Stone Temple Pilots - Purple -super Deluxe- Rem... [hot] «2025»
Whether you are a vinyl collector looking for the high-quality 180-gram pressing or a digital listener wanting to hear the evolution of "Pretty Penny," this reissue is the definitive way to experience an album that defined a generation.
The crowning jewel of the Super Deluxe Edition is Disc Three, which features a complete, previously unreleased concert recording from the Purple tour. The performance was captured on August 23, 1994, at the New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Connecticut. This electrifying 17-song set captures the band in their prime, running through an explosive setlist that features ten songs from Purple alongside hits from Core like "Plush," "Dead & Bloated," and "Sex Type Thing." It also includes fascinating covers, such as Woody Guthrie's "Gypsy Davy" and David Bowie's "Andy Warhol," showcasing the band's diverse musical palette and raw stage energy.
Reclaiming the Crown: Inside Stone Temple Pilots' "Purple" Super Deluxe Remaster Stone Temple Pilots - Purple -Super Deluxe- Rem...
"Purple" is the second studio album by Stone Temple Pilots, released on June 7, 1994. The album was a commercial success, debuting at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart and featuring hit singles like "Vasoline", "Interstate Love Song", and "Big Empty".
: Three unreleased acoustic tracks recorded live, including a haunting rendition of "Christmastime Is Here" from A Charlie Brown Christmas . Whether you are a vinyl collector looking for
★★★★½
Purple was the sound of a band refusing to be a grunge casualty. The proves that STP’s second album wasn't a follow-up—it was a re-up. Weiland’s lyrics (alienation, addiction, transcendence) feel prophetic. The DeLeo brothers’ riffs sound tectonic. And the whole thing, warts and all, stands as one of the great American rock records of the ‘90s. This electrifying 17-song set captures the band in
When Jonah finally mailed his sister a short message—no long explanations, only: "Found something you might like"—he included a photograph of the purple sticker. She answered with a single line: "Play it when I visit." Months later she did. They sat across from each other, two cups cooling on a table, and let the unreleased tracks stitch the distance between them into a new seam.
He began to play the box for others. His neighbor Rosa listened with her head tilted, eyes closed, fingers tracing the sleeve’s purple sticker. An old college roommate, Miles, showed up with a six-pack and a grin that said he was ready to be undone. Each listener came away crookedly changed; someone laughed too loud at a lyric that felt like an inside joke with fate, someone wiped a sleeve of their face and pretended it was grease.