The album 'Re-Thought' finds the band
covering DEAD OR ALIVE's 'You Spin Me Right Round' and FINE YOUNG
CANNIBALS 'She Drives Me Crazy'.
Tracklist:
01. Lock Down
02. Dark Lovers 03. Cage Me 04. You Spin Me Round
05. Hidden 06. Body Art 07. Night Skin 08. She Drives Me
Crazy 09. Upon You 10. Rethought
Latest
album from Scandinavian Rap-Metal outfit Clawfinger, who still stick to
their Rap-Metal sound that made them famous in 1994 with their debut
"Deaf Dumb Blind".
Special
Edition contains 2 Bonus Track.
Specs: EAC / APE / Cue / Log /
No Covers
Track list:
1. The price we pay 2.
Life will kill you 3. Prisoners 4. Final stand 5. None
the wiser 6. Little baby ... Read more »
Artist: Aztec Camera Album: Dreamland
Released: 1993 Source: WEA Genre: new romantics Format:
eac.ape.covers
Quote
Whoever got the idea of putting erstwhile
lo-tech pop hero Roddy Frame in the studio with the legendarily hi-tech
keyboardist/composer/producer Ryuichi Sakamoto ought to at least get
credit for thinking outside the box. And if the experiment wasn't an
unqualified success, well, that's what usually happens when you think
outside the box. Dreamland is far from a failure; by this point in his
career, Frame's pop craft is too instinctive to permit that. But
Sakam
... Read more »
Ever since 1987's Rick Rubin-produced Electric, the
Cult have never shied away from reveling in the trashiest aspects of
rock & roll culture. No doubt, Ian Astbury's sojourn replacing Jim
Morrison in the Doors -- or, as they were litigated into calling
themselves, Riders on the Storm -- must have caused the '60s to resonate
with him much more than singing a tribute to Edie Sedgwick, as he did
on the Cult's Sonic Temple. So in 2007, an age when pure hard rock was
nothing to be ashamed of, the Cult roared back with the back-to-basics
record Born into This. (As in the past, Ian Astbury and Billy Duffy are
the Cult; bassist Chris Wyse and drummer John Tempesta are nothing more
than hired guns here.) From t
... Read more »
Say this for Matchbox Twenty
-- they've gotten better the longer they've stuck around. And that's not
just their music, either: they've dropped the pretense of spelling
their name as matchbox 20, they've gone away from cumbersome album
titles, and they've embraced their status as MOR rockers. All of this is
evident on Exile on Mainstream, which is not only the first of their
albums to bear a simple yet clever title, it's a collection of hits that
traces their progression into a good, solid mainstream band and is also
buttressed by an EP that finds them livelier than ever. Bolder, too,
especially on the rockabilly of "I'll Believe You When" and the slow
oldies beat of "Can't Let You Go," which are l
... Read more »