| | D R I Four Of A Kind CD D R I Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
The remastered version of 4 OF A KIND was reissued in 2003 as Disc 1 of DIRTIEST...ROTTENEST.
By the time of 1988's Four of a Kind, all evidence of D.R.I.'s early hardcore punk roots was erased, except for the quartet's fondness for thrashing tempos. While they didn't go into the limp hair metal direction of contemporaries like T.S.O.L. (whose later albums would be laughable if they weren't so sad), instead favoring a somewhat tougher speed metal streak best shown on the neck-snapping "Slumlord" -- which also shows a rather surprising social commentary bent -- Four of a Kind is a perfect example of why it was a bad idea for hardcore punk bands to go metal. They simply couldn't do metal, which at its best has deep reserves of misanthropic anger, as well as the more tortured likes of Metallica or Megadeth. A hardcore band's anger is of the more cartoonish, juvenile wiseass variety, much more Ramones than Black Sabbath, and so the songs on Four of a Kind simply sound kind of weak and petulant. Later CD pressings include an absolutely pointless, grating bonus track, "S.O.F.C.," that consists of little more than a malfunctioning tape machine. ~ Stewart Mason
Personnel: Kurt Brecht (vocals); Spike Cassidy (guitar); Felix Griffin (drums).
Audio Mixers: Spike Cassidy; Bill Metoyer.
Recording information: Track Record Studios, North Hollywood, CA (02/1988/03/1988). D R I Four Of A Kind Songs Four Of A Kind Music Review Purchase Four Of A Kind CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | D R I Definition CD (1992)
Four Of A Kind album
$10.45
| | D R I Full Speed Ahead CD (1995)
Four Of A Kind CD music
$10.45
| | Faster Pussycat Wake Me When It's Over CD (1989)
Four Of A Kind music CDs
$9.09 Faster Pussycat's second album, Wake Me When It's Over, was a little less consistent than their debut; although a great deal of '80s hard rock was quite commercial, several songs here seem a little too calculated and insincere for their own good. The same triumvirate of influences as ...
| | Possessed Seven Churches CD (1985) Remastered
Four Of A Kind songs
$10.69 Often cited as the first true death metal record ever released (Florida's Death had been around just as long but would only make their vinyl debut a few years later), Possessed's Seven Churches took thrash metal's intensity to new levels of brutality. With song titles like "Burning in Hell," "Satan's Curse," and "The Exorcist" (featuring the famous movie's eerie title theme for an intro), the band definitely displayed a strong Slayer influence; but it was Possessed growler Jeff Becerra who first introduced the barely decipherable grunting vocal style which would epitomize the death metal genre. Among the highlights, "Pentagram," "Twisted Minds," and "Fallen Angel" have best stood the test of time, offering glimpses of the trends to follow with their surprisingly mature songwriting. They then close ...
| | D R I Thrash Zone CD (1989)
Four Of A Kind album
$12.19 The remastered version of THRASH ZONE was reissued in 2003 as Disc 2 of DIRTIEST...ROTTENEST.
Although the opening title track is a celebration of life in the mosh pit, D.R.I.'s fifth album is pretty much straightforward metal with little of the band's hardcore punk roots in its unapologetically slick sound. That said, Thrash Zone is an immense improvement over its immediate predecessor, the weak and unfocused Four of a Kind. Kurt Brecht's yowling vocals and forgettable lyrics are largely downplayed in favor of showing off the band's best assets: Spike Cassidy's efficient ...
| | Exciter Heavy Metal Maniac CD (1983)
Four Of A Kind CD music
$11.39 Released in 1983, the debut album from thrash metal pioneers Exciter puts them in league with then-emerging contemporaries ...
| | Dubblestandart Are You Experienced CDs (2006) Remixes
Four Of A Kind music CDs
$15.05 Dubble Standart is the moniker ...
| | Johnny Truant In The Library Of Horrific Events CD (2006) (Import)
Four Of A Kind songs
$30.19
| | Fear Of Eternity Funeral Mass CD (2007)
Four Of A Kind album
$13.19
| | Ray Price Side By Side CD (2007)
Four Of A Kind CD music
$12.25 Ray Price and Faron Young have had parallel careers in many ways. Both started out as hard honky tonk singers, but blessed with strong, everyman vocal styles, they switched over to mellower material and a Nashville pop veneer as time went on, and both have had their biggest hits with syrupy, string-laden crossover ballads. This set pairs them together, and is essentially a reissue of 1992's The Memories That Last with a pair of bonus tracks by each singer thrown in to complete the deal. It's a rather turgid affair, full of big, slow ballads that are big on sincerity but pretty low on energy, even though some of Nashville's best session players like Clinton Gregory on fiddle, Buddy Emmons on steel guitar, Jimmy Capps on guitar, and Blondie Calderon on vibraphone are aboard. It's all done very smoothly and professionally, but nothing really catches fire, although it's always nice to hear classics like Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart" and "Mansion on the Hill" and Willie Nelson's "Funny How Time Slips Away" done by veteran country crooners ...
| | Cristiano Malgioglio Le Piu Belle Canzoni CD (2008) (Import)
$7.75 | | Spider Loc B.A.Y.M.A.A.C. CD (2009)
For Sale Pre-Order Now! Available: Tuesday, January 19, 2010
$8.79 |
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