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Steppenwolf

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Download links and information about Steppenwolf by Steppenwolf. This album was released in 1968 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Psychedelic genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 47:00 minutes.

Artist: Steppenwolf
Release date: 1968
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Psychedelic
Tracks: 11
Duration: 47:00
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Buy on Songswave €1.33
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sookie Sookie 3:15
2. Everybody's Next One 2:58
3. Berry Rides Again 2:50
4. Hoochie Coochie Man 5:14
5. Born To Be Wild 3:30
6. Your Wall's Too High 5:47
7. Desperation 5:46
8. The Pusher 5:49
9. A Girl I Knew 2:39
10. Take What You Need 3:29
11. The Ostrich 5:43

Details

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Steppenwolf entered the studio for their recording debut with a lot of confidence — based on a heavy rehearsal schedule before they ever got signed — and it shows on this album, a surprisingly strong debut album from a tight hard rock outfit who was obviously searching for a hook to hang their sound on. The playing is about as loud and powerful as anything being put out by a major record label in 1968, though John Kay's songwriting needed some development before their in-house repertory would catch up with their sound and musicianship. On this album, the best material came from outside the ranks of the active bandmembers: "Born to Be Wild" by ex-member Mars Bonfire, which became not only a chart-topping high-energy anthem for the counterculture (a status solidified by its use in Dennis Hopper's movie Easy Rider the following year), but coined the phrase heavy metal, thus giving a genre-specific name to the brand of music that the band played (and which was already manifesting itself in the work of bands like Vanilla Fudge and the just-emerging Led Zeppelin); the Don Covay soul cover "Sookie, Sookie," which, as a single by the new group, actually got played on some soul stations until they found out that Steppenwolf was white; two superb homages to Chess Records, in the guise of "Berry Rides Again," written (though "adapted" might be a better word) by Kay based on the work of Chuck Berry, and the Willie Dixon cover "Hoochie Coochie Man"; and Hoyt Axton's "The Pusher," an anti-drug song turned into a pounding six-minute tour de force by the band. The rest, apart from the surprisingly lyrical rock ballad "A Girl I Knew," is by-the-numbers hard rock that lacked much except a framework for their playing; only "The Ostrich" ever comes fully to life among the other originals, but the songs would catch up with the musicianship the next time out.