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Welcome To My Nightmare 1975 Album

Welcome To My Nightmare Welcome To My Nightmare
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0.5
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Item description
My Catalog
Length
43m 19s
Country
United States
Release Dates
1975-03-11
Description
Welcome to My Nightmare is the first solo album by American rock musician Alice Cooper, released in March 1975. It his only album for the Atlantic Records label in North America; in the rest of the world, it was released on the ABC subsidiary Anchor Records (also his only album for that label). Welcome to My Nightmare is a concept album. Played in sequence, the songs form a journey through the nightmares of a child named Steven. The album inspired the Alice Cooper: The Nightmare TV special, a worldwide concert tour in 1975, and his Welcome to My Nightmare concert film in 1976. The ensuing tour was one of the most over-the-top excursions of that era. Most of Lou Reed’s band joined Cooper for this record.
artist
producer
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Other Roles
Alice Cooper
Alice Cooper
Lead Vocals
Dick Wagner
Dick Wagner
Electric and Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
Bob Ezrin
Bob Ezrin
Synthesizer, Keyboards, Vocals, Arrangements
Tony Levin
Tony Levin
Bass on "Welcome to My Nightmare" and "Escape"
Steve Hunter
Steve Hunter
Electric and Acoustic Guitar
Allan MacMillan
Allan MacMillan
Arrangements
Josef Chirowski
Josef Chirowski
Keyboards, Clavinet, Vocals, Fender Rhodes
Johnny "Bee" Bandajek
Johnny "Bee" Bandajek
Drums on "Welcome to My Nightmare" and "Escape"
Tracklist
1. Welcome To My Nightmare 5m 19s
2. Devil's Food 3m 38s
3. The Black Widow 3m 37s
4. Some Folks 4m 19s
5. Only Women Bleed 5m 59s
6. Department Of Youth 3m 18s
7. Cold Ethyl 3m 51s
8. Years Ago 2m 51s
9. Steven 5m 52s
10. The Awakening 2m 25s
11. Escape 3m 20s

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All Reviews
Alice drops the band in favor of Bob Ezrin and a large team of collaborators (Dick Wagner, Steve Hunter, etc.), unveils a concept which included the alter-ego character Steven (some would say autobiographical), and the ensuing media blitz spun off this album, a network TV special (featuring Vincent Price), tour and concert film. Nightmare is a different trip - in search of mega-pop star status, both the tense layers of psychological exploration, along with the menacing hard rock edge, have been stripped away - and in it is place is an inward, direct, often more opulent approach that had a lot in common with was popular at the time...just restated to fit Alice's distinct vision. It would set the tone for an erratic solo period which piloted through its share of peaks and valleys.
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