| | Odin Fight For Your Life CD Odin Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Although you wouldn't know it from their embarrassing depiction in the infamous The Decline of Western Civilization, Pt. 2 rockumentary, Odin were once a relatively well-respected band -- at least by the horrendously vapid standards of L.A.'s mid-'80s hair metal scene. Locked in a deadly struggle between technically advanced trad metal and lowest-common-denominator cock rock, the group wound up choosing the latter to its eventual ruin, but not before recording a body of work subscribing to both trends (sometimes at once) and, in lieu of an actual record deal, being profiled postmortem by 2001's Fight for Your Life collection. Quite the mixed bag, as you'd imagine, it's tellingly when Odin are at their glam-numbskull sleaziest (sub-Ratt-isms like "I Get What I Want" and "I'm Gonna Get You") that they fail most absolutely -- no thanks to vocalist Randy O and his squawking nasal falsetto. His lower registers don't rankle nearly as much, though, and guitarist Jeff Duncan's Eddie Van Halen-inspired histrionics rarely rankle at all. In fact, they take center stage on strongest tracks "12 O'Clock High" and "Love Action," while on the spare acoustic instrumental "Serenade to the Court," it's the influence of the late Randy Rhoads that comes through loud and clear. Another winning tandem, "Modern Day King" and the surprisingly powerful "Stranger Tonight," is built on a combination of acoustic and electric guitars, and even though not much else stands out for recognition, it's worth noting that the requisite power ballad, "She Was the One," isn't nearly as offensive as it could be. In other words, Fight for Your Life could almost (almost!) prove the point that Odin were "too good" to get a record deal during the depths of L.A.'s musically retarded glam metal culture -- but that still doesn't mean this set is likely to please many listeners who didn't actually share those warped tastes in the first place. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Us Version Of Once Japan Only release. Featured band on \"The Decline of Western Civilization, Pt. 2\", Featuring members of Lost Boys and Armored Saint, One of the biggest 80s Sunset Strip bands in Hollywood Fight For Your Life Music Odin Fight For Your Life Songs | 1. | 12 O'Clock High |
| 2. | Love Action |
| 3. | She Was the One |
| 4. | I Get What I Want |
| 5. | Serenade to the Court |
| 6. | Modern Day King |
| 7. | Stranger Tonight |
| 8. | Time and Time Again |
| 9. | I'm Gonna Get You |
| 10. | Push |
| 11. | Fight for You Life |
| Fight For Your Life Music Review Purchase Fight For Your Life CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Kinks Ultimate Collection CDs (2002) (Import) Thailand
Fight For Your Life
$20.09 Although generally not as highly regarded by the critics as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, or the Who, the Kinks may well have influenced far more musicians. The three-chord sledgehammer proto-metal burst of teenage lust called "You Really Got Me," the Kinks' third single and first hit, touched off a garage band explosion, which in turn influenced the rise of punk a decade later. Blessed with an astute songwriter in Ray Davies, the Kinks followed the template of "You Really Got Me" for a couple years, racking up hits with "All Day and All of the Night," "Tired of Waiting for You," and "Till the End of the Day." But Davies had more than one card in his pocket, and he blossomed into a sharp social satirist ("Dedicated Follower of Fashion"). By the time the album The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society was released in 1968, Davies had become a master of elegiac studies in English suburbia. The gender-bending "Lola" was a big hit in 1970 and the Kinks entered the video era in 1983 with "Come Dancing" and its memorable ...
| | Ozzy Osbourne Ultimate Sin CD (1986) (Import) Germany; Remastered
Fight For Your Life
$9.89 Also available in a 3-pack with DIARY OF A MADMAN and BARK AT THE MOON.
Ozzy Osbourne's 1983 release, BARK AT THE MOON, revealed that keyboards were becoming an integral ingredient in his music. On his next release, THE ULTIMATE SIN, keyboards were used even more extensively, resulting in Ozzy's most commercially accessible work. Despite the fact that many longtime fans resented the album's pop-metal leanings, THE ULTIMATE SIN became Osbourne's fastest-selling album to that point. It was also the last Ozzy Osbourne album to feature guitarist Jake E. Lee.
The most renowned song on THE ULTIMATE SIN remains the popular video/single "Shot in the Dark." Other standouts included the anti-nuclear war tracks "Thank God for the Bomb" and "Killer of Giants" (the latter was the album's working title for quite some time), as well as the title track and "Lightning Strikes," ...
| | Motorhead Stone Deaf Forever! CDs (2003) Box Set
Fight For Your Life
$50.75 Includes 60-page booklet with rare photos, extensive discographies and full-length essay by Mick Wall.
Recorded between 1975 & 2002. Includes liner notes by ...
| | Ozzy Osbourne Bark At The Moon /Blizzard Of Oz CD (2005) (Import)
Fight For Your Life
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| | Cramps Stay Sick CD (2007) (Import)
Fight For Your Life
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| | Early ZZ Top CD (Import) Import
Fight For Your Life
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| | Dream Theater Scenes From A Memory CD (1999)
Fight For Your Life
$11.35 "Metropolis Part I," a track featured on Dream Theater's breakthrough, ...
| | Rachel Buchman Baby And Me CD (2000)
Fight For Your Life
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| | Phil Vincent Secrets CD (2004)
Fight For Your Life
$13.69 Recording information: The Muzik Room (03/2003-09/2003).
Arrangers: Russ Martin; Phil Vincent.
Phil Vincent:All Vocals, Lead, Rhythm & Acoustic Guitars, Synthesizers, Piano, Organ, Bass & DrumsTane ...
| | Helloween Keeper Of The 7 Keys Part 1 CD (1987) Import
Fight For Your Life
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| | Trisomie 21 25 Years CDs (2007) LTD Boxset; Limited Edition; Box Set
Fight For Your Life
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