Since Greatest Hits pretty much included all the major greatest hits, Gems tends to focus on underplayed fan favourites.ġ. It purposely avoids overlap with that prior album, while providing a slice of the heavier side of ‘Smith. It’s impossible to view the 1988 compilation Aerosmith Gems as anything but purely a companion piece to 1980’s Greatest Hits. That’s something I haven’t done since I first bought it.Ĥ/5 stars (for Bonus Disc and Box of Fire overall)ĪEROSMITH – Gems (1988 Columbia, 1993 Sony) I’m glad to have taken the time to listen to the entire Box of Fire, in sequence, from start to finish. If you bought these albums separately, they do not have the numbers or the coordinated spines that form the Aerosmith logo. It’s a simply lovely way to display your Aerosmith collection, open or closed - when lined up, the CD spines form an Aerosmith logo! Each disc is numbered 1-12 (except the Bonus Disc), and can be differentiated from the regular retail versions by the numbered spines. Each CD, housed in its own jewel case, slides easily in and out. The front door opens “garage style”, with a little plastic “match” as a handle, painted to look as if burned. The packaging is cool a sturdy box with orange flame emblazoned all over. Wrapping up this exhaustive look at the Box of Fire and all the albums inside, there is very little left to add. This slips into a gap inside the Box of Fire, easy to miss and sometimes missing! If you’re buying a Box of Fire, make sure it’s intact. The Bonus Disc is housed in a simple cardboard CD sleeve. It’s a brilliant version, best appreciated by the Aerosmith connoisseur. This live version from 1991, complete with orchestra, was from an MTV thing later released on a CD of its own. They were unreleased for a reason, although they both could have evolved into cool heavy rock songs.ĥ. It was the unlisted “hidden” bonus track at the end of Pandora’s Box. Most fans who collect Aerosmith already had this one. Another instrumental from the same period. A cool instrumental jam from the Draw the Line sessions, but originally released on the 1991 “Sweet Emotion” CD single.Ĥ. Wanna know what Aerosmith sound like produced by Rick Rubin? This old rock n’ roll cover indicates, it’s kinda dry.ģ. I hate buying a soundtrack for one or two songs.
I’m always in favour of getting one of Aerosmith’s numerous soundtrack contributions on an Aerosmith disc. A later track (1987) from the Less Than Zero soundtrack. “Rocking Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu”. It’s a little longer and has a few things mixed louder.Ģ. Remember the music video they released in late 1991 to promote the Pandora’s Box set? That video featured a remix of “Sweet Emotion”, and it was released as a limited as a limited CD single. “Sweet Emotion” (1991 remix by David Thoener). I later found that plastic sleeve at another one of our outlets, and the owner “Billy Bob” gave it to me himself! (Thanks man, you have no idea how much that makes an OCD collector like me happy.)ġ. I just needed to replace a few broken CD trays, and the outer plastic sleeve was also missing (not a huge deal). I bought it used, at the store that Joe Big Nose manages today. Because of that, I did indeed wait to shell out for Box of Fire. In defense of Sony for the double-dip, I distinctly remember them announcing in advance the the future box set would include all the albums and additional goodies.
#AEROSMITH GREATEST HITS 2 DISC FULL#
The bonus CD included in Box of Fire was an added little reward for those fans who waited to shell out for the full box, rather than buy the CDs individually. I remember looking at that sealed box longingly, wishing I could peer inside. Back when I was working in the Record Store, we stocked this one for over $200 brand new. In 1994 these albums were released again inside the near-definitive Columbia box set, Box of Fire. Each CD received a well due remastering job, and improved packaging, as you have seen here throughout this series. Sony did a sonic makeover to the Aerosmith catalogue in ’93, using their new Super Bit Mapping technique. AEROSMITH – Box of Fire Bonus Disc (1994 Sony, only included in the Box of Fire)