John Frusciante Discografia. Smile From The Streets You Hold (1997) Enter a Uh. Smile From The Strets You Hold.
Rating site[edit]
Why on earth is the rating site PitchFork media being cited at all? For one the information on the rating page is completely wrong, and it's not a credible source whatsoever. Remove it, it has no right to be on this page, especially considering the ridiculous score the album was given - 0/10. Are you insane? It's brilliant, and if you don't like it (as to give it a 0) then you just don't get it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.87.235.102 (talk) 08:31, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
As stated on Wikipedia:WikiProject Albums, Wikipedia no longer suggests listing reviews in the infobox, anyway, but instead writing about them in a 'Reception' section. Why, though, do you believe Pitchfork media is 'not a credible source whatsoever'? Personally, I think the fact that the album has received both a 0/10 and a 10/10 rating is both fascinating and fitting for such a jarring, wild, frightening, and beautiful set of songs and deserves to be discussed. (PerriAlexis (talk) 19:05, 28 June 2010 (UTC))
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Smile from the Streets You Hold is the second solo album by John Frusciante. The record was released during a time when Frusciante was not performing with the Red Hot Chili Peppers. It was released on August 26, 1997 on Birdman Records, while Frusciante was still addicted to drugs. The record is an amalgamation of songs from various periods of time, mainly extras not included on Frusciante's debut Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt (1994); included, however, are several tracks recorded around 1996 and 'A Fall Thru the Ground' from 1988.
Recording[edit]
Many songs from Smile from the Streets You Hold were recorded when Frusciante was still with the Chili Peppers and are from the same period as his previous solo album, Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt. One of the earliest songs to be recorded is A Fall Thru the Ground, which was recorded in 1987.
In a 1997 interview with Guitar Player, Frusciante claimed to have maintained active communication with the spirit world during the album's recording phase:
The title song was a very intense moment, because I was having verbal communication with the spirits while I was recording; and I started crying at the end of it. The spirits give you ideas for things, and what's important to them is what's important to me. I'm much more concerned with my fame in their world than with my fame in this one. That's why it's been difficult for me to adjust to being alive at all.[4]
Actor River Phoenix, a good friend of Frusciante and the rest of the Chili Peppers, is featured on two tracks, 'Height Down' (originally titled 'Soul Removal'), and 'Well I've Been' (originally titled 'Bought Her Soul').[5] Both songs were supposed to be released on Niandra LaDes and Usually Just a T-Shirt, but were pulled by request of Phoenix's family after Phoenix's death.
'I May Again Know John', 'Enter A Uh', & the second part of 'Smile From The Streets You Hold' were recorded in late 1994 while Frusciante was living in New York City.[6]
'More', 'I Can't See Until I See Your Eyes', and 'Estress' were recorded to a cassette on a boombox in 1996. Frusciante's poor health is apparent in his voice.
Release[edit]
Frusciante had Smile from the Streets You Hold and Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt removed from record stores in 1998 after rejoining the Red Hot Chili Peppers because he felt uncomfortable with them being available to the public. He is quoted as saying that he released Smile from the Streets You Hold for drug money. Niandra Lades was eventually re-issued and in the early 2000s, Frusciante stated he will one day re-release Smile from the Streets You Hold, although this has yet to happen as of 2019.
There is also a second print of Smile from the Streets You Hold available. The songs on the second print are much lower in sound quality and have frequent hiss and hum, most notable in 'Nigger Song' which obscures the recording somewhat. It has been speculated that the original release had had the recordings professionally mastered, but the second release used Frusciante's untampered tapes by mistake.
The title song 'Smile from the Streets You Hold', is split in two separate tracks. During a 2001 solo performance, Frusciante said the song was about a friend, with the first half written while the person was alive and the second part being written after their death. Fans have speculated that the song may be about River Phoenix, although this has never been confirmed.
The second print also includes an extended version of 'Life's a Bath'. Another notable difference between the 17-track version and the 18-track version is that on the former, John can be heard taking a hit from a bong on 'For Air'.
Track listing[edit]
All songs written by John Frusciante.
18-track versions[edit]Smile From The Streets You Hold
All songs written by John Frusciante.
Smile From The Streets You Hold TorrentReferences[edit]
Smile From The Streets You Hold Track List
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