| | Ted Nugent CD Ted Nugent Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Ted Nugent (vocals, guitar, percussion); Derek St. Holmes (vocals, guitar); Cliff Davies (vocals, vibraphone, drums); Rob Grange (bass). Producers: Lew Futterman, Tom Werman. Reissue producer: Bruce Dickinson. Recorded at the Sound Pit, Atlanta, Georgia. Includes liner notes by Gary Graff. Digitally remastered by Vic Anesini (Sony Music Studios, New York, New York). Personnel: Ted Nugent (vocals, guitar, percussion); Derek St. Holmes (vocals, guitar); Cliff Davies (vocals, vibraphone, drums); Steve McRay (keyboards); Brian Staffeld, Tom Werman (percussion). Audio Remixer: Anthony Reale. Liner Note Author: Gary Graff. Recording information: Hammersmith Odeon, London, England (1977). Author: Ted Nugent. Photographers: Al Clayton; Adrienne Alford; Elaine Bryant; Ron Pownall. Arrangers: Derek St. Holmes; Ted Nugent. After disintegrating the Amboy Dukes in the early '70s, Ted Nugent finally decided to strike out on his own as a solo star. Even without a recording contract, Nugent toured constantly, built up a fervent following, and created a smoking hard rock quartet with the help of singer/guitarist Derek St. Holmes, bassist Rob Grange, and drummer Cliff Davies. The band's first release, 1975's Ted Nugent, is a prime slice of testosterone-heavy, raging, unapologetic rock & roll, and along with the band's 1977 release Cat Scratch Fever, it is Nugent's best solo studio album. While the grinding opening track, "Stranglehold," stretches beyond eight minutes and contains several extended, fiery-hot guitar leads, it does not come off as your typical '70s overindulgent fare -- every single note counts, as Nugent wails away as if his life depended on it. Other Nuge classics include "Motor City Madhouse," plus the St. Holmes-sung "Hey Baby" and "Just What the Doctor Ordered," all eventually becoming arena staples and making the band one of the late-'70s top concert draws. Additional highlights are the unexpected breezy jazz ballad "You Make Me Feel Right at Home," plus the untamed rockers "Stormtroopin'" and "Queen of the Forest." Nugent himself hails Ted Nugent as his best work, and with good reason. It's an essential hard rock classic. [Note: As with Nugent's other 1999 reissues, an insightful essay on this Nugent era by journalist Gary Graff is included, plus bonus tracks.] ~ Greg Prato Ted Nugent's self-titled 1975 debut solo release is a bold expression of gonzo guitarist's sound, image, and abundant attitude. Ted had what was essentially a touring band with Amboy Dukes bassist Rob Grange, fellow Michiganite Derek St. Holmes on vocals and guitar, and Cliff Davies on drums. During days off from the mega-road trip that preceded this album, the group recorded its first record. Co-produced by famed hard-rock/metal helmsman Tom Werman, "Stranglehold" has the impromptu jamming feel of a live show. Like "Deuce" for Kiss, the first track of a first album can define an act. "Stranglehold" leads straight into the no-holds-barred "Stormtroopin'," where the riffs are non-stop. The boogieish "Hey Baby" shows why St. Holmes was an underrated, soulful hard-rock vocalist. He howls "got me an overdose of rock & roll" on "Just What the Doctor Ordered." A wicked metal lick introduces "Snakeskin Cowboys." Ted picks his mammoth Gibson Birdland to death on "Motor City Madhouse." He switches gears on the bluesy shuffle of "You Make Me Feel Right at Home." The bonus live tracks of "Stormtroopin'," "Just What the Doctor Ordered," and especially "Motor City Madhouse" show why any rock & roll fan should witness a Ted Nugent show. Ted Nugent Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)   out of amboy and rockin harder this was teds first post amboy dukes album and boy it shows, he was really wailing out at this time and what a powerful album this was, from this record in 75 to weekend warriors in 78 was the pinnacle of teds carrere, great remastering and liner nots as well as bonus cuts, now lets do the amboy dukes stuff the right way and get that out to us old rockers!!!!!!! Submitted by SAXONMAN (hicksville new york)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
No lead Ted! If you want to hear a Gibson punished the way it is meant to be, then this album is for you. I've worn out many old tapes with the replaying of 'Stranglehold", 'Motor City Madhouse' and 'Queen of the Forest'! The words, Ted's maniacal guitar playing, and the drums puts me in the mood the second I hear that Gibson wake up! This album is still the pinnacle of the Nuge's Detroit days!
