American Hardcore is the fifth album by the American rock band L.A. Guns . It is their only album to feature singer Chris Van Dahl and the first to feature bass guitarist Johnny Crypt. This album continues the increase in heaviness by the band started on their previous album Vicious Circle . The band was very influenced by Pantera during this time.
5-444: American Hardcore refers to: American Hardcore (album) , by L.A. Guns American Hardcore (film) , 2006 film American Hardcore: A Tribal History , book written by Steven Blush Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title American Hardcore . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
10-529: The 12 tracks. He quit the band once they were dropped from PolyGram . Following Nickels' departure, second guitarist Johnny Crypt switched over to bass and the band remained a four-piece. The opening track "F.N.A." was intended to sound like a disc skipping, and is rumored to be a portion of their cover song " Black Sabbath " - available on the Japanese import version of the album - simply played backwards. A hidden track can be found following an extended break at
15-430: The 17 minute mark of the final track "I am Alive". The track features an exchange between a couple of prison guards discussing the pending execution of an inmate. According to Van Dahl, he did all the voices in one straight take. Atomic Punks singer Ralph Saenz was recruited to replace Van Dahl after he was fired in 1997 to finish out the last couple months of the tour. The band, with Saenz, would still perform several of
20-435: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=American_Hardcore&oldid=1040972077 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages American Hardcore (album) The band re-branded themselves "The L.A. Guns", at
25-411: The time of the release of American Hardcore , adding 'the' before its name. According to Steve Riley , this was done to note the change in direction from the band's classic line-up fronted by Phil Lewis . Also according to Riley, during the recording of American Hardcore the band was still a five-piece, as bassist Kelly Nickels was very much part of the band and received co-writing credit on eight of
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