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Here Come the Brides (album)

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Here Come the Brides
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 9, 2004
GenreHard rock, alternative metal, post-grunge, glam metal
Length45:49
LabelSanctuary Records
ProducerStevo Bruno
Brides of Destruction chronology
Here Come the Brides
(2004)
Runaway Brides
(2005)

Here Come the Brides is the debut album by Brides of Destruction released via Sanctuary Records on March 9, 2004. It is their most successful album being the only one to have a charting on the Billboard 200, it is also the only album that features bassist Nikki Sixx who would leave the band to rejoin Mötley Crüe for their reunion tour in 2005, and also the only album to feature John Corabi. The album's only single, "Shut The Fuck Up" failed to chart due to little airplay. "Only Get So Far" was originally written by Nikki Sixx for Tim McGraw and Faith Hill.

Background and recording

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Brides of Destruction was formed by Nikki Sixx and Tracii Guns in Los Angeles in 2002 initially with the name Cockstar after Mötley Crüe went on hiatus and Tracii left L.A. Guns. The lineup was rounded off with singer London LeGrand, keyboardist Adam Hamilton and Kris Kohls of Adema on drums. They were advised by radio programmers that the name Cockstar wouldn't be announced on air. They briefly adopted the moniker Motordog before settling on Brides of Destruction after it was suggested to Sixx by a friend.[1][2] Hamilton left shortly after and was replaced by John Corabi, also formerly of Mötley Crüe, who became the band's second guitarist. They entered the studio with producer Stevo Bruno to begin recording. Kohls left the band in early 2003 but is still credited in the album for the songs "I Got a Gun", "Natural Born Killers", "Revolution" and "Only Get So Far" despite Sixx stating that his replacement, Scot Coogan, had re-recorded the drum parts for them:

'A little update to some of you. We [BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION] just finished the last set of songs... We went in with six, came out with five done, plus the four from before. We have three that just need a little work to finish as well. Scot [Coogan] played drums to the older songs replacing [former B.O.D. and current ADEMA drummer] Kris Kohl's drums so it all sounds like it's from the same band/sessions.'[3]

After recording his guitar parts for all the songs, Corabi left the Brides stating he wanted to pursue a solo career as his reasons. In an interview years later Corabi cited some tension with Guns and little writing input contributing to his decision to leave:

'To be perfectly honest with you, I get along with Nikki [Sixx] splendidly, but when I left the band I told Nikki that there was gonna be some egos involved, I don't wanna say who, but I just said there's a member in this band that I just do not get along with, that I do not write well with. First of all they basically told me that they don't need me to write at all, so I was like I'm not into that situation, and I told Nikki "Dude, I love you to death. I known that you and I can write a great record and so I'm out.". And as it turned out he just sent Bruce [Kulick] an email like a week ago and said "Tell Corabi I'm really sorry about the Brides of Destruction thing and he was right." Because Nikki is having an issue now with the person that I was having an issue with… So we'll just leave it at that.'[4][5]

Sixx's future Sixx:A.M. bandmate James Michael features on the album, co-writing "Brace Yourself", "Natural Born Killers" and "Only Get So Far". Justin Nichols and Grammy nominated songwriter Kevin Kadish are also given writing credits on the song "Life" which sees drummer Scot Coogan performing lead vocals. After recording was finished, the album was mixed by Grammy Award-winning producer and mixer Steve Thompson. Initially it looked like the album would only see a Japanese release after signing a deal with Universal Records and failing to find a label for an American/European release. Due to this it looked likely the band were to split[6] until they signed a deal with Sanctuary Records[7] and set a release date that was pushed back a number of times[8] eventually being released on March 9, 2004. The band chose "Shut the Fuck Up" as their first single and recorded a video with director Paul Brown.[9] The song was chosen as a protest against politicians discussing the war against terror. Despite the fact that the track was edited for radio, the song did not receive as much airplay as the band would have liked and the track failed to chart.

