Post by Lucky Seven on Dec 1, 2006 18:06:26 GMT -5
This CD flippin' rocks! It's one of the greatest Christmas CDs ever made, and it only came out just this year! I also heard that this is gonna be their last album. Anyway, if you didn't get this CD already, I suggest you do while you can! It's awesome! Lots of heavy metal makeovers on classic Christmas songs. The album's current single I know of is their take on "Oh Come All Ye Faithful", which people are talking about how similar their version sounds like "We're Not Gonna Take It". Twisted Sister-A Twisted Christmas. This is a Christmas CD that DOESN'T suck (not that it's the only Christmas CD that doesn't suck!). And I think this is the only Christmas CD that Beavis and Butt-head would like. Here's some more information from http://www.twistedsister.com:
Twisted Sister "A Twisted Christmas" (Razor And Tie)
This is, quite simply, the best hard rock Christmas album ever made, and one of the best rock 'n' roll Christmas albums period since Elvis made his. It's THAT good.
The words "clever," "intelligent" and "groundbreaking" have seldom appeared in critics' assessments of Twisted Sister, but that's exactly what this 11-song collection is. The Long Island quintet melds classic Christmas tunes with their favorite heavy metal songs to create a disc like no other. For instance, singer Dee Snider realized that the chorus to the band's biggest hit "We're Not Gonna Take It" is almost note-for-note the same as the melody to "O Come All Ye Faithful." So the band played the backing music for the Twisted song, while Snider sung the traditional hymn lyrics, and the result is an instant holiday classic.
"I'll Be Home For Christmas," a duet with Lita Ford, is set to the music of Twisted's "The Price," and the band's "Rock And Roll Saviors" morphs into "Let It Snow." Other bands also get the treatment: AC/DC's "Problem Child" becomes "Silver Bells," Judas Priest's "You've Got Another Thing Coming" becomes "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus," and Black Sabbath's "Never Say Die" and "War Pigs" are blended into "Deck The Halls" and "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen."
The one original track, "Heavy Metal Christmas," is a Twisted interpretation of The Twelve Days Of Christmas ("Four quarts of Jack, three studded belts, two pairs of spandex pants, and a tattoo of Ozzy.") It also has ferocious bass riffing by Mark "The Animal" Mendoza that alone is worth the price of the disc.
This is the band's final album before calling it quits next year, and they saved the best of a 30-year career for last.
Wayne Parry, AP Writer
This is, quite simply, the best hard rock Christmas album ever made, and one of the best rock 'n' roll Christmas albums period since Elvis made his. It's THAT good.
The words "clever," "intelligent" and "groundbreaking" have seldom appeared in critics' assessments of Twisted Sister, but that's exactly what this 11-song collection is. The Long Island quintet melds classic Christmas tunes with their favorite heavy metal songs to create a disc like no other. For instance, singer Dee Snider realized that the chorus to the band's biggest hit "We're Not Gonna Take It" is almost note-for-note the same as the melody to "O Come All Ye Faithful." So the band played the backing music for the Twisted song, while Snider sung the traditional hymn lyrics, and the result is an instant holiday classic.
"I'll Be Home For Christmas," a duet with Lita Ford, is set to the music of Twisted's "The Price," and the band's "Rock And Roll Saviors" morphs into "Let It Snow." Other bands also get the treatment: AC/DC's "Problem Child" becomes "Silver Bells," Judas Priest's "You've Got Another Thing Coming" becomes "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus," and Black Sabbath's "Never Say Die" and "War Pigs" are blended into "Deck The Halls" and "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen."
The one original track, "Heavy Metal Christmas," is a Twisted interpretation of The Twelve Days Of Christmas ("Four quarts of Jack, three studded belts, two pairs of spandex pants, and a tattoo of Ozzy.") It also has ferocious bass riffing by Mark "The Animal" Mendoza that alone is worth the price of the disc.
This is the band's final album before calling it quits next year, and they saved the best of a 30-year career for last.
Wayne Parry, AP Writer