nycsilikon.blogg.se

Stone temple pilots unplugged
Stone temple pilots unplugged










stone temple pilots unplugged

So, Stone Temple Pilots finds STP picking up where they left off, retaining the harder, diamond edge of Shangri-La Dee Da, balancing swagger and melody with an expert professional touch, offering everything as expected, except for the key ingredient of Brendan O’Brien, who produced every one of STP’s albums before this. The brothers DeLeo are responsible for the former, and Weiland for the latter and, like it or not - the decade-long absence suggests that they surely don’t - they need each other, neither team sounding quite as good in their solo projects as they do working together. Despite Weiland’s knack for a fractured phrase, the kind that jams a verse or chorus into the brain, words have never been the reason to listen to Stone Temple Pilots, it’s always been their candied crunch, the way the filter ‘70s sleaze through psychedelic swirls. Stone Temple Pilots’ 2010 reunion album isn’t a song deep before Scott Weiland alludes to his checkered chemical past by singing “even when we used to take drugs,” which may not be a confession - the singer took great pains to claim he was writing in third person for this, the sixth STP album - but it’s easy to read between the lines, particularly when the song title invites you to do so.












Stone temple pilots unplugged