Don't feel bad. He's one of my best friends on the planet but plinko was posting for more than a week in my 1988 thread before I realized his true identity. The mention of Vinnie Vincent Invasion finally clued me in.2. How did I not know who the OP is??![]()
Don't feel bad. He's one of my best friends on the planet but plinko was posting for more than a week in my 1988 thread before I realized his true identity. The mention of Vinnie Vincent Invasion finally clued me in.
You had me going a lot longer back in the day with that slippery dude, but in my defense, you were trying to hide your true identity.That is hilarious!
Thank you for this.Playlist now in progress
One a day through the long weekend, that's the plan anyway. Happy New Year to all
Pretty sure that Wait For You song just kicked in an acid flashback. No idea why.93. Bonham
John's son Jason put a band together in his early twenties and all due respect, they wrote this stuff and it ain't half bad.
In my research I found that sadly singer Daniel McMaster passed away from sepsis due to a strep infection. No bueno :(
Predictably, Jason now tours the world playing Zeppelin stuff
Wait For You
Guilty
Awesome.. thank you! Something for the drive homeUnranked: Impellitteri
Following in the well worn footsteps of metal bands where the guitarist gets top billing, Impellitteri was founded in 1987 by guitar shredder Chris Impellitteri. Due to his classical influences, Chris was lauded by many as the next Yngwie Malmsteen, but alas, his arrival to the scene was a bit too late to make a lasting impact. Timing is indeed everything. To their credit, Impelliteri has continued to release albums and tour to this day, switching from original singer Rob Rock to British vocalist Graham Bonnet (formerly with Rainbow and Malmsteen's Alcatrazz) back to Rock back to Bonnet and back to Rock. But given that this is about the Mtv-era, it's worth noting that Impellitteri hit its commercial peak with 1988's Stand in Line, for which the video got regular play on Mtv at the time. In my opinion, honorable mention in the video performance goes to the keyboard player who straps on a keytar in multiple shots. I also enjoy the fact that Chris Impellitteri plays his guitar up at his armpits in the video.
Stand in Line
Bonus material: I was a big fan of vocalist Graham Bonnet at the time because of his non-traditional look - he had short hair and occasionally wore Miami Vice-era Don Johnson suits for live performances. At the risk of making this a look at me post, this was me at the time (far left), a singer with short hair trying to front a hair metal band (which was a relatively short-lived endeavor and, yes, we had faces made for radio). The band was called GHIA when I joined, which stood for "Guitar Heroes In Action." I made them change the name to "Radio Silence" which, unintentionally, was the absolute worst possible name for a boisterous hair metal band. Our pinnacle was playing a bill opening for Loudness (yes, the Japanese metal band), followed by a swift end shortly thereafter.
Edit to add: The above entry was at the invitation of @plinko. Thank you for the indulgence kind sir.
a relatively trippy little number, I suppose. Different ..Pretty sure that Wait For You song just kicked in an acid flashback. No idea why.
BANG!
Say да, да да да
Tell me yes and let's feed the fire!
BANG! BANG!
Say да да да
Nothing less
I wanna hear a YES
94. Gorky Park
BANG
Try to Find Me Nice little slow ditty
Cover of My Generation that nobody asked for
Moscow Music Peace Festival set
1989's Moscow Music Peace Festival brought together five acts in our top twenty, and these guys. Together they singled-handedly ended perestroika, and the friendships between our two countries have gotten so strong that today half our government now reports directly to the Russian Premier.
Oh yeah, one other guy showed up to help.. there we are, me and the boys, late at night and we've been glued to this pay-per-view.. all the artists come back out at the end for the big all star encore jam, and there's this fleshy young man on a drum kit who I've never seen before. If they even introduced him I missed it, because we were like "Who dis?"
Of course, and for some reason, it was none other than...
Rob Rock also had a great album “Rage of Creation”, early 2000’s, worth a listen.Unranked: Impellitteri
Following in the well worn footsteps of metal bands where the guitarist gets top billing, Impellitteri was founded in 1987 by guitar shredder Chris Impellitteri. Due to his classical influences, Chris was lauded by many as the next Yngwie Malmsteen, but alas, his arrival to the scene was a bit too late to make a lasting impact. Timing is indeed everything. To their credit, Impelliteri has continued to release albums and tour to this day, switching from original singer Rob Rock to British vocalist Graham Bonnet (formerly with Rainbow and Malmsteen's Alcatrazz) back to Rock back to Bonnet and back to Rock. But given that this is about the Mtv-era, it's worth noting that Impellitteri hit its commercial peak with 1988's Stand in Line, for which the video got regular play on Mtv at the time. In my opinion, honorable mention in the video performance goes to the keyboard player who straps on a keytar in multiple shots. I also enjoy the fact that Chris Impellitteri plays his guitar up at his armpits in the video.
