[quote name='Mike Brooks' timestamp='1510086984' post='3403938']
Howdy, it was my choice to cover Hysteria for the column. I have a list of albums as long as your arm to cover but the remit from day one was cover all sorts of albums, not just the Greatest Hits Of Jaco or Stanley on a monthly basis. Where possible I/we try to pick albums that have an anniversary pending (or not, it's not cast in stone) but I proposed some months back a 3 issue run of albums, by a band or artist, that sold massively and for that artist, they never produced a bigger selling album, I chose 1987 and hence the INXS/Def Leppard/George Michael albums. On top of that, the Hysteria deluxe boxset was released a few months back and we have Rick Savage's interview in the wings too. There is no denying that in the rock arena, Hysteria changed quite a lot of things as far as rock albums go, not least the production values that Mutt Lange brought to the album.
Don't despair, there are plenty of bass-centric albums lined-up, such as Marcus Miller's 'The Sun Don't Lie' in a month or two. As an ongoing column, the possibilities are almost endless so hopefully I'll cover something you do like soon.
All the best,
Mike
[/quote]
I for one really enjoyed reading it. I grew up as a little kid through the punk era, hysteria was my teens and grunge my university days. I am not a fan of the massively complicated lines some like. I don't consider hysteria to be a brilliant technical album (beyond the production)but it was cleverly written to appeal beyond hair metals usual reaches and was, as you say, a game changer.
(Any chance you could do some Sugar or Husker Du? Beaster would be perfect)