The Cult The Making of Electric & How Rick Rubin Saved The Band

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • The Cult: The Making of the Electric Album with Producer Rick Rubin
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    #thecult #electric #rickrubin
    I cite my sources and they may differ than other people's accounts, so I don't guarantee the actual accuracy of my videos.
    Electric would represent the Cult’s third album and follow up to their commercial breakthrough 1985’s Love. The record also represented a stylistic change for the british band whose previous sound had been more representative of gothic and psychadelic rock. Electric was an album that was stripped down rock n’ roll, but the road to get there was long and expensive . As producer Steve Brown who worked on the album told Loudersound “Ian just lost interest in the reverb, echo, big wall of noise thing we’d had on Love. He’d lost interest in it almost before we’d started recording, and got even less interested in it as we went along. Today, let’s explore the history of the album.
    Both frontman Ian Astbury’s and guitarist Billy Duffy would join forces in the early 80’s after both playing in their own respective. post-punk outfits. Initially called Death Cult, before renaming themselves the Cult. They released their debut album dream time in 1984 which went silver in the UK, but it would be the group’s sophomore effort Love that landed them on the map in the US. Led in part by the hit singles she sells sanctuary, revolution and rain the album would go sell at least half a million copies stateside Love would be soaked in post-punk and gothic rock a direction the band initially headed in when they started recording their third album. They would team up again with Love producer Steve Brown. But something was happening in the music scene between 1986 and 1987 and the members of The Cult took notice.
    Heavy metal and hard rock grew in popularity thanks to the success of Metallica, Megadeth as well as Slayer releasing seminal albums in 1986 and of course the following year you had Guns N’ Roses releasing appetite for destruction.
    The Cult saw it as an opportunity. in 1986 the LA Times interviewed the members of the Cult on their Love Tour where they talked about how some radio stations ignored the band despite Love being a commercial success. The paper would read "Astbury was also discouraged because the Cult hasn’t received the radio play in America he thinks it deserves with the singer revealing. “It’s really frustrating, especially in the Midwest,” “You go to these radio stations that are basically playing rock music, which is what we do in the broadest sense of the word, yet they won’t pick up on us because of the name, or the image.”
    The article was onto something, the band’s image was in stark contrast to what was popular at the time. The Cult would embrace the 60’s counterculture look with Paisley shirts, love beads, peace pins and of course American Indian imagery.
    Astbury would reveal in the same interview why the band identified with the 60’s so much saying
    “In the 1960s people really ran their own lives,” “They were fed up with what old people were doing. And they decided to use their imaginations and to do something like explore every aspect of life, fashion being one of them. They pooled their resources with clothes from all different periods and different cultures. Then all of a sudden it became uncool to be imaginative. Everyone went bland and boring. Recently, most people haven’t been using their imaginations enough" he'd say.
    In a separate interview, Asbury would tell the Sun-Sentinel It was a taboo to acknowledge the fact that you liked groups like Led Zeppelin or the Doors dating back to 1981 sayingThe Bible was the NME [magazine], and if you said, 'Robert Plant,' you mentioned the unholy!" he'd say
    By the summer of 1986 the band had recorded about a dozen songs which became known as the “Manor Sessions” at Richard Bransons studio in the Oxfordshire countryside. Compared to their previous album Love the band had a lot more money to burn through in the studio & that they did.
    The album at the time was tentatively titled “Peace.” The sessions harkened back to the band’s sound on Love, but the Cult were unhappy with how the tracks turned out. Guitarist Billy Duffy would tell The Sabotage Times in 2013 “the songs were too long and just felt bloated and self-indulgent. We’d gone back into the studio too soon, as the label just wanted us to keep laying golden eggs. In reality, we should have

Комментарии • 272

  • @smurphftw2008
    @smurphftw2008 3 года назад +79

    "Electric" is one of my top 5 all time. Killer album.

    • @scottyo64
      @scottyo64 3 года назад +3

      Yes I love that album!

    • @MegaEvildan
      @MegaEvildan 3 года назад +4

      Same. I listened to it every day on the way to school my junior year, in my friend’s blue and silver Econoline Van. Damn good memories.

    • @colerogers3137
      @colerogers3137 3 года назад +3

      We listened to it every day skating my friends halfpipe for a whole summer.

    • @Hydrosized
      @Hydrosized 3 года назад +1

      Mine too! Rocked out to it for a long time!

    • @dirkriley3004
      @dirkriley3004 3 года назад +1

      Mine also ! 🤘😜🤘

  • @readmore4178
    @readmore4178 3 года назад +28

    Electric only sold one million copies? That’s crazy. That album was phenomenal.

    • @markblum5059
      @markblum5059 Год назад

      The retardation of the pop music buying public. Just one of thousands of examples.

