
Adore: Vinyl 2LP.
When it was first released on June 1, 1998, the Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore, the follow-up to their mega-successful 1995 double album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, fans were puzzled by its lack of rock guitars, its folk and electronic elements and relative intimacy. Even the album title was misunderstood.
āThe funny thing was [it] was a joke that no one ever got,ā says Corgan, explaining that Adore was meant as a play on āA Door.ā The Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore offered a new entrance to the bandās career, as Corgan experimented with and without the bandāwhose drummer (and Billyās musical confidant), Jimmy Chamberlinās absence played as large a role as his presence might have in the making of the record. The highly personal Corgan songs reflected on the then-recent loss of his mother (āFor Martha,ā āOnce Upon a Timeā), his divorce and female issues (āAva Adore,ā āCrestfallen,ā āPug,ā āAnnie Dogā) and some of the most incisive lyrics heās ever written (āBlank Pagesā).
More than 15 years later, Adore--part of the continuing series of reissues of the iconic alternative bandās acclaimed catalog via Virgin/Ume--stands the test of time or as Rolling Stone writer David Wild calls it in the liner booklet, āthe surprisingly beautiful sound of a great band falling apart.ā
Capturing a transitional period in the Smashing Pumpkinsā history, Billy Corgan was glad to revisit some of these songs, adding in versions with Bon Harrisā electronic wizardry that proves how the album was way ahead of its time. āI love Adore, but for a while, my opinion of the record was so intertwined with peopleās reactions to it at the time. I would say that my kind of iffy feelings lingered long past the point when a lot of fans seemed to come back around to the recordāwhich seemed to really start happening around seven years ago. Now Adore is name-checked by fans constantly.ā
Now, thanks to UMeās four-pronged restoration of this gem, the album can reach a whole new generation of fans, its themes of in Corganās words, ādisassociation and disintegration and disembodimentā more relevant than ever more than a decade and a half later.
Tracklisting
1. To Sheila
2. Ava Adore
3. Perfect
4. Daphne Descends
5. Once Upon A Time
6. Tear
7. Crestfallen
8. Appels + Oranjes
9. Pug
10. The Tale Of Dusty and Pistol Pete
11. Annie-Dog
12. Shame
13. Behold! The Night Mare
14. For Martha
15. Blank Page
16. 17
When it was first released on June 1, 1998, the Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore, the follow-up to their mega-successful 1995 double album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, fans were puzzled by its lack of rock guitars, its folk and electronic elements and relative intimacy. Even the album title was misunderstood.
āThe funny thing was [it] was a joke that no one ever got,ā says Corgan, explaining that Adore was meant as a play on āA Door.ā The Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore offered a new entrance to the bandās career, as Corgan experimented with and without the bandāwhose drummer (and Billyās musical confidant), Jimmy Chamberlinās absence played as large a role as his presence might have in the making of the record. The highly personal Corgan songs reflected on the then-recent loss of his mother (āFor Martha,ā āOnce Upon a Timeā), his divorce and female issues (āAva Adore,ā āCrestfallen,ā āPug,ā āAnnie Dogā) and some of the most incisive lyrics heās ever written (āBlank Pagesā).
More than 15 years later, Adore--part of the continuing series of reissues of the iconic alternative bandās acclaimed catalog via Virgin/Ume--stands the test of time or as Rolling Stone writer David Wild calls it in the liner booklet, āthe surprisingly beautiful sound of a great band falling apart.ā
Capturing a transitional period in the Smashing Pumpkinsā history, Billy Corgan was glad to revisit some of these songs, adding in versions with Bon Harrisā electronic wizardry that proves how the album was way ahead of its time. āI love Adore, but for a while, my opinion of the record was so intertwined with peopleās reactions to it at the time. I would say that my kind of iffy feelings lingered long past the point when a lot of fans seemed to come back around to the recordāwhich seemed to really start happening around seven years ago. Now Adore is name-checked by fans constantly.ā
Now, thanks to UMeās four-pronged restoration of this gem, the album can reach a whole new generation of fans, its themes of in Corganās words, ādisassociation and disintegration and disembodimentā more relevant than ever more than a decade and a half later.
Tracklisting
1. To Sheila
2. Ava Adore
3. Perfect
4. Daphne Descends
5. Once Upon A Time
6. Tear
7. Crestfallen
8. Appels + Oranjes
9. Pug
10. The Tale Of Dusty and Pistol Pete
11. Annie-Dog
12. Shame
13. Behold! The Night Mare
14. For Martha
15. Blank Page
16. 17
Original: $88.38
-65%$88.38
$30.93Description
When it was first released on June 1, 1998, the Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore, the follow-up to their mega-successful 1995 double album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, fans were puzzled by its lack of rock guitars, its folk and electronic elements and relative intimacy. Even the album title was misunderstood.
āThe funny thing was [it] was a joke that no one ever got,ā says Corgan, explaining that Adore was meant as a play on āA Door.ā The Smashing Pumpkinsā Adore offered a new entrance to the bandās career, as Corgan experimented with and without the bandāwhose drummer (and Billyās musical confidant), Jimmy Chamberlinās absence played as large a role as his presence might have in the making of the record. The highly personal Corgan songs reflected on the then-recent loss of his mother (āFor Martha,ā āOnce Upon a Timeā), his divorce and female issues (āAva Adore,ā āCrestfallen,ā āPug,ā āAnnie Dogā) and some of the most incisive lyrics heās ever written (āBlank Pagesā).
More than 15 years later, Adore--part of the continuing series of reissues of the iconic alternative bandās acclaimed catalog via Virgin/Ume--stands the test of time or as Rolling Stone writer David Wild calls it in the liner booklet, āthe surprisingly beautiful sound of a great band falling apart.ā
Capturing a transitional period in the Smashing Pumpkinsā history, Billy Corgan was glad to revisit some of these songs, adding in versions with Bon Harrisā electronic wizardry that proves how the album was way ahead of its time. āI love Adore, but for a while, my opinion of the record was so intertwined with peopleās reactions to it at the time. I would say that my kind of iffy feelings lingered long past the point when a lot of fans seemed to come back around to the recordāwhich seemed to really start happening around seven years ago. Now Adore is name-checked by fans constantly.ā
Now, thanks to UMeās four-pronged restoration of this gem, the album can reach a whole new generation of fans, its themes of in Corganās words, ādisassociation and disintegration and disembodimentā more relevant than ever more than a decade and a half later.
Tracklisting
1. To Sheila
2. Ava Adore
3. Perfect
4. Daphne Descends
5. Once Upon A Time
6. Tear
7. Crestfallen
8. Appels + Oranjes
9. Pug
10. The Tale Of Dusty and Pistol Pete
11. Annie-Dog
12. Shame
13. Behold! The Night Mare
14. For Martha
15. Blank Page
16. 17












