| | Hallows Eve Tales Of Terror CD Hallows Eve Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Stacy Anderson (vocals); David Stuart (guitar); Ronny Appoldt, Tym Helton (drums). Hallows Eve Tales Of Terror Songs | 1. | Plunging to Megadeath |
| 2. | Outer Limits |
| 3. | Horrorshow |
| 4. | Mansion, The |
| 5. | There Are No Rules |
| 6. | Valley of the Dolls |
| 7. | Metal Merchants |
| 8. | Hallows Eve |
| Tales Of Terror Music Review Purchase Tales Of Terror CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Black Sabbath Master Of Reality CD (1971)
Tales Of Terror
$8.95 Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi (guitar); Geezer Butler (bass instrument); Bill Ward (drums). With Paranoid, Black Sabbath perfected the formula for their lumbering heavy metal. On its follow-up, Master of Reality, the group merely repeated the formula, setting the stage for a career of recycling the same sounds and riffs. But on Master of Reality Sabbath still were fresh and had a seemingly endless supply of crushingly heavy riffs to bludgeon their audiences into sweet, willing oblivion. If the album is a showcase for anyone, it is Tony Iommi, who keeps the album afloat with a series of slow, loud riffs, the best of which -- "Sweet Leaf" and "Children of the Grave" among them -- rank among his finest playing. Taken in tandem with the more consistent Paranoid, Master of Reality forms the core of Sabbath's canon. There are a few stray necessary tracks scattered throughout the group's other early-'70s albums, but Master of Reality is the last time they ...
| | Black Sabbath Sabbath, Bloody Sabbath CD (1973)
Tales Of Terror
$8.79 Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi (guitar); Geezer Butler (bass); Bill Ward (drums). With 1973's Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, heavy metal godfathers Black Sabbath made a concerted effort to prove their remaining critics wrong by raising their creative stakes and dispensing unprecedented attention to the album's production standards, arrangements, and even the cover artwork. As a result, bold new efforts like the timeless title track, "A National Acrobat," and "Killing Yourself to Live" positively glistened with a newfound level of finesse and maturity, while remaining largely faithful, aesthetically speaking, to the band's signature compositional style. In fact, their sheer songwriting excellence may even have helped to ease the transition for suspicious older ...
| | Black Sabbath Technical Ecstasy CD (1976)
Tales Of Terror
$6.15 Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi (guitar); Geezer Butler (bass); Bill Ward (drums, background vocals). Additional personnel: Gerald Woodruffe (keyboards). Recorded at Criteria Studios, Miami, Florida. Black Sabbath was unraveling at an alarming rate around the time of their second to last album with original singer Ozzy Osbourne, 1976's Technical Ecstasy. The band was getting further and further from their original musical path, as they began experimenting with their trademark sludge-metal sound. While it was not as off-the-mark as their final album with Osbourne, 1978's Never Say Die, it was not on par with Sabbath's exceptional first five releases. The most popular song remains the album closer, "Dirty Women," which was revived during the band's highly successful reunion tour of the late '90s. Other standouts include the funky "All Moving Parts (Stand Still)" and the raging opener, "Back Street Kids." The melodic "It's Alright" ...
| | Black Sabbath Paranoid CD (1971)
Tales Of Terror
$8.89 Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi (guitar); Geezer Butler (bass instrument); Bill Ward (drums). Paranoid was not only Black Sabbath's most popular record (it was a number one smash in the U.K., and "Paranoid" and "Iron Man" both scraped the U.S. charts despite virtually nonexistent radio play), it also stands as one of the greatest and most influential heavy metal albums of all time. Paranoid refined Black Sabbath's signature sound -- crushingly loud, minor-key dirges loosely based on heavy blues-rock -- and applied it to a newly consistent set of songs with utterly memorable riffs, most of which now rank as all-time metal classics. Where the extended, multi-sectioned songs on the debut sometimes felt like aimless jams, their counterparts on Paranoid have been given focus and direction, lending an epic drama to now-standards like "War Pigs" and "Iron Man" (which sports one of the most immediately ...
| | Black Sabbath Never Say Die! CD (1978)
Tales Of Terror
$6.09 NEVER SAY DIE is Black Sabbath's last LP with Ozzy Osbourne. Black Sabbath: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi (guitar); Geezer Butler (bass); ...
| | Holocaust Live (Hot Curry & Wine) CDs (1983)
Tales Of Terror
$17.35
| | Kalibas Enthusiastic CD (2003)
Tales Of Terror
$11.19
| | Nile Annihilation Of The Wicked CD (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
Tales Of Terror
$13.69
| | Nasum Grind Finale CD (2007) (Import) Japan
Tales Of Terror
$46.59
| | Browden And Avital Omer Avital Marion Browden CD (2009) (Import)
Tales Of Terror
$26.29
| | Koquita Will U B Mine CD (2003)
Tales Of Terror
$12.65 Biography of KoquitaBorn and raised in Harlem NY, Koquita has been singing from the age of Two. She began her musical career at the age of Nine when she performed for the Girl Scouts of America. She is an Alumnus of LaGuardia H.S. of Performing Arts; here she developed her ability to sing classical music in such languages as French, German and Italian, as well as English.Her skills and talent won her the opportunity to tour internationally with one of New York's reputable and spiritual singing groups, The Canaan Gospel Ensemble, where she was part of ...
| | Secret Disco CD (2007) (Import)
Tales Of Terror
$35.49
| | Pushin Rope Murderous Songs Of Despair CD (2008)
Tales Of Terror
$11.49
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