| | Doggy Style Don't Hit Me Up CD Doggy Style Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Photographer: Dana Mundz.
Unknown Contributor Roles: Rib Finley; Daniel Stone; Bosco; Ray Beez. Doggy Style Don't Hit Me Up Songs | 1. | I Like You |
| 2. | Don't Hit Me Up |
| 3. | Can't Stand the Humor |
| 4. | Goofy Head |
| 5. | Showtime |
| 6. | Happy with Nothing |
| 7. | Bon Bon Voyage |
| 8. | Bottle |
| 9. | Heffas, The |
| 10. | Family Man |
| 11. | Awol |
| 12. | Useless Toy |
| 13. | Peace in the City |
| 14. | Soda Jerk |
| 15. | Janitor Man |
| 16. | Schaeffer's Revenge |
| 17. | Bonus-Time Baby |
| 18. | Daddy's Constitution |
| 19. | Everyone Wants to Dub My Baby |
| 20. | Discovering Books |
| 21. | Dog Kart |
| 22. | Puerto Rico |
| 23. | Traveler |
| 24. | Dub This |
| 25. | Lady from Bordello |
| 26. | Black Dog |
| 27. | Kick the Pup |
| 28. | Soul Dude |
| Don't Hit Me Up Music Review Purchase Don't Hit Me Up CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Major Accident Massacred Melodies/A Clockwork Legion CD (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Don't Hit Me Up
$17.69
| | Slaughter & The Dogs Do It Dog Style CD (1978) (Import) Import; Canada
Don't Hit Me Up
$17.75 Slaughter & the Dogs' name may not ring recognition bells among today's listeners, but 1977 punk acolytes will definitely welcome this reissue. Vocalist Wayne Barrett and guitarist Mick Rossi named their band after the two albums they treasured most: David Bowie's Diamond Dogs, and Mick Ronson's Slaughter on 10th Avenue. Both choices summarize this album's light-shade approach. The opening salvo of "Where Have All the Boot Boys Gone?" sounds as hair-raising as ever and rightly remains the band's best-known song, having been credited with inspiring the Oi! punk movement. At heart, though, the Dogs revealed themselves as waggish punk-poppers on "Quick Joey Small" celebration of criminal bravado, and "You're a Bore," whose outro soars into impossibly pure ear candy. The band proves agreeably diverse on the slower, janglier "Since You Went Away," and a remake of the Velvet Underground's "I'm Waiting for the Man," which crackles with an impatience befitting its addiction-by-attrition theme. Still other tracks, such as "Victims of the Vampire," display a goonish sensibility better suited to a Ramones ...
| | M I A Lost Boys CD (2001)
Don't Hit Me Up
$12.95 M.I.A. was one of the 50 best So-Cal punk bands of the great early-'80s second wave explosion, but for some reason never received much lasting acclaim -- while seemingly all their brethren were acknowledged then and since. Sadly, their two best records, Notes From the Underground and After the Fact, are the period directly after this 37-song compendium. But Lost Boys, which captures their faster, harder beginnings, is still worth pursuing. This should have been chronological, as M.I.A.'s first release, the pulverizing, white-hot eight songs on their 1982 split LP, Last Rites for Genocide and M.I.A., is buried on tracks 14-21! Please start with them, as they're the best work here (including their pre-1985 zenith, the classic "Tell Me Why," as well as the explosive, tongue-in-cheek "I Hate Hippies"). It also puts in perspective the hardcore-thrash record they made for Alternative Tentacles, Murder in a Foreign Place. While this was their biggest seller, it's their ...
| | Rod Stewart Never A Dull Moment CD (1972) Gold
Don't Hit Me Up
$19.10
| | Transatlantic The Whirlwind CDs (2009)
Don't Hit Me Up
$18.79
| | Halford III: Winter Songs CD (2009) Special Edition; Digipak
Don't Hit Me Up
$13.58 At first glance, Halford's entry into the crowded holiday market looks like a parody. Heavy metal and Christmas make for strange bedfellows, and WINTER SONGS' pastoral cover art -- which ...
| | Brave Combo Group Dance Epidemic CD (1997)
Don't Hit Me Up
$13.79
| | Gil Evans Paris Blues CD (1987)
Don't Hit Me Up
$13.95
| | Fats Waller Career Perspective 1922-1943 CD (1996) (Import)
Don't Hit Me Up
$17.95
| | Diamond Collection, Vol. 10 CD (2006)
Don't Hit Me Up
$29.35
| | Puddle Of Mudd Life On Display CD (2003) Import
Don't Hit Me Up
$13.95 This is and Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
Partially recorded at NRG Studios and The Hook Studio, North Hollywood, California.
English version contains the two bonus tracks "Life Ain't Fair" and "Daddy".
Puddle of Mudd's sophomore album finds the band both digging deeper into its grunge tendencies and broadening its musical horizons with a collection of sometimes sinewy, sometimes uncharacteristically introspective tracks. The almost restrained "Sydney" falls into the latter category, its reflective lyric adding another dimension to the band's usually testosterone-driven songwriting. And it's by no means alone here, being immediately followed by "Time Flies," an extended exercise in surprising sensitivity.
This doesn't mean POM is wimping out--far from it, with an angsty opener such as the monolithic "Away from Me." However, it perhaps signifies a shift into more elaborate, ...
| | Circa Survive Juturna CD (2005)
Don't Hit Me Up
$10.69 In a dramatic turn of events, singer Anthony Green left his old band, Saosin, without warning at an Phoenix airport terminal (just as a tour was beginning), and jetted back to Philadelphia to form Circa Survive. ...
| | Gourds Blood Of The Ram CD (2004) (Import) Import
Don't Hit Me Up
$16.39 Scorch-porch? Beergrass? Hick-hop? All three tags have attempted, and ultimately failed, to successfully relate to the masses the eclectic bits of meat and bone that make up Austin, TX, the Gourds. The bandmembers themselves describe their Twilight Zone, sepia-tone, gravy-drenched fools-gold nuggets as "music for the unwashed and well-read," and that sentiment couldn't be more apt in illustrating the dizzying redneck poetry that runs rampant on their sixth full-length release, The Blood of the Ram. "Oklahoma has a dirty red mane/a Native American slot machine" is just one of the delicious images from co-founder Kevin Russell's ode to the "Lower 48." A spirited look at the nation through the windshield of a rusty tour bus, it's a fitting introduction to a collection of songs that are among the loosest and most road-trip-worthy of the quintet's decade-long career. The Gourds have always subscribed to the warts-and-all energy of recording live in the studio, and while Blood of the Ram retains all of the drunken barn jam whoops and missed cues of previous efforts, the troops are so well seasoned that even at their sloppiest -- Jimmy Smith's magnificently weird closer, "Turd in My Pocket" -- they manage to outperform ...
| | Captain Straydum Ban Ban Ban CD (2007) (Import)
$48.59 |
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