Hello again. I've just done another show, which I can promise is weirder and has more requests than any other show so far. The Rock and Metal Double Feature Show (or it split into two parts) will be my regular show going forward. It mixes everything I love, music wise, and it's enough variety for you guys to put in your song requests. Any feedback is appreciated if you listen to the show, the link is below!
The Rock and Metal Double Feature Show: 14/12/13 Track listing: The Rock Hour It's No Game - David Bowie Since You've Been Gone - Rainbow Paint it Black - The Rolling Stones Iron Man - Black Sabbath While My Guitar Gently Weeps - The Beatles November Rain - Guns 'n' Roses Going for Gold - Shed Seven If Your Dad Doesn't Have a Beard, You've Got Two Mums - The Beards Crazy Bitch - Buck Cherry Panic Station - Muse Smooth Sailing - The Queens of the Stone Age
The Metal Show The Great Destroyer - Nine Inch Nails Insane in the Brain - Cypress Hill Going Under - Evanescence Ha Ha You're Dead - Green Day Ava Adore - Smashing Pumpkins Martyr No More - Fozzy Through Glass - Stone Sour 5 Minutes Alone - Pantera Shout at the Devil - Motley Crue Obsessive Time Directive - Azure Emote Sulfur - Slipknot Seize the Day - Avenged Sevenfold Total show running time: 02:00:00 Other entries you might want to read:
Yesterday I posted my favourite UK #1 hits between the years 1952 and 1981. Why? Because the UK #1 is now sixty years old. We've had sixty years of popular music, and the charting of the popularity of it. So I decided I wanted to celebrate the past sixty years of music by revealing my favourite #1 hits. Because sixty years is such a long time I've made two lists, and this is the second one.
This Mixtape celebrates my favourite #1 hits from 1982 to 2012. This list of songs isn't as good as the list I put up yesterday, in my opinion anyway, because my favourite songs from the past 30 years hardly chart, nevermind get to #1. But there are some great tracks here, I'm sure you'll appreciate.
Don't know much about Mixtapes? Here are the rules.
A Mixtape is a playlist of a certain genre, band or era. The
list is generally 80 minutes long, the same length of a blank CD, with further
recommendations if some of the songs aren't to your taste. Remember kids,
downloading is wrong!
So here we go! Here's a list of my favourite #1 hits from 1982 to 2012, with the date it got to the #1 spot! Enjoy!
This
Mixtape is now available to listen to fully on YouTube so subscribe to me if you want to listen to it properly. Enjoy!
So that's it! I hope you enjoyed both of these playlists, or Mixtapes as I call them. Sure, I complain about the lack of quality songs getting up the charts nowadays, but that's obviously my opinion, an unpopular one based on the fact that in the end, it's a popularity contest for musicians. But we have had some great songs get up to the top, and I used to really love listening to the chart show when I was younger, so this was a trip down memory lane in a certain way. I hope it was for you too. This will be my last piece of work before Christmas. As you have probably noticed, I don't write much at the moment. I would like to see if I can address that properly in the New Year, but we'll see. Either way, I wish you all a very Merry Christmas if you celebrate it, and a Happy New Year. Take care!
Last month was the sixty year anniversary of the first #1 hit single in this country. Our first ever #1 in this country went to Al Martino with "Here in My Heart". Since then we've had over 1000 songs get to the #1 spot, the spot all music artists aspire to get to in this country. It means that for at least one week, their song is the most popular and most requested. It's like being king for a week I suppose.
Now the problem with #1 hits for me is that it usually goes to pop stars. The word pop comes from popular obviously, so if, like me, you like your rock and metal, chances are it makes it THAT much harder for your favourite tracks to actually perform well in the charts, nevermind get the #1 spot. Over time for me, less of my favourite tracks are getting to the top, which is a damn shame. But that's life!
Either way, I want to celebrate the last sixty years in music, with my favourite #1 hits through the years. Because sixty years is such a long time, and there were so many great songs through the years (especially over the course of the sixties) I've divided the Mixtapes into two, meaning today you'll get the first 30 years of #1s, and tomorrow you'll get the last 30 years of #1s. Remember this is a biased list.
Don't know much about Mixtapes? Here are the rules.