Release

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Upon release, Here Come the Brides chart at number 92 on the Billboard 200 selling 13,694 copies.[10] The band announced the Honeymoon From Hell US tour to support the album with support from Amen and Living Things. They also played at festivals in Europe such as Download in the UK, Metaltown in Sweden and supported Alice Cooper for a couple of shows in Norway and Sweden.[11] The album is currently out of print.

Critical reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[12]
Sputnikmusic[13]
Rolling Stone[14]
Blabbermouth[15]
New York Post[16]

The album was generally well received, with Allmusic giving it a 3.5/5 rating stating "The sound? By-the-numbers Los Angeles metal with slight post-grunge updates. "Shut the F*** Up" draws on Generation Swine-era Crüe, while "I Got a Gun" reaches eagerly for classic Queensrÿche. The Brides play well as a unit, and LeGrand makes up for his lack of nuance with power.".[17] Rolling Stone gave the album 3 out of 5 stars saying " Singer London Le Grand works a fine Bowie-Axl yowl, but he mostly gets points for his great porn-metal name. Throughout, Brides show today's whippersnappers how to deliver real cock-rock shock - even the de rigueur power ballad "Only Get So Far" has cojones.".[18] Blabbermouth gave a more mixed review stating "the record — a compact nine-song effort — only provides sporadic moments of inspiration and little in the way of truly electrifying rock and roll. It's commendable that Sixx, Guns, drummer Scot Coogan, and vocalist London LeGrand are sticking their middle fingers at trends and doing what they want musically, but the shopworn selection of material here generates very few real sparks."[19]

Track listing

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No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Shut the Fuck Up"Nikki Sixx, Tracii Guns, London LeGrand3:03
2."I Don't Care"Sixx, Guns3:21
3."I Got a Gun"Sixx, Guns, LeGrand, John Corabi3:47
4."2x Dead"Sixx, Guns5:37
5."Brace Yourself"Sixx, James Michael4:04
6."Natural Born Killer"Sixx, Guns, Michael, LeGrand4:31
7."Life"Coogan, Sixx, Kevin Kadish, Guns, Justin Nichols3:31
8."Revolution"Sixx, Guns, LeGrand4:37
9."Only Get So Far"Sixx, Michael, Guns5:05

Charts

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Album - Billboard (North America)

Year Chart Position
2004 Billboard 200 92

Personnel

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References

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  1. ^ MOTORDOG Becomes BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION - Oct. 11, 2002 Archived 2003-03-28 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION's NIKKI SIXX Discusses Band Moniker - Nov. 19, 2002 Archived 2007-03-19 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "MÖTLEY CRÜE's SIXX: We Won't Ask Old Fans To Purchase Upcoming Reissues - Feb. 5, 2003". Archived from the original on 2004-01-20. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  4. ^ "Metal Rules John Corabi Interview". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  5. ^ JOHN CORABI Leaves BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION - Apr. 2, 2003 Archived 2003-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ BRIDES BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION: Is The End Near? - Aug. 9, 2003 Archived 2007-03-19 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION Sign With SANCTUARY RECORDS - Nov. 14, 2003 Archived 2005-03-12 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION Set North American Release Date For Debut Album - Dec. 2, 2003
  9. ^ "BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION Film Video For 'Shut the Fuck Up' - Feb. 11, 2004". Archived from the original on 2004-09-17. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  10. ^ SOUNDSCAN Report: TESLA, BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION, KATAKLYSM, DECAPITATED - Mar. 17, 2004 Archived 2004-08-26 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION Announce 'Honeymoon From Hell' Tour Dates - Mar. 23, 2004". Archived from the original on 2006-01-14. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  12. ^ Allmusic review
  13. ^ Sputnikmusic review
  14. ^ Rolling Stone review
  15. ^ Blabbermouth review Archived 2008-05-26 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ New York Post review
  17. ^ allmusic ((( Here Come The Brides > Overview)))
  18. ^ Brides of Destruction: Here Come The Brides : Music Reviews : Rolling Stone
  19. ^ BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION Here Come The Brides (Sanctuary) Archived 2008-05-26 at the Wayback Machine