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Dragonride

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Download links and information about Dragonride by Black Hawk. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Alternative genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:01:19 minutes.

Artist: Black Hawk
Release date: 2007
Genre: Alternative
Tracks: 17
Duration: 01:01:19
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dark Strange Night (New Version) 3:19
2. Lose My Mind 3:13
3. Point of the Sword (New Version) 3:27
4. Fight At Night 3:37
5. Suicide 4:09
6. Dragonride 3:28
7. Burning angels 3:44
8. Saturday night 4:22
9. Let Us Break the Night Down 3:45
10. Black Wheel Dealer 2:10
11. Black hawk 3:29
12. Our Land (Bonustrack) 3:07
13. First Attack (Bonstrack from 1989-Mini-LP) 4:14
14. Point of the Sword (Bonstrack from 1989-Mini-LP) 3:51
15. Midnight Hero (Bonstrack from 1989-Mini-LP) 3:31
16. Sea of Thousand Deaths (Bonstrack from 1989-Mini-LP) 4:33
17. Dark Strange Night (Bonstrack from 1989-Mini-LP) 3:20

Details

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As retro-metal albums go, Black Hawk's Dragonride — which was released in 2007 but actually replicates what heavy metal sounded like some 20 years earlier — is about as authentic as they come. That's because, much more than a nostalgic ‘80s metal experiment conducted by a bunch of young punks who stumbled upon their parents' vinyl collections, Dragonride is in fact the second album released in as many years by a band of veterans who first attempted to launch their career (unsuccessfully) in 1981, never to make it past the demo-recording stage. Until now. All of which means that a fair number of this album's astonishingly convincing musical period pieces ("Dark Strange Night" and "Point of the Sword," for instance) have every reason to sound convincing because they are, after all, just acting their age, being updates on much older material. And so too will listeners who stumble upon this only modestly imaginative but wonderfully familiar song set, which revisits the simpler but timeless charms made popular by ‘80s metal stalwarts ranging from Judas Priest to Saxon to Iron Maiden with eerie exactitude, if not the same commercial appeal. The evocative fantasy scenery depicted on Dragonride's cover art completes the time-traveling illusion, making this a can't-miss attraction for retro-metal enthusiasts — not to mention a testament to one band's perseverance in the face of adversity.