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Road To Ruin - RIIR album flac

Road To Ruin - RIIR album flac Performer: Road To Ruin
Title: RIIR
Style: Classic Rock
Released: 2007
MP3 album: 1679 mb
FLAC album: 1539 mb
Rating: 4.3
Other formats: DXD ASF VQF AA TTA WMA AIFF
Genre: Rock

Road to Ruin is the fourth studio album by American punk rock band the Ramones, released on September 21, 1978, through Sire Records as LP record, 8 track cartridge & audio cassette. It was the first Ramones album to feature new drummer Marky Ramone, who replaced Tommy Ramone. Tommy left due to lack of previous albums sales and stress while touring; however, he stayed with the band to produce the album with Ed Stasium.

Road To Ruin: Expanded and Remastered. WMG (от лица компании "Rhino Warner"); CMRRA, LatinAutor - Warner Chappell, ASCAP, UBEM, PEDL, Warner Chappell, LatinAutor" и другие авторские общества (9).

Road to Ruin signs here an excellent first album. The band succeeds in bringing back the ambience of the 70s and 80s and adding to it the flavour of the 21st century. It offers us a very nice album which will please all the fans of classical hard. Translated by heavyboy.

The Road to Ruin is a 1970 album released by husband and wife John and Beverley Martyn. It was the second (and last) album released as a duo. Island Records persuaded John Martyn to resume his solo career as they believed that the public was more interested in John as a solo artist rather than as part of a duo. The album marked the first collaboration on record between John and bassist Danny Thompson, who featured on many of Martyn's subsequent recordings.

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When the Ramones started work on their fourth album, Road to Ruin, in early 1978, they were in something of a bind. Their previous three albums had helped spark the punk revolution and established them as one of the greatest bands in the long and checkered history of rock & roll, but they weren't getting the sales that their label wanted or breaking out in the mainstream the way some of their . compatriots like Blondie had. The Ramones also wanted those things, so they made some major moves

Road to Ruin is a real good album. It isn’t as funny or as powerful as their debut, Ramones, but this does not mean the band is losing its grip. Joey, however, really puts his guts into these antiquated but beautiful lyrics and pulls it off.