Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-75560
Style: Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Time: 50:33
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 283 Mb
Steppenwolf
7 is the fifth studio album by Canadian-American rock band Steppenwolf.
The album was released in November 1970, by Dunhill Records. It is the
first Steppenwolf album with new bass player George Biondo. The album’s
numerical title reflects the fact that it was the band’s seventh album
release for ABC/Dunhill records (including the four preceding studio
LP’s, as well as two live albums). While the album featured
Steppenwolf's trademark rock and roll sounds, none of the songs were
able to make the top 40. The album featured a cover of Hoyt Axton's
"Snowblind Friend", their second cover of one of his antidrug songs (the
first being "The Pusher"). Along with "Who Needs Ya", it was one of two
singles from the album which made the charts, but fell short of the top
40. The album track "Renegade" is autobiographical for lead vocalist
John Kay, recounting his flight with his mother from the Soviet
occupation zone to the West in 1948. The intro to
"Earschplittenloudenboomer" is spoken by Kay partially in German.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steppenwolf_7)
01. Ball Crusher (04:53)
02. Forty Days And Forty Nights (03:04)
03. Fat Jack (04:52)
04. Renegade (06:07)
05. Foggy Mental Breakdown (03:54)
06. Snow Blind Friend (03:55)
07. Who Needs Ya (02:59)
08. Earschplittenloudenboomer (05:00)
09. Hippo Stomp (05:45)
10. Screaming Night Hog / Bonus Track (03:17)
11. Snow Blind Friend (Mono Single Version) / Bonus Track (03:20)
12. Hippo Stomp (Mono Single Version) / Bonus Track (03:22)
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