| | Iron Maiden CD Iron Maiden Discography of CDs
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This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. There may be no better place to hear how both punk and prog rock informed the New Wave of British Heavy Metal than Iron Maiden's self-titled debut. Often overlooked and overshadowed by the glorious Bruce Dickinson years, it's easy to forget that Iron Maiden was itself a game-changer when it appeared on the scene in 1980. That year also saw important albums from Motörhead, Saxon, and Angel Witch, but Iron Maiden vaulted its creators to the head of the NWOBHM pack, reaching the U.K. Top Five and establishing them as an outfit with the talent to build on Judas Priest's late-'70s innovations. On the one hand, Maiden was clearly drawing from elements of punk rock -- the raw D.I.Y. production, the revved-up velocities, and the vocals of rough-and-ready growler Paul Di'Anno, who looked and sounded not like a metal god, but rather a short-haired street tough. On the other hand, Maiden had all the creative ambition of a prog rock band. Compositionally, even their shortest and most straightforward songs featured abrupt changes in tempo and feel. Their musicianship was already light years beyond punk, with complicated instrumental passages between guitarists Dave Murray and Dennis Stratton and bassist Steve Harris. When Murray and Stratton harmonize their leads, they outdo even Priest's legendary tandem in terms of pure speed. The lyrics have similarly high-flying aspirations, spinning first-person stories and character sketches with a flair for the seedy and the grotesque. Add it all up, and Iron Maiden performs the neat trick of reconciling two genres seemingly antithetical to one another, using post-Priest heavy metal as the meeting ground. The seven-minute "Phantom of the Opera" is a landmark, the band's earliest progressive epic and still among its best; with its ambitious fusion of musical styles, its multi-sectioned construction, and the literary retelling of the lyrics, it seemed to encapsulate all the promise of both the band and the NWOBHM. Two of the simpler, punkier rockers, "Running Free" and "Sanctuary" (the latter left off the U.K. version but added to subsequent reissues), made the lower reaches of the British singles charts. The flasher tale "Prowler," one of the band's more enduring numbers, is in the same vein, but ups the instrumental complexity, while the title track still remains a concert staple. Elsewhere, the band offers the first of many instrumentals with "Transylvania," introduces the recurring title character of "Charlotte the Harlot," and reimagines Judas Priest's "Beyond the Realms of Death" with the "ballad" "Remember Tomorrow," which starts out soft but closes with a speed-freak guitar section. Perhaps the only hint of a misstep comes on the more restrained ballad "Strange World," the only song from this album that was never re-recorded in a live or alternate version by the Dickinson lineup. Nonetheless, the whole project explodes with energy and ideas, and while the band would certainly go on to refine much of what's here (including the cover painting of mascot Eddie), Iron Maiden would still rank as a landmark even if the Dickinson years had never happened. ~ Steve Huey Just as punk was mutating into new wave and the '70s were coming to a close, Iron Maiden came onto the British music scene as part of a movement known as the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal. Named for a medieval torture instrument, Iron Maiden was founded by bass player Steve Harris and released their self-titled debut in 1980. Roughly produced by Will Malone, the songs were influenced by the group's fascination with horror films ("Phantom Of The Opera") and the macabre ("Transylvania," "Prowler"). Driven by Harris' driving bass and Paul Di'Anno's raspy vocals, songs such as the moody "Remember Tomorrow" and the more aggressive "Charlotte The Harlot" also featured the melodic interplay of guitarists Dave Murray and Dennis Stratton. "RunnQ (8/00, p.127) - Included in Q's "Best Metal Albums Of All Time" - "...Viewed as a punk-metal hybrid....there remains a streetwise edge to this debut that [they] never recaptured..." Iron Maiden Music Review Average Rating: (4.3 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews The birth of a unique sound This album sounds great. It has a snappy vibe that grabs ahold of your ears. Iron Maiden weren't the originators of this new sound, they introduced it to the masses. The album covers and merchandizing were key to this goal, for the radio would never allow their wrathfull sound.
