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Every Day Is Saturday

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Download links and information about Every Day Is Saturday by The Dictators. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:20:33 minutes.

Artist: The Dictators
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:20:33
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on Songswave €2.27

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Weekend 4:09
2. Backseat Boogie 3:29
3. Master Race Rock 4:11
4. California Sun 3:03
5. Fireman's Friend 5:57
6. Whisky Radio Spot 0:49
7. America the Beautiful 2:41
8. Sleepin' With the TV On 3:50
9. Eugene Radio Spot 1:04
10. Faster and Louder 3:01
11. Minnesota Strip 4:26
12. Baby Let's Twist 3:59
13. What Is It 3:12
14. Borneo Jimmy 4:13
15. I Stand Tall 5:07
16. No Tomorrow 3:28
17. Stay With Me 4:17
18. Bloodbrothers Radio Spot 1:01
19. 16 Forever 3:15
20. Loyola 2:42
21. Laughing Out Loud 2:24
22. What's Up With That? #2 2:52
23. I Just Want to Have Something to Do 2:50
24. 16 Forever #2 3:29
25. Owensboro Radio Spot 1:04

Details

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The Dictators should have been one of the most famous and revered rock 'n' roll bands of all time. But the music industry is a fickle one, and things that seem obvious in hindsight were rarely so clear at the time. The band's debut album, Go Girl Crazy, is an established artifact in the annals of rock history. Yet the demos of those songs, which appear here in rougher and rawer form, are clearly superior. The two tracks that didn't make the album—"Backseat Boogie" and "Fireman's Friend"—deserved to be aired long before this 2007 rarities compilation. But that's the history of The Dictators for you. Thanks to the fine archivists at Norton Records, this album is everything it could be and more. "Sleepin' with the TV On" is fully realized and superior to the official version. The original tunes from Bloodbrothers are all here in brutal form. Two takes of Andy Shernoff's "16 Forever," the b-side "Loyola," a handful of radio spots, and a cover of The Ramones' "I Just Want to Have Something to Do" fill out this excellent alternate look at a five-star band.