    • @FrostedSeagull
      @FrostedSeagull Год назад +1

      The Cult only sold .1 million copies of Electric. I too was surprised to hear that they only sold 3 million albums in the USA from 1986 - 91.
      It is said the release of Appetite of Destruction and their old UK 'Goth music image affected them. " Slash fron Guns said they were typical Brits.
      I.e. jealous and insecure of their own image & sound and put down everyone else.
      Sonic Temple
      Just fell short of Double Platinum in 1989. By then The Cult were called Zeppelin copy cats didn't really break in the US as they were popular on the East and West Coast but the multi-platinum buying mid West still shunned them.
      The Cult's European and world wide audience dropped off as they were seen as a US hair band joke.
      Ceremony- sold poorly, confused AND couldn't please anyone.
      Ironically it was 'alternative enough " which butt hurt Ian
      Astbury as 10 uears prior, Southern Death Cult were THE alternative darlings of the huge post punk Indie UK scene, which was as fickle as ice cream left out in the noon day sun.

    • @rodneystanger1651
      @rodneystanger1651 6 месяцев назад

      @@FrostedSeagull Ceremony is great.

    • @aprylwhitten5189
      @aprylwhitten5189 2 месяца назад

      THE CULT album sales
      THE CULT sold over 4,065,000 albums, including 2,500,000 in the United States and 460,000 in the United Kingdom. The best-selling album by THE CULT is SONIC TEMPLE, which sold over 1,335,000 copies .

  • @prodigal71
    @prodigal71 3 года назад +27

    Just a phenomenal album!! I loved Love but Electric blew me away. We used to cover Wildflower and later LRM...still a top 20 album in my life

    • @infowazz
      @infowazz 2 года назад +2

      perfection

  • @rushmore3927
    @rushmore3927 3 года назад +21

    Love is one of the greatest 80s albums.

  • @That1Guy
    @That1Guy 3 года назад +12

    I always wished they would have kept going in this direction with this rhythm section and Rick’s in your face production. this is one in my favorite albums ever made.

  • @ericalger5003
    @ericalger5003 3 года назад +16

    Electric set the stage for Sonic Temple and Sonic Temple was a giant success.

  • @nachobeerhunter8713
    @nachobeerhunter8713 3 года назад +5

    Electric was on constant replay for me as a teenager. The Cult is one of my favourite bands and Duffy was a major influence on me for learning guitar.🤘

  • @tonepoet
    @tonepoet 3 года назад +15

    I saw The Cult live in Germany opening for Aerosmith in Germany in support of Sonic Temple and they COMPLETELY blew Aerosmith off the stage in an embarrassing way. It was '89 or' 90. They were on fire big time.

    • @bigpappapump4050
      @bigpappapump4050 3 года назад +4

      I saw the same tour in Frankfurt Germany. Your right they blew Aerosmith off the stage.

  • @alscousin8936
    @alscousin8936 3 года назад +10

    There hasn't been a Cult album I didn't like. That said, I grew up an 80's post punk/goth kid, and I distinctly remember the transition in musical style from Love to Electric. All bands have to progress, but The Cult lost a lot of the old guard fans when Electric came out. At the time, Electric represented exactly what us punk/goth kids had rejected, what our older cousins had played at nauseum. Now, 30+ years later I can appreciate all those big rock guitar sounds that Electric provided. Still, today I hear more punk in The Cult's lastest music than ever before. After all these years following them, it's nuance I think one would call it that I hear.

  • @rokarolla
    @rokarolla 3 года назад +14

    I saw them on the Electric tour, opening for Billy Idol/Steve Stevens. Great Woods MA. It was wicked!

    • @kudukilla
      @kudukilla 3 года назад +2

      Same here, but in Houston.

    • @themurphrees3795
      @themurphrees3795 2 года назад +1

      I was at the same show in Houston, great show!

  • @samholcombe3129
    @samholcombe3129 3 года назад +4

    Thank god they re recorded it because Electric is on of my all time favorite albums because it is stripped down raw rock

  • @EmilioExploring
    @EmilioExploring 3 года назад +6

    It's kind of interesting that Billy was Morrisseys original writing partner back in the day.

  • @sgr9400
    @sgr9400 3 года назад +6

    Electric ⚡️ still sounds sharp, to the bottom of the glass, nearly 35 years on & that’s a big fucking achievement all round. Go, The Cult, go, like the bullet from the barrel of a rock ‘n roll gun!

  • @killboybands1
    @killboybands1 Год назад +2

    Brilliant album..one of my all-time favorites...totally underated.

  • @catjudo1
    @catjudo1 3 года назад +8

    Electric is a damn fine rock album. The change in sound seemed to be something of a Cult signature IMO, as Sonic Temple and Ceremony had a more bombastic and arena rock feel, while The Cult was a sludgier and grunge-like affair. Then Beyond Good and Evil shows up a few years later with a thoroughly heavy and dark sound, more like a metal band than rock. Their recent output kind of draws on their earlier ideas, particularly Choice of Weapon with its recall of Native American themes and mythos. For me, they were always hard to pin down and they really deserve more credit for their accomplishments than they generally deserve.

  • @jimshorts5970
    @jimshorts5970 3 года назад +4

    My ‘go to’ cassette for ripping through the city delivering pizzas back in the day. Good times!

