Ted Nugent - Ted Nugent
Facts
| Artist(s) | Ted Nugent |
| Studio | Sony |
| Release Date | June 22, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 746465914208 |
| Buy this item | $10.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 15:47 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- Stranglehold
- Stormtroopin'
- Hey Baby - Ted Nugent, Saint Holmes, Derek
- Just What the Doctor Ordered
- Snakeskin Cowboys
- Motor City Madhouse
- Where Have You Been All My Life
- You Make Me Feel Right at Home
- Queen of the Forest
- Stormtroopin'
- Just What the Doctor Ordered
- Motor City Madhouse
- Magic Party
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Just What The Doctor Ordered! |
If you like this album, you might also like mine: Sloopjohnd November 14, 2008
| HEY BABY! |
| Laughably Bad 70's Music!!! |
| Shedding the past |
I STILL, to this day, get goosebumps and shivers when I hear that opening guitar lick to "StrangleHold"! This song kicks major ass from first note to last. Most people miss that there is a short bass solo in there, just before the breakdown into the bluesy middle part. And that guitar note that leads into the middle just seems to hang on forever, without going into feedback. I find my head rising to it, anticipating the drop on it to let the middle part officially begin. For someone trying to drop the Acid Rock tag, this song fits into that tag so well. The side to side backward cymbal crashes, the flanged bass underneath it all, just the whole movement of the entire piece is so captivating. Ted is playing in such a bluesy manner, that he hasn't really played before or since. Even he says that he doesn't know where half that stuff came from. He just shut his eyes, and let it come. I have two different "live" versions of this song, and he doesn't come close on either one. BUT, I got to see him live for the first time on Kiss' 2001 Farewell tour, and at 51 years old, when he played this song, it was note for f#@$%g note! Absolutley amazing!
"Stormtroopin'" sounds like it could have been on any of the later Amboy Dukes albums, but a good song nonetheless. "Hey Baby" is more of a hard rock blues, a harbinger really, of what a lot of bands were getting ready to do, this could have fit on any early "Bad Company" album, quite comfortably. The same with "Where You Been All My Life" A lot of people point to "Motor City Madhouse" as the guitar tour de Force, for Ted, but when played alongside "StrangleHold" It just doesn't, in my opinion, hold up. And the fake ending on it, kinda makes this one my least favorite on the record.
There is a "hidden" gem on this record, that never really got the respect it deserved, "Feel Right At Home", which is basically just organ, bass, and drums/w.brushes.it is such a cool soulfull little piece, which was such a departure from anything else on the album, and for Ted personally, that it just never got the attention it deserved. If you have this album, throw that little number on, forget that it's Nugent, and REALLY listen to it. You'll be sorry you missed it all this time.
For me, there is a "Holy Trio" of "must listen to" songs on this album, that whenever I pull the album out I...well, must listen to..lol The first one being "StrangleHold" of course. The second one is "Just What The Doctor Ordered" Which, if you listen closely is Ted telling his story, of how he got to that point. The guitar riff in this song is just fantastic, as is the playing, the arrangement and the structure. As on StrangleHold", Nugent steps out of his "box" in his playing, and it pays off big time. The other one is "Snakeskin Cowboys", While not really being a departure guitar wise for him, it is a great song that again, I feel never, got it's due. And the "tough guy" imagry in the lyrics is excellent. This is the kind of song, that he seemed to be aiming the Dukes at all along, and in that vein, it deserves more attention than it recieved.
For what it's worth. My band usually ends it's night with "Stranglehold" and knowing that we can never even get close to Ted's brilliance on this song, we just basically use the middle section to give everyone in the band a solo, and it works, at least from my perspective. I always introduce the song by saying "We are the only band in Orlando crazy enough to try this song" Whether that's the true case or not, It hypes the crowd, because they know what is coming...lol
For me, although he did have some songs later that rated with the ones on this album, he never really had an album that held together as well as this one. A brilliant moment of everything working right at the right time. And a primer to the Metal assault that was soon to be upon us in 80's.
October 12, 2007
| Finely aged rock! |
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