Punk Goes Metal

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (31 ratings)

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 64:55

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diesel boy / dieselboy

alicencyberland

i love how, despite the fact that i've written twice and included links to site to back up my information they still have this as well as 2 other compilations "diesel boy" is on attached to the page for "dj dieselboy"

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The best of the bunch...

SteveDave

Saturdaycerealbowl said it best: the bands make this disc. REAL punk bands playing some great covers. The only beef I have is that the disc is a little heavy on hair metal... definitely check out AFI, Bigwig, Dynamite Head, Dieselboy, and Aquabats. If you want a really good cover of "Youth Gone Wild" though, be sure to look up the Mad Caddies. Enjoy!

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The best...

saturdaycerealbowl

This is the best in Fearless' "Punk Goes..." catalog. Primarily because this CD actually has punk bands on it. Punk Goes Pop was the last to have a decent punk band. Now the series is just horrible. But this is the gem of them all! At the very least, get this one!

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SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO COOOOOOOOOOOL

DiBz

OrkyDoc, dude you are right! punk and metal are f***ing sweeeeet! Now imagine both of them together. WOW! That's what I call good music. That song by A.F.I. so goooood! Everybody, you gotta download this. It rocks!

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AWESOME

OrkyDoc

I love metal and I love punk, this CD combines the best of both worlds. Punk versions of some really great metal tunes. It is a fun listen. If you like 80's metal check this out! Great party CD!

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They Say All Media Guide

Punk Goes Metal is a concept compilation, as it finds 17 of punk rock’s quirkiest groups covering many heavy metal classics in their own special way. Occasionally, the songs take on a new life based on the band’s interpretation (such as Link 80′s brass section in Metallica’s “Harvester of Sorrow”), while others stick to the integral metal qualities that left the chosen song imbedded on so many sweaty, long-haired headbangers’ minds when it first came out (as does A.F.I.’s version of “My Michelle” or Dynamite Boy’s superb cover of AC/DC’s “TNT”). These groups have done an outstanding job of refreshing old classics, and at times old metal songs that many wish had never been unearthed, and that is the sole reason why Punk Goes Metal succeeds. Enjoyable and often humorous, this is a compilation that fans of ’80s metal or ’90s punk should own. – Jason D. Taylor

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