Stand in Line
Bonus material: I was a big fan of vocalist Graham Bonnet at the time because of his non-traditional look - he had short hair and occasionally wore Miami Vice-era Don Johnson suits for live performances. At the risk of making this a look at me post, this was me at the time (far left), a singer with short hair trying to front a hair metal band (which was a relatively short-lived endeavor and, yes, we had faces made for radio). The band was called GHIA when I joined, which stood for "Guitar Heroes In Action." I made them change the name to "Radio Silence" which, unintentionally, was the absolute worst possible name for a boisterous hair metal band. Our pinnacle was playing a bill opening for Loudness (yes, the Japanese metal band), followed by a swift end shortly thereafter.
Edit to add: The above entry was at the invitation of @plinko. Thank you for the indulgence kind sir.
Which brings us to our theme song
95. Black ‘n Blue
If these guys had anything else worth listening to, it eluded the hell out of me. But just look at that glorious 1984 hair
Hold Onto 18
Dammit! I don't check the thread for a couple days and you unleash King Diamond, Gorky Park and these masterful bastards.Which brings us to our theme song
95. Black ‘n Blue
If these guys had anything else worth listening to, it eluded the hell out of me. But just look at that glorious 1984 hair
Hold Onto 18
this sounds like some #### they would have done at Abu GhraibThank you for this.
Although, after a two hour deep dive into Nelson the other night, my Spotify account might never fully recover from this thread.
I actually liked their cover of My Generation. But to be fair, I'm pretty sure I heard it before I heard the original Who version. I originally heard it on this truly bad-### album. The Skid Row cover of Holidays In The Sun by the Sex Pistols is my personal definitive version of that tune. And I love me some Pistols.I think this has all leads me to the question of the moment: There weren't ninety-four bands better than Gorky Park?
Oooh. Boy.
When I saw the phrase "hammers and sickles" yesterday, a certain Scorpions song went through my head, too, and given that I'd just updated an old Top Ten thread about hair metal ballads, I felt ashamed I hadn't included that song.
Thought the same thing. Let your balalaika sing.When I saw the phrase "hammers and sickles" yesterday, a certain Scorpions song went through my head, too, and given that I'd just updated an old Top Ten thread about hair metal ballads, I felt ashamed I hadn't included that song.
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indeed.
I actually liked their cover of My Generation. But to be fair, I'm pretty sure I heard it before I heard the original Who version. I originally heard it on this truly bad-### album. The Skid Row cover of Holidays In The Sun by the Sex Pistols is my personal definitive version of that tune. And I love me some Pistols.
I think this has all leads me to the question of the moment: There weren't ninety-four bands better than Gorky Park?
Oooh. Boy.
This is just begging for some follow-up.I'm with you on all of this except the very last part
I played that Skid Row cover for scorchy once and he reacted by pouring a bag of white powder all over his crotch
This is just begging for some follow-up.
What purpose did that serve? Was it an accident?
Random tidbit- Black and Blue featured Tommy Thayer on guitar. For the past 20 years, Thayer has been in Kiss, playing lead guitar in the Ace Frehley makeup.Which brings us to our theme song
95. Black ‘n Blue
If these guys had anything else worth listening to, it eluded the hell out of me. But just look at that glorious 1984 hair
Hold Onto 18
I think whatever song you played was so awful that it caused an inadvertent spasm, thus sending my knee into the tent table and the non-dairy creamer into a pile in my lap. Great timing that you captured a wonderful pic of the incident with your brother pretending to snort it off my crotch.No yayo, Tommy, it was only coffee creamer![]()
Technically I think it was the next day but it was definitely on the same Andes hike.
No cell service and I was playing DJ with the meager selection of songs that were on my phone 6-7 years ago.. including that Stairway comp..
He was an FFA legend on old yeller. Or at least in his own mind.Huh, I am bad at this stuff. Now I feel like am also supposed to know who this scorchy character is too.
I'm intrigued too. Is one of these guys the poster formerly known as Sloop #### ###### ?Huh, I am bad at this stuff. Now I feel like am also supposed to know who this scorchy character is too.
man, that has to sting.He was an FFA legend on old yeller. Or at least in his own mind.
Butthead, these chicks are hot.99. Nelson
So, these choads make the cut, by virtue of two things: They had a #1 single, so there's no questioning their (brief) popularity, and they brought in Bobby Rock on drums, and I ####### love Bobby Rock.
One day Mark Slaughter and Dana Strum decided to effectively fire Vinnie Vincent from his own band. VVI drummer Bobby Rock could have stayed on as well.. but he left for what he thought were greener pastures. Oopsie, I guess?
