Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
During the turn of the 80s and 90s, the band had 3 hits in the top 40 of national chart Modern Rock Tracks, being them Pet Sematary, Poison Heart and I Don't Wanna Grow Up (cover of Tom Waits). Their first, and only, cover album , Acid Eaters , was released in 1993, just a year and a half before the band's fourteenth and final studio album ...
File:Ramones - Best of the Chrysalis Years cover.jpg; File:Ramones - The Best of the Ramones cover.jpg; File:Ramones - Blitzkrieg Bop cover.jpg; File:Blitzkrieg Over You! cover.jpg; File:Ramones - Bonzo Goes to Bitburg cover.jpg; File:Bossa n' Ramones cover.jpg; File:Ramones - Brain Drain cover.jpg; File:Brats on the Beat cover.jpg
Ramones is the debut studio album by the American punk rock band Ramones, released on April 23, 1976, by Sire Records. After Hit Parader editor Lisa Robinson saw the band at a gig in New York City, she wrote several articles about the group and asked Danny Fields to be their manager. [ 1 ]
Greatest Hits is a 2006 compilation album by the punk rock band Ramones. It was issued one year after the box set Weird Tales of the Ramones, and four years after the single-disc collection Loud, Fast Ramones: Their Toughest Hits. The album contains songs recorded during 1976–1989.
Ramones Mania is the first greatest hits album by the American punk rock band the Ramones.It was released on May 31, 1988 through Sire Records and consists of 30 Ramones songs, including some single versions ("Sheena Is a Punk Rocker," "Needles & Pins" and "Howling at the Moon"), a single B-side ("Indian Giver") and one previously unreleased take (the film version of "Rock 'n' Roll High School").
The album also featured the first Ramones single to enter the Billboard charts (albeit only as high as number 81): "Sheena Is a Punk Rocker". The follow-up single, "Rockaway Beach", reached number 66—the highest any Ramones single would ever reach in America.
The second version is a slight remix of the Ed Stasium version by producer Phil Spector, who produced The Ramones' next album End of the Century. This version features Spector's Wall of Sound mixing technique and was the version featured on the Rock 'n' Roll High School soundtrack album and accompanying 7" single.
The liner notes were written by Boris the Sprinkler singer Rev. Nørb in April 1997; In them, he claimed that Boris the Sprinkler had originally been slated to cover 1978's Road to Ruin, which was the next Ramones studio album after Leave Home and Rocket to Russia, but while he felt that "half that album is totally great, and cannot be improved ...