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Prince Of Darkness

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Prince Of Darkness album cover
01
Prince Of Darkness
5:11
$0.99
02
Roses On White Lace
4:31
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03
Teenage Frankenstein
3:41
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04
He's Back (The Man Behind The Mask)
3:51
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05
Billion Dollar Babies
3:21
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06
Lock Me Up
3:27
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07
Simple Disobedience
3:31
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08
Thrill My Gorilla
2:58
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09
Life And Death Of The Party
3:43
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10
Freedom
4:09
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 38:23

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eMusic Features

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Dr. Cooper and Mr. Hyde: Alice Cooper

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

"I'm a boy and I'm a man!" Alice Cooper proclaimed in his 1971 breakthrough hit, "I'm Eighteen," and straddling that cusp, drawing a borderline between his performance self and his private life, has also enabled him to enjoy a long and celebrated career. Unlike many performers who walk the jagged edge of shock and awwww... he has understood (and not always easily), over the course of four decades, that there are those who live their… more »

They Say All Music Guide

After taking a break from releasing albums and touring in the early to mid-’80s (while battling alcoholism), Alice Cooper returned with a pair of hard rock albums for MCA: 1986′s Constrictor and 1987′s Raise Your Fist and Yell. While Cooper remained a popular concert attraction with heavy metallists from coast to coast, both albums were largely spotty affairs; instead of returning to the raw garage rock of his early-’70s peak, Cooper attempted to stay in step with the then-thriving pop-metal scene. After leaving MCA for Epic in 1989 (and scoring a hit the same year with Trash), his former label issued a best-of compilation from both of Cooper’s comeback albums, entitled Prince of Darkness. Again, this wasn’t Cooper at his peak, but such tracks as “Teenage Frankenstein” and the strangely new wave-ish “He’s Back (The Man Behind the Mask)” prove to be highlights. Also of note to collectors is the inclusion of a rare live version of “Billion Dollar Babies,” which was previously available only as a B-side. If you want to check out Cooper’s late-’80s direction and don’ t feel like buying both albums from the era, the midline-priced Prince of Darkness will do the trick. – Greg Prato

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