  • @dwade6322
    @dwade6322 3 года назад +24

    Rick Rubin has saved more careers than anyone. Total genius.

    • @Mike_Jones1980
      @Mike_Jones1980 3 года назад +5

      Not to mention how many he helped start.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +1

      I'm not sure The Cult are a band he saved. He raised their star, sure. But, he also made a record that wasn't really who The Cult were, and the AC/DC middle America generic rock fan Electric appealed too. It set them up with an audience who expected the same stuff, over and over. Ian and Billy weren't going to permanently water themselves down for that. Sonic Temple moved back towards The Cult being themselves. And, the audience Rubin tried to cultivate started to vanish. This is why if you are going to pander to audience that's not normally yours, you stick with it and ride it for life. Radically different records tailored to radically different audiences screws up your existing audience and the more you jump audiences in search of the most lucrative, you create potential for people to lose interest because you are trying to transition between styles/audiences. Only a few bands have jumped almost radically around and survived. They are the ones though that exist just for money, like KISS.

  • @phillipfubar8869
    @phillipfubar8869 3 года назад +6

    It's a shame they never made another album that sounded like Electric. It really suited Ian's voice.

    • @seagullpoet
      @seagullpoet Год назад

      You can say that about GNR too.

  • @issyjas3309
    @issyjas3309 2 года назад +4

    Love is one of the most amazing albums ever recorded

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +3

      Go pick up PEACE. It's the original take on the Electric material with Steve Brown, LOVE's producer. It's The Cult. Not the corporate trash that Rubin barfed out on Electric.

    • @ProgrammistMusic
      @ProgrammistMusic Год назад +1

      @@zoso1980 i like the Peace album a lot, especially the versions of Wild Flower, Electric Ocean and Outlaw. Nevertheless, i understand why the band did not like those versions, since they are just too overloaded with too many layers and echoes. "Love" was the perfect mix for what they did at the time, but the Peace versions just did not fit. While not being a big fan of "Electric" i have to admit, that Rick Rubin managed to strip The Cult down to it's essence, whether you like it or not. The music and the songs are great in any way performed. And until today, no Cult album sounds like another and that's quite an achievement.

  • @veerchasm1
    @veerchasm1 3 года назад +12

    Electric is their best album IMO

  • @ERICF66
    @ERICF66 3 года назад +6

    This is exactly what I figured out all those years ago. Love was their pinnacle as far as I was concerned. As a club goth lite kid in the mid eighties, I really liked their darker music and overall goth style and was completly pissed off that they changed so drastically to the denim, raggedy hair, cock rock style and music. When Electric came out I was done with them.

  • @drewbaisden3475
    @drewbaisden3475 11 месяцев назад +1

    That guitar tone that Duffy got on that album is maybe my favorite ever. Electric is why I started to play again, I had just moved to Dallas and still doing too many drugs and Electric came out and was what I needed to hear. LP Standard straight into a Marshall. I needed a hobby and Dallas had massive guitar shows, I bought a white LP Custom and JCM800. Such an underrated album, those riffs, Astbury sounded great. Took alot of balls to rerecord that album with Rubin, stripped down like that. It alienated alot of their old fans and they had to know it would. Now I have 16 vintage guitars, 4 old Marshalls, even a drum kit. I'm old now and haven't played in years but the late 80's Dallas was a blast and the one album of that time for me is Electric.

  • @ericbute835
    @ericbute835 3 года назад +2

    The " Manor Sessions " was put out on CD in a white boxset in 1990/91. It also had the singles, b-sides and live tracks from that era. It was an official release.

    • @tristandunn4628
      @tristandunn4628 Год назад +1

      They did "The Manor Sessions" which was the versions of tunes that ended up on Electric (minus "Aphrodisiac Jacket" and "Peace Dog"). There was also another disc in that set (the name escapes me) that had the tunes that were totally scrapped (Zap City, Groove Co, Conquistador and Love Trooper). That gave you nearly all of it. I think it was the Rare Cult box set that finally gave you the two missing pieces of the jigsaw

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      That album is also known as PEACE. Steve Brown (LOVE) produced it. It's the full fleshed out album that was intended as the follow-up to LOVE, but got shelved so they could chase US $. It's worth every penny. It's The Cult without all the phony corporate US audience pandering imagery and mix.

  • @v2vroth
    @v2vroth 3 года назад +21

    Billy Duffy 🤘🏻😎🤘🏻🎸🎶

  • @HappyHermitt
    @HappyHermitt 2 года назад +1

    Thank you Angelle for turning me on to Electric. I bought it and I wore it out.

  • @tobysgamingworld1550
    @tobysgamingworld1550 2 года назад +1

    I love the shot of the sad looking guy sitting on the steps shaking his head when the voice over mentions “they fired their British managers” lol. It just struck me as funny.

  • @nonprogrediestregredi1711
    @nonprogrediestregredi1711 3 года назад +2

    I remember reading a review of Electric in Hit Parader in '87 that praised the album. I'd only heard of the Cult before that. It prompted me to pick up the album and I'm REALLY glad I did; that album kicks ass!

