Bust a Nut

Bust a Nut

Bust a Nut

Track Listings
 
1. Gate/Invited
2. Solution
3. Shine Away
4. Try So Hard
5. She Want She Want
6. Need Your Lovin'
7. Action Talks
8. Mama's Fool
9. Cry
10. Earthmover
11. Alot to Lose
12. Rubberband
13. Wonderful World
14. Games People Play

Editorial Reviews
Product Description
1998 Japanese reissue on Geffen of their 1994 album for MCA with a cover of Led Zeppelin's 'The Ocean' added as a bonus track. 15 tracks total. --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Bust a Nut,Tesla,Geffen Special Prod.,Hair Metal,Hard Rock,Heavy Metal,Pop,Pop-Metal,Popular Music,Rock
Bust a Nut
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Bust a Nut - The best Tesla Album
  • Tesla continues to lose direction
  • Rock-Solid Tesla Album
  • Stands The Test of Time
  • Rock the way it's meant to be played
Bust a Nut
Tesla
Manufacturer: Geffen Gold Line Sp.
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Pop MetalPop Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GlamGlam | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
CDs $7 - $10CDs $7 - $10 | Pop Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
All Bargain TitlesAll Bargain Titles | Pop Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
CDs $7 - $10CDs $7 - $10 | Hard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
All Bargain TitlesAll Bargain Titles | Hard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
4-for-3 Classic Rock4-for-3 Classic Rock | 4-for-3 Music | Stores | Music
4-for-3 Hard Rock & Metal4-for-3 Hard Rock & Metal | 4-for-3 Music | Stores | Music
4-for-3 Pop4-for-3 Pop | 4-for-3 Music | Stores | Music
4-for-3 Rock4-for-3 Rock | 4-for-3 Music | Stores | Music
4-for-3 All Music4-for-3 All Music | 4-for-3 Music | Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Psychotic Supper
  2. The Great Radio Controversy
  3. Mechanical Resonance
  4. Five Man Acoustical Jam
  5. Tesla - Time's Makin' Changes: The Videos & More

ASIN: B000000P1I
Release Date: 1997-09-23

Tracks:

  1. The Gate/Invited
  2. Solution
  3. Shine Away
  4. Try So Hard
  5. She Want She Want
  6. Need Your Lovin'
  7. Action Talks
  8. Mama's Fool
  9. Cry
  10. Earthmover
  11. Alot To Lose
  12. Rubberband
  13. Wonderful World
  14. Games People Play

Album Description

1998 Japanese reissue on Geffen of their 1994 album for MCA with a cover of Led Zeppelin's 'The Ocean' added as a bonus track. 15 tracks total.

Album Details

Japanese Reissue Including a Bonus Track: Ocean.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Bust a Nut - The best Tesla Album.......2007-07-11

Buy this album!!! I bought it when it first came out and it's been my favorite of their's ever since. The others are all great as well so it's going some to say that this is the best. I feel that they matured a great deal in their lyrics and the songs all rock. It's truely a shame that they got lumped in with all of the "hair bands" of the day because they were not part of that crowd. Anyway, every song is a stand out. The band feels that they peaked on Psychotic Supper but I feel this is where the truely great stuff is.

From what I've read and heard in talking to a lot of fans is that this is their least favorite Tesla album but if you listen, you will find an awesome rock album full of great songs. This is one of those albums where I truely can't figure out why it didn't do better not only in sales but in the minds of Tesla fans. Buy this album!!!

