Scorpions – Deadly Sting – The Merkury Years (1997)
Scorpions – Deadly Sting – The Merkury Years (1997)
CD1
01. Loving You sunday morning
02. Lovedrive
03. Holiday
04. Make It real
05. The zoo
06. Blackout
07. Can't live without You play
08. No one like You play
09. China white
10. Dynamite
11. Bad boys running wild
12. Rock You like a Hurricane
13. Coming home
14. Big city nights
15. Still loving You
16. Coast to coast (live)
CD2
01. Don't stop at the top
02. Rhythm of love
03. Passion rules the game
04. Walking on the edge
05. Believe in love
06. I Can't explain play
07. Tease me please me
08. Don't believe her
09. Wind of change
10. Hit between the eyes
11. Send me an angel
12. Alien nation
13. Under the same sun
14. Woman
15. In trance (live)
16. Over the top
17. Life goes around play
Personnel:
Klaus Meine (vocals, background vocals);
Rudolph Schenker, Matthias Jabs (guitar, background vocals);
Michael Schenker (guitar);
Herman Rarebell (drums, percussion, background vocals)
Francis Buchholz (bass, background vocals).
It's quite difficult to find a young person who knows about the Scorpions. Even when their careers were peaking in the '80s, they were never widely recognized, existing always as more of an underground band. The lack of hit singles produced by the group is by no means a judgment of its talent, however, as Deadly Sting: The Mercury Years proves. Some may find the fact that Mercury made the compilation a double-disc set surprising -- again due to the band's small following -- but the album is far better than the single-disc collection Best of Rockers 'n' Ballads. Following chronologically from 1979 to 1993 (thus covering the years in which the band enjoyed its most success), Deadly Sting rips through the favorites "Loving You Sunday Morning," "The Zoo," "Blackout," "No One Like You," "Big City Nights," "Still Loving You," "Rock You Like a Hurricane," "Rhythm of Love," "Wind of Change," and "Don't Believe Her," finally concluding with two unreleased recordings from 1995. Though these tracks are far cries from the songs that proceeded them, that doesn't stop Deadly Sting: The Mercury Years from being the most essential album from one of the most under-rated hair bands of all time. ---Barry Weber, AllMusic Review
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Last Updated (Monday, 07 January 2019 17:05)