But fear not, old Bob still tours the circuit with an act that's way up this list; he also sells health food concoctions and does all sorts of fitness and motivational stuff on the side. I know all this because I get his weekly newsletter in my email.![]()
As for Nelson, well, sure, they're awful. They're phony. They're wannabes. Yet, even if you can't bring yourself to call them by any form of the metal genre.. the ingredients were there - slippery little guitar hooks, hard hitting drums - and they certainly made a cultural impact. Their ridiculousness was a black mark on the whole scene. There would be more black marks to come..
I Can Hardly Wait
After The Rain
Tom Breihan's writeup on Love and Affection. Tom Breihan's Number Ones series kicks ###..
I still listen to Black and Blue often and have always thought they were underrated. The debut album is pretty dang solid all the way through.Which brings us to our theme song
95. Black ‘n Blue
If these guys had anything else worth listening to, it eluded the hell out of me. But just look at that glorious 1984 hair
Hold Onto 18
No, I haven't. Like the real CIA? I'd be interested in the podcast.Did anyone listen to the CIA/Scorpions podcast. It was bonkers.
It’s called Wind of Change. Here is the synopsis:No, I haven't. Like the real CIA? I'd be interested in the podcast.
You have absolutely got to be kidding me. I'm not going to binge an eight-part series, but I'll definitely try and find the spoilers. Thanks.It’s called Wind of Change. Here is the synopsis:
It’s 1990. The Berlin Wall has just come down. The Soviet Union is on the verge of collapse. A heavy metal band from West Germany, the Scorpions, releases a power ballad, “Wind of Change.” The song becomes the soundtrack to the peaceful revolution sweeping Europe — and one of the biggest rock singles ever. According to some fans, it’s the song that ended the Cold War.
Decades later, New Yorker writer Patrick Radden Keefe hears a rumor from a source: the Scorpions didn’t actually write “Wind of Change.” The CIA did.
This is Patrick’s journey to find the truth. Among former operatives and leather-clad rockers, from Moscow to Kiev to a GI Joe convention in Ohio, it’s a story about spies doing the unthinkable, about propaganda hidden in pop music, and a maze of government secrets. “Wind of Change.” An offbeat eight part investigation
Wind of Change is an Original Series from Pineapple Street Studios, Crooked Media and Spotify. Follow Wind of Change on Spotify to binge the full season.
Fire off a PM to shuke and we’ll see about getting these guys moved upFairWarning said:Looking at the list so far, King Diamond is very underseeded.
FairWarning said:Looking at the list so far, King Diamond is very underseeded.
Good way to put itAgree. Maybe it's because he doesn't fit the set all that well.
Ok, this sounds awesome.bigbottom said:It’s called Wind of Change. Here is the synopsis:
It’s 1990. The Berlin Wall has just come down. The Soviet Union is on the verge of collapse. A heavy metal band from West Germany, the Scorpions, releases a power ballad, “Wind of Change.” The song becomes the soundtrack to the peaceful revolution sweeping Europe — and one of the biggest rock singles ever. According to some fans, it’s the song that ended the Cold War.
Decades later, New Yorker writer Patrick Radden Keefe hears a rumor from a source: the Scorpions didn’t actually write “Wind of Change.” The CIA did.
This is Patrick’s journey to find the truth. Among former operatives and leather-clad rockers, from Moscow to Kiev to a GI Joe convention in Ohio, it’s a story about spies doing the unthinkable, about propaganda hidden in pop music, and a maze of government secrets. “Wind of Change.” An offbeat eight part investigation
Wind of Change is an Original Series from Pineapple Street Studios, Crooked Media and Spotify. Follow Wind of Change on Spotify to binge the full season.
bigbottom said:It’s called Wind of Change. Here is the synopsis:
It’s 1990. The Berlin Wall has just come down. The Soviet Union is on the verge of collapse. A heavy metal band from West Germany, the Scorpions, releases a power ballad, “Wind of Change.” The song becomes the soundtrack to the peaceful revolution sweeping Europe — and one of the biggest rock singles ever. According to some fans, it’s the song that ended the Cold War.
Decades later, New Yorker writer Patrick Radden Keefe hears a rumor from a source: the Scorpions didn’t actually write “Wind of Change.” The CIA did.
This is Patrick’s journey to find the truth. Among former operatives and leather-clad rockers, from Moscow to Kiev to a GI Joe convention in Ohio, it’s a story about spies doing the unthinkable, about propaganda hidden in pop music, and a maze of government secrets. “Wind of Change.” An offbeat eight part investigation
Wind of Change is an Original Series from Pineapple Street Studios, Crooked Media and Spotify. Follow Wind of Change on Spotify to binge the full season.
I remember the video for “Halloween” got a lot of airplay on MTV.91. Helloween
German band still huge in Germany
I find it mildly interesting that these guys and their doppelgangers Queensrÿche were happening at the same time on different sides of the world. The Queensrÿche of Europe? Sure.
The Keeper of the Seven Keys 1 & 2 records are juicy through and through.
I Want Out
Future World