Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

The Unforgiven|The Unforgiven

The Unforgiven

The Unforgiven

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Language available : english

Storming across the dusty streets of a Western town are the Unforgiven, a sextet of street slingers hailing from the mean streets of Los Angeles in 1986. It was a rough time, one when money hung heavy in the air, one when any group of rocking vagabonds could possibly strike gold if they were teamed with the right set of prospectors, which the Unforgiven undoubtedly were. Surviving a furious bidding war, the Unforgiven signed with CAA and manager Doc McGhee, who was then riding high on the success of Mötley Crüe, and set up shop at Elektra Records, where they were put in the studio with John Boylan, the guy who produced Boston's debut a decade earlier. The Unforgiven didn't sound like a relic of the '70s, nor did it seem like it belonged to the punk and metal undergrounds where leader John Henry Jones used to roam. It is a record that thoroughly embodies its time, capturing every misbegotten and forgotten trend of 1986. At their core, the Unforgiven were an American version of Big Country borrowing the Last Gang in Town persona of the Clash: messianic rockers determined to follow in the footsteps of U2 right into an oversized arena. Some of their Western imagery had thematic ties to the nascent roots rock of the '80s -- the Los Angeles-based indie Slash had plenty of nervy, back-to-basic bands and cowpunk was on the rise in 1986 -- but the Unforgiven only had designs on MTV and AOR radio, so they made a massive, steel-girded rock, an album constructed to intimidate via its sheer size. Apart from an instrumental version of "Amazing Grace" that attempts to end the album on a lyrical note, every one of the songs piles on the guitars and shout-along vocals, anchored by rhythms that echo in a cavern. This is Big Music, rock & roll as a calling, but where the Alarm, U2, and Big Country often looked outside themselves and found the troubles at large, Jones constructs ad hoc myths out of half-remembered TV Westerns. It's all a façade, which perhaps would've made The Unforgiven an ideal album for 1986, a transitional year in the reign of MTV when the network was in need of a big new guitar band to rally the troops. Instead, The Unforgiven stiffed, possibly because it's all sound and fury and no hooks, but probably because it was so damn silly. These were detriments in 1986 but, years later, they're attributes because this hubris captures the spirit of 1986 in a way so many hit albums did not. [Real Gone's 2014 reissue contains two bonus tracks: a single edit of "I Hear the Call" and the non-LP "The Long Run Out (Ballad of the Unforgiven)."]

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

More info

The Unforgiven

The Unforgiven

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
All Is Quiet on the Western Front
00:04:02

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

2
Hang 'Em High
00:04:14

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

3
I Hear the Call
00:04:12

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

4
Roverpack
00:03:34

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

5
Cheyenne
00:04:32

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

6
The Gauntlet
00:04:08

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

7
With My Boots On
00:03:24

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

8
The Ghost Dance
00:03:01

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

9
The Loner
00:03:46

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

10
The Preacher
00:04:10

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

11
Grace
00:02:38

The Unforgiven, MainArtist - John Henry Jones, Writer

© 1986 Elektra Records. ℗ 1986 Elektra Records

Albumbeschreibung

Storming across the dusty streets of a Western town are the Unforgiven, a sextet of street slingers hailing from the mean streets of Los Angeles in 1986. It was a rough time, one when money hung heavy in the air, one when any group of rocking vagabonds could possibly strike gold if they were teamed with the right set of prospectors, which the Unforgiven undoubtedly were. Surviving a furious bidding war, the Unforgiven signed with CAA and manager Doc McGhee, who was then riding high on the success of Mötley Crüe, and set up shop at Elektra Records, where they were put in the studio with John Boylan, the guy who produced Boston's debut a decade earlier. The Unforgiven didn't sound like a relic of the '70s, nor did it seem like it belonged to the punk and metal undergrounds where leader John Henry Jones used to roam. It is a record that thoroughly embodies its time, capturing every misbegotten and forgotten trend of 1986. At their core, the Unforgiven were an American version of Big Country borrowing the Last Gang in Town persona of the Clash: messianic rockers determined to follow in the footsteps of U2 right into an oversized arena. Some of their Western imagery had thematic ties to the nascent roots rock of the '80s -- the Los Angeles-based indie Slash had plenty of nervy, back-to-basic bands and cowpunk was on the rise in 1986 -- but the Unforgiven only had designs on MTV and AOR radio, so they made a massive, steel-girded rock, an album constructed to intimidate via its sheer size. Apart from an instrumental version of "Amazing Grace" that attempts to end the album on a lyrical note, every one of the songs piles on the guitars and shout-along vocals, anchored by rhythms that echo in a cavern. This is Big Music, rock & roll as a calling, but where the Alarm, U2, and Big Country often looked outside themselves and found the troubles at large, Jones constructs ad hoc myths out of half-remembered TV Westerns. It's all a façade, which perhaps would've made The Unforgiven an ideal album for 1986, a transitional year in the reign of MTV when the network was in need of a big new guitar band to rally the troops. Instead, The Unforgiven stiffed, possibly because it's all sound and fury and no hooks, but probably because it was so damn silly. These were detriments in 1986 but, years later, they're attributes because this hubris captures the spirit of 1986 in a way so many hit albums did not. [Real Gone's 2014 reissue contains two bonus tracks: a single edit of "I Hear the Call" and the non-LP "The Long Run Out (Ballad of the Unforgiven)."]

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Live In Europe

Melody Gardot

Live In Europe Melody Gardot
More on Qobuz
By The Unforgiven

Zero

The Unforgiven

Zero The Unforgiven

Breathe

The Unforgiven

Breathe The Unforgiven

Days Like These

The Unforgiven

Days Like These The Unforgiven

Quick To Blame

The Unforgiven

Quick To Blame The Unforgiven

Matchless

The Unforgiven

Matchless The Unforgiven

Playlists

You may also like...

i/o

Peter Gabriel

i/o Peter Gabriel

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Rumours

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours Fleetwood Mac

Now And Then

The Beatles

Now And Then The Beatles

Dark Matter

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter Pearl Jam