Ted, you the man! Submitted by Ken (Higgins Lk,Mi) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Ted's Solo Career Starts With A Bang Ted Nugent's solo career started with a bang on his self-titled debut album. Blending the influences of Led Zeppelin, Mountain, The Stones, Grand Funk Railroad, Mitch Ryder, The Allman Brothers Band, Chuck Berry, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Free, and Humble Pie, among others, the Motor City Madman created a style all his own. This album, the followups to 1982, and his work from 1995 on are a testament to the creative benefits of sobriety. Submitted by Adam (Suffern NY USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
This Is Right Before It Hit The Fan What a statement by an emerging atrist who would not be denied! Takes all kinds of balls to open an album with a long slow blues number ("Stranglehold"). Marred only slightly by Tom Werman's thin production (no bottom end; damn shame since Rob Grange was a fine bass player)and one inexplicable track ("You Make Me Feel Right At Home"), this is as in-your-face as a solo debut should be. Highlights: "Stranglehold", "Hey Baby", "Just What The Doctor Ordered", and the neck-snapping "Motor City Madhouse" (the guitar solo that closes "Madhouse" is my all-time favorite Nugent solo; it sounds like a truckload of bowling balls rolling down the stairs of the Empire State building, and that's a good thing). Submitted by a reviewer (Portland OR) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Ted Nugent CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ted Nugent Cat Scratch Fever CD (1977) Remastered
Ted Nugent
$7.59 Personnel: Ted Nugent, Derek St. Holmes (vocals, guitar); Rob Grange (bass); Cliff Davies (drums, background vocals); Montego Joe, Tom Werman (percussion); Boz Burrell, Alan Spenner, Rory Dodd (background vocals). Producers: Lew Futterman, Tom Werman, Cliff Davies. Reissue producer: Bruce Dickinson. Includes liner notes by Gary Graff. Digitally remastered by Vic Anesini (Sony Music Studios, New York, New York). Personnel: Ted Nugent (vocals, guitar, percussion); Derek St. Holmes (vocals, guitar, background vocals); Cliff Davies (vocals, drums, background vocals); Alan Spenner, Rory Dodd, Boz Burrell (vocals, background vocals); Tom Werman (percussion, background vocals); Montego Joe (percussion). Liner Note Author: Gary Graff. Recording information: CBS Studios, London, ...
| | Foghat Fool For The City CD (1975)
Ted Nugent
$8.39 Foghat: Lonesome Dave Peverett (vocals, guitar), Rod "The Bottle" Price (guitar, slide guitar, vocals), Nick Jameson (bass, keyboards, guitar, vocals), Roger Earl (drums, percussion). Digitally remastered by Bill Inglot and Ken Perry (K-Disc). All songs written or co-written by Lonesome Dave Peverett except "My Babe" (Bobby Hatfield/Bill Medley) and "Terraplane Blues" (Robert Johnson). Undoubtedly Foghat's finest album, 1975's FOOL FOR THE CITY, could cruise along on the strength of the band's biggest and best single, "Slow Ride," alone. In addition to that choogling stoner classic, however, the record also finds the bluesy British rock group offering up the fist-pumping, arena-worthy title track and a oddly funky version of Robert Johnson's "Terraplane Blues," not to mention the uncharacteristically melancholy "Take It or Leave It." Throughout the eclectic song selection, frontman Lonesome Dave Peverett leads the ensemble with assurance, making sure that even the lesser-known ...
| | Rainbow Rising CD (1976) Remastered
Ted Nugent
$7.29 Rainbow: Ronnie James Dio (vocals); Ritchie Blackmore (guitar); Jimmy Bain (bass); Tony Carey (keyboards); Cozy Powell (drums). All tracks have been digitally remastered. Rainbow: Ronnie James Dio (vocals); Ritchie Blackmore (guitar); Jimmy Bain (bass); Tony Carey (keyboards); Cozy Powell (drums). Personnel: Ronnie James Dio (vocals); Ritchie Blackmore (guitar); Munich Philharmonic Orchestra (strings, horns); Tony Carey (keyboards); Cozy Powell (drums). Recording information: Musicland Studios (02/1976). Arrangers: Ritchie Blackmore; Ronnie James Dio. On their second release, Rainbow not only avoid the sophomore jinx; they hit a home run. After replacing the entire band (except Ronnie James Dio) immediately following the recording of the first album, Ritchie Blackmore and the Rising lineup (Blackmore; Dio; Tony Carey, keys; Jimmy Bain, bass; and the late, great Cozy Powell, drums) ...
| | Wishbone Ash Argus CD (1972) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Expanded Edition
Ted Nugent
$6.55 Additional Tracks
ARGUS: EXPANDED EDITION contains bonus tracks from LIVE IN MEMPHIS, a 1972 promotional EP. Wishbone Ash includes: Ted Turner, Andy Powell (gutiar); Martin Turner (bass); Steve Upton (drums, percussion). Producer: Derek Lawrence. Reissue producers: Andy McKaie, Leon Tsilis. Includes liner notes by Leon Tsilis. Digitally remastered by Erik Kvortek. If Wishbone Ash can be considered a group who dabbled in the main strains of early-'70s British rock without ever settling on one (were they a prog rock outfit like Yes, a space rock unit like Pink Floyd, a heavy metal ensemble like Led Zeppelin, or just a boogie band like Ten Years After?), the confusion compounded by their relative facelessness and the generic nature of their compositions, Argus, their third album, was the one on which they looked like they finally were going to forge their own unique amalgamation of all those styles into a sound of their own. The album boasted extended compositions, ...
| | Deep Purple Who Do We Think We Are? CD (1973) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Ted Nugent
$9.65 Digitally remastered reissue featuring 7 bonus tracks, 'Woman From Tokyo' ('99 remix & Alt. Bridge), 'Painted Horse' (Studio Outtake), 'Our Lady' ('99 remix), 'Rat Bat Blue' (Writing session & '99 remix) & 'First Day Jam' (Instrumental). 2002.