Embryonic Icon of metal Submitted by markgrafstrom (Salol, MN, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Iron Maiden's First and Best Album From start to finish, this album is absolutely phenomenal. It manages to perfectly blend Maiden's future, heavy-metal style with a more back-to-basics punk sound. I wouldn't normally touch punk music with a 10-foot pole, but this album has an incredible punk-rock sound to it that I love. All of the songs have catchy riffs, excellent guitar work, great vocal melodies, and tons of energy. Paul Di'Anno's vocals are outstanding and he positively puts his heart and soul into his singing. Prowler gets things going with a catchy, quick riff. Sanctuary comes second and propels the album even faster with an accelerated pace. Remember Tomorrow showcases one of the best Maiden riffs and heaps of emotion from Di'Anno. Running Free brings things back around to the unique punk-rock feel of the album with a great, rebellious song. Phantom of the Opera is up fifth. Not much to say. It's a great song. Transylvania is an entertaining instrumental that appears to act as an opening to the next song: Strange World. Strange World is jaw dropping. Di'Anno's vocals combined with slow, meaningful guitar work is just amazing. Charlotte the Harlot brings some pep back into the album, and the album closes with the eponymous song, Iron Maiden. This album is just flat-out excellent. I thought I had a favorite Maiden album, and then I bought this. It's the new king on my Maiden throne. Submitted by CD_Music_Freak (Earth) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The Beginning This album is GREAT
prowler is an all time classic that is by far my favorite on the album
Remember Tomorrow, wow the coolest and most mysterious intro ever, until it breaks into the heavy parts, then its SWEET!
Running Free, What a great song, still played at many iron maiden gigs today, different feel tho i must say
Phantom of the Opera, the greatest maiden riff and solo of all time remain on this song
Strange world; well... it is strange, different feel to the song
Sanctuary. another one still played today most likely with a pause in the middle where janick fiddles around a bit
Charlotte the Harlot.WOO dave murrays first song its a good one too, you other crapy bands, be jelous
Iron maiden. This is the bands song, its the coolest and its usually the ending of every concert, its also very different without a guitar solo. Submitted by Evan Simpson (Winnipeg, MB, CAN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Greath Album simply a must have! Submitted by carloz90210 (california) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
would be five if not for production Every song is a classic. Sound is not that great, even by early 80's standards. Still a must have! Submitted by rob (buffalo) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Iron Maiden CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Iron Maiden Killers CD (1981) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$11.89 This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Wrathchild" and "Killers." Iron Maiden: Paul DiAnno (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass); Clive Burr (drums). Engineers: Martin "Headmaster" Birch, Nigel Hewitt. Recorded at Battery Studios, London, England. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Iron Maiden's sophomore effort, Killers, is mostly composed of pre-existing material that had been left off the debut, with just a few new additions. It's certainly a better-sounding release than the debut, with new producer Martin Birch beefing up the band's studio presence and lending their instrumental attack a newfound clarity that throws their considerable skills into sharp relief. In fact, this helps mask the fact that the songwriting isn't quite as strong overall as it was on the debut. But the teaming of new guitarist Adrian Smith with Dave Murray forms the most formidable twin-guitar attack in heavy metal, outside of Glenn Tipton and K.K. Downing. Plus, bassist Steve Harris' busy, driving lines are now consistently audible in the mix. The resulting instrumental fireworks are what truly make the album tick. That said, there's a much smaller percentage of catalog standards here than on the previous album. "Wrathchild" is the standout, re-recorded here with Smith on guitar from an earlier version for the Metal for Muthas compilation. There's a fair bit of unity in the lyrical themes, with a parade of murderers, fugitives, and characters otherwise torn from their roots. "Murders in the Rue Morgue" is a first-person retelling of the Poe short story, and the title track is another highlight, with Paul Di'Anno turning in an especially menacing performance. The single "Purgatory" has a catchy singalong chorus and a tempo worthy of