  • @truckstop4873
    @truckstop4873 3 года назад +3

    I was trucking through the desert blasting that CD last night.

  • @nolagospeltracts8264
    @nolagospeltracts8264 3 года назад +38

    "Love" is a great album!

    • @cris_261
      @cris_261 3 года назад +4

      Be sure to get a copy of the "omnibus edition" of Love. It's a 4 disc set that includes the album, a remixes and B sides disc, a disc of demos, and a recording of a concert from 1985 (I think).

    • @MegaEvildan
      @MegaEvildan 3 года назад +6

      Hell yeah. And “Love” is one of their best songs.

    • @jevinday
      @jevinday 3 года назад +4

      she sells sanctuary is a fucking awesome song

    • @dirkriley3004
      @dirkriley3004 3 года назад +1

      Amen !

  • @bobthebear1246
    @bobthebear1246 3 года назад +5

    Great video, thanks. Someone lent me the 7" vinyl single of "She Sells Sanctuary" in late-1986. I played it, liked it, and played it a few more times, liking it a little bit more each time. It was seemingly a bit out there, but it was catchy, and I loved Ian Astbury's voice. Then I was over a friend's house a few months later and we're watching MTV when the video for the brand-new "Love Removal Machine" came-on. He had already seen it once and was wondering what I would think.
    I was fucking blown away.
    I almost couldn't believe it was the same band. I was like, Holy shit, The Cult are like AC/DC now?! YEAH!! 🤘🏻 Ended-up getting *ELECTRIC* on CD a couple of years later, right at the same time that I got the even better *Sonic Temple* which of course was an incredible combination of the sounds of *Love* and *Electric* although even heavier than the latter.
    Speaking of *Sonic Temple,* could you please do a making-of video for it?? Thank you in advance!! 🤘🏻

    • @ddobry21
      @ddobry21 3 года назад +1

      Yes, a Sonic Temple video would be awesome.

  • @fokeyjo
    @fokeyjo 3 года назад +1

    Loved the management sacking bit, with the guy on the steps shaking his head :D

  • @francisswings
    @francisswings 3 года назад +15

    “Electric” doesn’t get the credit it deserves. Just fuckin’ solid from beginning to end. “BTBW” is a little weak, but other than that, I play this record a lot. It’s hard not to marvel at how goddamn great it is. “Electric” is to records, what “Conan The Barbarian” is to movies: It’s hiding in plain sight. It’s so badass it almost disguises how glorious it is.

    • @infowazz
      @infowazz 2 года назад +1

      oh man i was hooked on this album for a long time

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      It's a sell-out record that re-imaged them to compete in the US with GNR and AC/DC. It was an artistic disaster and remains a shining example of 'don't throw away everything you were to chase dollars.' It may have sold hotcakes to the butt-rock crowd, but in the end, it made The Cult a 3rd tier butt-rock band in the states instead of the alternative band they really were, and by '91 their mainstream days were over thanks to Rubin and chasing corporate rock dollars by Rubin emulating AC/DC. It's a massive fail changing genres to the point you fuck up your career down the road. The Cult should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Rubin's corporate screw job robbed them out of that and their legacy, IMHO. The record that deserves the praise and respect is PEACE. That's the album that got shelved, so they could bring in Rubin. Steve Brown (LOVE) produced it. And it's everything The Cult ever was, and more. It's them to the bone, not a phony corporate job. PEACE is the legacy record, not Electric's corporate pandering trash.

    • @francisswings
      @francisswings Год назад

      I think your description applies more to “Sonic Temple” than “Electric”. It’s not fair to refer to “Electric” as anything in the realm of sellout or, especially, butt rock. With “Electric” the songs are just so goddamn good that even if those things were true, I mean who gives a shit? Listening to that record is an absolute delight and I think your preference for the record before Rubin got a hold of it is maybe steering you towards your contempt for it. Get “Let There Be Rock” by AC/DC, get any Didjits record, listen to the 45 of Guns N’ Roses “It’s So Easy”, spin an Alice Donut record then put the “Electric” cherry on top of all of it. Them shits is just straight up bad fucking ass.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      @@francisswings Sonic Temple moved the needle back to Billy and Ian being themselves without the forced Rubin-esque production and neutering of The Cult sound for butt-rock audiences. There is far more authenticity in Sonic Temple than Electric. Sure Sonic Temple, was a mainstream album, too, but it was far more authentic then the brazen and radical re-imaging of a band that destroyed what they were to cater to an audience that The Cult wasn't about. Speaking of authenticity, Electric Ocean on PEACE for example, is iconic. On Electric it is a hum-drum AC/DC style rocker and is boring AF. Groove Co. on PEACE is an impressive stretch into new artistic territory. On Electric, you get an embarrassing cover of Born To Be Wild - the most un-Cult thing they ever did. I don't think Ian and Billy even played it on the 'Electric 25 year' tour, to show you what they thought of it. The fact you mention a listening session that includes GNR and AC/DC, then Electric makes my point. No one would say, 'hey, I'm going to listen to Back & Black, Appetite and then LOVE.' You may think Electric is glorious. But, artistically the songs were pared down to the point that even though Billy, Ian and Jamie were performing, it wasn't The Cult. It was the greatest put-on by a band, label and producer trying to emulate trendy trash while throwing away an established band's own iconic sound and identity. Rubin did that and you got a trash record for it. I'd propose you disliked Sonic Temple because it moved away from the corporate butt-rock hash of Electric, and started to move back towards who The Cult really were. Rubin may have helped The Cult go mainstream, but long term, associating them with GNR or AC/DC, that wasn't their lane, and it screwed up their identity in the states. Were they a butt-rock outfit or a first-rate alternative and post-punk band? Pre-Electric they were the latter, and partially returned to it after Electric. However, there are many people who base their opinion of them on Electric and, I close with when you hop genres in a big way like was done on Electric, it confuses people to who you are and what your band is about. Had they released PEACE instead of Electric, they'd be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and they've had transitioned into the 90s grunge era far better. Associating with corporate rock and taking its flag with Electric got them swept aside in the '91, because even many industry types thought they were the butt-rock outfit Rubin tried to push. It's a damn tragedy. So, you'll forgive me that I don't include The Cult as Rubin success. He pushed a band to be something they weren't, and it cost them dearly in the long haul.

