New York Dolls | 
| Artist: New York Dolls Label: Island / Mercury Category: Music
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $4.28 You Save: $5.70 (57%)
New (45) Used (33) Collectible (1) from $4.00
Rating: 75 reviews Sales Rank: 8719
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 832752 UPC: 042283275225 EAN: 0042283275225 ASIN: B000001FMX
Release Date: October 25, 1990 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Personality Crisis | | • | Looking for a Kiss | | • | Vietnamese Baby | | • | Lonely Planet Boy | | • | Frankenstein | | • | Trash | | • | Bad Girl | | • | Subway Train | | • | Pills - New York Dolls, Diddley, Bo | | • | Private World | | • | Jet Boy |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com In 1972, when rock & roll was all but dead in Manhattan, five cross-dressing glam punks from the boroughs convened and began hammering out crude, sub-Chuck Berry rock for the downtown in-crowd. It took another year before a record company dared to sign them, thus foisting The New York Dolls on an essentially uninterested world. Taking their cue from the band's guitarist/Keefalike Johnny Thunders, hardcore Dolls fans pooh-poohed Todd Rundgren's production as wimpy: twenty-five years after its release, songs like "Personality Crisis" and "Looking for a Kiss" sound more trashily invigorating than ever. With the Rolling Stones finished as a vital force by '73, the doomed Dolls were there to step into the void. A classic. --Barney Hoskyns
Album Description Limited 2008 UK 180gm vinyl pressing of this classic album, released to coincide with the 60th anniversary of the long-playing record. This is an exact replica of the original packaging and contains a voucher enabling the purchaser to download MP3 versions of the songs within. Happy Birthday, my dear vinyl LP! Universal.
Album Details Japanese Limited Edition Issue of the Album Classic in a Deluxe, Miniaturized LP Sleeve Replica of the Original Vinyl Album Artwork.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 70 more reviews...
Happy Birthday New York Dolls! July 28, 2003 M. Fantino (San Francisco, California USA) 78 out of 78 found this review helpful
It was 30 years ago today (27 Jul 2003) that The New York Dolls debut album hit record store shelves. I think it's safe to say, these thirty years would have been much different had that record not come out. It has been suggested that The New York Dolls emerged in 1973 just as The Rolling Stones relavence was ebbing (a point I might argue if provoked). And, as if things don't happen all on their own, one might look at The Dolls and see a trashier, dumbed-down lip-stick-smeared drag-queen version of Jagger and Richards (especially David Johansen and Johnny Thunders - it's uncanny!) but musically made up of equal parts Iggy Pop swamp-monster sleaze, Lou Reed's gritty street-sense, T. Rex's jangly mess, and the charging glam-jam of David Bowie. The result was The New York Dolls were louder, and even more strung-out than their peers. Iggy Pop once said that he single-handedly killed the sixties. That may be so, but it wasn't until July 27th, 1973 that The New York Dolls came kicking and screaming, in their high heels and track-marked arms, it wasn't until then that they showed us how good and gritty bad music can sound. The punk scene would have been much different minus The Dolls. It's unlikely The Ramones would have done it quite the way they did, and The Sex Pistols certainly wouldn't have happened. In fact, Malcolm McLaren managed the tail end of The Dolls before he moved back to England to create The Sex Pistols. Malcolm dressed The Dolls in patent red leather and draped giant sickle & hammer red flags behind them on stage, all this to upset the American public. None of his antics seemed to work with The Dolls, as they were nodding out of consciousness more than half of the time. It may have been easier for Malcolm McLaren to go from a band with two zonked junkies to a band with only one. 'I was trying to do with the Sex Pistols what I had failed with the New York Dolls' --Malcolm McLaren In fact, Malcolm wanted to hire either Sylvain Sylvain of The New York Dolls or Richard Hell (then of Television) to front his incomplete Sex Pistols. 'Malcolm...he always wanted me to come over and start a group called the Sex Pistols' --Sylvain Sylvain ...and in retrospect: 'It was a stupid idea of mine...no way Hell or Syl would have fit in with the Pistols. Hell and Syl had years on the Pistols...the Pistols were incredibly naïve.' --Malcolm McLaren The Sex Pistols, on the other hand, perhaps spawned at least partly by The Dolls, rejected the accusation completely on their song called New York. Johnny Rotten explained he and the rest of the band were sick and tired of Malcolm McLaren endlessly going on about The Dolls and The New York scene, which the Pistols felt was too poetry based and arty. New York was their reaction against The New York Dolls. Johnny Thunders and drummer Jerry Nolan, after the demise of The New York Dolls, formed The Heartbreakers with Richard Hell (who didn't stay long). Amoung the many great punk songs that Johnny Thunders is responsible for, one is a response to The Sex Pistols nasty New York called London Boys. It was more brutal than the flimsy musical fight Lennon and MacCartney employed on their albums. But it was with their debut album, only 11 songs, that the Dolls created all that haggard, whacked and wasted neo-Euro clumsy art rock. A fantastic set of stripped down freak-out garage-boogie.