2 out of 5 stars Tesla continues to lose direction.......2006-10-17

I honestly feel that Tesla reached the end here. After "Psychotic Supper" failed to get the label support that it desparately needed the group just fell apart. With this the whole metal scene was falling away anyhow as grunge was dying off after the death of Kurt Cobain, and here was Tesla trying to make up it's mind what way to go. With the opening track "The Gate" it sounded like they were going to head back to the hair days of the 80's, but then the next song "Solution" they played like a lost and wandering band of the 90's. The rest of the songs just followed suit. The groups slogan is "No Machines", but there's also another slogan at foot here, and that's "No Music Direction", and for some bands that's possibly a workable concept as long as there's an inkling of where the bands roots are. With Tesla it's all over the board where they would score a top 10 hit with an acoustic version of the song "Signs", which is a rock song, to where they do a cover here of Joe South's "Games People Play". I feel that Tesla failed to show thier influences here, and was just trying to make a living; which is not a bad thing, but it pretty much kept them at a cult status. I pretty much had this album, but didn't listen to it at the time as I was trying to leave the secular music scene behind, and just move onto Christianity, and I know the album lurked around in my head all this time, so I felt it was time to face it; I feel that the album is below par for a group that can do some memorable songs, and to me it seems they wanted out of the label, and possibly away from each other.

4 out of 5 stars Rock-Solid Tesla Album.......2006-07-23

You really have to hand it to Tesla. After the flannel-clad alterna-rockers pretty much wiped out the hair metal genre, (and yes, I know that Tesla shouldn't have been lumped in with Poison, Warrant, et al, but they were anyway, so...) in the early 1990's, Tesla had a decision to make. They could have quit releasing new music like Cinderella, or made some weak attempt at going grunge like Dokken. Instead, the band released what they knew their fans wanted...another great Tesla album.

Bust a Nut is exactly the kind of album Tesla could have recorded a decade earlier, or a decade later for that matter (see Into the Now). It's a straightforward, blues-based hard rock album that doesn't rely on big hair, fancy outfits, teen angst, or any other gimmick. In a nutshell (which is appropriate given the title and cover), Tesla is the quintessential rock & roll band. I realize that's a bold statement, but I think they would stand up against all challengers.

Back to the album itself, Bust a Nut may not be as perfect as Mechanical Resonance or the Great Radio Controversy, but it is on par with Psychotic Supper and Into the Now. There are some great songs here (Shine Away, Try So Hard, Mama's Fool, and Games People Play come to mind), though perhaps a bit of filler as well. Still, it's a solid album overall, and served as a bold declaration of independence at a time when many other bands were trying desperately to adopt the latest trends. Of course it sold poorly and the band disappeared for nearly a decade, but the album still rocked!

5 out of 5 stars Stands The Test of Time.......2005-06-02

Music world since the introduction of synth changed a lot and lots of great bands like BOSTON, JOURNEY, ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA and ASIA with bombastic dynamism in rock dominated the charts. By the late 80s keyboard-led music became necessity. Tesla came out of such era but stayed simple just as Led Zeppelin, Early Deep Purple, or Whitesnake. They recreated staight rock'n roll based on guitars and passionate vocals. Their style well honors Nikola Tesla, legendary inventor, where the bandname came from.

Borrowing Nikola Tesla's 1943 invention, a machine cracking a nut, as the jacket image, the band fulfills the hard-rocking yet dyanmic and acoustic rock to the edge.

The opening The Gate/Intro signifies their sound and SOLUTION rocks heavy competing well with Metallica's ENTER SANDMAN. SHINE AWAY, TRY SO HARD are my top favorites from this album and the reason I love this album. NEED YOUR LOVING is the beautiful Purplish acoustic masterpiece track. ACTION TALKS and CRY are well set heavy tracks. Since ALOT TO LOSE they search for pop area using covers and renditional track. WONDERFUL WORLD, no doubt was inspired by Louis Armstrong classic WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD. Nice renditional track. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY is the full renditon of 1969 hit by Joe South.

Verdict: Rock'n roll masterpiece. Revitalizing guitar featured traditional hard rock.
Rating: 99 out of 100. Every track is the winner. Few albums can accomplish this.
Recommended for: Classic rock fans. Modern rock fans who love acoustic rock. Wide range of rock fans.