| | Iron Maiden Number Of The Beast CD (1982) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$12.09 This Limited version features vinyl replica packaging. This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files, including music videos for "Run To The Hills" and "Number Of The Beast." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass); Clive Burr (drums). Recorded at Battery Studios, London, United Kingdom. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray , Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass guitar); Nicko McBrain (drums). Routinely ranked among the greatest heavy metal albums of all time, The Number of the Beast is the birth of Iron Maiden as we know it, a relentless metal machine lifted to soaring new heights by the arrival of erstwhile Samson frontman Bruce Dickinson. Dickinson's operatic performance here made him an instant metal icon, challenging even Rob Halford for bragging rights, and helped launch the band into the stratosphere. The Number of the Beast topped the charts in the U.K., but even more crucially -- with Judas Priest having moved into more commercial territory -- it also made Iron Maiden the band of choice for purists who wanted their metal uncompromised. Maiden took the basic blueprint Priest had created in the late '70s -- aggressive tempos, twin-guitar interplay, wide-ranging power vocals -- and cranked everything up faster and louder. The album's intensity never lets up, the musical technique is peerless for its time, and there isn't a truly unmemorable song in the bunch. Blessed with a singer who could drive home a melody in grandiose fashion, Steve Harris' writing gets more ambitious, largely abandoning the street violence of old in favor of fittingly epic themes drawn from history, science fiction, and horror. The exceptions are "22 Acacia Avenue," a sequel to "Charlotte the Harlot" tha
| | Iron Maiden Piece Of Mind CD (1983) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$11.89 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray , Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass guitar); Nicko McBrain (drums). The second of three straight iconic Iron Maiden albums, Piece of Mind marks the debut of what many regard as the definitive Maiden lineup, with the arrival of new drummer Nicko McBrain. McBrain's ability to duplicate the complex patterns of the guitar and bass riffs gives the band a seamless ensemble unity. Even Steve Harris, whose busy basslines were never exactly groove-oriented, has never felt more integrated into the overall sound. Perhaps part of that feeling comes from the less frantic pace; the average tempo has slowed somewhat from the preceding album, and the hold-over punk influences still present there have been completely eradicated. Instead, we get a few moodier, heavier pieces (especially "Revelations") that make the album darker-sounding overall. We also get greater involvement in the songwriting from Bruce Dickinson and Adrian Smith, whose themes are perfectly in tune with Steve Harris' epic storytelling. Nearly every song here was inspired by movies or literature, whether it's history, mythology, sci-fi, or fantasy; this approach got them tagged as a thinking-man's metal band, and certainly provided a lyrical blueprint for Anthrax. No less than four songs are about battles and warriors, and a couple are about flying, underscoring the heights of the drama that the band is aiming for. The centerpiece of the album is, of course, "The Trooper," an all-time genre classic that boasts Murray and Smith's most memorable harmonized lead riff, plus that trademark galloping rhythm. A retelling of the Greek myth "Flight of Icarus" was the other British hit single, boasting an appropriately soaring chorus. Album opener "Where Eagles Dare" is the other flight song, recounting a WWII spy thriller and featuring one of McBrain's signature per
| | Iron Maiden Powerslave CD (1984) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$11.89 This Limited version features vinyl replica packaging. This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "2 Minutes To Midnight" and "Aces High." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass); Nicko McBrain (drums). Recorded at Compass Point, Nassau, Bahamas. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "2 Minutes To Midnight" and "Aces High." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass); Nicko McBrain (drums). Recorded at Compass Point, Nassau, Bahamas. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray , Adrian Smith (guitar); Steve Harris (bass guitar); Nicko McBrain (drums). The third in a trilogy of legendary Iron Maiden albums, Powerslave is frequently ranked as the fan favorite of the bunch, capping off a stellar run that sealed the band's genre-defining status. If The Number of the Beast was the all-time metal landmark, Powerslave is perhaps the quintessential Maiden album, capturing all the signature elements of the band's definitive era in one place. The album opens with Maiden at their catchiest, turning in a pair of metal classics right off the bat with the British hit singles "Aces High" (a high-speed ode to a WWII air battle) and the apocalyptic "2 Minutes to Midnight." Next we get an instrumental, "Losfer Words (Big 'Orra)," of the sort that Maiden periodically deployed to keep fans in awe of their technical chops. A pair of their best and most overlooked album tracks follows; "Flash of the Blade" and "The Duellists" exemplify the glory-minded