Deep Purple: Ian Gillan (vocals); Ritchie Blackmore (guitar); Jon Lord (keyboards); Roger Glover (bass); Ian Paice (drums). All tracks have been digitally remastered. Audio Mixers: Ian Paice; Roger Glover. Audio Remixers: Peter Denenberg; Roger Glover. Photographer: Fin Costello. Deep Purple had kicked off the '70s with a new lineup and a string of brilliant albums that quickly established them (along with fellow British giants Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath) as a major force in the popularization of hard rock and heavy metal. All the while, their reputation as one of the decade's fiercest live units complemented ...
| | AC Highway To Hell CD (1979) Remastered; Deluxe Edition
Ted Nugent
$9.99 This is a Hyper CD, which contains regular audio tracks and also provides a link to the artist's website with the help of a web browser. AC/DC: Bon Scott (vocals); Angus Young, ...
| | Vincenzo La Scola Vita Mia CD (2009) (Import)
Ted Nugent
$14.45
| | Cannibal Corpse Gore Obsessed CD (2002)
Ted Nugent
$9.75 Contains an untitled hidden track following "Grotesque". Cannibal Corpse includes: George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher (vocals); Jack Owen, Pat O'Brien (guitar); Alex Webster (bass); Paul Mazurkiewicz (drums). Recorded at ...
| | Firebird No. 3 CD (2004)
Ted Nugent
$13.89 Originally Release '04 , Third album from the group led by guitarist Bill Sheer after disbanding Carcass.
Firebird: Bill Steer . Personnel: Bill Steer (vocals, guitar, harmonica, keyboards, percussion); Berno Paulsson (keyboards, percussion); George "Jolle" Atlagic (drums). Recording information: Berno Studios, Malmo, Sweden. In a career which, at least thus far, has hardly been worthy of great distinction within retro-rock circles, the horrendous, kindergarten-level ...
| | DGM Misplaced CD (2004) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan
Ted Nugent
$44.15
| | Mudvayne Lost And Found CD (2005)
Ted Nugent
$8.99 Mudvayne: Chad Gray (vocals); Greg Tribbett (guitar); Ryan Martinie (bass guitar); Matt McDonough (drums). It's been three years for Mudvayne, three years when metal started to reject its "rap" and "nu" prefixes. At first, Lost and Found reflects that realignment. Vocalist Chad Gray and his mates have nixed the nicknames and makeup for their third Epic full-length, and they try to focus on songs instead of heavy music shtick. However, they equate getting real with the melodramatic plead that interrupts the razor-sharp main part of "Choices," and Gray can't overcome lines like "IMN"'s "No one/No one could ever understand/This life." The song is about suicide, which is very serious. But yelling "F*ck this sh*t!" over thudding rhythms just isn't very powerful anymore. They nail it on opener "Determined" -- one of Mudvayne's all-time strongest tracks, it's a fist-swinging blast of modernized thrash. But Lost and Found soon falls into the familiar, busting no-one-understands-me lyrics and matching moments of refreshing rawness to stretches of stereotypical "corporate metal," a non-genre that's risen up to accept loud rock refugees and the harder side of post-grunge. The energy in "Determined" and "Just" is sapped by the meandering "TV Radio" and "Fall into Sleep," and ultimately Mudvayne gets lost between thrash and diluted Slipknot devotion. ...
| | Franco Battiato Fetus CD (1972)
Ted Nugent
$14.29 On this '70s outing, an early work by the Italian experimental pop composer, the great singer was influenced considerably by his background in experimental electronic music. As a student of Karlheinz Stockhausen, Franco Battiato was enthusiastic about electronic music, and found his voice as a minimalist composer who combined avant-garde minimalism, experimental rock, and popular forms into a strange hybrid of abstract sound that touches on Tangerine Dream-like passages. Titles such as "Una Cellula," "Energia," "Fenomenologia," ...
| | Lalith Rao Raga Darbari CD (2006) (Import) France
$17.59 | | Ranking Dread In Dub CD (2004)
Ted Nugent
$12.65 I man don't want to watch no TV, I man wanna listen to a Dub LP! So says Ranking Dread on his debut dub album.Originally released in 1982 this Dub LP has gained cult status due in part to the fantastic cover art of Rod Vass.To some this is THE DUB album by which all others should be measured. It's hard for us to be objective about that statement but when you hear the incredible mixes from King Tubby I am sure that you will have to think about it too.King Tubby takes ridims laid by Sly and Robbie and injects them with a power that screams "this is a Tubbys mix" . The masterful use of echo and reverb that goes to the outer edge of dub yet never loses control. Check out the stellar mix of Bob Marleys "I Don't Want To Wait In Vain". There were five tracks to a side on the original LP and the reissue LP is an exact copy of the original with King Tubby and Sly & Robbie on the A side with apprentice Scientist and Roots Radics doing the honors on side B .Scientist flexes his muscles on Side B (LP) track ...
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