Mother's Milk (Parental Advisory) / Red Hot Chili Peppers
| Song Title | Time | Play | Price | Download | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALBUM TITLE >> Mother's Milk (Parental Advisory) | 77:55 | $11.49 | Buy Album | ||
| Good Time Boys | 5:01 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Higher Ground | 3:22 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Subway To Venus | 4:25 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Magic Johnson | 2:57 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Nobody Weird Like Me | 3:49 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Knock Me Down | 3:43 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Taste The Pain | 4:31 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Stone Cold Bush | 3:05 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Fire | 2:03 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Pretty Little Ditty | 3:07 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Punk Rock Classic | 1:46 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Sexy Mexican Maid | 3:22 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Johnny, Kick A Hole In The Sky | 5:20 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Song That Made Us What We Are Today (Demo) | 12:56 |
|
$1.69 | ||
| Knock Me Down (Original Long Version) | 4:44 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Sexy Mexican Maid (Original Long Version) | 3:59 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Salute To Kareem (Demo) | 3:24 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Castles Made Of Sand (Live) | 3:19 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Crosstown Traffic (Live) | 2:53 |
|
$1.29 | ||
| Buy entire album $11.49 | |||||
''Mother's Milk'' is the fourth studio album by American alternative rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers, released on August 16, 1989 on EMI. After the death of guitarist Hillel Slovak and subsequent departure of drummer Jack Irons, vocalist Anthony Kiedis and bassist Flea regrouped with the addition of guitarist John Frusciante and drummer Chad Smith. Frusciante significantly altered the band's sound by placing more emphasis on melody than rhythm, which had dominated the band's previous material.
The record was a greater commercial success than the Chili Peppers' past three studio albums combined. ''Mother's Milk'' peaked at number 52 on the ''Billboard'' 200 and received widespread recognition for singles "Knock Me Down" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Higher Ground". The album became their first gold record in early 1990, and was the first step for the band in achieving international success. Although the record was not met with the same positive critical reception that its predecessor ''The Uplift Mofo Party Plan'' (1987) had garnered, ''Mother's Milk'', according to Amy Hanson of Allmusic, "turned the tide and transformed the band from underground funk-rocking rappers to mainstream bad boys with seemingly very little effort".
















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