Product Details
Mother's Milk

Mother's Milk
Red Hot Chili Peppers

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Good Time Boys
  2. Higher Ground
  3. Subway To Venus
  4. Magic Johnson
  5. Nobody Weird Like Me
  6. Knock Me Down
  7. Taste The Pain
  8. Stone Cold Bush
  9. Fire
  10. Pretty Little Ditty
  11. Punk Rock Classic
  12. Sexy Mexican Maid
  13. Johnny Kick A Hole In The Sky
  14. Song That Made Us What We Are Today
  15. Knock Me Down
  16. Salute To Kareem
  17. Castles Made Of Sand
  18. Crosstown Traffic

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7117 in Music
  • Released on: 2003-03-10
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Explicit Lyrics, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Chili Peppers finally hit their stride with Mother's Milk, for the first time making their breakneck mix of funk, rap, and metal smooth enough to attract the masses, while keeping it raw enough not to alienate old fans. They've straddled that edge ever since. It didn't hurt that they offered a pretty mainstream cover of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground" to introduce the album. That single though, and the rest of Mother's Milk (including "Knock Me Down" and the randy "Sexy Mexican Maid") is pure Pepper--from Anthony Kiedis's in-your-face vocals to Flea's chattering bass. Milk was also guitarist John Frusciante's debut with the group. --Michael Ruby

CD Description
1989's MOTHER'S MILK is the album that broke the Red Hot Chili Peppers out of college rock cultdom and into the rock mainstream. Despite suffering the loss of drummer Jack Irons and guitarist Hillel Slovak a year earlier (Irons left after Slovak suffered a fatal drug overdose), founding members Anthony Kiedis and Flea found exceptional replacements in Chad Smith and John Frusciante. The new members' excitement is clearly evident throughout MOTHER'S MILK, arguably the Chili Peppers' best album. A cover of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground" and a tribute to Slovak, "Knock Me Down", were both big MTV successes, as were such other highlights as "Taste the Pain" (featured prominently in the movie SAY ANYTHING), "Good Time Boys", "Subway to Venus", "Magic Johnson", and "Sexy Mexican Maid".


Customer Reviews

Old Spice5
I got into the Chili's in a pretty back to front way - I bought Anthony Kiedis's autobiography 'Scar Tissue' on the off-chance, the blurb made his life seem interesting and different - and I couldn't find another book I wanted to read. It's strange, I'm only 44 and knew of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, but was unfamiliar with their music, or at least thought I was. However, like any decent biography, it made me become inured in the persons life for a week and brought the things he's done into sharp relief rather than being out there in the ether with everything else. So I hear 'Californication', 'By The Way' and Under the Bridge', etc and realised that I know these songs after all, just didn't know who they were by. Age has taken its toll after all...

So I've just gently started to go through their back catalogue expecting to be progressively less impressed as they moved out of the Rick Rubin era back towards their debut. So far so wrong. I haven't got RHCP and Freaky Styley yet, but think this album is excellent and although I didn't enjoy Uplift Mofo quite as much, there isn't too much in it.

I tend to like this more than BSSM, it's certainly faster and heavier, although maybe not as polished.
What I particularly like about this album [and the RHCP in general] is that many of their songs have a well chosen change of pace or a captivating solo that maintains the interest and keeps you going back for a re-listen. The only little nit that I'll pick is that 'Fire' sounds pretty muddy, but then it was recorded live a while before the album was made. 'Pretty Little Ditty' sounds like a precurser to the Californication era, while 'Good Time Boys' rampages and then is twisted by a funky bass line and rampages again. My favourite track is 'Johnny, Kick a Hole in the Sky', it's a fusion of all that the RHCP have taught me in the past couple of months - I didn't understand the funk/punk thing until I heard RHCP, now I realise it's the funk that punk was missing. Or at least it seems that way at my age, whearas at 17 I probably thought differently.

Red Hot Chili Peppers? Discovered them late. Glad I did.

Chili's go from good to great!5
I bought this album shortly after discovering Blood Sugar Sex Magik and falling in love with the album and the band. I set about getting all of their earlier albums, and this is the first one i purchased.