"Mick who?" February 18, 2004 Shotgun Method (NY... No, not *that* NY) 26 out of 28 found this review helpful
Ah, the Dolls. More than any other band, they were the epitome of the rock 'n' roll lifestyle (them and The Stooges..but that's another story). They didn't just burn the candle at both ends--they used a blowtorch on the middle. All the drug-crazed, trashily androgynous, Rolling Stones-in-drag insanity of the New York Dolls was woefully short-lived, but the result was a breakthrough 1973 LP that was a huge influence on the future punk movement. The Ramones (guitarist Johnny Thunders was a friend of Dee Dee Ramone's) and the Sex Pistols (Malcom McLaren managed the Dolls before there even was a Johnny Rotten) probably wouldn't have existed without Johnny Thunders and David Johansen to show them the way. Way grittier and wilder than their glam rock kin (David Bowie and T. Rex), the Dolls basically updated the early rock 'n' roll of Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis. What the Dolls lacked in instrumental prowess they made up for in reckless sexual abandon and crazy R&B swagger. Thunders' guitar is HUGE, sloppy, and manic, and his filthy riffs and solos are what make this album. But let's not forget the trashy wit and great singing of Johanson, Sylvain Sylvain's piano, Jerry Nolan's crashing drums, and bassist Arthur Kane...well, he sucked, but you barely heard him over the wonderfully shambolic boogie anyway. The opener Personality Crisis establishes everything the Dolls were about--stomping piano, riproaring guitar, and Johanson's cocky swagger and crazy vocals. The 1-2-3 punch of Personality Crisis, Looking For A Kiss, and Vietnamese Baby is then followed by the short reprive of Lonely Planet Boy. The epic Frankenstein brings the rawk back, and it is immediately followed by the insanely addictive sing-a-long Trash. The album ends with Jet Boy, which hooks you with the biggest freakin' chorus ever. Filler? What filler? Every song rules. They're so good that you will almost forget about Todd Rundgren's godawful production. Almost. The New York Dolls' first release ranks up there with The Stooges' Fun House and The MC5's Kick Out The Jams as the definitive proto-punk album. Barring that, it may be the greatest pure rock 'n' roll document EVER. You need this one.
WHEN I SAY I'M IN LOVE, YOU BEST BELEIVE I'M IN LOVE...L-U-V July 8, 1998 tleese@flash.net or Phillip Kaufman (Oklahoma) 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
This little gem introduced the world to the Dolls, too bad the world wasn't ready for them. I don't care how deep the Velvet Underground's songwriting was, or how violent and ludicrous the Stooges were. The New York Dolls were the definitive punk band. And this album stands to that testament. This is the band at it's best,before the drugs and Rundgren hit. Every song is mind blowing, so I won't single any out. If you like the Stones, buy this, if you like punk, buy this, if you like plain ol' good rock, buy this, and if you just like good music in general, buy this. It stands the test of time, and should be included in every music collection.
The Rock And Roll Mainline March 24, 2005 Christopher Bushman (Portland, OR USA) 9 out of 10 found this review helpful
The New York Dolls debut album is the exact point where the Rolling Stones intersect with Punk Rock. In the early 70's, Mick and Company, like mad scientists, had perfected the distillation of Mississippi Delta blues crossed with sleazy urban rock and roll and burned themselves in the process, forcing them to retreat into the comparative safety of reggae and funk experimentation, soul balladry and less inspired rock. In the mid 70's, the Ramones, Sex Pistols and their ilk through off all pretense of artistry or respect for tradition and fully embraced the nothing to lose vibe of urban decay. They constructed a new sound shot through with angst where speed was prized over craft and irony ruled. With the 1973 release of their debut album, the New York Dolls tried to have it both ways. David Johansen, Johnny Thunders, Syl Sylvain, Arthur Kane and Jerry Nolan have clearly processed the gutbucket style of rock and roll offered up by the Stones but cannot bring themselves to turn away from the blast they were having in the funky but chic and lowdown quarters of NYC. Madmen running around in garish drag and rocking out with abandon, they were embraced by the bohemian cognoscenti and reviled everywhere else. The experiment did not work out over the long haul but they made a glorious noise in their moment and left behind this 5-star testament to excess. All the songs are terrific but I especially love Pills.
One of the most influential albums ever. July 1, 2000 Tim Lieder (New York, NY) 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
I bought this because I have been reading "Please Kill Me" and the New York Dolls are a doomed group just waiting to break up, but still they are the beginning of punk. I had to buy this CD.It's amazing! Echoes of every band that you've ever loved from the Replacements to Husker Du to glam rock to punk to grunge (which is really just post-punk). The influence spread out and engulfed modern music. Listening to this CD is like reading Nietzche for the first time. At once familiar and unique, you are listening to the source. You have heard this music before only you have heard its imitators. Every song is great but "Personality Crisis", "Looking for a Kiss" and "Jet Boy" are way cool! Buy it now.
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