When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Misfits discography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misfits_discography

    The discography of Misfits, a horror punk band formed in Lodi, New Jersey, in 1977, consists of seven studio albums, three live albums, four compilation albums, four EPs, nineteen singles, one video album, five music videos, one box set, one demo, and one cancelled album. The Misfits were formed in 1977 by singer and songwriter Glenn Danzig.

  3. Misfits (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misfits_(band)

    In July 1983 the Misfits finished recording their EP, and Danzig decided to record two more songs that he had intended for his new project, turning it into a full album. Earth A.D./Wolfs Blood demonstrated the increased influence of hardcore punk and heavy metal on the band, though they would break up just two months before it was released.

  4. Static Age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_Age

    With the release of the Misfits box set in 1996, the complete original Static Age album saw the light of day for the first time on CD, eighteen years after the songs were recorded. The box set included all three compilation albums as well as a disc with all fourteen Static Age tracks that had been mixed in 1978.

  5. Misfits (Misfits album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misfits_(Misfits_album)

    Upon release, Danzig was the only member of the Misfits receiving royalties for Collection I, along with the 1985 compilation album Legacy of Brutality and the 1987 live album Evilive. [7] This led to a series of legal battles between Danzig and his former bandmates Jerry Only and Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein. [8] [9]

  6. Famous Monsters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famous_Monsters

    Famous Monsters is the fifth studio album by the American punk rock band Misfits, released on October 5, 1999.It is the second in the post-Danzig era of the band, and the last album to feature Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein, Michale Graves, and Dr. Chud, who would all quit the band in 2000.

  7. Michale Graves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michale_Graves

    The second show was the same music played as the first show, only this time the lineup consisted of Graves on vocals and electric guitar (he used Misfits guitarist Doyle's old Ibanez Iceman which was given to Graves as a gift upon joining the Misfits back in 1995), Dr. Chud on drums, and "J-Sin Trioxin" (Mister Monster) on bass.

  8. The Devil's Rain (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Devil's_Rain_(album)

    The Devil's Rain is the seventh studio album by horror punk band Misfits, released October 4, 2011, through the label that the Misfits own, Misfits Records.It is the band's first album in eight years, following 2003's covers record Project 1950, and the first of original material since 1999's Famous Monsters. [1]

  9. Beware (EP) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beware_(EP)

    Beware is the fifth release by the American punk rock band Misfits.First issued in January 1980, this EP combined the Misfits' previously released singles "Bullet" and "Horror Business", and was originally intended as a recording that the Misfits could bring with them on their tour of the United Kingdom with the British punk rock group the Damned in late 1979.