A Mixtape is a playlist of a certain genre, band or era. The
list is generally 80 minutes long, the same length of a blank CD, with further
recommendations if some of the songs aren't to your taste. Remember kids,
downloading is wrong!
So here we go! Here's a list of my favourite #1 hits from 1952 to 1981, with the date it got to the #1 spot! Enjoy!
This
Mixtape is now available to listen to fully on YouTube so subscribe to me if you want to listen to it properly. Enjoy!
So those are my favourite #1 hits from 1952 to 1981. It was an amazing time to be listening to music, as at the time truly great songs were getting to #1 on a regular basis. I can't say the same for today unfortunately. Anyway I'll bring you 1982 - 2012 tomorrow. Join me then!
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“Welcome 2 My Nightmare” surpasses the original album
released 26 years prior, and shows that music doesn’t have to be serious; it
can be pure entertainment and fun.
Alice Cooper released “Welcome 2 My Nightmare” three months
ago. It’s his 26th album and is the official sequel to “Welcome to My
Nightmare” which was released ironically, 26 years ago. Three years ago Alice
Cooper released “Along Came a Spider” and was considering doing a sequel to
that album, but when producer Bob Ezrin (who also sequenced The Fragile by Nine
Inch Nails and has worked with well respected artists like Pink Floyd, KISS and
Peter Gabriel) didn’t like the idea of a sequel to that album proposed they do
a sequel to “Welcome to My Nightmare” instead, Alice Cooper liked that idea
more. Alice Cooper was touring extensively while the album was being prepared
for release and expected it to be released next year, but released it in
September instead.
The album starts off with “I Am Made of You” which is a
great intro, showing the homage to the past while using modern influences too.
How? Well the tune in the beginning is from the track “Steven”, arguably the
best song on the original “Welcome to My Nightmare”, but you can clearly hear
Alice Cooper using modern auto-tune in this track, which divides me personally
as I hate auto-tune, but it doesn’t take too much away from the track. It’s a
great opener, and it does its job well, which is set you up for the rest of the
album.
After the intro track, we’re treated to “Caffeine”, which
shows pretty much all sides of Alice Cooper in one track. On one side you have
a decent hard rock/metal track, but you also see the silly side to the shock
rock legend, which is that he’s simply, singing a song about needing caffeine.
Yes, that’s what this song is about. And the chorus is “Caffeine! Caffeine!” in
a squeaky voice. It’s incredibly cheesy but there’s absolutely nothing wrong
with that at all. If you haven’t followed Cooper’s career much you need to
realise that this guy has never taken himself seriously. Ever. He’s an
entertainer and plays the part so well.
“The Nightmare Returns”, track three, basically sets up
track four, “A Runaway Train”, and is Alice Cooper describing his incapability
of sleeping. “A Runaway Train” which shows tribute to country music and has a
drum beat similar to a train on tracks. It’s a decent track, it shows another
side to Cooper that he doesn’t show too often but in all honesty Alice Cooper
plays what genres he feels he can pull off, and trust me, he can pull of loads,
and he proves he can do country well here.
But track five, “Last Man On Earth”, is my favourite song.
It’s so fricking cool, it shows so much swagger and glamour, and Alice Cooper’s
vocals are brilliant. The song follows Alice Cooper off the “Runaway Train”
from the earlier song, where the train crashed. If you think Alice Cooper is a
has-been, he’s lost it, he’s a relic and can’t go anymore, seriously, give this
a listen and it will prove you wrong. This song is easily as cool and smooth as
his seventies stuff. In fact, this song is proof that Alice Cooper’s “Welcome 2
My Nightmare” project is a success.
“The Congregation” is apparently inspired by The Beatles
according to Cooper himself but it reminds me more of the general glam-rock
sound of the seventies, a sound and era that Cooper was attached to quite
closely. If you listen properly you’ll hear a cameo by Rob Zombie, whose very
good friends with Cooper. It’s a good song, very catchy and it continues to use
modern and old influences in this hybrid album. “I’ll Bite Your Face Off” is
track seven and is so far the only single off the album. It’s an odd choice if
you ask me, but then again Alice Cooper doesn’t always choose his singles well
in my opinion. But it’s a decent traditional seventies rock song, a nod to The
Rolling Stones according to Cooper himself, it’s as decent as most of his
singles over the years have been. I don’t know if Alice Cooper will release any
more singles off this album, purely because he doesn’t chart anymore, he makes
music for fun and for his fans rather than to make money. That being said,
“Welcome 2 My Nightmare” is Alice Cooper’s highest charting album since 1994,
when he released “The Last Temptation”, and in the US since 1989 when he
released “Trash”, so that’s great news.
