This is a 2 disc limited edition expanded version of the original single disc 
14 track pressing that was released earlier in the same year. 
Disc 1 contains 12 tracks while disc 2 contains 13 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Post Grunge
Label Number: 168 618 403-2
.FLAC via Florenfile (Disc 1)
.FLAC via Florenfile (Disc 2)
*****
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
Review by Allmusic.com
.FLAC via Florenfile (Disc 1)
.FLAC via Florenfile (Disc 2)
*****
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
☠: Selected by Lass
© 2002 Roadrunner RecordsReview by Allmusic.com
                            
                    The impact Jerry Cantrell made with his former band 
Alice In Chains set the blueprint for hard rock in the 1990s like few 
others. Widely imitated yet never successfully replicated, Cantrell 
remains a seemingly boundless fountain of crunchy, groove-heavy riffs 
and eerie vocal harmonies. After a compromise with his label (Roadrunner
 Records) to release a one-disc version, Cantrell's musical vision can 
finally be appreciated with the breadth and sequencing he originally 
intended with DEGRADATION TRIP VOLUMES 1 & 2.                
The eleven additional cuts are far from scraps recovered from the cutting room floor. "Pro False Idol" and "Dying Inside" are musical studies of an artist struggling with the sticky marriage of art and commerce, while the sole instrumental "Hurts Don't It?" speaks with as much emotional articulation as any of the vocal tracks. As dark and looming as much of the set is, Cantrell is equally skilled at putting his bitingly honest lyrics into more hopeful musical tapestries, such as "31/32." With closure on the Alice In Chains legacy (due to the tragic death of vocalist Layne Staley), perhaps Jerry Cantrell can finally lay some of his demons to rest.
The eleven additional cuts are far from scraps recovered from the cutting room floor. "Pro False Idol" and "Dying Inside" are musical studies of an artist struggling with the sticky marriage of art and commerce, while the sole instrumental "Hurts Don't It?" speaks with as much emotional articulation as any of the vocal tracks. As dark and looming as much of the set is, Cantrell is equally skilled at putting his bitingly honest lyrics into more hopeful musical tapestries, such as "31/32." With closure on the Alice In Chains legacy (due to the tragic death of vocalist Layne Staley), perhaps Jerry Cantrell can finally lay some of his demons to rest.
tags: jerry cantrell, degradation trip volumes 1 and 2, 2002, flac,






 
 




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