REVIEW: Motley Crue – Quaternary (1994 Japanese EP)

MOTLEY CRUE – Quaternary (1994 Elektra Japanese EP)

For me, undoubtedly the most heavily anticipated new album of 1994 was the new Motley Crue.  Originally titled ‘Til Death Do Us Part, the self-titled ’94 Crue disc was their first with new singer/guitarist John Corabi.  They holed up with producer Bob Rock and knuckled down, creating what could have been the most important album of their careers.  The long wait (five years between studio albums) and cryptic remarks from the studio indicated that this would be the heaviest Motley album ever, and their most ambitious.  The new, serious Motley for the 90’s had, as always, written plenty of extra material too.

In addition, producer Bob Rock had an idea for getting creative juices flowing.  He asked each of the four members of Motley Crue to write and record a solo track with no input from the other members.  This was slightly historic:  the first time Nikki Sixx, Mick Mars, Tommy Lee or John Corabi had done anything solo.  With all the numerous outtakes recorded for the Motley Crue LP, there was now plenty of extra material to put out as a bonus EP.

Scan_20160612A mail-away coupon inside the Motley Crue CD alerted fans that five more tracks were available by mail order only.  20,000 copies of the original EP were pressed.  They included all four solo tracks and a new Motley Crue song called “Babykills”, featuring fifth Beatle Billy Preston on clavinet!

Still, the lucky fans in Japan didn’t have to mail away for anything.  They were able to buy Quaternary right on their store shelves, and because it’s Japan, they also got bonus tracks.  The Japanese version of Quaternary was not a five song EP, but more like a nine-song mini-album.  I had no idea such a thing existed until finding one at Sam the Record Man in Toronto in the summer of 1996.   It still has the price tag:  I paid $49.99, for a total of three songs that I did not have before.

Today, every one of these songs can be found on the box set Music to Crash Your Car To: Volume II, along with even more bonus mixes.

Quaternary commences with industrial noises and studio dialogue:

Tommy Lee:  “I can’t play with fuckin’ clothes on man, this is bullshit.”
Bob Rock: “Play naked.”
Tommy Lee: “Fuckin’ jeans on, a fuckin’ shirt…what up with that?”
Bob Rock: “What, do you work in a bank?”

The industro-rap metal of Tommy Lee’s “Planet Boom” is a track he had been working on for years. An early version made its debut in the background on the 1992 home video release Decade of Decadence. Even though the words “industro-rap” and “Tommy Lee” don’t really sound good together, “Planet Boom” kicks ass. Tommy played all the instruments, utilising a simple, detuned Sabbathy riff and a relentless drum loop. The strength of his vocal came as a surprise, as did the song in general. A few years later it was remixed for Pamela Anderson’s movie Barb Wire. (Stick with this original.)

After a brief studio discussion with Mick Mars about hemorrhoids (?), his blues instrumental “Bittersuite” blows your ears off. Motley fans know that Mick Mars is the most musically talented member, considered an underrated and under appreciated rock god. The blues-rock of “Bittersuite” isn’t as satisfying as I imagine a pure blues offering to be, but there is no doubting Mick’s talent here. Both as a writer and a player, Mick hit it out of the park (Chris Taylor played drums). Mick’s goal was to pay tribute to rock-blues greats like Beck, Hendrix and Blackmore. Mission accomplished. His guitar tone is beautiful and so are his emotive licks.

Nikki Sixx goes third, with another industrial-metal cross. “Father” is one angry fucked up track. It’s heavy and direct, on-trend for 1994, and very abrasive. The riff and song are simple, but Nikki’s anger leaks through. “Father — where were you?” Backwards guitars, electronics and loops on top — you can tell Nikki and Tommy were listening to the same kinds of music at the time!

New kid John Corabi goes last, and in the liner notes he says that “Friends” is his first piano song. He meant to go acoustic, but “Friends” just came out of him. It’s a pretty Queen-like ballad with lovely harmonies in the middle. Although Mick Mars’ song is probably a greater technical achievement, “Friends” is my favourite of the solo tracks. When a guy like Corabi gets going on a ballad, it’s usually going to be amazing anyway. Throw in the Queen elements, and I’m just a sucker for it! It’s really a shame that Motley did not continue with John beyond this. The potential for greatness was always there.

After more studio chatter, we break into “Babykills”, the Billy Preston collaboration. “Babykills” is fun and funky hard rock, probably the heaviest thing Preston ever played on. Unfortunately his part is little more than an added topping. Great tune though; probably far too good to lie hidden away on an obscure mail-order EP.

An impromptu jam that seems to be called “I Just Wanna Fuck You (In the Ass)” ends the original EP on a jokey note.  “What the fuck do you want, for fuck all?”

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As mentioned, the Japanese had bonus tracks.   These are tracks that did not make the finished Motley Crue album, since they had recorded so much extra material.  “10,000 Miles Away” is a cool blues ballad, showing off more of Mick’s fine fingerwork.  It was obviously too much of a standard sounding song to fit in with the experimental Motley Crue album.  Not that the album stood a chance in hell after grunge cleared the decks, but you do wonder if it would have been better received if some of these more digestible songs were included on it.

