Doubt | 
| Artist: Jesus Jones Label: Nettwerk Records Category: Music
List Price: $15.98 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $15.97 (100%)
New (24) Used (335) Collectible (23) from $0.01
Rating: 25 reviews Sales Rank: 133172
Format: Original Recording Reissued Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 077779571529 EAN: 0077779571529 ASIN: B00000CKZF
Publication Date: 1991 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Trust Me | | • | Who? Where? Why? | | • | International Bright Young Thing | | • | I'm Burning | | • | Right Here, Right Now | | • | Nothing to Hold Me | | • | Real, Real, Real | | • | Welcome Back Victoria | | • | Are You Satisfied? | | • | Two and Two | | • | Stripped | | • | Blissed |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Details Digitally Remastered Re-issue of the Band's Second Album that Spawned the Hit Singles 'right Here Right Now', 'real Real Real', 'who Where Why' and 'ibyt-international Bright Young Thing'.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 20 more reviews...
Jesus Jones goes mainstream December 26, 1999 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Mike Edwards is by far the most creative European musician to be named after David Bowie. "Doubt" is Mike E going more mainstream. You can find their infamous smash hit "Right here, right now" on it. When their first album "Liquidizer" was released the critics considered it as one of the best debut albums for years. "Doubt" is never out of time and it should never be missed on a party. If you're just not into mainstream like me, then check their 3rd album out, named "Perverse". Their latest record so far "Already" is awesome too. www.jesusjones.com
I guess, perhaps, you just had to be there... May 31, 2001 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I was working in college radio when this album came out. For those of us who'd grown up in the Reagan years, particularly those of us who thought the world really might come to an end during our adolescence with "Uncle Ronnie" falling asleep at the trigger, the events which inspired this album's best-known track really *were* amazing, life-changing, inspiring events."Right Here Right Now", the single that launched [and perhaps defined] Jesus Jones' short career, isn't the *greatest* pop song ever written, but it's catchy as anything, and it fit right in with a lot of other music coming out of the UK right around that era. Throw in "International Bright Young Thing" and "Real Real Real", and you've definitely enough material to justify a bargain bin purchase. Besides, you're holding a bit of history in your hand - someday you can tell your grandchildren that you know the lyrics to that song about the fall of the Berlin Wall :-)
Those were the days. September 23, 2003 H3@+h (VT) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
During a time in which I listened mostly to "Ministry" and the "Red Hot Chili peppers", I still squeezed in a little "Jesus Jones". I have to admit, this is an album that I only play once or twice a year, but once it's in I love it. I really think this is better than most people think it is. The songs "International Bright Young Thing" and "Real, Real, Real" are just a couple songs on a mostly good album. Any fan of "The Soup Dragons" or "Happy Mondays" should like "Doubt". If nothing else, it's fun to crank "Right Here, Right Now", and pretend it's the early 90's again.
Still Great March 13, 2002 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This album struck a special chord with me and still does. It's one of the most underrated albums of the 90's.
10 years later, and I'm still listening... January 26, 2002 David Miller (Phoenix AZ United States) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This album, alongside Faith No More's "Real Thing" and the KLF's "White Room" shaped the majority of my record collection in the decade since. There was something special about the way samplers and sequencers were used back in the early 90's which most rock acts don't understand fully... that the song dictates what sounds and samples are to be used, for example the screaming backwards bullets in the punkish opener "Trust Me," the fire and car crashes of the industrial "Stripped", the sitar in "International Bright Young Thing," and perhaps coolest and most original pairing of samples, a John Lee Hooker harmonica riff merging with Middle Eastern psychedelia in "Who Where Why." Additionally, this is one of those albums where every song could have been a single-- no filler whatsoever.Do yourself a favor and get an often-overlooked piece of rock history.
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