| | Sammy Hagar Marching To Mars CD Sammy Hagar Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
All the flux Hagar's endured since leaving Van Halen results in a record full of introspection that finds the singer engaging in a Heart-flavored power ballad about his new wife and infant daughter ("Kama") and indulging in the metaphysical ("The Yogi's So High (I'm Stoned)"). Hagar's unlikely list of hand-picked contributors also includes Bay Area neighbor Mickey Hart, who adds his percussive talents and even co-produces the catchy title track with Guns 'N' Roses' knob-twirler Mike Clink.
Sammy Hagar's first post-Van Halen album finds the Red Rocker getting over a messy musical break-up by collaborating with an unlikely array of guest artists. Cameos include Huey Lewis and Roy Rogers, who add bluesy nuances to the crunch of "Little White Lie," and Bootsy Collins, whose bass enlivens the faux funk of "Would You Do It For Free?". Hagar's old group Montrose even reforms for "Leaving The Warmth Of The Womb."
Personnel: Sammy Hagar (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, bass); Slash, Mike Landau (guitar); Ronnie Montrose (acoustic & electric guitars); Damon Johnson (acoustic & slide guitars); Roy Rogers (slide guitar, dobro); Huey Lewis (harmonica); Jesse Harms (keyboards, background vocals); Jonathan Pierce, Bootsy Collins, Bill Church (bass); Denny Carmassi, Matt Sorum (drums); Giovanni Hidalgo, Luis Conte (percussion); Mickey Hart (percussion, sequencing); Eric Martin, Mickey Thomas, Aaron Hagar, Arnie's Army, Derek Hawkins, Harley Dinardo, Dave Cartategul, Kari (background vocals).
Sammy Hagar Marching To Mars Songs Marching To Mars Music Review Average Rating: (4.3 out of 5 stars)   Marching To Mars a winner Great CD!!!
One of Hagar's best.
Buy it now, what are you waiting for?
Slash, Matt Sorum, Mickey Hart, Bootsy Collins, Ronnie Montrose all contribute. Submitted by Jeff (Chicago)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
One of my favourites! Always loved Van Halen, both with Dave and with Sammy. Not with that third dude though... Found this album in a supermarket. They had a lot of records without sleeves and cases for a couple of dollars and this album was one of them. The disc itself doesn´t say much but I noticed it was Sammy, so I bought it. Damn, it kicks ass! I like it really hard and many of the songs are heavy like cement. Definetly his best so far. Submitted by Gunnar (Sweden) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Back In Good Form After Hagar's bitter split with Van Halen, he easily revived his roots with this, rock and even raggae inspired album. Featuring such stars as Slash, Damon Johnson(Brother Cane), and even Hagar's first band Montrose have cameos. This is the REAL DEAL Hagar fans. Plus, it feature two Van Halen written tracks, On The Other Hand and Do It For Free. Great Album! Submitted by Zach (Lockport IL) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Marching To Mars CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Sammy Hagar I Never Said Goodbye CD (1987)
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| | Living Sacrifice Hammering Process CD (2000)
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$13.49 The dissonant, trebly guitar noodling combined with detuned sub-riffing known as nu-metal sneaks into the always-evolving aggro of Living Sacrifice on the group's sixth release, The Hammering Process. Though perhaps considered a suspicious shift by their underground metal ...
| | Dream Theater Falling Into Infinity CD (1997)
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$8.39 Dream Theater's specialty is atmospheric metal, at times heavy, at times sinister, with a sharp techno edge. "New Millennium," the disc's opening cut, defines the sound: ...
| | Dream Theater Awake CD (1994)
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$9.19 Dream Theater's web of metal and progressive elements comes roaring out of the speakers at full throttle like some manic coupling of Frank Zappa, Guns & Roses and Yes, a garish torrent of virtuoso chopsmanship, classical flourishes and good old fashioned nosebleed metal.
With his snaking, syncopated lines, complicated rhythmic variations and crunching tone, Dream Theater's John Petrucci is a guitar hero for the '90s, and string slingers who admire the likes of Alan Holdsworth and Steve Vai will find much to admire in his unhinged extended flights on "Voices" and "Erotomania." And singer James LaBrie possesses the ...
| | Dream Theater Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence CDs (2002)
Marching To Mars album
$17.19 On this, Dream Theater's seventh studio effort, the heavier elements of the band's music come to the forefront. Although the masterful balance of rhythmic interplay, jazzy arrangement, and catchy melodies is ever-present ...
| | Living Sacrifice Conceived In Fire CD (2002)
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$13.39 Of all the metalcore bands that have come and gone over the span of the genre's history, Living Sacrifice has remained a band who ...
| | Rough Trade Avoid Freud CD (1980) (Import) Canada
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| | Me'Shell Ndege'Ocello World Has Made Me The Man Of My Dreams CD (2007)
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| | Remnant A Life Lived CD (2007)
Marching To Mars album
$12.69 The story of Remnant starts in earnest in 2003. Arash Davari and Adam Shockley were roommates at the time and both played guitar for their church, leading worship for the college ministry. Over time, Arash and Adam started writing music together, jamming on the tunes with the college worship band. Then in the spring of 2003 Arash and Adam decided to start taking their music more seriously and start performing outside of the college ministry. Thus began their search for a drummer and bassist.Enter: Nathan Harwell. Prodigious drummer, perennial cool guy, and perpetually shrouded in mystery. After the other guys in the college band had expressed their disinterest in pursuing a music career, Arash and Adam asked Nathan to fill the drummer spot. Serendipitously, Nathan had just quit drumming for another band and was available to jam with the boys; chemistry came instantly. With Arash on lead guitar, Adam on rhythm guitar and lead vocals, and Nathan now on drums, the band took a suggestion from a friend and decided to call themselves Remnant. All that remained was finding a bassist, but little did they know their search would take them through three interim bassists and two years before they found their man (who, incidentally, was literally right under their collective nose the whole time). Remnant continued writing new material and performing live through the spring of 2005 when their third bassist quit, leaving the seemingly snake-bitten position open yet again. At the time, ...
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