Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Alice Cooper Pictures
Artist:
Alice Cooper
Origin:
United States, Detroit - MichiganUnited States
Born date:
February 4, 1948
Alice Cooper Album: «Brutal Planet/Dragontown»
Alice Cooper Album: «Brutal Planet/Dragontown» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.6 of 5)
  • Title:Brutal Planet/Dragontown
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Track listing
Review - Product Description
This "two-fer" from the Snapper label collects two of Alice Cooper's better later recordings, Brutal Planet and Dragontown, both of which were a return to form for the original "shock rocker." ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi
Customer review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- Alice gets hard and heavy

I have been a fan of Alice Coopers music for many years , his "Brutal Planet" cd is by far my favorite A.C. cd . This is a very heavy album and contains more of AC's great lyrics . Check out the songs Brutal Planet ,Wicked Young Man and Eat Some More. This cd is a must for any fan of good heavy metal .

Dragontown is also a very very good cd . I wouldn't rank it up there with Brutal Planet but to get them both in one package at a very low price was a deal I could not pass up.

The downside is , as with all Recall cd sets , the liner notes do not give you very much info , just the bare minimum .

I rate Brutal Planet a 5 and Dragontown a 3 - Check them out

Customer review
- I've been an Alice Cooper since 1972.

This album did not disappoint me. A lot of songs that start off slowly then migrate to gravely voiced head bobbing ballad.

Customer review
- Good Alice Cooper Double Feature

The guy who wrote the liner notes obviously did not have a clue abut his subject matter, the song lyrics should have been inserted instead. However Cooper's attention to diction makes "Brutal Planet" and "Dragontown" fascinating listening. Both are underrated albums that confront issues or morality. The music rocks.

Customer review
- It takes a forklift to lift this CD

These are in my opinion Alice's heaviest two albums in along time and the idea of packaging them together is one of marketing genius. Anyone interested in one of these albums should indeed hear both. There isn't as much experimentation here as on other releases the volumes contained are just the brutal proof that experience is what polishes a performer and Alice shines bright on this collection of music. The only song I didn't like was "Disgraceland", to make fun of the king is sacriligious in Memphis. Unless your Jerry Lee.