Mothers Milk is the first album to feature a completely different line up. Although Kiedis and Flea remain from the original Peppers, their guitarist Hillel Slovak tragically died from a heroin overdose shortly after their previous album, and their drummer Jack Irons went into a depression and left, due to the death of Slovak. So after deciding whether or not to carry on with the band, Kiedis and Flea thankfully kept it going. They enlisted a young guitarist who was a massive fan of the band, John Frusciante. His energy and enthuiasm won him the role, and he could already play all of their songs anyway. On drums, they found Chad Smith, who, although seeming to be out of place with his heavy rock image, fitted in perfectly. They set about writing Mothers Milk together, unaware that this would be the band line-up that would make them world famous.

So to the album itself. Their previous album 'Uplift Mofo Party Plan' signalled a slightly rockier edge, and they continued with this direction when making Mothers Milk. The album contains Flea's trademark funky slap bass throughout, and Kiedis's rap style vocals, but it brings in new energy from Frusciante and Smith. My album summary is as follows.

'Good time boys' - Starts the album off quite rockily, as it means to go on. Sounds like the CD is jumping in the middle of it, but its not! Some great guitar riffs.
'Higher Ground' - A cover of the Stevie Wonder classic, and better than the original! This one has featured on loads of compilations over the years. Flea's bass is brilliant.
'Subway to venus' - Bizarre vocals about space being king or something. A fairly average song though.
'Magic Johnson' - A tribute song to the legendary US basketball player who the Chili's love. Quite quirky, but funky as hell when it kicks in.
'Nobody weird like me' - How Flea's fingers don't fall off while playing this track i'll never know, the slap bass is on overdrive. Really fast paced rock song.
'Knock me down' - Mid tempo tune, an extended version of this appears on the re-released, remastered version of the album, but doesn't work quite as well. Good song, not dazzling, but good.
'Taste the pain' - Great little song, good guitar riffs, vocals, and a good video to go with it, buy 'What hits' on DVD if you can!
'Stone cold bush' - One of the album highlights, really rocky song, fast paced, great wah wah guitar, sounds of a woman having an orgasm in the background, what more could you want!
'Fire' - A cover of the Jimi Hendrix song, but about twice the speed. Brilliant version, and dare i say it again, better than the original?!
'Pretty little ditty' - Beautiful little instrumental track, part of which was covered by Crazy town years later on their hit 'Butterfly'.
'Punk rock classic' - Short snappy punk track, very rocky, ending in the guitar riff from GnR's sweet child of mine, bizarrely.
'Sexy mexican maid' - Brilliant smooth song, great groove, sexy lyrics.
'Johnny,kick a hole in the sky' - Great end to the album, got everything, funk,rock, great drumming, weird vocals (i mean what does kick a hole in the sky mean anyway)

There is a remastered version of this album available which has extended versions of Sexy Mexican maid and Knock me down, also has 2 brilliant instrumental tracks one of which is probably the funkiest thing they've ever done. It also has 2 live covers of Hendrix songs. Well worth buying.

All in all. this album is my 2nd favourite Chili's album after Blood Sugar. It basically paved the way for what was to come, and they re-invented themselves with this album. It is way different to the sound of Chili peppers circa 2004, in my view it is a much better sound, but any Chili's fan old and new will like the majority of this album. Go and buy it, you know you want to!

Probably the best album in the world!5
if you like the original chili's and their funk sound then this is the album for you, if on the other hand you are a green RHCP fan who was introduced via By The Way or Californication I would advise you to listen to BSSM first. that said this is a truly amazing album, with covers of stevie wonder's Higher Ground and Castles made of sand being simply great. the opening song Good Time Boys has to be heard to be believed (if your in the fan club and wonder how the hell they came up with the name RockinFreakApotamus check out the vocal ad lib near the end of good time boys!) some great songs higher ground, knock me down, taste the pain, the basketball orientated 'Magic Johnson' all sheer genius plus a cover of hendrix's fire.
An excellent way to spend £7, i'm amazed amazon haven't put the price up!