Scorpions - Pictured Life: All the Best

Scorpions - Pictured Life: All the Best
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Album Details

Title: Pictured Life: All the Best
Artist: Scorpions
Release Date: 2000
Re-Released On: 5/2/2000
Label: BMG Ariola, BMG
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 632427616023, 743217384227
Genre: Rock
Styles: Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Arena Rock, Album Rock
Moods: Dramatic, Energetic, Hedonistic, Rebellious, Intense, Party/Celebratory, Rowdy, Aggressive, Confident, Fiery, Raucous, Rousing, Sleazy, Theatrical
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. In Trance
  2. Pictured Life
  3. Speedy's Coming
  4. In Your Park
  5. Life's Like a River
  6. Backstage Queen
  7. Drifting Sun
  8. Living and Dying
  9. Virgin Killer
  10. Top of the Bill
  11. Far Away
  12. Fly People Fly
  13. Sun in My Hand
  14. Catch Your Train
  15. Crying Days
  16. Yellow Raven

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2000CDBMG Ariola738422
2000CDBMG74321

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Before they became the poster boys for cheesy German hair metal, the Scorpions had a good ten-year run as one of the hardest and most creative '70s rock bands. This album concentrates on the first half of that period, when they were developing their famous twin-guitar assault and cutting away the psychedelic fat from the meat of their sound. Their lyrics balanced between glam rock sleaze and Sabbath seriousness, but they never fell back on the clichés and generic rhymes that littered their material after 1984. Plus, they had the incredible dual-guitar work of Rudolph Schenker and Ulrich Roth to guide the songs along. That complementary style of playing simply faded away as the years went by, leaving one of the most recognizable aspect of their sound behind. "Pictured Life" rolls along with a mild punk rock influence, although the chorus negates just about any punk tendencies the verses lean toward. "Backstage Queen" is a rollicking blues-rocker that showcases the swagger and attitude that they used to flaunt. They do a good job of tempering their moody psychedelic tinges on "Drifting Sun" and "Living and Dying," while "Virgin Killer" is was one of the first songs that really showed how heavy and visceral they could be when they tried. "Top of the Bill" may be the purest distillation of their sound on the whole album, blending the passionate wail of '70s Klaus Meine with the grandiose guitar and soaring backup vocals that would show up on their early-'80s albums. "Life's Like a River" loses some of the Scorpions' momentum, but it was really one of their first stabs at balladry, and they got a lot worse than this in later years. The same could be said for the shimmering "Far Away," although the guitar part is much better here. Fans of the band who haven't heard this music should hunt this out immediately; this is an excellent sampler of the first half of their hot streak. And anyone who likes good '70s rock should check this out; there is some solid material here that might surprise someone who only knows the Scorpions from their radio tracks. ~ Bradley Torreano, All Music Guide

Credits

No credits were found for this album.