| | Scum Rats Demon Of The Dark CD Scum Rats Discography of CDs
Scum Rats Demon Of The Dark Songs | 1. | Intro |
| 2. | Come With Me to My World |
| 3. | Demon Eyes |
| 4. | Devil in Disguise |
| 5. | Red Hot Motorbike |
| 6. | Demon of the Dark |
| 7. | Without You |
| 8. | My Way of Rock 'N' Roll |
| 9. | Bad Moon Rise |
| 10. | Scum Rats Babe |
| 11. | Guilty 'Till I'm 21 |
| 12. | Believe It's Your End |
| 13. | On the Beach |
| 14. | Too Hot |
| Demon Of The Dark Review
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Purchase Demon Of The Dark CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Them Crooked Vultures CD (2009)
Demon Of The Dark album
$11.19 Often, supergroups wind up dominated by one particular personality - think Eric Clapton in Derek & the Dominos, Jack White in the Raconteurs -- which makes the egalitarianism of Them Crooked Vultures all the more remarkable. Of course, when it comes down to it, it's a group of three natural-born collaborators: John Paul Jones, the old studio pro who gravitated toward provocative partners after Led Zeppelin's demise, teaming up with R.E.M. as easily as he did with avant-queen Diamanda Galas and nu-folkster Sara Watkins; Dave Grohl, who hopped into an empty drummer's chair whenever the opportunity presented itself; and ...
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Demon Of The Dark music CDs
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Demon Of The Dark songs
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Demon Of The Dark album
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Demon Of The Dark CD music
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| | Complete Animals CD (1990) (Import) Australia
Demon Of The Dark music CDs
$13.15 COMPLETE ANIMALS is a two-CD, 40-song remastering, containing the Animals' standards "House of the Rising Sun" and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" as well as four previously unreleased tracks.
The title is a bit of a misnomer; this double CD only includes the complete sessions that the Animals recorded with producer Mickie Most in 1964 and 1965. The 40 songs capture the band at their peak, including most of their best and biggest hits: "House of the Rising Sun," "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," "Bring It on Home to Me," "We Gotta Get Out of This Place," "I'm Crying," "It's My Life," and "Boom Boom." Most of the rest of the tunes don't match the excellence of these smashes, though they're solid. The great majority of them are covers of vintage ...
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Demon Of The Dark songs
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| | Saw Doctors Play It Again Sham! CD (2003)
Demon Of The Dark music CDs
$9.95 This is a delightful collection of 20 singles and B-sides, 17 of which never found their way onto studio albums. Several of these selections have become concert favorites like "I'd Love to Kiss the Bangles" and "Michael D. Rocking in the Dail." Many of the remaining tracks possess the youthful exuberance found on earlier albums like If This Is Rock'n'Roll, I Want My Old Job Back and All the Way From Tuam presumably since they were written during that early period. The Saw Doctors playfully mix early rock & roll with punk, country, folk and even Motown and, as is their trademark, compliment the music with themes of youthful lust, small town living, growing up Catholic and other recurrent identifiers. Lead vocalist Davey Carton compiled this collection so the integrity of the band and what they stand for is preserved. This album is packed full of gems, some familiar to loyal fans, others more obscure like the powerful "Sound Sham." For those who haven't had the experience of seeing this band live or haven't heard the numerous Saw Doctors four-song single releases Play it Again Sham! is indeed the missing link. ~ Dave Sleger
The Saw Doctors, Ireland's most underrated rock outfit, have put out a near-perfect collection of their best songs from 1990 through 2000. Unlike the grand themes of U2 or the introspection of Sinead O'Connor, the Saw Doctors are a pub band that wrestles with the notion of snagging a little piece of heaven here on earth ...
| | Stray CD (1970) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Demon Of The Dark songs
$12.35 These prog-metalists coulda, woulda, shoulda hit big, but it was tough to break with fellow Brits Led Zep standing in their way. That doesn't diminish the power of their music, though, and this self-titled 1970 outing resonates as loudly as virtually any hard rock album released that year.
Because they were merely precocious teenagers when they'd been signed to a recording contract in the late '60s, the Stray (as they were originally known) probably experienced the golden era of British rock in all of its kaleidoscopic, Sgt. Peppers-powered glory, even more intensely than most. As such, they quickly progressed beyond their Brit blues and mod-ish beginnings to dabble in acid rock and psychedelia before diving more permanently into the nascent progressive and hard rock movements. It is clearly the latter two styles that inform the core of their eclectic eponymous debut from 1970, and especially its sprawling, nine-and-a-half minute opener, "All in Your Mind." Building slowly at first, the song gradually sprouts into an insistently driving juggernaut offering ample opportunities for guitarist Del Bromham to showcase his wah-wah intensive solo flights, and to introduce the quartet's penchant for singing in harmonic unison. As with most of the album's other heavy rockers ("Taking All the Good Things," the Hawkwind-like "Only What You Make It," etc.), we're talking about weight streaked with softer dynamics and stylistic variety, on par with the parallel work of the Groundhogs or Pink Fairies -- but not single-minded riff leviathans like Black Sabbath or earliest Budgie -- although, curiously, ...
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