The one track on the Japanese release that is easy to skip is the Skinny Puppy remix of “Hooligan’s Holiday”.  This track was already available on the “Hooligan’s Holiday” single and it’s since been re-released in other places too.  It’s long — over 11 minutes.  Dave “Rave” Ogilvie remixed it with Dwayne Goettel and cEvin Key, so it is of possible interest to Skinny Puppy collectors.  The thing that bugs me about it is that it strikes me as lazy.  The song is pretty much the same as always for the first three minutes, and then the remixing begins.  The whacked out and frankly boring remixed part goes on for almost seven more minutes, before transitioning back to the standard song.  In other words, what Skinny Puppy did here was edit out the middle section and guitar solo of the song, drop in seven minutes of remixed barf, and then put the ending back on.

Two demos round out the CD:  “Hammered” (which did make the album) and “Livin’ in the No” (which did not).  The “Hammered” demo is structurally the same as the album version, no radical departures.  It sounds like much of it is live in the studio, and it’s clear that Motley were focusing on grooves.  It’s all about the four guys being locked in.  Finally “Livin’ in the No” is in the standard hard rock mold.  Again, a track like this fits in less well with the unorthodox LP, but might have made it more accessible for fans.  Even so, a guy like Vince Neil would never have been able to sing “Livin’ in the No” and make it sound good.

There is little question that the Motley Crue album deserves its 5/5 star rating.  This being a collection of outtakes, the same cannot be expected.  Still, it does deserve a very respectable:

4/5 stars

Get the complete EP including all Japanese bonus tracks on Music to Crash Your Car To: Volume II. That set also contains more remixes originally from single B-sides of the era: “Misunderstood” (Guitar Solo/Scream Version), “Hooligan’s Holiday” (Derelict Version), “Misunderstood” (Successful Format Version), “Hooligan’s Holiday” (Brown Nose Edit).

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20 comments

  1. Deke has a point here. Still, you might remember that some time ago, I apologized to Mick Mars because I had him down as the worst guitarist in metal. He’s clearly not. After reading this, if what you say about him on this album is true, I might owe him an even bigger apology.

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  2. Meh, not a fan of the rubbish dialogue tbh, but considering this was a collection of leftovers outakes whatever doesn’t hassle any on this release. But otherwise after the magnificent SelfTitled I also mailed away for this EP and was not disappointed.

    Some years later replaced it for this very same Japan issue and darn them for getting the best of the best LOL, in addition to the standard version 10,000 Miles was sweet both it and Livin’ In The No worth the extra coin (not 50 smakaroos fer this cat Mike, think it was under 15 am sorry to say :)

    With grunge at the helm, records like this and the MC SelfTitled served as perfect crossover records for both the new and old scenes, records that could have and should have thrived if given the support they deserved.

    Great to have this review up Mike, and agree with the score nice one thanks \m/

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    1. Hey fair enough. My wife hates them. I totally understand anyone who doesn’t like Motley Crue. However I will say that they probably should have changed their name at this point because this era sounds nothing like the Motley that you dislike.

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    1. Don’t buy it Joe, I have a copy I can send. I bought it in Taranna, excited to find it, then found out when I got home that I already had it in the Car Crash boxed set. Alas, it’ll be on the evil silver disc, if you can live with that. Lemme know! COMMUNITY!

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  3. Yay! I have this! It’s not often that I come to LeBrain’s and actually have the tunes he’s talking about! Yup, I own both the Car Crash boxed sets and have reviewed them. Mike nails it perfectly here, better than I ever did.

    Hey Deke! Just the thought of these tracks makes me feel like I need another shower hahahahaha!

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    1. I’m going to review the car crash box sets at some point too, and will be happy to link back to you!

      I remember there were supposed to be three car crash box sets. Think about it — they were a reissue (again) of all the Motley albums with bonus tracks (and more bonus tracks), but it stopped in 1994. Where was Generation Swine? And everything beyond that? It always seemed like the third box was cancelled due to lack of interest.

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  4. And indeed he still is deliverying better Mike!

    Being the Jon Stevens fan I am was reluctant to embrace The Dead Daisies after his unfair dismissal and their sophomore and first with Corabi was okay enough but the majority of it sounded like it was written either for or with Stevens (heck even sounded like Stevens singing that first verse of ‘Critical’, just saying ;)

    Point being their new material from their forthcoming third record sounds pretty darn good! This is how I like my Corabi \m/

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      1. That’s OK man! Yeah I’m really glad for Corabi that he’s doing something so good. For a while there I thought he was doomed just to be the rhythm guitar player in Ratt, which would have been ludicrous.

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  5. > I paid $49.99, for a total of three songs that I did not have before.

    At first I thought “$50?!! Too expensive!!” But it’s “Canadian dollars”, isn’t it? Which, Google tells me, is equal to about U.S.$39. Still too expensive though! The CD has the Japanese price of ¥2200 written on it…which is about half what you paid.

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