UPC: 602527210360
Format: CD (2 disc)
Release Date: Nov 23, 2009
Regular price
$22.95 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$22.95 USD
Unit price
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
FREE SHIPPING
This item is expected to ship 3 business days after order placement.
![The Fame Monster [Deluxe Edition] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/24470eed5dac84e40cf0c06a54fed823.jpg?v=1755343028&width=1445)
Personnel: Lady Gaga (vocals, piano, keyboards, synthesizer); Colby O'Donis (vocals); Tom Kafafian (guitar); Joe Tomino (drums); RedOne , Calvin Gaines (programming); Flo Rida, Space Cowboy , Victor Bailey.
Audio Mixer: Robert Orton.
Recording information: 150 Studios, Parsippany, NJ; 2nd Floor Studios, Los Angeles, CA; 333 Studios, New York, NY; Chalice, Los Angeles, CA; Cherrytree Recording Studios; Darkchild Studios, Los Angeles; Dojo Studios, New York, NY; FC Walvisch, Amsterdam; Metropolis, London, UK; Poe Boy Studios, Miami, FL; Record Plant, Los Angeles.
Photographer: Hedi Slimane.
Initially planned solely as a standard double-disc reissue in the wake of the blockbuster success of The Fame, Lady Gaga decided to release the new material as a separate EP called The Fame Monster in addition to the standard two-CD set, where it's tacked onto a now standardized version of her debut. It's a nice move for fans, plus it helps emphasize the new material, which does act as a bridge from the debut to a forthcoming full-length. Everything on The Fame Monster bears a galvanized Eurotrash finish, as evident on the heavy steel synths of "Bad Romance" and the updated ABBA revision "Alejandro," as it is on the rock & roll ballad "Speechless" -- its big guitars lifted from Noel Gallagher -- and the wonderful, perverse march "Teeth." Even the stuttering splices on "Telephone," a duet with Beyoncé, leans to the other side of the Atlantic, which just emphasizes the otherness that's become Gaga's calling card. And even as she's becoming omnipresent, with her songs mingling with those who co-opt her on the radio, she is still slightly skewed, willing to go so far over the top she goes beyond camp, yet still channeling it through songs that are written, not just hooks. The Fame Monster builds upon those strengths exhibited on The Fame, offering a credible expansion of the debut and suggesting she's not just a fleeting pop phenomenon. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Audio Mixer: Robert Orton.
Recording information: 150 Studios, Parsippany, NJ; 2nd Floor Studios, Los Angeles, CA; 333 Studios, New York, NY; Chalice, Los Angeles, CA; Cherrytree Recording Studios; Darkchild Studios, Los Angeles; Dojo Studios, New York, NY; FC Walvisch, Amsterdam; Metropolis, London, UK; Poe Boy Studios, Miami, FL; Record Plant, Los Angeles.
Photographer: Hedi Slimane.
Initially planned solely as a standard double-disc reissue in the wake of the blockbuster success of The Fame, Lady Gaga decided to release the new material as a separate EP called The Fame Monster in addition to the standard two-CD set, where it's tacked onto a now standardized version of her debut. It's a nice move for fans, plus it helps emphasize the new material, which does act as a bridge from the debut to a forthcoming full-length. Everything on The Fame Monster bears a galvanized Eurotrash finish, as evident on the heavy steel synths of "Bad Romance" and the updated ABBA revision "Alejandro," as it is on the rock & roll ballad "Speechless" -- its big guitars lifted from Noel Gallagher -- and the wonderful, perverse march "Teeth." Even the stuttering splices on "Telephone," a duet with Beyoncé, leans to the other side of the Atlantic, which just emphasizes the otherness that's become Gaga's calling card. And even as she's becoming omnipresent, with her songs mingling with those who co-opt her on the radio, she is still slightly skewed, willing to go so far over the top she goes beyond camp, yet still channeling it through songs that are written, not just hooks. The Fame Monster builds upon those strengths exhibited on The Fame, offering a credible expansion of the debut and suggesting she's not just a fleeting pop phenomenon. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Tracks:
Disc 1:
1 - Bad Romance
2 - Alejandro
3 - Monster
4 - Speechless
5 - Dance in the Dark
6 - Telephone
7 - So Happy I Could Die
8 - Teeth
Disc 2:
1 - Just Dance
2 - Love Game
3 - Paparazzi
4 - Poker Face
5 - Eh, Eh (Nothing Else I Can Say)
6 - Beautiful, Dirty, Rich
7 - Fame
8 - Money Honey
9 - Starstruck
10 - Boys Boys Boys
11 - Paper Gangsta
12 - Brown Eyes
13 - I Like It Rough
14 - Summerboy
1 - Bad Romance
2 - Alejandro
3 - Monster
4 - Speechless
5 - Dance in the Dark
6 - Telephone
7 - So Happy I Could Die
8 - Teeth
Disc 2:
1 - Just Dance
2 - Love Game
3 - Paparazzi
4 - Poker Face
5 - Eh, Eh (Nothing Else I Can Say)
6 - Beautiful, Dirty, Rich
7 - Fame
8 - Money Honey
9 - Starstruck
10 - Boys Boys Boys
11 - Paper Gangsta
12 - Brown Eyes
13 - I Like It Rough
14 - Summerboy