| | Nasty Savage CD Nasty Savage Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
Recorded at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida. Personnel: Nasty Ronnie (vocals); David Austin, Ben Meyer (guitar). Recording information: Morrisound Recording Studios, Tampa, FL; Morrisound Studios, Tampa, FL. Nasty Savage Songs | 1. | No Sympathy |
| 2. | Gladiator |
| 3. | Fear Beyond the Vision |
| 4. | Metal Knights |
| 5. | Garden of Temptation |
| 6. | Asmodeus |
| 7. | Dungeon of Pleasure |
| 8. | Morgue, The |
| 9. | Instigator |
| 10. | Psychopath |
| 11. | End of Time |
| Nasty Savage Music Review Average Rating: (3.8 out of 5 stars)   Some Like It Nasty This album is slightly less technical than their later releases. It has a heavy, raw sound. The Vocals are steeped in volitile falsetto that can drive some people insaine- awesome! Submitted by mannerism (Texas)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Nasty, Nasty, raw nasty Nasty savage, are in 80´s the supreme double by-pass, no doubt a great classic. Submitted by juanrafam (Medellín, Colombia)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
IF YOU LIKE IT HEAVY!!!! This is truly one of the best metal cd's of the 80's. If you like heavy, then you'll love it NASTY. This dics contains great guitar work, great drum work and the unique vocals of Nasty Ronnie. A must have for any metal head. Submitted by tts1968 (Peabody,MA USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
ONLY for fans of the band... Nasty Savage is one of those bands that if you jammed to them as a kid back in the 80's, and power meant more than actual talent and ability, then this still is an album for you. This band is painfully old-school, with sometimes almost whiny tracks and, at times, painfully simple music. Nasty Savage does however, have their own definitive sound, especially the vocals of Nasty Ronnie. A must have for 80's holdouts and fans of the band, but I would not suggest this band to the majority of today's Slipknot/ In Flames type fans. Submitted by BTB (Alabama, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Nasty Savage CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Nasty Savage Indulgence/Abstract Reality CDs (1994)
Nasty Savage
$9.99
| | Yardbirds Ultimate! CDs (2001)
Nasty Savage
$21.09 Those who worship at the Guitar God altar will have their prayers answered on July 17, when Rhino delivers The Yardbirds - Ultimate!, the first-ever collection to include tracks by the patron saints of guitar rock: Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, and Jimmy Page. Boasting more than 50 songs, the two-CD anthology marks the first time a truly comprehensive Yardbirds collection has ever been available, despite ...
| | Kinks Ultimate Collection CDs (2002) (Import) Thailand
Nasty Savage
$20.09 Although generally not as highly regarded by the critics as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, or the Who, the Kinks may well have influenced far more musicians. The three-chord sledgehammer proto-metal burst of teenage lust called "You Really Got Me," the Kinks' third single and first hit, touched off a garage band explosion, which in turn influenced the rise of punk a decade later. Blessed with an astute songwriter in Ray Davies, the Kinks followed the template of "You Really Got Me" for a couple years, racking up hits with "All Day and All of the Night," "Tired of Waiting for You," and "Till the End of the Day." But Davies had more than one card in his pocket, and he blossomed into a sharp social satirist ("Dedicated Follower of Fashion"). By the time the album The Kinks Are the ...
| | Kreator Terrible Certainty CD (1988) Remastered
Nasty Savage
$10.45
| | Loudness Thunder In The East CD (1985)
Nasty Savage
$9.69
| | Cramps Stay Sick CD (2007) (Import)
Nasty Savage
$26.29
| | Andre Andersen Changing Skin CD (1999) (Import)
Nasty Savage
$13.15
| | Gianni Morandi Gli Anni Sessanta CD (2001) (Import)
Nasty Savage
$46.15
| | Cannae Gold Becomes Sacrifice CD (2005)
Nasty Savage
$11.09 Light This City: Laura Nichol (vocals); Benny Murray (guitar, drums); Mike Dias (bass instrument). Personnel: Laura Nichol (vocals); Ben Murray (guitar, drums). Audio Mixer: Zack Ohren. Recording information: Castle Ultimate Studios, Oakland, CA (12/2004-01/2005). Arranger: Ben Murray. San Francisco's Light This City arguably came into their own with this release, which, coincidentally, was also their first album for Prosthetic Records, by striking upon the two-pronged formula that would characterize their particular mix of melodic death metal henceforth: velocity and bombast. The first permeates every song so completely and compulsively (as indeed it would on every one of the band's albums) that their intensity would simply overpower the senses without the second's timely punctuations, which really help to give shape and temper emotions during standouts like the opening title cut, the excellent mid-section riffs of "Obituary," and the brilliant Gothenburg-style staccato picking of "The Hunt." Kudos, too, to vocalist Laura Nichol, who compensates her relatively indistinct (though always impassioned) death growl with thoughtful ...
