CD - Bonus Tracks / Bonus DVD
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| CD | $11.09 |
Disc
1 | |
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| View all tracks on this disc | |
Disc
2 | |
| 1 | The Making Of... DVD |
| 2 | Duran Duran's DVD |
| 3 | Red Carpet Massacre DVD |
| 4 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Album |
| 5 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Artwork |
| 6 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Video |
| 7 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Campaign |
| 8 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Out-Takes |
| 9 | Documentary DVD Featuring: The Stills |
| 10 | Documentary DVD Featuring: Falling Down Music Video |
| See all tracks | |
The big news about Duran Duran's 12th album and second disc since the original lineup reunited in 2001 is that three of Red Carpet Massacre's tracks were produced by Timbaland, with input from Justin Timberlake. The collaboration makes perfect sense; given the band's long history with funk auteur Nile Rodgers of Chic, it's easy to see Tim Mosley as a smart dance-music successor. Those three tracks are outstanding -- "Nite-Runner," "Skin Divers," and "Zoom In" capture musically the glamour, menace, and camp that Simon, Nick, and the Taylors have projected in over three decades of photo shoots. "Nite Runner" in particular sounds like a Timberlake outtake, with some mumbling from Timbaland to give it a clubbier edge. The focus of these tracks seems to have bled over into the rest of the sessions, resulting in a collection of strong songs true to the band's balancing act of aggressive rock and sinuous funk. Guitarist Dominic Brown, who replaced Andy Taylor after the original axe-man quit the band for the second time, gets plenty of opportunity to blaze on the title track and an instrumental, while the more heavily processed numbers belong to the metronomic drumming of Roger Taylor and Rhodes's seemingly timeless New Wave keyboard squiggles. The album's single, "Falling Down," produced by Timberlake, is a mid-tempo ballad with clobbering drums that seems to zero in on the band's success with the melancholy "Ordinary World," but the long money is on those club tracks. Twenty years after their biggest U.S. hits, Duran Duran have indeed come back hungry -- like the wolf. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble