Silver (Cheap Trick album)

Silver
Live album by Cheap Trick
Released February 27, 2001
Recorded Davis Park, Rockford, Illinois
Genre Rock
Length 130 minutes
Label Cheap Trick Unlimited
Producer Cheap Trick
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Blender Magazine[1]
Allmusic[2]
Artist Direct[3]

Silver is the third live album released by Cheap Trick. It was performed at Davis Park in the band's hometown of Rockford, Illinois on August 28, 1999, to celebrate the band's 25th anniversary since their formation. The album was recorded and released as a two-disc set in 2001, and re-released in 2004 with two additional tracks ("Daddy Should Have Stayed in High School" and "On Top of the World").

Background

The band performed at least one song from each of their albums, including The Doctor, "I Want You To Want Me" (from In Color) was performed slightly differently, with the "I'd love you to love me" line sung in a different tune. Jon Brant made a brief return to play "If You Want My Love" and "She's Tight" (both from One on One). The band made acoustic arrangements of "I Can't Take It" (from Next Position Please), "Take Me to the Top" (from The Doctor), "It All Comes Back to You" (from their 2nd eponymous album), and "Tonight It's You" (from Standing on the Edge). Holland Zander, Robin Zander's daughter and former lead singer of The Snaggs, made a guest appearance to sing a duet version of "Time Will Let You Know" (from Robin Zander's solo album). Daxx Nielsen played drums and percussion on many songs and Miles Nielsen played guitar on a couple songs. The Rockford Symphony and the Harlem High School Choir were also guests on some songs. Slash played guitar on "You're All Talk", ex-Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan plugs in his guitar for "Just Got Back" and Art Alexakis joined the band for a cover of The Beatles' "Day Tripper". Rick Nielsen did lead singing in "World's Greatest Lover" (from All Shook Up). The Phantom Regiment Drummers guested on "Who D'King" (from All Shook Up).

Track listing

Disc one

  1. "Ain't That A Shame"
  2. "I Want You To Want Me"
  3. "Oh, Candy"
  4. "That 70's Song"
  5. "Voices"
  6. "If You Want My Love"
  7. "She's Tight"
  8. "Can't Stop Fallin' Into Love"
  9. "Gonna Raise Hell"
  10. "I Can't Take It" (Acoustic)
  11. "Take Me to the Top" (Acoustic)
  12. "It All Comes Back to You" (Acoustic)
  13. "Tonight It's You" (Acoustic)
  14. "Time Will Let You Know"
  15. "World's Greatest Lover"

Disc two

  1. "The Flame"
  2. "Stop This Game"
  3. "Dream Police"
  4. "I Know What I Want"
  5. "Woke Up with a Monster"
  6. "Never Had a Lot to Lose"
  7. "You're All Talk"
  8. "I'm Losin' You"
  9. "Hard to Tell"
  10. "Oh, Claire"
  11. "Surrender"
  12. "Just Got Back"
  13. "Day Tripper"
  14. "Who D'King"
  15. "Daddy Should Have Stayed in High School" (2004 Re-release)
  16. "On Top of the World" (2004 Re-release)

Chart performance

Chart (2001) Peak
position
U.S. Independent Albums Chart[4] 45

References

  1. "Silver Album Review, Songs, Ratings". Starpulse.com. 1999-08-28. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  2. Prato, Greg (2001-02-27). "Silver - Cheap Trick : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  3. "Cheap Trick Albums and Discography - ARTISTdirect Music". Artistdirect.com. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  4. Cheap Trick. "Cheap Trick - Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
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