I cut and pasted this from Louder. Hahaha
It's not just the familiar names on Young & Wild glam metal compilation
Philip Wilding
I blame myself. I was one of those stumbling up and down Sunset Strip and the murkier parts of Manhattan – before it became the millionaire’s island (© Chris Robinson) it is now – looking like I dressed in the dark and giving credence to bands who should probably never have made it out of the garage, let alone onto a major label. Those were, as people are wont to say, different times.
This three-disc set makes a pretty good fist of capturing those turbulent years. I had a ringside seat as the world turned from bands like Mötley Crüe and cast its gaze towards the new breed of bands spearheaded by artists like Mother Love Bone. Drugs would wreak havoc on both those bands, but that was about all they had in common, even if both weren’t above applying eyeliner when it came to stage time.
Sleeve notes aside, the essays here read like Wikipedia filtered through ChatGPT, and capture little of the excitement of that era; there’s little wrong with the curation as we go from Twisted Sister all the way through to XYZ. It’s quite the ride, like crashing your car into a railway bridge is a ride.
To the compilers’ credit, it’s not just the familiar names – Skid Row, Faster Pussycat, Cinderella – included here. They’ve gone through the crates to find the bands who probably haunted the shadows on films like The Decline Of Western Civilization Part II, the truly awful Leatherwolf (still a touring entity, apparently, and once signed to Island Records – good to see all that Bob Marley money going to a good home), the deathly Lillian Axe (picked up by MCA, still ruining club gigs for paying customers all across the US) and L.A. Guns (PolyGram, new album Leopard Skin available now, though not through PolyGram) and their live favourite, the hideous Sex Action, on which Phil Lewis’s caterwauling is enough to spook a dog three counties away.
Of course, it’s easy to throw stones – and fun too – although there were glimmers of promise among the music of the era, such as Junkyard and the excellent Hollywood, and Warrior Soul’s Trippin’ On Ecstasy. But for every ounce of invention, there’s always a band like Tuff, waiting to become landfill.
Young and Wild Glam Compilation
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- WolfgangVonPage
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Young and Wild Glam Compilation
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- Chip Z'Hoy
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Re: Young and Wild Glam Compilation
Not familiar with the comp so I looked it up. I think the only band I'm unfamiliar with is Tattoo Rodeo. Possibly Electric Angels (a lot of Electric bands; a lot of Angel bands).
Re: Young and Wild Glam Compilation
I'm going to take an educated guess that's Phil Wilding, once of Kerrang! He was a miserable git there too.
Sleek wrote: It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a shredder to write a great song.
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Re: Young and Wild Glam Compilation
I thought the CEO would have a thought regarding the last sentence.
Got myself a Cadillac, but can't afford the gasoline.
- DonJuanDeMarco
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Re: Young and Wild Glam Compilation
Looks like a great compilation to me! Are they the original versions though? Or Deadline/Cleopatra type re-records? There are a ton of compilations out there like that. The re-recordings are all terrible compared to the originals.
https://www.amazon.com/Young-Wild-Ameri ... B0F1447HBG
https://www.amazon.com/Young-Wild-Ameri ... B0F1447HBG
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