Glam Metal style.
โTheatre of Painโ contains the hit singles "Smokin' in the Boys Room" and the power ballad "Home Sweet Home".
The album reached No. 6 on the US charts and No. 36 in the UK, and was certified quadruple platinum by the The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on June 5, 1995.
Background:
In early 1985, Mรถtley Crรผe entered the studio to begin recording the followup to their highly successful 1983 album โShout at the Devilโ, an album which sold over 4 million copies and established the band as one of the world's top recording acts. Producer Tom Werman was once again hired to produce.
The band had enjoyed a tumultuous two years in the wake of โShout at the Devil'sโ unexpected success. The band's fondness for partying and sex earned them a reputation as a legitimately dangerous band, culminating in a December 8, 1984, car crash which killed Hanoi Rocks' drummer Nicholas "Razzle" Dingley and saw Mรถtley Crรผe's lead vocalist Vince Neil facing possible prison time for vehicular manslaughter.
On top of Neil's troubles, the band's founder and primary songwriter, Nikki Sixx, had developed a heroin addiction which was beginning to spiral out of control. Further adding to the turmoil, the band had been seriously considering replacing guitarist Mick Mars. It was with these uncertainties hanging over the band that โTheatre of Pain'sโ recording commenced in January, 1985. During recording, the album's working title was โEntertainment or Deathโ, though Sixx changed it prior to release.
Overview:
Mรถtley Crรผe kicked off their โTheatre of Painโ world tour on July 7, 1985, with seven shows in Japan, culminating in a four-night run in Tokyo which sold out so quickly that promoters added a fifth show to satisfy demand. The band remained on the road for eight months, completing the tour in Paris, France, on March 3, 1986.
โTheatre of Painโ enjoyed tremendous success upon its release in the early summer of 1985. The singles "Smokin' in the Boys Room" and "Home Sweet Home", both of which remained staples of the band's live sets for decades to come, helped the album match the quadruple platinum status of its predecessor, โShout at the Devilโ.
The album was dedicated to the memory of Nicholas "Razzle" Dingley.
Despite this success, the opinions of the band members themselves in regards to the album have been decidedly negative in the ensuing years. Vocalist Neil has referred to โTheatre of Painโ as his least favorite Mรถtley Crรผe album, and bassist Sixx has referred to the album as "a pile of rubbish, the whole fucking record, with a few moments of maybe brilliance." Guitarist Mick Mars said in 1985 that the album was "more polished" than the band's previous releases, adding that the references to sex and violence were "not as blatant" on โTheatre of Painโ. "I think itโs there. Itโs a little more subtle, but it's there," he said.
Though Sixx, the band's primary songwriter, was battling a serious heroin habit during the album's recording, he has since blamed producer Werman for the album's shortcomings, saying in his 2007 memoir The Heroin Diaries that Werman "didnโt really know how to control us, or to do what it is we needed to make the follow-up to โShout at the Devilโ." Werman responded to Sixx's criticism, saying in 2008; โIsn't it curious how they say they love you while they're selling millions of records, but a couple of decades later you didn't capture their sound, you didn't work hard enough, you didn't pay enough attention, you talked on the phone all the time, you partied too hard, and, in fact, you're personally responsible for everything in their lives that they've failed to achieve?โ
The album did give the band their first Top 20 hit in "Smokin' in the Boys Room", a cover of a 1973 hit by Brownsville Station. The idea to record the song was Neil's. It was one of the first songs the band attempted when they first formed in 1981, but according to guitarist Mick Mars, "it was like 'uugghhyeechh'. We sounded like crap, Iโll tell ya." In the studio, Neil suggested they try it again "and it just worked", according to Mars, adding "I think it's because we've been together now for five years, and we know how to play with each other."
The track "Keep Your Eye On the Money" saw Sixx hinting at serious self-reflection, with lines such as "Comedy and tragedy, entertainment or death" and "dancing on the blade" as "the crowd screams on for more" perhaps being reflections on the excesses of the previous two years. In "Save Our Souls", Sixx addresses his heroin addiction with the lines "For a life so good, it sure feels bad" and "It's been the hard road, edge of an overdose" foreshadowing his near fatal overdose later in the decade.
The album featured a first for Mรถtley Crรผe: a power ballad in the form of "Home Sweet Home". Some observers were unhappy with the band's decision to record a ballad and release it as a single. Said Sixx at the time, "First we were mass murderers for doing 'Helter Skelter', then we were Satan-worshippers and now we've wimped out." The song came together in the studio when Neil began humming along to a piano lick randomly played in the studio by drummer Tommy Lee. Sixx wrote the lyrics and the band had a hit single, charting at number 89 on the Billboard Hot 100, with a remixed version peaking at number 37 on the same chart seven years later in 1992. The video for the song was made when Sixx was deeply addicted to heroin. The bassist was so strung out during the shooting of the music video for "Home Sweet Home" that he wandered underneath a stage and began discussing "family, music and death" with an imaginary person. Country music star Carrie Underwood scored a hit in 2009 with her cover of the song.