| | Iron Maiden Somewhere In Time CD (1986) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$11.39 This Limited version features vinyl replica packaging. This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Stranger In A Strange Land" and "Wasted Years." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar, synthesizer); Steve Harris (synthesizer, bass); Nicko McBrain (drums). Principally recorded at Compass Point Studios, Nassau, The Bahamas and Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, The Netherlands. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Stranger In A Strange Land" and "Wasted Years." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Adrian Smith (guitar, synthesizer); Steve Harris (synthesizer, bass); Nicko McBrain (drums). Principally recorded at Compass Point Studios, Nassau, The Bahamas and Wisseloord Studios, Hilversum, The Netherlands. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth (Chop 'Em Out). This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The weakest album from Iron Maiden's classic `80s period, Somewhere in Time is really the first true disappointment in their catalog, too often collapsing under the weight of their now-trademark ambition. Though it sold well on the heels of the hugely successful Powerslave tour, and is often regarded as underrated by Maiden devotees, it clearly finds the band struggling to refresh what was rapidly hardening into formula. Trying to keep up with the times, Maiden incorporate synthesizers here, much as Judas Priest attempted to do on the same year's sterilized-sounding creative flop Turbo; the main difference here is that Maiden pull it off much more effectively. Yes, the production does have more of that typically `80s studio sheen, but Maiden makes the new instrumentation serve their existing sound,
| | Iron Maiden Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son CD (1988) Enhanced CD
Iron Maiden
$11.95 This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Can I Play With Madness," "The Evil That Men Do," "The Clairvoyant" and "Infinite Dreams." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Adrian Smith (guitar, synthesizer); Dave Murray (guitar); Steve Harris (synthesizer, bass); Nicko McBrain (drums). Recorded at Musicland Studios, Munich, Germany. This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Seventh Son of a Seventh Son is the last great Iron Maiden album, reconnecting with the band's prog rock roots and reversing the signs of decline that had been evident on their previous record. By this point, Maiden had earned the respect of metalheads the world over with their steadfast adherence to unadulterated metal and their grandiose aesthetic. They'd made concessions neither to pop-metal nor to thrash, and their passionate fan base would never have tolerated a radical reinvention. But what do you do when your epic ambition itself has become a formula? You go even bigger and make a concept album, of course, and that's what Maiden does here, breaking out of the creative rut they'd fallen into on Somewhere in Time. The concept is based on the European folklore which held that the seventh son of a seventh son would be born with special powers that could be used for good or evil (and probably also in part by fantasy author Orson Scott Card, who'd touched on this idea in his own work). As such, the lyrics are Maiden at their most gothic, obsessed with supernatural mysticism of all stripes; the story line concerns the title character, born with a gift for prophecy but mistrusted by his village, which ignores his warnings of apocalyptic doom and makes him a tormented Cassandra figure. Musically, this is Maiden at their proggiest, with abrupt, stop-on-a-dime transitions between riffs, tempos, time signatures, and song sections. Yet nearly
| | Ernest Tubb Tribute To A Legend CD (1996)
Iron Maiden
$6.85 Personnel: Ernest Tubb (vocals, guitar).
| | Bellydance Superstars Vol. III CD (2005) Digipak
Iron Maiden
$10.75 Personnel: Joseph Chamaa (strings); Issam Houshan (percussion). Audio Mixer: Tony Shepperd. Recording information: Real Sound Recording Studio. Photographers: Barry J. Holmes; Denise J. Marino; Aaron Stipkovich; Ryan Beck; Michael "Dino" Campbell . Arrangers: Raul Ferrando; Elie Barbar; Guy Manoukian; Ahmed Adel.
| | Studio Apartment People To People CD (2006) (Import)
Iron Maiden
$23.65 Track Listing of songs: Message; One True Love; Journey; We Are Lonely; Landscape; Love Is The Answer; Evolution; Spirits; Questo Mondo Immenso; Isn't She Lovely; Episode; Dazzling; One True Love [Heartful Message Version] [Korean Bonus Track]; Love Is The Answer [Heartful Message Version] [Korean Bonus Track];
| | Celtic Frost Monotheist CD (2006) Bonus Track; Deluxe Edition; Digipak
Iron Maiden
$15.65 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Celtic Frost: Tom Gabriel Fischer, Franco Sesa, Erol Unala, Martin Eric Ain. Personnel: Tom Gabriel Fischer (vocals, guitar, programming); Martin Eric Ain (vocals, bass guitar); Erol Unala (guitar, programming); Franco Sesa (drums, percussion). Audio Mixers: Tom Gabriel Fischer; Peter Tägtgren; Walter J.W. Schmid; Philipp Schweidler. Liner Note Authors: Tom Gabriel Fischer; Martin Eric Ain. Recording information: Apollyon Sun Bunker, Zurich Switzerland (2002-2005); Celtic Frost Bunker, Zurich, Switzerland (2002-2005); Department Of Noize, Kilchberg, Switzerland (2002-2005); FSK-18, Winterthur, Switzerland (2002-2005); Horus Sound Studio, Hanover, Germany (2002-2005); Oakland Recording, Winterthur, Switzerland (2002-2005); Transmutation, Thalwil, Switzerland (2002-2005). Author: Sun Tzu. "Belief in one god," suggests the title of Celtic Frost's comeback album, MONOTHEIST. For fans of the groundbreaking Swiss death/thrash metal outfit, that statement is better understood as "Belief in one band." Celtic Frost are the absolute deity of dark metal, and the band returned in 2006 to reclaim what it so rightfully deserved, following experiments and folly both daring and unsuccessful. Tom G. Warrior and company lay waste to a dense, moody, cathartic collection of songs, finding new inspiration in both their old works as well as elements of the early-2000s metal scene they helped inspire. Relentlessly grim and spiritually foreboding, MONOTHEIST marks a powerful return to form for Celtic Frost. Celtic Frost's much anticipated 2006 comeback album, Monotheist, is everything you'd expect from the band who managed to attach the term avant-garde to ugly ol' heavy metal. It's unconventional, unpredictable, challenging to a fault, head-scratchingly weird at times, frequently brilliant, and anything but perfect. A simplified stylistic description would have it pegged as some sort of modern gothic doom album, but simple descriptions have never really fit the bill with Celtic Frost -- whether relating to their greatest triumphs, To Mega Therion and Into the Pandemonium, or abject disasters, like the infamous Cold Lake. The inherently complex Monotheist is no different, and the shared weight of the band's hallowed legacy and inevitably tall expectations don't exactly help the album's inauspicious start, either. Despite an energetic burst of old-school blackened thrash, opener "Progeny" stands out mostly thanks to those recognizable CF qualities: Thomas Gabriel Warrior's muscular rasp, crusty and brutal guitar tone; and the ensuing "Ground" bores down on interminably ponderous riffs and tediously repetitive lyrics ("Oh, God, why have you forsaken me!") just long enough to leave one seriously worried. Luckily what the trio (currently comprising founding members Warrior and Martin Eric Ain, plus new drummer Franco Sesa) can't quite realize through brute, stultifying force, they ultimately accomplish via subtler means. A foreboding, instantaneously infectious melody threads its way through even the heaviest portions of "A Dying God Coming into Human Flesh," and haunting female voices duet with Warrior's alternately deadpan and surprisingly fragile, quavering tones over gothic stunners like "Drown in Ashes" (featuring well-placed synthesizers) and the very unusual (even for this album, even for Celtic Frost) "Obscured," where a semi-industrial ambience actually recalls Berlin-era Bowie! Several subsequent tracks carry on suffering from excessively tiresome doom droning, but almost invariably contain that unexpected twist (like the clanging of rusty bells that introduce "Os Abysmi Vel Daath") or clever bridge ("Domain of Decay") to make them special, or at the very least interesting. And with the ambitious closing triptych comprising the cyclopean vistas and terrifying shrieks of "Totengott," the marriage of harmony and feedback across
| | Les Rita Mitsouko Systeme D CD (2008) (Import)
Iron Maiden
$13.69 Track Listing of songs: Au Fond Du Couloir; Get Up, Get Older; Y'A D'La Haine; La Steppe; Les Amants; L'HôTel Particulier; Femme D'Affaires; My Love Is Bad; Chanson D'A; Elevator; Godfather Of Soul; ChèRes Petites; La Belle Vie; Modern Baleine;
| | Christy Bruneau Time CD (2008)
Iron Maiden
$9.85 Upon first hearing singer/songwriter Christy Bruneau, she sounds like a cross between Natalie Merchant and Jewel. After spending just over 23 minutes listening to her debut CD however, the listener realizes that her style and playing are very much her own.Bruneau grew up listening to the music her father played around the house. Willie Nelson, Patsy Cline, The Beatles, Dusty Springfield, Janis Joplin, Cream, Elton John and Charlie Rich all got regular rotation on the home record player. Being a self-described \"rebel at heart,\" Bruneau says she wore out Elton John\'s Yellow Brick Road album, \"Mostly because my Mom thought it inappropriate for a girl my age to listen to Elton John.\"Throughout the album, Andy Lohr on guitars and mandolin, Nathan Moon Swift on drums, and Tommy Andrews on bass and guitars lay down very nice accompaniment to Bruneau\'s highly enjoyable singing. The guitars on \"Time,\" the bonus track recorded live in the studio, are especially well matched to Bruneau\'s ethereal song styling. Also, \"Time\" seems to be the most autobiographical of the whole set. Growing up in Phoenix, AZ, Bruneau saw all of her girlfriends starting families and knew that she couldn\'t sail on that boat, at least not yet; \"And all the girls are gettin\' married and havin\' babies/So you packed your bags and left and said, \'This life ain\'t for me.\'\" But perhaps Bruneau feels she abandoned her past when she left Arizona in 1995 and relocated to San Diego. As she repeats upon her return home, \"So you hope they\'re right, time heals and time mends.\"We certainly hope that Bruneau\'s wounds heal, but not quite all the way. There seems to be more angst wanting to manifest itself in a song, and I, for one, would like to hear more.Reviewed by David Strickler at Nowontour
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