| | DJ Morpheus I Can't Live Without My Radio CD (2005) (Import) France
Nasty Savage
$15.35 An occasionally darker matter than Andrew Weatherall's likeminded mix of post-punk and early industrial, Nine O'Clock Drop, I Can't Live Without My Radio could be referred to as Nine O'Clock Drop Dead. Granted, DJ Morpheus didn't put this together for Cleopatra, the likes of Medium Medium and Heaven 17 sound excited about being alive, and ...
| | Twisted Sister Love Is For Suckers CD (2006) (Import) Import
Nasty Savage
$16.29
| | Cellador Enter Deception CD (2006) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan
Nasty Savage
$38.09 Includes 1 bonus track. Playing European-style power metal from the breadbasket of the American Midwest, Omaha, Nebraska's Cellador surprised the metal underground with their debut album, 2006's ENTER DECEPTION. From the furious riffage, courtesy of guitarists Bill Hudson and Chris Peterson, to the operatic, triple-tracked vocals of lead singer Michael Gremio, Cellador go toe to toe with their continental contemporaries in terms of both screamo punch and metallic speed. Fittingly, tracks like "A Sign Far Beyond" and "No Chances Lost" sound like the histrionic product of Bill & Ted's fictional group, Wyld Stalyns, albeit formed with utter seriousness by the virtuosos down at your local Guitar Center. ENTER DECEPTION is no joke, but it'll make you smile all the same. In the '90s and early to mid-2000s, the power metal revival movement was a largely European phenomenon. Germany, Holland, Italy, and the Scandinavian countries were full of young Gen-X and Gen-Y bands that were caught in a stylistic time warp and modeled themselves after the old-school power metal warriors of the '70s and '80s. But largely European doesn't mean exclusively European, and Cellador is among the power metal revival outfits that has come from the United States. This Omaha, NE, outfit didn't exist until 2004 -- and even though all of the band's members were in their late teens or early twenties when they recorded their debut album, Enter Deception, in late 2005 and early 2006, their sound is right out of Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, and Helloween. No one in Cellador was even born when Priest gave listeners Hell Bent for Leather in 1979 or when Maiden's first official full-length album came out in 1980, but their intense yet melodic approach clearly recalls power metal's heyday. Cellador do tend to be faster and thrashier than a lot of other power metal revival bands; in that sense, Enter Deception brings to mind Priest's 1990 gem, Painkiller, which was the most thrash-influenced project that Rob Halford and friends recorded during that era. But despite having a bit of thrash and speed metal appeal, there is no question that Cellador are a power metal band first and foremost. No one who knows his/her metal history will give Enter Deception the grand prize for originality; there's nothing even remotely groundbreaking on this decent but highly derivative effort. Regardless, the songs are likable and well executed, and Cellador demonstrate that a power metal revival unit doesn't have to be from Europe to be worthwhile. ~ Alex Henderson In the '90s and early to mid-2000s, the power metal revival movement was a largely European phenomenon. Germany, Holland, Italy, and the ...
| | Eri Yamamoto Cobalt Blue CD (2006)
Nasty Savage
$14.29 Personnel: Eri Yamamoto (piano); Ikuo Takeuchi (drums). Recording information: Park West Studio, Brooklyn, NY. Photographer: Rika Yamamoto. Arranger: Eri Yamamoto. Eri Yamamoto is a young Japanese pianist who possesses all the tools necessary for greatness: a keen sense of time, a swinging voice, technical chops that anybody would admire, and a singer's lyric sensibility as a soloist. Cobalt Blue is her debut for Thirsty Ear in the Blue Series -- curated by her friend, vanguard jazz pianist Matthew Shipp -- and her fourth outing overall. Along with bassist David Ambrosio and drummer Ikuo Takeuchi, she weaves a tapestry that reveals her influences, pianist McCoy Tyner, in particular, and Horace Tapscott and Bill Evans to a lesser extent. A lot of Yamamoto's own compositions are built ...
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