Jane's Addiction
Ritual De Lo Habitual

Warner Bros.    9 25993-2  (1990)

Rock/Pop
CD, 9   Tracks, 51:33  Length
01 Stop Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 04:14
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
02 No One's Leaving Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 03:01
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
03 Ain't No Right Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 03:34
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
04 Obvious Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 05:55
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
05 Been Caught Stealing Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 03:34
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
06 Three Days Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 10:48
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
07 Then She Did Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 08:18
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
08 Of Course Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 07:02
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
09 Classic Girl Perry Farrell; Dave Navarro; Eric Avery; Stephen Perkins 05:07
✷  Recording Date   1990  ✷ 
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Perry Farrell
Guitar Dave Navarro
Bass Eric Avery
Drums Stephen Perkins
Musician Jane's Addiction
Producer Dave Jerden; Perry Farrell
Engineer Bob Lacivita
Personal Details
Index # 1666
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Ritual de lo Habitual served as Jane's Addiction's breakthrough to the mainstream in 1990 (going gold and reaching the Top 20), and remains one of rock's all-time sprawling masterpieces. While its predecessor, 1988's Nothing's Shocking, served as a fine introduction to the group, Ritual de lo Habitual proved to be even more daring; few (if any) alt-rock bands have composed a pair of epics that totaled nearly 20 minutes, let alone put them back to back for full dramatic effect. While the cheerful ditty "Been Caught Stealing" is the album's best-known track, the opening "Stop!" is one of the band's best hard rock numbers, propelled by guitarist Dave Navarro's repetitive, trashy funk riff, while "Ain't No Right" remains explosive in its defiant and vicious nature. Jane's Addiction always had a knack for penning beautiful ballads with a ghostly edge, again proven by the album closer, "Classic Girl." But it's the aforementioned epics that are the album's cornerstone: "Three Days" and "Then She Did...." Although Perry Farrell has never truly admitted what the two songs are about lyrically, they appear to be about an autobiographical romantic tryst between three lovers, as each composition twists and turns musically through every imaginable mood. And while the tracks "No One's Leaving," "Obvious," and "Of Course" may not be as renowned as other selections, they prove integral in the makeup of the album. Surprisingly, the band decided to call it a day just as Ritual de lo Habitual hit big, headlining the inaugural Lollapalooza tour (the brainchild of Farrell) in the summer of 1991 as their final road jaunt. Years later, it remains one of alt-rock's finest moments. -- Greg Prato (allmusic.com)