Description
DOC HOLLIDAY has been a representative line-up of a kind of Southern rock created for the US radios, and this since 1980. The band is led by the charismatic Bruce BROOKSHIRE, guitarist, bass-player and main singer of a line-up whose fame is well-establish… Legendary US Southern rock band, led by charismatic Bruce Brookshire. “”Danger zone”” was originally released back in ’86 and have been out of print for a long time. New edition, remastered + 2 bonus tracks, “”Redneck rock & roll band”” and “”Rollin’ and tumblin” (Muddy Waters cover). No back cover.
Track Listing:
Danger Zone, Ready To Burn, Redneck Rock & Roll Band, Run To Me, Southern Girls, Automatic Girl Tijuana Motel, Thunder & Lightning, Into The Night, All The Right Moves, Easy Goin’ Up, Redneck rock & roll band (Live), Rollin’ and tumbling (Live).
the best album of the doc. Fantastic blend of southern rock and hard US rock. Before you die you have to print this cd s in your mind!!
Check Audio (whole album, every song)
Personnel:
Bruce Brookshire guitars, bass, vocals
Eddie Stone keyboards, vocals
John Samuelson bass, guitar, vocals
Jamie Deckard drums
Tony Cooper piano
Ric Skelton guitar
Bruce Frye background vocals
Tina Fortunato background vocals
Daniel Bud Ford bass
Danny Cadillac Lastinger drums
2001 reissue of their 1986 album with two bonus tracks.
Tracks:
1.  | Danger Zone | |||
2.  | Ready to Burn | |||
3.  | Redneck Rock and Roll Band | |||
4.  | Run to Me | |||
5.  | Southern Girls | |||
6.  | Automatic Girl | |||
7.  | Tijuana Motel | |||
8.  | Thunder and Lightning/Into the Night | |||
9.  | All the Right Moves | |||
10.  | Easy Goin’ Up/Redneck Rock and Roll Band live | |||
11.  | Rollin’ and Tumblin’ live | Cover: Muddy Waters |
no back cover
DOC HOLLIDAY: Danger Zone (original Kerrang review)
Doc Holliday – Danger Zone (1986)
I kinda missed the whole Southern Rock thing back in the 80s, a mistake I’ve been rectifying over the last 10 years or so. To be honest, I don’t really dig the more straight ahead 70s Southern Rock with the more country sound, but most of those early bands hit gold in the early to mid 80s when they mixed a more commercial AOR vibe into their repertoire…Blackfoot, 38 Special, Van Zant, the list goes on – that golden period between ’78 and ’86. Anyway, this starts off in fine form, with the title track a great example of the hard-rocking AOR style that I love from some of these bands – killer track. Second track sounds like a long-lost Billy Idol song – so, no complaints here. ‘Redneck Rock and Roll Band’ has a great southern stomp to it. Bruce Brookshire’s excellent whiskey soaked rasp saves most of them from being totally dire.
The title track on this DOES rip. Are there any songs called ‘Danger Zone’ that don’t rule? If you’ve written a song called Danger Zone and it blows, then shame on you 😉
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