Music has always been a part of my life -- now welcome to the journey. Just a little blog to reminisce, review, rant and rave about the music in my life. "Music is my mother and my father. It is my work and my rest,my blood, my compass, my love" ~Jeff Buckley
Thursday, January 25, 2024
I Remember You: Skid Row at 35
"Skid Row was slightly different from contemporary albums by Warrant and Great White because it contained less "fake-gutter narratives of sluts and bad boys", and instead leaned more towards Bon Jovi's earnest anthems." Erik Davis Spin Magazine June 1989
1989 gave us Skid Row's debut self-titled album. Personally, I can only hear some of these titles as read by MTV VJ Adam Curry or Headbanger's Ball host Rikki Rachtman as they seemed on heavy request rotation, along with Aerosmith, Queensrÿche, and Poison. It was different, heavier, and the songs weren't just about love and partying. 18 and Life told the story of Ricky who threw his life away, Youth Gone Wild was about the questioning of authority, and that video for I Remember You - who can forget that sad story?
For those of us who cut our teeth on Poison and Bon Jovi, Skid Row was the stepping stone to heavier music and gave us an outlet for our teen angst. While not without controversy, the band toured for the next 17 months and even played in the Moscow Music Peace Festival and would open for and play with a myriad of the 1990's super groups: Aerosmith, Guns N Roses, Pantera, and Soundgarden.
Big Guns
Sweet Little Sister
Piece of Me
18 and Life
Rattlesnake Shake
Youth Gone Wild
Here I Am
Makin' a Mess
I Remember You
Midnight / Tornado
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Thinkin’ Bowie’s Just a Knife: Skid Row Slave to the Grind
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| David Bierk |
… 'a surprising and welcome jolt to the system', with Skid Row 'proving their mettle, their self-worth, their guts' on songs taking the listener 'to dark unsettling places where reflection collides with worry'. Popoff, Martin (August 1, 2007). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 3: The Nineties.
Released June 11, 1991, Skid Row’s second album, Slave to the Grind, surprised many at its complexity. The first metal album to debut at number 1 on Billboard Top 200 for weekly sales, Slave to the Grind demonstrated that Skid Row was more than just an angry metal band pumping out rock anthems and power ballads.
Many of us awaited the grand moment on Headbanger’s Ball when we would finally see (and hear) the first single, Monkey Business, before the album was even released. It was faster, louder, and harder than any song we’d heard on their self-titled debut. Forward two months and the album was released along with it's second single, Slave to the Grind.
Having weathered
his storm of controversies in the late 1980’s, Sebastian Bach seem ready to move on
and also move away from the hair band label they had achieved – Slave to the Grind was a centimeter away
from speed metal at times, and harkened back to his influences of the 1970’s. Many praised Dave "the Snake" Sabo and Rachel Bolan with the lyrics being stronger than Youth Gone Wild or I Remember You, but of course others didn't see the same and panned the lyrics.
Success of albums such as Slave to the Grind ushered in in seemingly the beginning of the end of the metal grind of sorts. While the 1980's saw Skid Row open for Bon Jovi, they headlined with Pantera and Soundgarden in the 1990's as their openers. The biggest tour of the summer of 1991 was most definitely Guns N Roses Use Your Illusions Tour, which Skid Row joined. 1992 and beyond seems to usher in grunge and a slow adieu to bands like Skid Row.
Skid Row with Sebastian as lead vocalist, would have five more years and two more albums together. The popularity they saw from their humble jersey roots that skyrocketed them to the Moscow Music Peace Festival with the other 80's hair bands would never be regained - as least in masses. The fans are still there and still loyal.
Slave to the Grind - Track listing
Highlights, the MTV video tracks Monkey Business and Slave to the Grind are likely the most known. Even though they went heavier, some "ballads" still made it and they are powerful with Bas's iconic high notes: Quicksand Jesus, In a Darkened Room, and Wasted Time are worth your listen. Finally, for the runners out there, Riot Act, Living on a Chain Gang, and Psycho Love are great for your playlist.
Monkey Business
Slave to the Grind
The Threat
Quicksand Jesus
Psycho Love
Get the F*ck Out
Living on a Chain Gang
Creepshow
In a Darkened Room
Riot Act
Mudkicker
Wasted Time