  • @stew6662
    @stew6662 3 года назад +3

    I liked their first two albums as well as some of the southern death cult songs like Maya. You can see a lot is their early performance on RUclips during this period. While I continued to buy their albums up until “beyond good and evil” I always preferred the earlier stuff.
    They were talented enough to switch their sound, but I always felt they decided to chase the money

  • @kudukilla
    @kudukilla 3 года назад +2

    On the Billy Duffy episode of Pursuit of Tone, he talked about recording Electric. On first day in studio Rick Rubin said here’s your Les Paul, there’s a Marshal amp, go play.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +1

      Day 1 of the corporate make-over on that trash record. Most people know Billy is a Gretsch man. And is again, a Gretsch man.

    • @rodneystanger1651
      @rodneystanger1651 6 месяцев назад

      @@zoso1980 Agree. And Rubin is a hack. Ian's looks are what sold that band at that point, because of mtv, and Manor Sessions versions would have sold much better. Rubin's production was cheesy as shit.

  • @routinehead2481
    @routinehead2481 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely LOVE this album. I remember buying it when it came out just by the looks of the banner on the record store wall. Never heard a note by them in the previous. Since then I have bought it at least six times on various formats. There is not a dud on the entire album. Still one of my three favorite albums in the entire universe of music.

  • @planetmusicsamos
    @planetmusicsamos 3 года назад +1

    Electric is a GREAT album and one of the best rock albums of all times !!!

  • @AndyTanguay
    @AndyTanguay 2 года назад +1

    This is embarrassing, one of my all time favorite albums, and I didn't know it was a Rick Rubin album. Makes sense now.

  • @kmjr2400
    @kmjr2400 3 года назад +4

    My favorite album by the Cult!!!

  • @denisefreitas6727
    @denisefreitas6727 3 года назад +9

    Great story. I like Electric, but Love us an iconic album.

    • @rnrtruestories
      @rnrtruestories  3 года назад +3

      I like the peace sessions too definitely underrated band

    • @cris_261
      @cris_261 3 года назад

      @Christopher Bingham Great opening track!

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      @@rnrtruestories PEACE is actually an unsung iconic record, IMHO.

  • @pamelahinchee8012
    @pamelahinchee8012 3 года назад +6

    I saw them on this tour and Guns and Rose's opened for them. Great Show. In my top 5...

  • @Chief1987
    @Chief1987 3 года назад +2

    Southern Death Cult was their first name.
    Great video :)

  • @leonkennedy4935
    @leonkennedy4935 3 года назад +1

    Thank you! I love The Cult. I knew some of this info but your research is phenomenal.

  • @jefferysteen1041
    @jefferysteen1041 3 года назад +10

    Love was good but their debut Dreamtime was a great album!I have to admit that Electric was very good and it's aged very well.I saw them on tour,Guns n Rose's opened up and they kicked butt(The Cult not GnR!)!

    • @pamelahinchee8012
      @pamelahinchee8012 3 года назад +2

      Me too! At the Paramount in Seattle. Ran in to them at The Cloud Room in The Camlin Hotel where both Bands were staying. EPIC SHOW!

    • @jefferysteen1041
      @jefferysteen1041 3 года назад +1

      @@pamelahinchee8012 Greetings from Seattle!I was at that show!Who would have thought G n' R would become the next big thing!But they did!

    • @pamelahinchee8012
      @pamelahinchee8012 3 года назад +3

      Wow! Small world. We saw History! Did you attend the Jane's show with MLB and Soundgarden opening? That show was amazing! I was backstage and again drinking at The Cloudroom before and after. History AGAIN.

    • @jefferysteen1041
      @jefferysteen1041 3 года назад +1

      @@pamelahinchee8012 No..I just went to see my favorite band at the time The Cult..it was the second time I have seen them,first when they opened for Billy Idol.

