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Sahara Hotnights - Original Album Classics (2016)

Sahara Hotnights - Original Album Classics (2016)

BAND/ARTIST: Sahara Hotnights

Tracklist:

CD1

01. Push on Some More
02. Quite a Feeling
03. Drive Dead Slow
04. Oh Darling!
05. Wake Up
06. That's What They Do
07. Impressed by Me
08. Kicks
09. Too Cold for You
10. I Know Exactly What to Do
11. Our Very Own

CD2

01. Alright Alright (Here's My Fist Where's the Fight ?)
02. On Top Of Your World
03. Fire Alarm
04. With or Without Control
05. Keep up the Speed
06. No Big Deal
07. Down and Out
08. Only the Fakes Survive
09. Whirlwind Reaper
10. Fall into Line
11. Are You Happy Now ?
12. Out of the System
13. A Perfect Mess

CD3

01. Who Do You Dance For ?
02. Hot Night Crash
03. Empty Heart
04. Walk On The Wire
05. Mind Over Matter
06. Stupid Tricks
07. Nerves
08. Stay/Stay Away
09. Keep Calling My Baby
10. The Difference Between Love And Hell
11. Hangin'

While growing up in northern Sweden during the hey day of grunge, the four ladies of Sahara Hotnights needed something tangible to beat the boredom of being teenagers. Naturally, Maria Andersson (vocals/ guitars), Josephine Forsman (drums) and sisters Jennie Asplund (guitars), Johanna Asplund (bass) formed a band. They were already under the influence of Blondie, The Clash and The Ramones, so Sahara Hotnights structured themselves under seventies punk rock for a stylish, post-grunge sound of their own. A self-released debut EP, Suits Anyone Fine, was issued to critical European acclaim in 1997, and almost immediately things started to happen for Sahara Hotnights. They scored a label contract with the Swedish label, Speech and over the next two years, three more killer singles - "Face Wet," "Oh Darling," "Nothing Yet" - would be released. In 1999, Sahara Hotnights issued their proper studio full-length C'mon, Let's Pretend; it would later earn two Swedish Grammy nominations.

Such success wasn't short of stopping, either. Sahara Hotnights got out of their drab Swedish hometown of Umea by the new millennium and signed to BMG in the U.K. The Drive Dead Slow EP appeared in April 2000 and the girls prepped for a sophomore album. The spiky cool Jennie Bomb exuded a new confidence from the Sahara Hotnights. Now in their early twenties, the dynamic inside the band had never been better and their musicianship was tight. America finally caught on in mid-2002; Sahara Hotnights and JetSet set up camp and Jennie Bomb was slated for a domestic release in September. Two years later, the band made their major label debut for RCA with Kiss & Tell.


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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:26
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Many thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:25
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Many thanks for lossless.