Along Came a Spider – Alice Cooper

Release Date: 1/01/2008

Recording Date: 7/2008

Tracks: 11

Length: 00:44:17 Hrs

Label: Steamhammer

Type: CD,LP

Genre/Styles

Album Tracks (11)

Average User Rating
Currently 0.0 / 5.0 Stars
  • 1 out of 5 stars
  • 2 out of 5 stars
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • 5 out of 5 stars
Views 2068 Comments 0 (Write your own)

To share this media with a friend, you must have AIM installed. Click the "Download AIM" button to install AIM. If you already have AIM, click the "Send Instant Message"

What the Critics Say

Throughout his long career, Alice Cooper has taken full advantage of how concept albums allow for more ambitious songwriting and memorable, layered characters who get more than one song to tell their stories. They're always tortured stories with social outcasts rebelling against turbulent childhoods or other traumatic whatnot, but this time the stakes are much higher. Along Came a Spider tells the story of an eccentric serial killer who suffers from the exact opposite of arachnophobia and lives by the spider's code of "You trap, you kill, you eat." How he got there and why he chose spiders is a story better heard from Alice -- that is, if you're an undying fan of his less accessible concept piece From the Inside or his phantasmagorical horror show Welcome to My Nightmare. Spider has as few hooks as Inside and more than twice the sinister moments found on Nightmare, all delivered with a post-Rob Zombie attitude that allows things to get a little more brutal, more alt-metal. While the casual fan will feel that some of the less gripping songs are just here to move the story along, fanatics will gush as Alice once again acts as host and narrator and revives the character Steven, the young boy who broke all his toys on Nightmare. With a serial killer as lead and titles like "(In Touch With) Your Feminine Side" and "The One That Got Away," Alice fills his lyrics with clever and gruesome wordplay, but the winner here is the only plausible single, "Wake the Dead," which shockingly and shamelessly borrows the bassline from the Chemical Brothers' "Let Forever Be." Guitarist Slash, Kiss drummer Eric Singer, and background vocalist extraordinaire Bernard Fowler all make appearances, while Renaissance man Danny Saber handles the production with co-producer Greg Hampton, which appropriately sounds soundtrack big. An easy recommendation for fan club members and/or serial killers. Everyone else has two or three better Cooper concepts to devour first. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide

Recent Comments

Add your own comment
Currently there are no comments
1000 character maximum

Tips On Commenting

ADVERTISEMENT
Fill Up Some Playlists
Just click on ADD whenever
you see videos.
Watch free music videos, tune in to AOL Radio, get free music downloads, read music news, and search for your favorite music artists.