| | Manilla Road Gates Of Fire CD - Import Manilla Road Discography of CDs
Manilla Road Gates Of Fire Songs | 1. | Riddle of steel |
| 2. | Behind the veil |
| 3. | When giants fall |
| 4. | fall of niam, The |
| 5. | Imperious rise |
| 6. | Rome |
| 7. | Stand of the spartans |
| 8. | Betrayal |
| 9. | Epitaph to the King |
| Gates Of Fire Review
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Purchase Gates Of Fire CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Highlander 3: The Final Dimension DVD (1994) Widescreen
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| | Suhgarim When You Bleed CD (2007)
Gates Of Fire album
$5.69 Suhgarim started out as an acoustic duo near Venice, Italy, and is the brainchild and passion of Vocalist/Songwriter Tricia Montfleury and Guitarist/Songwriter Dave Sudak. They have released one EP called When You Bleed in April of 2007, which was recorded at Studio C in Chapin, SC. Special thanks to Race Manning and Matt Veltmann for a great job tracking and mixing. After going through some personel changes they added one of the tightest and most energetic rhythm sections in the Southeast consisting of Patt Trikk on Drums and Hank Thomas on Bass, as well as Charles Traweek on guitars & keys. Patt, Hank and Charles bring a wealth of musical knowledge and solid skills to the band. They are currently touring the Southeast and have played with Blessed by a Broken Heart, Hydrovibe, Wednesday 13, Hot Lava Monster, Black Ritual, Closer, Soul Mites, Dave Britt Band, Evil Empire, Zelazowa, Restless Oblivion, Psycle, Lunas Lament and many other bands. Suhgarim seeks to turn people on to some rockin' tunes and have a good time in the process!So what does Suhgarim mean? Apparently no one really knows what our name means, or so it seems. Perhaps an explanation is in order. Ambiguity may not be the best policy as far as band names go, I suppose. People have been asking, so here goes. In it's pure form Suhgarim means absolutely nothing except the name of a rock band from Columbia, SC. However, it is a play on words. Or word actually. The original name is taken from the ENUMA ELISH which is a Babylonian creation myth which is most likely Sumerian in origin. Sumer was one of the early civilizations of the Ancient Near East, located in the southern part of Mesopotamia (southeastern Iraq) from the time of the earliest records in the mid 4th millennium BC until the rise of Babylonia in the late 3rd millennium BC, we're talking way back. Thousand of years before Judeo Christianity to be exact. Sumer together with Ancient Egypt and the Indus Valley Civilization is considered the first settled society in the world to have manifested all the features needed to qualify fully as a "civilization". The name Suhgarim is taken from one of the fifty names of power for their god who was actually the creator of all gods. In that context Suhgarim which was the 21st name of power, SUHGURIM, means he who insures a hearing, Creator of the gods, his fathers. May his name be evoked and spoken in the land! So why the word play. Well for one, there are other bands that have taken that name as their own. Which leads to reason number two. Branding. In my opinion the best name for a band is one that can be easily branded and recognized. When someone searches for that name the first and even better the only sites returned are linked ...
| | Flint CD (1979)
Gates Of Fire CD music
$9.69 Interesting that when former Grand Funk producer Todd Rundgren adds his guitar to the mix, the album comes to life. "Too Soon to Tell," track three on side one, has that Columbia R&B/rock sound that Santana and Journey made famous. Vocalist Don Brewer hit number one five years prior to this with "We're an American Band," giving Flint a unique edge. In a world where the lead singer or guitar star is all, these remnants of Grand Funk moved on when guiding light Mark Farner went solo, retaining a voice that audiences could identify. That's something the latter-day Guess Who should have considered had Chad Allen joined them when Burton Cummings left, but impossible for the Doors, Bowie's Spider's From Mars, Cooper's Billion Dollar Babies, and so many other casualties. Opening side one with a respectable version of "Back in My Arms Again," well, Brewer can't reinvent the Supremes the way the J. Geils Band did with "Where Did Our Love Go." Without Mark Farner, it is sad to say, Craig Frost, Mel Schacher, and Brewer sound like your average bar band. Guitar work from Frank Zappa on "You'll Never Be the Same" and "Better You Than Me," backing vocals by White Lightnin', and saxophone from Jimmy Hall make for great, slick musicianship. But Todd Rundgren playing guitar on "For Your Love" sounds more like a rock star jamming with the local rock group than the magic you've come to expect from the wizard who recreated vintage sounds so perfectly on his Faithful album. The production by Brewer, Frost, and Shacher is as faceless as this music. Rather than be a new version of Rare Earth, which is exactly what this is -- -what is it about singing drummers? -- Flint should have pursued the direction they touched upon in the aforementioned "Too Soon to Tell." Definitely more hip than Atlanta Rhythm Section, remember, these cats are from Grand Funk, not the Classics IV. A once mighty arena rock band turning the volume in the wrong direction. All the excess and grittiness found in Grand Funk Railroad's dynamic version of "Gimme Shelter" is forgotten here, traded for slick '70s power rock. Too calculated, too diluted. Rundgren adds something to "Keep Me Warm," ...
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