"Louder Than Hell" was a track left over from the โShout at the Devilโ sessions which the band reworked and re-recorded. A demo version of the song with the original title of "Hotter Than Hell" was released on a 2003 remastered edition of โShout at the Devilโ.
New music aside, โTheatre of Painโ saw the band drastically alter its image upon the album's release, and the move towards Glam Metal was not met with enthusiasm by some fans. The band's new Glam Metal look was panned by People Magazine, who slammed their new "sleekly eerie, pouty looks" which "might have been sent over by central casting." The magazine went as far as to refer to lead vocalist Vince Neil as "the hottest peroxide-blond hermaphrodite on the head-banger circuit" while Rocks Back Pages chided their "effeminate clothes". Some fans were dismayed when glamour shots began appearing in the Heavy Metal press which showed the band members sporting as much pink lace as they once did black leather. Guitarist Mars addressed the image change in a 1985 interview with The Georgia Straight: "We've always been a bit different looking band than anybody else. And everybody, now, is wearing lots of leather and studs and blowing out their hair and stuff. So itโs time for us to change, โcause we donโt want to be stuck into that mainstream. It's just to be something different." Said Sixx of the move towards Glam: "Hey, man, I like to look good, I wear make-up. Shit, President George Washington used to wear a wig and make-up. I mean, c'mon. If he can do it, I can do it."
The video produced for "Smokin' in the Boys Room" took MTV by storm in the summer of 1985. The video expanded upon a theme common in 80s Metal, the "put-upon high school nerd universe" in which relief from the forces of oppression is found through the power of Heavy Metal, exemplified so successfully by videos such as Twisted Sister's "Weโre Not Gonna Take It" and "I Wanna Rock". The video was targeted by Tipper Gore, leader of the activist group Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) as a bad influence on the youth of America. The "Smokin' in the Boys Room" video featured veteran horror movie icon Michael Berryman, perhaps best known for his performance in Wes Cravenโs 1977 horror film "The Hills Have Eyes". Berryman would subsequently have a cameo appearance in the video for "Home Sweet Home". The album also had another link to the horror genre with the song "Save Our Souls" being featured in the 1985 Italian horror film Demons.
Critical Reception:
In their August 1985 review, People Magazine praised guitarist Mick Mars' work but found little else to applaud. The magazine called the album "thudding trash", with Neil's vocals and Sixx's songwriting taking the brunt of the criticism. The magazine felt that, while โTheatre of Painโ does contain some of the band's most accomplished work, the album ultimately "needs cosmetic surgery".
Terry Atkinson of the Los Angeles Times declared that Sixx's lyrics "include some well-phrased lines", but ultimately declared that the album "plods along nondescriptly" with "punchless riffs", stating that the album "sounds as if it was produced by a machine in a youth-market research firm."
Tim Holmes of Rolling Stone found โTheatre of Painโ to be the group's "most technically proficient album" while dismissing the heavy metal genre entirely, not understanding its growing popularity.
Sixx spoke about โTheatre of Painโ in 1987, declaring that "Some of that stuff is as polished as we've ever gotten, that's not good for this kind of music. But there was still plenty of dirty and grit on it - we can only get so polished. Polishing our music is like painting a garbage can."
Robert Horning of PopMatters reviewed the albums โTheatre of Painโ and โGirls, Girls, Girlsโ in 2003, finding that "Both albums show a general lack of inspiration, both in the writing and the playing. The band's indifference is evident in the lyrics, which are nothing but a string of clichรฉs stitched together with little concern for coherence"
The album has been credited, perhaps more so than any other release of its time and place, with transforming Heavy Metal from an album-oriented format to a singles-oriented format. The album was instrumental in inaugurating the Pop-Metal era which to many has become synonymous with the 1980s, with bands such as Poison, Cinderella and others following the โTheatre of Painโ example as the decade continued.
Links to Artists, Albums, and Music Videos:
Click this link to listen to โTheatre of Painโ via Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/theatre-of-pain/1607359411
Click this link to watch the official music video for โSmokinโ in the Boys Roomโ: https://youtu.be/5oVBvxA0mm0
Click this link to watch the official music video for โHome Sweet Homeโ: https://youtu.be/Gmrh42foUsg
Click this link to follow Mรถtley Crรผe on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MotleyCrue
Note: The reviews shared here are for historical reference. The views and opinions expressed within are not always supported (in full or in part) by Into the Wells. โ E.N. Wells
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