    • @pamelahinchee8012
      @pamelahinchee8012 3 года назад +2

      @@jefferysteen1041 I saw them open for Billy Idol too, I just don't remember it that well. My Bad. Wasn't that at the Key Arena????

  • @HistoriasOficiales
    @HistoriasOficiales 3 года назад +6

    Nice video!! Have you ever considered making a video about the Nirvana and Guns N' Roses beef during the early 90s?

    • @rnrtruestories
      @rnrtruestories  3 года назад +4

      Yes it will be a super long long video

  • @blackpeter70
    @blackpeter70 3 года назад +1

    Love and Electric were both popular with "the cool kids" (not me at the time - I was a Peter Gabriel/Dire Straits man), and you'd always see them walking around at High School at the time. I didn't actually start listening and loving it until a few years later, and never looked back. I've seen them play live, really cool. Astbury's a bit of a plank, but I love the music.

  • @ministerofdarkness
    @ministerofdarkness 3 года назад +2

    Rock N Roll Masterpiece! PLAY LOUD

  • @chrisbridston3438
    @chrisbridston3438 3 года назад +5

    The drums on electric ⚡️.. I loved this album so much I took it to school to show off when it first came out .. along with the cure 3 imaginary boys .. two of my biggest 80s albums before Depeche Mode 101 came out.. now this was REAL alternative .. which used to be called post modern

    • @davidtingley9978
      @davidtingley9978 3 года назад +3

      Rubin knew how to dial in a near natural drum tone in a decade where bombast was often the rule. Killer drum tone on South of Heaven as well.

    • @chrisbridston3438
      @chrisbridston3438 3 года назад +1

      Honestly sonic temple was my absolute jam .. bob rock as much as he’s the Michael Bay of production does know how to get this band to play well besides Rubin

    • @chrisbridston3438
      @chrisbridston3438 3 года назад

      Also loved beyond good and evil , and weapon of choice :) both versions

  • @krisdoyle3031
    @krisdoyle3031 3 года назад

    I noticed the change in sound between those albums, but wasn't sure what made them do it , I assumed it was from New influence in music not management. Cool ..I love learning new pieces of the story

  • @palebluedotstudios
    @palebluedotstudios 3 года назад +4

    Love it. Thanks for this!

  • @karlmoles6530
    @karlmoles6530 3 года назад +3

    Rick Rubin made, and saved a lot of careers. The list of awesome albums made under his direction is long and enviable. the Cult, The Four Horsemen, Trouble, The Jayhawks, Masters of Reality and many others all made their masterpieces with Rubin. He gave bands like AC/DC the best albums they'd had in years. Man's a genius.

    • @davidrpriest
      @davidrpriest 3 года назад

      Don't forget Johnny Cash. American Recordings was huge comeback from someone who people thought might be past his better days.

    • @chrisfournier6144
      @chrisfournier6144 3 года назад

      Yeah he did work with the Jayhawks as well didn’t he? Another great and editing band! Thanks for reminding me!

    • @vr6swp
      @vr6swp 3 года назад

      Rubin keeps things simple. And the simpler it is, the better it works

    • @aprylwhitten5189
      @aprylwhitten5189 2 месяца назад

      Don't forget the Beastie Boys!

  • @alexroberts9349
    @alexroberts9349 3 года назад +3

    It was a GREAT album!!

  • @kennyowens2189
    @kennyowens2189 3 года назад +1

    Fuckin great album and that tour was fuckin amazing they opened up for Billy idol and blew him away

  • @julianmoreau3281
    @julianmoreau3281 3 года назад +3

    Top 5 band for me

  • @LetsGoMetsGo33
    @LetsGoMetsGo33 3 года назад +3

    Re: title- No. While "electric" was awesome, "love" was already a smash.

  • @charlieryan1736
    @charlieryan1736 3 года назад

    Thanks for another interesting video

  • @drewsollars2239
    @drewsollars2239 3 года назад

    It's kind of their Electric Warrior. Haven't heard it in awhile but I wore out the cassette back in the day.

  • @stevekonbass
    @stevekonbass 3 года назад +1

    Electric... awesome album.

  • @starkillerclub3755
    @starkillerclub3755 3 года назад +6

    During the hair band hey day, along comes the Rick Rubin produced Cult LP "Electric" it may or may not saved the Cult's career, but it sure gave the over produced, over achieving, over hyped, hair metal scene a kick in the ass, as did the Rick Rubin produced self titled Danzig and Danzig ll / Lucifige albums a couple of years later.

  • @neilpye6089
    @neilpye6089 3 года назад +1

    Never heard the peace lp I thought that only a few of the songs came out on the box set so I will have to track down a copy of the double CD. Electric is a great lp.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      PEACE is The Cult. Highly recommend it. Electric is Rubin's vision of Billy, Jamie and Ian as corporate US butt-rockers. If you like LOVE and DREAMTIME, PEACE is everything they were and more in that era.

  • @midohiobuckeyeaorwarrior9743
    @midohiobuckeyeaorwarrior9743 3 года назад

    Hey Sid, did you forget to upload the video with this week's clues on Sunday? Was looking forward to it.