One of the best songs on the album for me is “Disco
Bloodbath Boogie Fever”, which mixes allsorts of different genres from glam
rock, goth rock, shock rock, disco, techno and dare I say it, rap. It’s odd to
describe, it just sound fantastic. It sounds complicated, what with all the
genres Cooper incorporates but it’s simply good sounding music, and John 5,
once of Marilyn Manson and currently of Rob Zombie, gives a helping hand with a
fantastic guitar solo at the end to top off what was already an awesome song.
I could talk about all the songs in honesty but the feeling
is very similar throughout the album, but there are three more songs I will
talk about. First is track eleven, “When Hell Comes Home”, which is arguably
the heaviest song on the album, what with it’s heavy bass and Alice Cooper’s
dark lyrics and sinister voice. It’s definitely one of the more serious songs
on the album.
However contrasting the sincerity of this track, track
twelve is “What Baby Wants”, which is a duet with, I can’t believe I’m about to
say this, Ke$ha, which is a lot better than it sounds trust me. I hate to say
it but you can trust me, it’s a good duet, the contrasting styles and music
backgrounds all count for nothing in this song because Alice Cooper is in a
silly mood again. And when I say silly, I mean that affectionately, because in
the end music is entertainment and there’s very few entertainers in the music
industry as good as Alice Cooper. The song is about Alice Cooper and his
encounter with the devil, although the devil is actually Ke$ha, and he must
sell his soul to her. It’s silly and fun and Ke$ha, kudos to her, she plays her
part very well and her vocals aren’t as bad as I feared when I heard about the
duet. One more thing though, there’s an auto-tune bridge towards the end of the
song and it’s cringe-worthy, but once again, in a good way. Kind of.
Lastly, the album ends with an awesome outro, called “The
Underture”. This song is basically a Broadway-esque exit to both “Nightmares”;
mixing the music of both albums into a quite simply beautifully crafted outro.
It mixes great songs from both albums, like “Disco Bloodbath Boogie Fever” and
“I Am Made of You” from this album and songs from the original album like
“Steven”, and the title track, “Welcome to My Nightmare”. I can’t sum up how
great the outro is in words, if you’ve heard both albums by the time you reach
this point it’s a great way of wrapping everything up.
“Welcome 2 My
Nightmare” was a lot of fun to listen to. Is Alice Cooper the best hard rock
artist in the world? No, I don’t think so. But I never thought he was, I’ve always
seen Alice Cooper as an artist who consistently brings the goods at a good
level throughout his career. He did in the Seventies, he did in the Eighties,
and while the Nineties or Noughties weren’t too kind on the man, this could be
another surge of interest and popularity for the guy, who’s now in his sixties.
I wouldn’t rule it out. Alice Cooper still has it. Doing sequel albums are a
risky business; you’re paying homage to your former self, while trying to reach
a high level you may not be able to reach again, never mind excel. And that’s
what Alice Cooper does here. Yes I said it, “Welcome 2 My Nightmare” is better
than “Welcome to My Nightmare”. Is this album as good quality as other albums
being released at this time? No it’s not, but the nostalgia is there, the
purity is there, the beauty, is there. And most importantly, this album is so
much fun. It’s so much fun to listen to an album where you can hear the
entertainment value, where you can hear how much of a ball Alice Cooper had
going back into the studio with the same guys he released music with 26 years
ago, and with artists who he has met along the way. Alice Cooper as a person is
in a great place right now, and you know something? His music is too. “Welcome
2 My Nightmare” in a nutshell, surpasses the original album released 26 years
prior, and shows that music doesn’t have to be serious; it can be pure
entertainment and fun.
Rating: **** stars
Stand out tracks: "Last Man On Earth", "Disco Bloodbath Boogie Fever", "The Underture"
Here's the music video for the only single released so far, "I'll Bite Your Face Off":
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