Thought they had a shot at being #1 based on Appetite, witch to me is THE 80's hard rock album. Talk about an implosion.6. Guns N' Roses
Some might think they should be even higher.
Every Freaking Time!!Raise Your Hands still makes me think of Spaceballs
Sounds like the same tour I saw them on. It was almost a 2 hour break between bands before GnR came on,apparently because Axl wasnt even in the building. The songs sounded ok but there was no flow-big pause between each one. There was also a piano,drum and 2 guitar solos and they played You Could Be Mine twiceThought they had a shot at being #1 based on Appetite, witch to me is THE 80's hard rock album. Talk about an implosion.
Saw them at Giants Stadium in NJ in the early '90's with a band that hasn't been named yet. That band was excellent. Guns 'N Roses not so much, Axle stopped the show early, just kinda left. Caught them a couple of other times and they were good.
Think Lies is awesome, Illusion 1 & 2 overdone but still a few gems -- Yesterdays is awesome, just a great all around song.
Whoa… I was working at an independent record store at the time and would get all the news from labels on new bands, etc… Wildside was “The Next Big Thing”… until there wasn’t a metal scene left by the time their debut album was releases in early 92. I still like that album.Cut from Appetite and given to another band.. it's almost like a B-side if you close your eyes!
They could have easily condensed those two into one album and called it Lo Mein.Spaghetti Incident? Chinese Democracy? What's that?
Loved GNR, but agree that Appetite has been worn out for me over the years. In part because there are really no “non radio” tracks on the album, so its all been played to death.(Ok- maybe “Think About You” or “Anything Goes” would qualify as “deep cuts”, but I’m sure both of em can be heard on Boneyard)6. Guns N' Roses
Oh yeah, that's one I should have included.Estranged is possibly a top 20 all time song for me.
These guys were the #### for me. Between them and the Crue, I wore tapes out. Saw them 3-4 times during the endless Slippery When Wet Tour, it was an amazing 2-2 1/2 year run. I still crank all their stuff.7. Bon Jovi
They wanted to be huge, they knew they needed a little help, and they got the help they needed, from producer Bruce Fairbairn and songwriter Desmond Child to be specific. Sometimes you just need that little extra push. They were the biggest band in the country, for a moment, and they sustained.
Seamlessly bridged the gap between heavy metal and pop - not my words but I'm on board.
The first half of their first tape was bangers, to my young ears, particularly Runaway (is this like Twisted Sister for chicks?) and Shot Through The Heart
7800 isn't a good record. In And Out Of Love
Slippery When Wet, it was OK, should have kept the original cover - grrrl you were so close!
Let It Rock
You Give Love a Bad Name
bunch more hits, we know em
Bad Medicine,
Lay Your Hands On Me
Bad Medicine
say what you will, the first two tracks on each of those are some punchy leadoffs
JBJ had a solo hit, and Keep The Faith was OK
I saw them in London, with my friend's pregnant wife on this tour![]()
I had to think about who opened and remembered it was godforsaken ROCKHEAD
NUMBER ONES:
You Give Love a Bad Name
Livin' on a Prayer
Bad Medicine
I'll Be There For You
Blaze of Glory
So they're at least as good as five Nelsons
@scorchy on Bad Medicine WITH FEELIN
Jon helped out a lot of younger "local" acts, besides the obvious ones my personal fave is cute-lady fronted Saraya
(Sandi Saraya was briefly married to ...... drumroll ...... Tesla's Brian Wheat!)
This, JBJ was a fantastic front man and Richie Sambora was his perfect second. The whole band was just tight and the chicks came out of the woodwork to see them.I turn off Hair Nation anytime anything post Pyromania comes on for Def Lep anytime GNR comes on...I run for the hills....I can’t take them anymore. Talk about a career off one album.
Bon Jovi.....yeah burnt out on them too. Had more than my fill and the shelf life has expired for me for the most part.
I did see them several times in the 80’s heyday and the shows were amazing. First off.....they were a great live band and Jon was a premier front man. Two....the very hottest girls were everywhere at Bon Jovi shows.....loved it.
I can aaaallllmost hear what you're talking about....but I think this song is a microcosm of what the "GnR" sound is(and isn't), to me anyway. That ain't Saul on lead, and you know it instantly.Cut from Appetite and given to another band.. it's almost like a B-side if you close your eyes!
Throw in Rocket Queen and Mr. Brownstone as stuff I'd put ahead of most of the more "popular" tracks from AfD. Way, way better than Jungle, SCoM, or (especially) Paradise City....which is just a garbage freakin' tune to me. Insta-skip/channel changer.I'm still a fan of SCOM and Paradise City but over time I think my favorite track off Appetite is Nighttrain. Think About You and My Michelle as well.
