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Damian DeadLove and
DampKitten are now friends
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Damian DeadLove wrote a new post
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Keith. So glad you connected with the write my friend. No, I never went that far. lol. If I had and this was all the farther I got, then I would have got fucked on that deal. lol. I tend to complain sometimes, but this isn’t one of those times. Appreciate you.
Damian
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If ever there was a declaration for choosing your life wisely, this is it. We get one shot, make it count. And never sell out. I’d bookmark this if I could, so consider it bookmarked, my friend!
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Damian DeadLove wrote a new post
15 Comments-
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Just revisited the Olive Stone film The Doors last week. It still holds up. Great! This poem is awesome Damian. The Doors were revolutionary for the few short years they were around. Killer poem.
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I really loved the ending dearest Damian yes powerful words and I love and still love Jim as I shake the cotton from my brain…great write and dedication ❤️
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This had the cadence of a song to it. His influence drifting through you, perhaps? What a great ode to your inspiration, my friend
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Damian DeadLove wrote a new post
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Outstanding! Didn’t know much about Buckingham’s background. Informative and a pleasure to read. Not sure if you have listened to Fleetwood Mac before the self titled album in 1975, but their earlier records are more heavy blues driven and underground. I’m not a fan of the band from the self titled album forward but their early material with Peter Green is quite good. Kind of like early Savoy Brown. Rock on dude!
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Keith. So glad you enjoyed the story my friend. I love the band in the Lindsey era obviously. But yes I know about the legendary, Peter Green. He’s the one that wrote, “Black Magic Woman.” Even though it’d be a bigger hit for, Santana. Thanks for your continued support. Appreciate you.
Damian
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It’s rather wild all the drama that band was able to withstand. Lindsey is a hell of an artist in his own right. Though Stevie to me is one of the best hands down.
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Nick. So glad you enjoyed the story my friend. I agree totally it had to be chaos. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, I like Stevie a lot too, but I’m a Lindsey guy. The crazy thing is if it wasn’t for Lindsey, she wouldn’t have got the Fleetwood Mac gig. Anyhow they’re both great artists, thanks for the support. Appreciate you.
Damian
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I don’t know that much about him, other than he was in Fleetwood Mac & at one point involved with Stevie. But I can absolutely swear that Tusk is one of my all-time favorite songs…ever. I never looked into who wrote what for them or the singing rights to said songs. That was fascinating to learn. To be in the throes of a broken relationship & still creating phenomenal music…damn. I’m impressed. With him & with your sharing of his story, my friend
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Willow. So glad you enjoyed the story my friend. I’m a huge fan of this era of Fleetwood Mac. I’m a fan of Stevie Nicks. I’m a bigger fan of Lindsey, which might be obvious writing from his point of view and all. But the two of them together are phenomenal, when they’re getting along. Stevie, went more pop with her solo career. Lindsey, had hits, but that wasn’t what he was focused on. He wanted to make great albums, and sometimes experiment as well as shifting between acoustic & electric guitar. He played all the instruments unless he had a guest on a song. I’ve got every solo album & every live album he released. Might have to share a song or two with you off of YouTube. “Tusk” is a great song my friend. It’s is a Lindsey song by the way, he talked the rest of the band into making “Tusk” the entire album was meant to be nothing like Rumours. Lindsey, stated we already made a great pop record, we can’t do it any better than we already did it. Sorry for the novel.. Appreciate you.
Damian
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Damian DeadLove wrote a new post
13 Comments-
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I remember reading this one on DUP. I never knew anything about them until you introduced them. I will say a couple things here. You brought such an infectious enthusiasm to the tellingvof theor story that it roused my curiosity. So well the fuck done there! Also, completely unrelated to the story, I have complete hair envy looking at their photo. Sigh… Another fascinating episode, my friend
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Willow. So glad you enjoyed the story my friend. Yeah, it was the last one written. The enthusiasm was it’s a band my friend and I talk about all the time. He got me into them, and his mother had passed away. This was in March around my birthday, he had called me in late February saying he might not be able to call on my birthday because she was getting worse. She passed, I knew he was going to be busy with all her arrangements. So I wrote this episode for him. I wanted it to be good when I read it on my YouTube channel. I was relieved a couple months later on my belated birthday call, because he calls me on my birthday, always has. That it was his escape, a place to relax and get calm. He said he’d close his eyes and listen to me talk about, Overkill. So I was there for him in an untraditional way, but I was there. Sorry for the novel. Appreciate you.
