Miss Crazy - Can’t Get Enough
Release: Miss Crazy - Can’t Get Enough
- Datum: 26.09.2007
Inhaltsangabe
01 Can't Get Enough
00 My Life Is Over
03 No Compromise
04 Billie
05 Hide Island
06 Life's Been Good
07 You're Blue
08 Scream
09 So Long
10 Now
11 Shut Eyes
12 Baby Let's Go
13 Nothing
14 My Way
15 Tattooed Freak
16 All For You
17 I'm your Hooligan
18 Looks that Kill
- Genre: Rock
- Qualität: 320 kbit/s
HinweiseGenre : Hard Rock
Country : USA
Year : 2007
A generation ago, historic rock artists like Alice Cooper, David Bowie, and KISS showed your parents that they were not living in the 50's or 60's anymore. These legacy bands incorporated stunning imagery and stage theatrics to elevate the standards of rock performance worldwide. Many 90's bands like Marylin Manson, Slipknot and AFI continued the tradition in spirit, while blazing their own sonic trails. Now, a generation later, Miss Crazy arrives on Earth to reignite the flame of hard rock while honoring the visual standards set by their forefathers. Expertly produced by Ronnie Borchert, Miss Crazy is bringing the sound of excitement back to jaded music fans around the world. Your parents might compare Miss Crazy to their old favorites like Def Leppard, AC/DC, Kix, or Cinderella. However, kids your age won't have anything to compare Miss Crazy to - no other major band today sounds like Miss Crazy!
Album Review :
Producer Ronnie (Trixie) Borchert has captured an exhilarating spark of spontaneity in many of these tracks, yet the album accumulates to a cohesive, coherent, head turning rock’n’roll noise, occasionally unpredictable, but never self indulgent.
Opener ‘No Compromise’ intros with a guttural, recurring chant, before a steamrolling riff breaks through, pushing the song into the darker side of Cinderella territory. Any decent label would have signed the band on the strength of this one distinctive song. Thankfully, there’s plenty more good stuff.
‘Billie’ and ‘Life’s Been Good’ maintain the momentum with driving, pounding riffs and wiry lead guitar. Markus Christopher’s broken glass rasp elevates the balladic ‘You’re Blue’ to Tom Keifer level, giving the song a fractured, menacing spin. After ‘No Compromise’, ‘So Long’ is probably the album’s standout track, striking more of a grownup pose against a thirsty riff and a simple, repetitive beat.
Arguably, the band paint from a limited sonic palette, but the songs embrace just enough aural hooks to grab our attention. Borchert plays his part by further ensuring that there are enough inventive and effective moments scattered among the strums and stomps to hold our interest.
‘Miss Crazy’ will not win plaudits for originality. Few albums in this genre will. That it plays impressively to the past without sounding clichéd or overly derivative is a tribute to the band’s songwriting skill and Borchert’s intuitive production.
Country : USA
Year : 2007
A generation ago, historic rock artists like Alice Cooper, David Bowie, and KISS showed your parents that they were not living in the 50's or 60's anymore. These legacy bands incorporated stunning imagery and stage theatrics to elevate the standards of rock performance worldwide. Many 90's bands like Marylin Manson, Slipknot and AFI continued the tradition in spirit, while blazing their own sonic trails. Now, a generation later, Miss Crazy arrives on Earth to reignite the flame of hard rock while honoring the visual standards set by their forefathers. Expertly produced by Ronnie Borchert, Miss Crazy is bringing the sound of excitement back to jaded music fans around the world. Your parents might compare Miss Crazy to their old favorites like Def Leppard, AC/DC, Kix, or Cinderella. However, kids your age won't have anything to compare Miss Crazy to - no other major band today sounds like Miss Crazy!
Album Review :
Producer Ronnie (Trixie) Borchert has captured an exhilarating spark of spontaneity in many of these tracks, yet the album accumulates to a cohesive, coherent, head turning rock’n’roll noise, occasionally unpredictable, but never self indulgent.
Opener ‘No Compromise’ intros with a guttural, recurring chant, before a steamrolling riff breaks through, pushing the song into the darker side of Cinderella territory. Any decent label would have signed the band on the strength of this one distinctive song. Thankfully, there’s plenty more good stuff.
‘Billie’ and ‘Life’s Been Good’ maintain the momentum with driving, pounding riffs and wiry lead guitar. Markus Christopher’s broken glass rasp elevates the balladic ‘You’re Blue’ to Tom Keifer level, giving the song a fractured, menacing spin. After ‘No Compromise’, ‘So Long’ is probably the album’s standout track, striking more of a grownup pose against a thirsty riff and a simple, repetitive beat.
Arguably, the band paint from a limited sonic palette, but the songs embrace just enough aural hooks to grab our attention. Borchert plays his part by further ensuring that there are enough inventive and effective moments scattered among the strums and stomps to hold our interest.
‘Miss Crazy’ will not win plaudits for originality. Few albums in this genre will. That it plays impressively to the past without sounding clichéd or overly derivative is a tribute to the band’s songwriting skill and Borchert’s intuitive production.