  • @RighteousBrother
    @RighteousBrother 3 года назад +1

    When I was at college back in 87, Electric was THE album of that year, not a duff track on it, probably the bands crowning achievement.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      No, that would be LOVE or Dreamtime. To the butt-rock crowd, they like Electric but nothing before.

  • @anthonygil1522
    @anthonygil1522 Год назад

    Aphrodisiac Jacket still gives me goosebumps to this very day!
    I saw them open up for Billy Idol at the Cow Palace in San francisco and they blew Billy out of the water
    so bad that people actually threw shoes at Billy at the begining of his set Because the Cult had Rocked so much harder... Billy eventually won the crowd over and had a decent show, But the night belonged to The Cult!

  • @ConradAllStar
    @ConradAllStar 6 месяцев назад

    Love Electric. Love this video. Would be even better if the noisy background track was removed from the video.

  • @sixsentsoldiers
    @sixsentsoldiers 2 года назад

    Rueben is to Electric as Bob Rock is to the black album. Those 2 guys captured what the band was live on record.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      I saw The Cult in 2022 in New Orleans. That stripped down, 'hey, we're going to sound like AC/DC' was definitely not their vibe. They had the fuller rich sound. Not excessively thin like Electric. A middle point between Electric and Peace mixes. Electric doesn't reflect their live gigs today, I can attest to that.

  • @amaccama3267
    @amaccama3267 3 года назад +5

    Great story Sidd. ❤🤘✌

  • @davidmreyes77
    @davidmreyes77 3 года назад +3

    The follow up Sonic Temple was produced big. Had big songs… but they never quite reached that height again.

  • @MENFUSSMIKE
    @MENFUSSMIKE 3 года назад

    Man I wore ELECTRIC the phuck out when I was in high school. It's held up extremely well.

  • @---___----_
    @---___----_ 3 года назад +6

    Amazing album!

  • @lobohunter4909
    @lobohunter4909 3 года назад +1

    More cult stories please 🙏

  • @mr.e8432
    @mr.e8432 3 года назад

    I had a tape of the manor sessions. The songs sounded like leftovers from the love album but I like them, they didn’t sound bad.

  • @krasteff
    @krasteff Год назад +3

    I think Electric was the wrong direction for them. The Manor sessions were in essence a pre-grunge sound and many grunge bands directly copied Ian's use of sustained vocals and the whole sound. Had they gone in that direction, they would have been THE originators of grunge, although according to some, they indeed were. Also it is said here that they started as DC/ in gothic genre, but their true gothic period was as SDC, the first incarnation of the one and the same band.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +2

      Yes, Electric is inauthentic to who The Cult are. It was a crass repackaging for American dollars. It damaged their career path and confused audiences as to who they were. Are they an AC/DC clone with a guy who wears a pirate hat, or are they the band that had a layered and interesting mystical sound of She Sells Sanctuary? Without the heavy-handed corporate reimaging and Rubin's attempt to make Back In Black by The Cult, their creative arc and audience retention would've been much more solid.

  • @terrypmusic
    @terrypmusic 3 года назад

    Great stuff, keep it up

  • @jlobiafra
    @jlobiafra 3 года назад +1

    I remember the goths hated electric when it came out lol. I digged it but lots of my friends hated it. Sonic temple is when they lost me

  • @anfrankogezamartincic1161
    @anfrankogezamartincic1161 2 года назад

    Rick Rubin saved their career. Ever heard the first version of ELECTRIC? It was recycled LOVE sound,you can find it under the name ELECTRIC PEACE

  • @spiritualarchitect4276
    @spiritualarchitect4276 3 года назад

    My favorites:
    1. Beyond Good And Evil
    2. Love
    3. Dreamtime
    4. Ceremony
    5. Peace
    6. Hidden City
    7. Sonic Temple
    8. The Cult
    9. Choice Of Weapon
    10. Born Into This
    11. Death Cult
    12. Southern Death Cult
    ~see what I did there~

    • @charliegeorge9393
      @charliegeorge9393 2 года назад

      no can't see a link?

    • @spiritualarchitect4276
      @spiritualarchitect4276 2 года назад

      @@charliegeorge9393 This video is about Electric. But I replaced Electric with Peace, which I like much better.

  • @alemmingsdeath
    @alemmingsdeath 2 года назад +1

    I remember hearing Electric for the first time and thinking "why the hell is AC/DC on this record?!?".

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +1

      Yup. The record felt like The Cult playing their songs in AC/DC style mix. Turned me off. I have nearly all their albums, EXCEPT Electric. It felt phony and a crass repackaging for MTV and American radio. The Peace original mixes are much more satisfying. They are, all things said, The Cult being The Cult.

  • @xwhite2020
    @xwhite2020 3 года назад +2

    I saw them once then went back the following night and saw them again.

  • @pamelahinchee8012
    @pamelahinchee8012 3 года назад +4

    Great Album!