This is ultra true and should not be discounted.This, JBJ was a fantastic front man and Richie Sambora was his perfect second. The whole band was just tight and the chicks came out of the woodwork to see them.
Essentially the Zebra of heavy metal/glam rock. @Doug B
I think Zebra might be too fringe-y for this countdown. They seemed to have a more regional following, primarily in their dual home bases of New Orleans and Long Island (although I was living in LA when they first hit the scene, so maybe they’re more widespread that what is typically reported).
Speaking of ... are they on this list? I guess not quite metal enough. Zebra was one of those bands around here, though. Just about all the guys that liked Ratt, Crue, Priest, etc. liked Zebra, too.
There's another, much (much) larger act that is the same way -- not (usually) metal, but loved by a lot of metal fans in the 1980s.
I watched a guy pull about 30 concert tees from a claw machine one time - he got one with every quarter. He must have hacked the machine or something… it was amazing to watch at the time. Most of them were Def Leppard shirts, all black. It would have been after Hysteria (when they came to town), but my memory says they were Pyromania shirts.Some TripItUp Def Leppard tidbits
I have a vintage Def Leppard pyromania shirt that I’m told is worth quite a bit
seen them live three times, and they execute damn near flawlessly every time
Same.my favorite track off Appetite is Nighttrain.
I had Hysteria on cassette, and I remember always fast forwarding through the Hysteria side so I could listen to the Animal/Rocket/Sugar/Women side.Pyromania is a perfect album. Every track is good or great. Photograph is in my top 10 al time songs, and maybe top 5.
Hysteria is admittedly worn out these days and PSSOM should be sent to the Old Song's Home where it can enjoy Who's The Boss reruns until the end of time But in it's day the album was a great synthesis of rock and pop. Women, Animal, and Hysteria are still listenable.
But yes, the early stuff is the best. Wasted is one of my DL favorites. Then there's Hello America, Rock Brigade, and Rocks Off of On Through The Night. The best of High 'N Dry, IMO, are Let It Go, You Got Me Runnin', and Bringin' On The Heartbreak/Switch 625. You're a DL fan if you know those last two must be played together, not separately.
I remember Zebra on MTV, 2-3 videos.I think Zebra might be too fringe-y for this countdown. They seemed to have a more regional following, primarily in their dual home bases of New Orleans and Long Island (although I was living in LA when they first hit the scene, so maybe they’re more widespread that what is typically reported).
Trying to figure out the other band you mentioned.
It was J.Geils Band.It's a good choice.
I traded another tape for it.. and I can't remember what right now, this was the kind of pointless crap I thought I'd remember forever like Super Bowls (also forgotten)
It might have been Don Henley
I was just about the same, heard the song someplace and it was, "hey that's SLASH!!!"There's just something about his gimmick that is unmistakable. First time I ever heard Slither on the radio was before I'd even heard about VR being a thing. The second that intro really kicks in, no one familiar with GnR with ears didn't go "Is...is that Slash? *pauses to listen a second* Yeah. That's Slash."
Wow, you're right (at least about Triumph). I think I own everything they did but they don't really fit in this category although it feels like they should but they just don't.I thought about Zebra but left them in the Triumph camp .. some sort of no-mans land .. double shout-out though![]()
Great live band. Used to go see them on Long Island at a club called Cheers, in Deer Park. They always packed the house.I think Zebra might be too fringe-y for this countdown. They seemed to have a more regional following, primarily in their dual home bases of New Orleans and Long Island (although I was living in LA when they first hit the scene, so maybe they’re more widespread that what is typically reported).
Trying to figure out the other band you mentioned.
Evilgrin blessed Triumph as metal FWIWI thought about Zebra but left them in the Triumph camp .. some sort of no-mans land .. double shout-out though![]()
Think about the t-shirts the metalheads back in school used to wear in the 80s. Almost all centerline metal acts, but maybe a handful of bands from other genres. Among that handful would be Zebra ... but one of the other bands in that handful is a really huge act.Trying to figure out the other band you mentioned.
Ah - should have picked up that it was Triumph you were referring to. Or was it?Evilgrin blessed Triumph as metal FWIWI thought about Zebra but left them in the Triumph camp .. some sort of no-mans land .. double shout-out though![]()
![]()
No, it wasn't.Ah - should have picked up that it was Triumph you were referring to. Or was it?![]()
Thinking Rush then.No, it wasn't.Ah - should have picked up that it was Triumph you were referring to. Or was it?![]()
Triumph wasn't big among the heads in school for some reason. Definitely no Triumph T-shirts.
Classic pose. The Foo Fighters went with that get-up when they performed at Rush’s RRHOF induction:
You find some amazing things going down the YouTube rabbit holeFamous clip from the California Jam in 1974To this day my favorite DC song is from his short stint with Deep Purple. Richie Blackmore, Jon Lord and Coverdale really did Burn.