5 out of 5 stars Rock the way it's meant to be played.......2004-03-04

I've alway's thought this record was their best, but many hardcore fans are unable to let go of the first two albums. MR and GRC were classics all told, but Bust a Nut song for song betters them both. If you've never heard Tesla before quickly skip to track 10, Earthmover and relish it in all its sonic glory. Tesla has never been about relenquishing its integrity to the fad following public. They are about writing great bluesy rock that lyrically mimic lifes ups and downs.
Bust A Nut
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Bust A Nut
    Tesla
    Manufacturer: Geffen
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Pop MetalPop Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B000LWJXO6
    Bust a Nut
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • Bust a Nut - The best Tesla Album
    • Tesla continues to lose direction
    • Rock-Solid Tesla Album
    • Stands The Test of Time
    • Rock the way it's meant to be played
    Bust a Nut
    Tesla
    Manufacturer: Pid
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Pop MetalPop Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
    Hard Rock & MetalHard Rock & Metal | Imports | Stores | Music
    Similar Items:
    1. Psychotic Supper
    2. The Great Radio Controversy
    3. Mechanical Resonance
    4. Five Man Acoustical Jam
    5. Tesla - Time's Makin' Changes: The Videos & More

    ASIN: B000005KFK
    Release Date: 1998-03-31

    Tracks:

    1. The Gate/Invited
    2. Solution
    3. Shine Away
    4. Try So Hard
    5. She Want She Want
    6. Need Your Lovin'
    7. Action Talks
    8. Mama's Fool
    9. Cry
    10. Earthmover
    11. Alot To Lose
    12. Rubberband
    13. Wondeful World
    14. Games People Play
    15. The Ocean

    Album Description

    1998 Japanese reissue on Geffen of their 1994 album for MCA with a cover of Led Zeppelin's 'The Ocean' added as a bonus track. 15 tracks total.

    Album Details

    Japanese Reissue Including a Bonus Track: Ocean.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Bust a Nut - The best Tesla Album.......2007-07-11

    Buy this album!!! I bought it when it first came out and it's been my favorite of their's ever since. The others are all great as well so it's going some to say that this is the best. I feel that they matured a great deal in their lyrics and the songs all rock. It's truely a shame that they got lumped in with all of the "hair bands" of the day because they were not part of that crowd. Anyway, every song is a stand out. The band feels that they peaked on Psychotic Supper but I feel this is where the truely great stuff is.

    From what I've read and heard in talking to a lot of fans is that this is their least favorite Tesla album but if you listen, you will find an awesome rock album full of great songs. This is one of those albums where I truely can't figure out why it didn't do better not only in sales but in the minds of Tesla fans. Buy this album!!!

    2 out of 5 stars Tesla continues to lose direction.......2006-10-17

    I honestly feel that Tesla reached the end here. After "Psychotic Supper" failed to get the label support that it desparately needed the group just fell apart. With this the whole metal scene was falling away anyhow as grunge was dying off after the death of Kurt Cobain, and here was Tesla trying to make up it's mind what way to go. With the opening track "The Gate" it sounded like they were going to head back to the hair days of the 80's, but then the next song "Solution" they played like a lost and wandering band of the 90's. The rest of the songs just followed suit. The groups slogan is "No Machines", but there's also another slogan at foot here, and that's "No Music Direction", and for some bands that's possibly a workable concept as long as there's an inkling of where the bands roots are. With Tesla it's all over the board where they would score a top 10 hit with an acoustic version of the song "Signs", which is a rock song, to where they do a cover here of Joe South's "Games People Play". I feel that Tesla failed to show thier influences here, and was just trying to make a living; which is not a bad thing, but it pretty much kept them at a cult status. I pretty much had this album, but didn't listen to it at the time as I was trying to leave the secular music scene behind, and just move onto Christianity, and I know the album lurked around in my head all this time, so I felt it was time to face it; I feel that the album is below par for a group that can do some memorable songs, and to me it seems they wanted out of the label, and possibly away from each other.

    4 out of 5 stars Rock-Solid Tesla Album.......2006-07-23

    You really have to hand it to Tesla. After the flannel-clad alterna-rockers pretty much wiped out the hair metal genre, (and yes, I know that Tesla shouldn't have been lumped in with Poison, Warrant, et al, but they were anyway, so...) in the early 1990's, Tesla had a decision to make. They could have quit releasing new music like Cinderella, or made some weak attempt at going grunge like Dokken. Instead, the band released what they knew their fans wanted...another great Tesla album.

