American Idiot (Regular Edition) [Explicit] By Green Day
¡Uno! is the ninth studio album by the American punk rock band Green Day. It is the first of three albums in the ¡Uno! ¡Dos! ¡Tré! trilogy, a series of studio albums released from September 2012 to January 2013.
This deluxe edition comes with a limited edition Fan Box, including 4 color printed 3-CD Slipcase, including ¡Uno!, 4.5 x 4.5 4-color collectable Green Day sticker, and
printed cardboard fillers for ¡Dos! (available 11/13/12) and Tre! (available 1/15/13) albums.
Featured Uno (Deluxe Edition)
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Good Album + Quick FYI,
Bought the new Green Day this morning and it’s definitely a fun album. I’d agree with several of the other reviewers that it’s no American Idiot or 21st Century Breakdown but it’s still a good addition to their catalogue. GD doesn’t change their sound all that much from album to album so you know what you’re going to get. If you like it, great. If not, you’re probably not reading this anyway. For other details on the album, I’ll let you read the other reviews.
The real point of leaving this review is to let you know that this Amazon version ¡UNO! [+digital booklet] is a “clean” version. The curse words are there (PLENTY of them) but in this version they’ve all been covered up by a guitar riff or a sound effect. I don’t know if this is the original released version of the album but I doubt it. If so, what’s the point of even having those words in the lyrics? Just write them out. However, I can’t find an “explicit” version on Amazon so perhaps this is the original.
I have my own feelings about whether this is a good or bad thing but I’ll leave it to your own preferences as all our needs are different. I just thought everyone should know that this is a “clean” version. Enjoy!
****UPDATE****
OK folks, it’s time for an update. Amazon has now added two new versions of the album that were not available when I wrote this review earlier today (9/25). There is now an Explicit version (¡UNO! [Explicit]) and Explicit version that includes four videos (¡UNO! [Explicit] [+video]). I only wish these had been available before I got sucked into the daily deal clean version.
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|Green Day Back To Their Roots: Punk-Powered Power-Pop.,
After the two musical sagas that were American Idiot and 21st Century Breakdown I was hoping Green Day would calm things down a bit and just produce some simple music again that would be easy to digest and enjoy. Don’t get me wrong, I loved both 21st Century Breakdown and American Idiot, but they were LONG and INTENSE. I give Green Day huge accolades for making political music in a time when making political music is largely unpopular, and doing it very well. My long term gripe is that I couldn’t casually listen to those records on repeat for hours like my old Green Day records from the 90′s and I really missed that.
Green Day responded exactly how I hoped they would with ¡UNO!. Instrumentally it fits somewhere between Warning and Nimrod. It feels like a missing piece of a puzzle. Part of me wonders if some, if not a majority of these tracks, are from the canceled/lost “Cigarettes and Valentines” album because while they were recording that album Billie Joe stated that it would be more a more simple pop-rock album.
Much to my delight, on ¡UNO! I hear A LOT of influence from Cheap Trick, The Kinks, and The Clash. The guitar riff on Angel Blue is so much of a “The Clash” riff that I seriously had flashbacks to when I first bought London Calling in the late 90′s. Some songs also remind me of Green Day’s 60`s rock Foxboro Hot Tubs side project. A couple simpler tracks (“Loss Of Control, for example”) have a definite garage-rock style that even remind me of Billie Joe’s side project Pinhead Gunpowder’s release, “Goodbye Ellston Avenue”. As a long term Green Day fan and overall music glutton I can’t tell you how AWESOME this is!
I’ve been listening to Green Day since I was 13 and found my brother’s CD of Insomniac in his CD player. I’m 28 now and a bigger fan than ever. They never fail to make a great record and this is no exception. Billie Joe continues to grow as a pop song writer and vocalist. Green Day described this as the “party album” of the trilogy. I am not 100% sure what that means since I can’t compare it to the other two upcoming releases, but I’m interested to see where this trilogy goes. I am “hooked” again, thank you Green Day for making an old fan happy once again.
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|A return to 2000,
So it’s 1994, and your major label debut, “Dookie,” just made you the biggest act around. you put out a few more albums that do well enough, but never recapture that initial success. Your time in the limelight has passed, the world has moved onto the next big thing…
And then, out of nowhere, the unheard of happens. You put out “American Idiot”, a good ten years after what was supposed to be your biggest time of success, and it launches you right back into the spotlight. Suddenly you aren’t just writing modern rock hits. These are Hot 100 chart toppers. Your band finally escaped the shadow of your major label debut. You’ve proven to the world that you’re here to stay…but how the heck are you gonna follow it up?
Ever since “American Idiot” swept the nation, Green Day has been very strategic about where to take their career. “21st Century Breakdown” was an attempt to do a bigger, better “American Idiot.” Now three years later, what in God’s name can the band do? A return to the early 90′s punk? A third rock opera? Something brand new? The answer ended up being ALL OF THE ABOVE. Green Day announced three new records; one power-pop, one garage rock, and one epic.
The first of three records is called UNO, which is a power pop record infused with punk energy. Don’t listen to the reviewers that are calling this a return to Dookie’s sound. This record fits in with the late 90′s and pre-idiot Green Day output. If I had to sum it up, I’d say it sounds like a harder version of 2000′s “Warning.”
The songs themselves are a mixed bag. There are some true highlights here, but they’re unfortunately surrounded by mediocre songs that probably never would have seen the light of day had the whole “3 albums in 4 months” concept never happened…
Which brings me to my final, and probably most important point. Is it fair to review this album yet? Standing alone, it’s an average Green Day record with a few fantastic moments. As part of the trilogy, it may very well take on a whole new meaning. The true review of “Uno! Dos! Tre!” Won’t exist until they’re all out. For the time being, we’ve got UNO! to enjoy for what it is; a fun, up-tempo power-pop album that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
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