| | U D O Faceless World CD - Import U D O Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Udo Dirkschneider (vocals); Mathias Dieth (guitar); Thomas Smusznyski (bass); Stefan Schwartzman (drums). Recorded at Dierks Studios, Cologne, Germany between October 1989 & January 2000. All tracks are digitally remastered. When Udo Dirkschneider sang lead with the West German metal band Accept, it was clear that AC/DC's Bon Scott was his primary influence. And the headbanger took his love of Scott with him when he departed Accept and formed his own band, Udo, in 1987. Though not as strong as his work with Accept, Faceless World is a decent album that employs mildly gothic imagery at times. Not content to simply crank up the volume and hit us with power chords, Dirkschneider and friends make melody a priority on "System of Life," "Stranger," "Blitz of Lightning" and other songs on this exuberant CD. Faceless World may not be Balls to the Wall (one of Accept's best releases), but it isn't anything to be ashamed of either. Who could have predicted that only three year's after Faceless World came out, this type of rock would have lost so much ground to alternative rock? ~ Alex Henderson U D O Faceless World Songs | 1. | Heart of Gold |
| 2. | Blitz of Lightning |
| 3. | System of Life |
| 4. | Faceless World |
| 5. | Stranger |
| 6. | Restricted Area |
| 7. | Living on a Frontline |
| 8. | Trip to Nowhere |
| 9. | Born to Run |
| 10. | Can't Get Enough |
| 11. | Unspoken Words |
| 12. | Future Land |
| Faceless World Music Review Purchase Faceless World CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | U D O Animal House CD (1997) (Import)
Faceless World
$11.75
| | U D O Mean Machine CD (1997) (Import) Germany
Faceless World
$15.75
| | U D O No Limits CD (1999) (Import) Germany
Faceless World
$12.29
| | U D O Holy CD (2000) (Import) Germany
Faceless World
$11.95
| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Faceless World
$6.39 The Corrs: Jim Corr (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Sharon Corr (vocals, violin); Andrea Corr (vocals, tin whistle); Caroline Corr (vocals, drums, bodhran, percussion). Recorded at Ardmore Studios in Dublin, Ireland in January 2002. You knew the Corrs had made it when they played the final JFK Awards ceremony of the Clinton administration. Playing it would have been achievement enough, but their status as a happening thing was cemented at the end of the ceremony, during the encores, when everybody was taking their final bows. Bill moseyed up over to Andrea, put his arm around her, and when she was looking away, sized her up -- at precisely the same moment Chuck Berry was checking her out. If that doesn't mean that you've broken America, entering its pop culture, I don't know what does, expect for maybe a VH1-endorsed piece of product like Live in Dublin. Lo and behold, that's exactly what the Corrs received in the spring of 2002, a year and a half after "In Blue" and its accompanying single "Breathless" broke down the doors in America for the U.S. Only two songs on this set list are shared with In Blue, but that doesn't mean that the group ...
| | U D O Man And Machine CD (2002) (Import) Germany
Faceless World
$16.49 2002 album for heavy metal act featuring Accept, vocalist Udo Dirkschneider. 11 tracks including, 'Private Eye', 'The Dawn Of The Gods' & 'Silent Cry'.
Udo: Udo Dirkshneider (vocals); Stefan Kaufmann, Igor Giandola (guitar); Fitty Wienhold (bass); Lorenzo Milani (drums). Additional personnel: Doro Pesch (vocals). Producers: Stefan Kaufmann, Udo Dirkschneider. Recorded at Roxx Studio, ...
| | B Sharp Jazz Quartet Searching For The One CD (1996)
Faceless World
$9.39
| | Bathory Blood Fire Death CD (1988)
Faceless World
$9.15 Possibly the first true example of what is commonly called Viking metal, 1988's Blood Fire Death inaugurated an incredibly prolific period in Bathory's history -- so prolific and creative, in fact, that an entire album's worth of material recorded at this time would be shelved for years before eventually finding room for release as 1996's Blood on Ice. Featuring dramatic orchestral arrangements backing horrific ...
| | Clifford Jordan & Magic Triangle Firm Roots CD (1975) (Import) Germany
Faceless World
$17.95
| | Vampire Music, Vol. 1 CD (2005)
Faceless World
$9.45
| | Mastodon Blood Mountain CD (2006) With DVD; Limited Edition
Faceless World
$14.85 This CD/DVD set includes their 12 track album plus a DVD with an animated piece, photo gallery, and making-of-the-video footage, as well as behind-the-scenes footage.
Mastodon: Brent Hinds (vocals, guitar); Troy Sanders (vocals, bass guitar); Bill Kelliher (guitar); Bränn Dailor (drums). Additional personnel: Josh Homme, Scott Kelly, Cedric Bixler-Zavala. Reigning kings of the early-2000s metal resurgence, Atlanta's Mastodon expertly blended vintage speed-metal riffage, stoner rock's sludgy power, and prog's vision and scope on 2004's acclaimed LEVIATHAN. The band returns even stronger on their 2006 major label debut, BLOOD MOUNTAIN. The quartet's playing remains unquestionably tight, as fierce solos overlay colossal riffs, which are anchored by a rhythm section that is fluid when necessary (as on the ambient prog-metal of "Sleeping Giant") and lock-step perfect when the orders for speed and power are sent down from on high (see "Bladecatcher"). While BLOOD MOUNTAIN is purportedly a concept album (loosely built around the idea of being lost and doomed and at nature's mercy in the great wild, as opposed to LEVIATHAN's overt Moby Dick theme) it's difficult to decipher a clear narrative from the scorched-earth vocals. Nonetheless, a classical sense of grandiosity pervades the album, as the lightning intensity and sheer power of the music take the listener on a bewildering journey. But remain calm, dear listener: Mastodon will get you to the top of the mountain--bloody and beaten, but altogether satisfied. The two-year long wait is over, and those Mastodon fans encouraged but leery of the slicker production of Leviathan over Remission will be even more bemused, or downright bewildered, by Blood Mountain, the band's first foray into major-label territory since signing with Warner Brothers' Reprise imprint (after all, this was the label conceded to Frank Sinatra as his own when he threatened to leave it). Blood Mountain is everything fans both hoped for and feared. Mastodon has dug even deeper in its foray into prog metal, but without losing an ounce of their power, literacy, or willingness to indulge in hardcore punk, doom, and death metal. Like Leviathan, Blood Mountain is both melodic and downright raging in places. Matt Bayles is in the producer's chair once more and he's encouraged this Georgia quartet -- Bränn Dailor (drums), Brent Hinds (guitar and vocals), Bill Kelliher (guitar and vocals), and Troy Sanders (bass and vocals) -- to take it to the limit. And they have. Blood Mountain indulges and goes deep into the territory of prog metal beats and quests and spiritual revelations that have less to do with Tolkein-ism and more to do with Conan-ism. There are utterly beautiful melodic passages woven into the heaviness that are reminiscent of Thin Lizzy's dual guitar lyricism -- and the band has ...
| | Cara Lumen Transformational Visioning CD (2007)
Faceless World
$16.45
| | Reggae Party Hits CD (2009) (Import) Import
$14.59 |
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