  • @p1sstoph3
    @p1sstoph3 3 года назад +1

    you mean initially called "Southern Death Cult"? that was their name before Death cult, btw

  • @nolarocks
    @nolarocks 3 года назад

    I have the original Manor Sessions disc - it precedes the box set you mention.

  • @adrianfleming3437
    @adrianfleming3437 3 года назад +2

    I still like love more than electric but it is a killer album.

  • @hobbyable1
    @hobbyable1 3 года назад +1

    Steve Brown did a really good job on the original version of Electric (check it out) but its not the sound the band wanted. For me Sonic Temple remains by far the best thing they ever did.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +1

      I think had they gone with PEACE, it would've been huge and iconic just like LOVE. Electric Ocean from PEACE would've been an undisputed classic.

  • @toddbefield1100
    @toddbefield1100 17 дней назад

    Prefer early SDC up to Love...more alternative/psychedelic sound. However the hard rock Electric album did make the band huge in America and much more commercial. Sonic Temple was the last album i got back in the day too as an older guy now.

  • @scottmactavish9716
    @scottmactavish9716 3 года назад

    Don't know if it was Rick or the label that prompted it, but they also included a pretty damn good version of Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild".

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      I thought that was the absolute corniest non-Cult thing they ever did. It was laughable. It's the perfect symbol of Rubin's re-imaging them as an American rock band. The whole thing stunk. Took a great band and wrecked them for corporate sales, only to have their mainstream success evaporate by '91. That's what happens when you throw away what made you great to chase GNR.

  • @carlojones833
    @carlojones833 6 месяцев назад

    Love and Electric so different, its like 2 different bands.

  • @tragicallymalicious1
    @tragicallymalicious1 3 года назад

    I first heard this playing in a record store and thought it was Aerosmith. I asked the guy working and he told me different. Sounded good anyway.

  • @thesean3194
    @thesean3194 3 года назад +1

    I like the Electric album, but if the Cult kept the same tone and feel of the Dreamtime and Love albums they would have been bigger than U2.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад +1

      Steve Brown said the same. If Ian and Billy had stayed on their artistic evolution without trying to cash in on America, they'd be much more iconic and have an iconic sound. Instead of the post-punk shifting to arena rock and pandering to the AC/DC crowd.

  • @rokarolla
    @rokarolla 3 года назад +1

    Does Billy Duffy play on License to Ill?

    • @dgen73
      @dgen73 3 года назад

      Kerry King played on "license to ill".

  • @RestrainingHollywood
    @RestrainingHollywood 3 года назад +2

    Electric is Great but Love is still their Best Album. Sonic Temple a close 2nd.

  • @ericsilberstein667
    @ericsilberstein667 Год назад

    Great alt band.

  • @hellbenderdesign
    @hellbenderdesign 3 года назад

    I would never have imagined that it all began with 'Cookiepuss'.

  • @jamesledzepplin7839
    @jamesledzepplin7839 3 года назад +1

    i have one of those "alleged" bootlegs

  • @jefferysteen1041
    @jefferysteen1041 3 года назад +5

    You do alot of videos featuring The Cult..that's cool but how about my favorite band Queensryche!

  • @christopherbinns3040
    @christopherbinns3040 3 года назад

    Love The Cult,and Electric is great.....but I actually prefer the original Peace album.

  • @barpsoon3031
    @barpsoon3031 3 года назад +4

    Love removal machine=Start me up.

    • @xwhite2020
      @xwhite2020 3 года назад

      Everythings been done before.

  • @hadara69
    @hadara69 3 года назад +1

    I have a rare CD of “The Manor Sessions”. It’s like “Love” but without the Gothy mystique.
    They made the right move rerecording it all for “Electric”, which is still my favorite of theirs. It's cool that the Beastie Boys inspired that!

  • @jimboyle4934
    @jimboyle4934 3 года назад +2

    I remember when I first started hearing these guys, I wondered why the DJ's were abbreviating Blue Oyster Cults name LOL

  • @humanhighway0
    @humanhighway0 5 месяцев назад

    I prefer the sound of the Manor Sessions.

  • @charliegeorge9393
    @charliegeorge9393 2 года назад

    Have to say you have loads of Cult stories? Are you a big fan?

  • @fiddleback1568
    @fiddleback1568 3 года назад

    Ian Ashbury wanted to be part of the synthetic fake "Seattle Alternative" scene. But he couldn't, because he was considered part of the Metal scene.

    • @zoso1980
      @zoso1980 Год назад

      When just a few years before grunge, when you make a record that's corporate through and through with Rick Rubin, then Sonic Temple drops and it's an arena rock record. It's kinda hard. If they'd stayed on their creative arc with the DREAMTIME-LOVE-PEACE and retained that indie creative element in the front, Ian would've been celebrated as a grunge hero. They went and chased American dollars, and in doing that became boxed into the corporate rock world and, which ultimately led to them going dormant after Ceremony. Ian and Billy should've been hailed as Alternative heros. Instead, at the time, they go pushed aside with most of the bombastic arena rock. Funny how choices in 1986/1987 affected how they were perceived 5 years later.