Damian
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EXCELLENT! Seen Overkill live 2 times in the 90’s and once in the 2000’s. Great live act. Horroscope was a mature, progressive thrash album. That release, they gained a wider audience. Atlantic Records wanted them to polish their sound even more with the followup, I Hear Black. That’s why that album sounds much different then others. They were trying to go mainstream. The album did ok, reaching the charts. WFO was solid, but the sales weren’t great. That was their last release on a major label. Overkill will never be as huge as Slayer, Metallica, Megadeth or Anthrax but they left their mark on Metal and Thrash Metal. Great job Damian.
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Keith. So glad you enjoyed the story my friend. I agree they went more commercial it was their “Black Album” says J.J. Burton. Just like Megadeth had “Countdown to Extinction”, and Slayer had “Seasons.” Every thrash band took a shot at what Metallica done with the Black Album. That’s also straight from the mouth of my old friend. He’s the wisest man I know when it comes to Thrash or Death Metal. If I get stuck he’s the one I ask. lol. But we loved the Blues vibe and the songwriting. They are often called the Motörhead of thrash by some. Appreciate you.
Damian
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I actually don’t think I know this band unless I’m just not recalling. But heck, any band with a ‘Fuck You” EP is worth a listen.
I have some YouTubing to do.
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The Fuck You Ep is a great listen. Though the track “Fuck You” is a cover song from the Canadian Punk band D.O.A. Check them out as well.
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I checked out both band and both are great. Though I will say D.O.A. “Fucked Up Donald” is going on my playlist haha. Loved it.
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Meant to comment on this on DUP but the shutdown happened before I got around to it!
I never even thought of calling them the Motorhead of thrash but that is an apt description for them. When Hello From the Gutter came to Headbanger’s Ball on MTV they suddenly became one of my top-tier favorite bands. I even had an Under the Influence t-shirt I found at a mall in the city (they didn’t sell Overkill merch out in the sticks where I was from lol). 90-95 period is significant for me as those were very formative years (age 17-22)
I always felt that Overkill had a gritty realness to them, actually (imo) superior to Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer or Anthrax (the so-called “big four”). I grew up with those bands and went to the concerts and wore the t-shirts and cranked the tapes in my muscle cars but now, in my 50’s, I find that I never listen to any songs by the Big Four anymore, but I still listen to Overkill. The music has truly aged like a fine wine. A very streetwise kind of metal. Developed under harsh conditions. This is a band with a lot of moxie, and you can hear it in the music.
The Years of Decay is probably my sentimental favorite, but Horrorscope really showed how they had matured as songwriters. “Time to Kill” and “Who Tends the Fire?” are the 2 tracks I seem to drift back to the most.
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Thanks so much for reading and your kind words, Benjamin. So glad you connected with the story my friend. I always thought it should have been Overkill instead of Anthrax representing the east coast side of the Big 4. And I like Anthrax, but Overkill had songwriting and something special that couldn’t be duplicated. I agree a moxie, or a swagger. Plus “Blitz” who reminds me of a Thrash metal David Lee Roth. He’s clever in his lyric writing and has a very witty sarcasm to his humor. He’s a fucking frontman, not strapped to an instrument. He knows how to interact with the crowd. Great album, I love Decay as well. “Who Tends the Fire?” is one of my favorites as well. “Time To Kill” is awesome as well. But I really loved “Decay” as a song. Being it explains life on the road and touring isn’t as glamorous as you think, it’s work. Great comment. Appreciate you.
Damian
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Killer piece my friend. A great poem to think about, especially if you sold your soul.
Question for you Damian…Did you sell your soul for Rock n Roll?