Glenn Hughes was also badass as co-vocalist and on bass.
Tesla is one of my favorite bands & a top 5 of the era for me.16. Tesla
Well these guys don't have much baggage, just hard working 'Murkin rock n rollers. And while they're no L.A. Guns they're pretty damn excellent! Mechanical Resonance was a perfect debut.
EZ come
Modern Day Cowboy
Little Suzi's on the up
Heaven's Trail
The Way It Is
Love Song
The Great Radio Controversy was a little softer, 4 stars say I, gave them their biggest hit and had them on a tear, when they released an acoustic live album in late 1990 - with a real hit and everything - that made a historical impact.. and for a couple of years you couldn't walk down the street without tripping over a tossed out MTV Unplugged CD.
A year later, the third album, Psychotic Supper - it wasn't bad but wasn't as good, and the rest was history for us here, and I won't always keep pushing newer stuff, but they have also put out quality tunes in their older years.
Lillian Axe was another one that wore out the small-venue circuit in New Orleans. They did eventually get picked up by MCA for two albums.Used to see Zebra all the time in Jackson, MS. I always figured they would make it big but they just never got over. Another band around at that same time was Lilian Axe. I liked them a little better but they were another band that just never quite hit their stride.
Saw Zebra and Lillian Axe many times at the rock clubs in Houston. Always like Liilian Axe a lot better. The lead singer from one of my buds early bands wound up singing for them way after their prime.Used to see Zebra all the time in Jackson, MS. I always figured they would make it big but they just never got over. Another band around at that same time was Lilian Axe. I liked them a little better but they were another band that just never quite hit their stride.
7. Bon Jovi
They wanted to be huge, they knew they needed a little help, and they got the help they needed, from producer Bruce Fairbairn and songwriter Desmond Child to be specific. Sometimes you just need that little extra push. They were the biggest band in the country, for a moment, and they sustained.
Seamlessly bridged the gap between heavy metal and pop - not my words but I'm on board.
The first half of their first tape was bangers, to my young ears, particularly Runaway (is this like Twisted Sister for chicks?) and Shot Through The Heart
7800 isn't a good record. In And Out Of Love
Slippery When Wet, it was OK, should have kept the original cover - grrrl you were so close!
Let It Rock
You Give Love a Bad Name
bunch more hits, we know em
Bad Medicine,
Lay Your Hands On Me
Bad Medicine
say what you will, the first two tracks on each of those are some punchy leadoffs
JBJ had a solo hit, and Keep The Faith was OK
I saw them in London, with my friend's pregnant wife on this tour![]()
I had to think about who opened and remembered it was godforsaken ROCKHEAD
NUMBER ONES:
You Give Love a Bad Name
Livin' on a Prayer
Bad Medicine
I'll Be There For You
Blaze of Glory
So they're at least as good as five Nelsons
@scorchy on Bad Medicine WITH FEELIN
Jon helped out a lot of younger "local" acts, besides the obvious ones my personal fave is cute-lady fronted Saraya
(Sandi Saraya was briefly married to ...... drumroll ...... Tesla's Brian Wheat!)
6. Guns N' Roses
Some might think they should be even higher. Putting out the best record of a whole major music era is something, but not enough, not if your pointless/endless, not-even-cute shenanigans - not to mention the high bar that record set lol - helped stick a fork in that genre.
But I love Axl, and I think he, like Sebastian Bach, is a good dude who was young, a little aggro and got caught up in the moment
The rest of the band and particularly Slash got all strung out and things unraveled. Lucky no one died. I'm glad no one died!
Welcome to the Jungle - first single, 90% sure I saw this the first time it was on MTV (late-ish on the Ball).. like wow from first listen
Rocket Queen
@scorchy on Sweet Child
Tom Breihan on Sweet Child
Patience
You Could Be Mine feat Ahnold
Don't Cry feat Shannon Hoonwell, someone died from that poison
Use Your Illusion's cost and overall bloatedness feel like the product of a young artist with unlimited resources being left to his own devices.
Lots could have been handled much better.
I might see them live again someday, now that they're old and grabbing that cash.
!SCHEDULE!
Tomorrow #5
Saturday #4
SUNDAY I AM OFF THE GRID
Monday #3
Tuesday = #2 and 1, that's the plan anyway
Not gonna argue any rankings in this thread [yet].
Speaking of ... here's the guy DeMartini replaced in Ratt.
A LOT of guys went through that band at one time or another. Heck, Michael Schenker gave Ratt a whirl when Robbin Crosby had to go to rehab for a while.
Gotta admit I'm a bit surprised VH didn't even crack the top 10. Intrigued to see how the rest of the rankings play out.
Think Lies is awesome, Illusion 1 & 2 overdone but still a few gems -- Yesterdays is awesome, just a great all around song.