    Bust a Nut is exactly the kind of album Tesla could have recorded a decade earlier, or a decade later for that matter (see Into the Now). It's a straightforward, blues-based hard rock album that doesn't rely on big hair, fancy outfits, teen angst, or any other gimmick. In a nutshell (which is appropriate given the title and cover), Tesla is the quintessential rock & roll band. I realize that's a bold statement, but I think they would stand up against all challengers.

    Back to the album itself, Bust a Nut may not be as perfect as Mechanical Resonance or the Great Radio Controversy, but it is on par with Psychotic Supper and Into the Now. There are some great songs here (Shine Away, Try So Hard, Mama's Fool, and Games People Play come to mind), though perhaps a bit of filler as well. Still, it's a solid album overall, and served as a bold declaration of independence at a time when many other bands were trying desperately to adopt the latest trends. Of course it sold poorly and the band disappeared for nearly a decade, but the album still rocked!

    5 out of 5 stars Stands The Test of Time.......2005-06-02

    Music world since the introduction of synth changed a lot and lots of great bands like BOSTON, JOURNEY, ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA and ASIA with bombastic dynamism in rock dominated the charts. By the late 80s keyboard-led music became necessity. Tesla came out of such era but stayed simple just as Led Zeppelin, Early Deep Purple, or Whitesnake. They recreated staight rock'n roll based on guitars and passionate vocals. Their style well honors Nikola Tesla, legendary inventor, where the bandname came from.

    Borrowing Nikola Tesla's 1943 invention, a machine cracking a nut, as the jacket image, the band fulfills the hard-rocking yet dyanmic and acoustic rock to the edge.

    The opening The Gate/Intro signifies their sound and SOLUTION rocks heavy competing well with Metallica's ENTER SANDMAN. SHINE AWAY, TRY SO HARD are my top favorites from this album and the reason I love this album. NEED YOUR LOVING is the beautiful Purplish acoustic masterpiece track. ACTION TALKS and CRY are well set heavy tracks. Since ALOT TO LOSE they search for pop area using covers and renditional track. WONDERFUL WORLD, no doubt was inspired by Louis Armstrong classic WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD. Nice renditional track. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY is the full renditon of 1969 hit by Joe South.

    Verdict: Rock'n roll masterpiece. Revitalizing guitar featured traditional hard rock.
    Rating: 99 out of 100. Every track is the winner. Few albums can accomplish this.
    Recommended for: Classic rock fans. Modern rock fans who love acoustic rock. Wide range of rock fans.

    5 out of 5 stars Rock the way it's meant to be played.......2004-03-04

    I've alway's thought this record was their best, but many hardcore fans are unable to let go of the first two albums. MR and GRC were classics all told, but Bust a Nut song for song betters them both. If you've never heard Tesla before quickly skip to track 10, Earthmover and relish it in all its sonic glory. Tesla has never been about relenquishing its integrity to the fad following public. They are about writing great bluesy rock that lyrically mimic lifes ups and downs.

    Music Track:

    1. Come Together [CD-single]
    2. Complete Demos
    3. Crucify the Priest [Import]
    4. Dark Ages [Import]
    5. Death Metal
    6. Diamonds, Diamonds [Import]
    7. Dirty Dozen [Import]
    8. Earth Vs. the Wildhearts
    9. Echoes of Decimation [Enhanced] [Limited Edition]
    10. Eternal Live [Enhanced] [Live]

    Music Track

    music track

    Recommended Music:

    Wow! Wow! Oui!! Oui!!

    Serra: Orchestral Works

    Salute to Sunnyland Slim

    Music: Johnny Bush Is Back: Great Texas Honky Tonk Music

    Raag Digitaal [Import]

    Special Forces

    Serge Gainsbourg [Original recording remastered] [Import]

    Sunday Love [Enhanced]

    Real World (UK Import) [CD-single] [Import]

    Silk Road Journeys: When Strangers Meet

    Supper

    Soft Shoulder

    RB Music Presenta Merengue Encendido

    American Romance

    Live at Leeds