| | Loudness Thunder In The East CD - Import Loudness Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $26.19 CD Backorder: (Usually ships in 3-10 days) 
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Japanese remastered reissue of the Japanese metal act's 1985 album is packaged in a miniature LP sleeve.
With 1985's Thunder in the East, Loudness were faced with the daunting challenge of conquering heavy metal fans outside their homeland of Japan for the first time. Knowing that their early sound might prove a tad too heavy and complex for American audiences, the foursome rose to the occasion by dispensing their most melodic compositions ever. Yet, except for a few obvious examples, like "We Could Be Together," first single "Crazy Nights," and the power ballad "Never Change Your Mind," the band doesn't seem at all self-conscious about this transition. A few all-out headbangers like "Get Away" and "Clockwork Toy" are hammered out for good measure, but it's excellent tracks like "Heavy Chains," "The Lines Are Down," and "No Way Out" which obtain the best results by bridging the gap between both extremes and providing the best foundations for Akira Takasaki's incendiary guitar solos. In fact, were it not for singer Minoru Niihara's poor English-speaking skills (which quite understandably result in some amusing lyrical transgressions) little here belies the band's unique origins, and for that they should be applauded. Oh, and the impossibly long guitar riff of "Run for Your Life" has to be a world record. Backed by a ruthless marketing campaign concocted by record label Atco, Thunder in the East would actually do quite well in America. But Loudness' novelty status would soon wear off, and they would never again experience such success in America, despite some fine efforts in the following years. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Loudness: Minoru Nihara (vocals); Akira Takasaki (guitar); Masayoshi Yamashita (bass); Munetaka Higuchi (drums).
Thunder In The East Music Thunder In The East Music Thunder In The East Music Review Purchase Thunder In The East CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | TNT Knights Of The New Thunder CD (1984) Import
Thunder In The East album
$13.95 The debut album from Norway's TNT is anchored by the charismatic pop-metal vocals of singer Tony Harnell (actually an American) and the high-tech fretwork of guitarist Ronnie Le Tekro. The record also benefits ...
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| | Loudness Devil Soldier CD (1999) (Import) Bonus Tracks; Japan; Mini LP Sleeve
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| | Guns N' Roses Appetite For Destruction / GN'R Lies / Spaghetti Incident CD (1987)
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| | Movers & Groovers Movers & Groovers Vol. 2 CD (2006) (Import)
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| | Kevin Coyne One Day In Chicago CD (2005)
Thunder In The East songs
$18.99 Kevin Coyne's death, just as this album was being readied for release, has painted it somewhat unfairly as his musical swan song, when it could more accurately be described as the beginning of his comeback. After too many years in the musical wilderness, Coyne arrived in Chicago with little idea of what he intended recording -- and wound up with an 11-song album's worth of country-blues-folk, recorded more or less live in one 15-hour burst, with Coyne apparently pulling the lyrics off the top of his head as they went. Sometimes those unrehearsed roots show, but never in a bad way -- rather One Day in Chicago has an uncluttered freshness that simultaneously conjures up the greatest of his '70s work and looks forward to a future in which the true best was yet to come. "Over Land and Sea," all Velvet Underground organ and psychedelic embellishments, is a genuine, and beautifully ingenuous, highlight, while "A Million Kisses" and the clattering country romp "Money Like Water" are just unrepentant fun and games from start to finish -- especially when Coyne kicks into demented radio announcer mode to argue the meaning of "pennilessness." Of course One Day in Chicago is not a new Marjory Razorblade, Sanity Stomp or Millionaires & Teddy Bears. But the brilliant mind that made those records is as sharp here as it ever was, and as wry, as poignant and as double-edged hilarious as you could hope. ~ Dave Thompson
The phone rings in the mixing room at North Branch Studio in Chicago and my wife breaks the news that Kevin died this morning. We're busy finishing off an album he started with my band the Pine Valley Cosmonauts on his last visit to the states. It's the last day of mixing and I'd been excited to send him the final product. I talk to his wife Helmi in Nuremberg and she tells me he died at home in her arms. This is the only good news; Kevin's been slogging around Europe with an oxygen tank and breathing tubes in tow for the last few months playing blinding shows but living in constant terror of dropping dead in some hotel room all alone. He was diagnosed with fibrosis soon after to returning from the Chicago trip. It's a vicious disease that turns your lungs to concrete and places an unbearable strain on your heart. Kevin downplayed the seriousness of his condition and continued playing and recording, painting and writing 'til the end. He had a gig in Vienna the night he died and shows booked well into December.First spied in 1974 on the Whistle Test with his guitar on his lap moaning and yelling, fretting the chords with his thumb Kevin caused a stir at my school on a par with Alvin Stardust's dramatic TOTP debut. Apart from a slew of great Reggae albums, Kevin's Millionaires And Teddy Bears and Babble were the only thing worth nicking out of the Virgin Records press office when we were briefly label-mates back in 1979. John Lydon once confessed to pilfering from his arsenal of crazed squawks and wails and my pal John Hyatt unashamedly channeled Kevin for The Three Johns. In 1990 The Mekons covered his song Having A Party, a unsubtle stab at Virgin's owner (reportedly a huge ...
| | Hail Hornet CD (2007)
Thunder In The East album
$12.55 When one considers the, shall we say, "social" interaction that is usually involved with smoking weed, it's no wonder that the stoner rock community seems to produce more intra-group collaborations than most musical cliques, and in Hail Hornet, the genre has yet another such "supergroup" to follow in the footsteps of luminary predecessors like Down, the Desert Sessions, and the Mighty Nimbus. Comprised of vocalist Troy Medlin (of Sourvein), guitarist Vincent Burke (Beaten Back to Pure, Sourvein), bassist "Dixie" Dave Collins (Weedeater, Buzzov*en, Bongzilla), and drummer Erik Larson (normally a guitarist with Alabama Thunderpussy, the Mighty Nimbus, etc.), Hail Hornet's pedigree certainly reads like an embarrassment of riches, and their eponymous debut album doesn't give failure a ...
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