Alice Cooper Goes to Hell | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Alice Cooper |
Cover: | Alice Cooper - Goes To Hell.jpg |
Released: | June 25, 1976 |
Studio: | Soundstage, Toronto; Record Plant East, New York and RCA Recording Studios, Los Angeles |
Genre: | Rock, hard rock, pop rock |
Length: | 43:15 |
Label: | Warner Bros. |
Producer: | Bob Ezrin[1] |
Prev Title: | Welcome to My Nightmare |
Prev Year: | 1975 |
Next Title: | Lace and Whiskey |
Next Year: | 1977 |
Alice Cooper Goes to Hell is the second solo studio album by American rock musician Alice Cooper, released in 1976.[2] A continuation of Welcome to My Nightmare as it continues the story of Steven, the concept album was written by Cooper with guitar player Dick Wagner and producer Bob Ezrin.[3]
With the success of "Only Women Bleed" from his first solo effort, Alice continued with the rock ballads on this album. "I Never Cry" was written about his drinking problem, which would in one year send the performer into rehab and affect all his subsequent music up to and including 1983's DaDa.[4] Cooper called the song "an alcoholic confession".
The "Alice Cooper Goes to Hell" tour of 1976 was completely cancelled prior to commencement due to Cooper suffering from anemia at the time. However, a number of songs from the album ended up in Cooper's live show. "Go to Hell" proved the last song until the 1989 hit song "Poison" to become a consistent part of Cooper's live setlists, being performed on most tours to the present. "I Never Cry" was also regularly performed in the late 1970s and during the 2000s, while "Guilty" was performed regularly on the Flush the Fashion and Special Forces tours and occasionally during the 2000s, and "Wish You Were Here" was frequently played on the tours for the following two albums.
Rolling Stone wrote that "the soppy old standard, 'I'm Always Chasing Rainbows', probably expresses [Cooper's] musical sympathies much better than this record’s dynamic, if derivative, rock & roll."[5]
“Go to Hell” was covered by Dee Snider, Zakk Wylde, Bob Kulick, Rudy Sarzo, Frankie Banali and Paul Taylor on the 1999 tribute album Humanary Stew: A Tribute to Alice Cooper. Also, was included on the 2009 videogame on the fictitious station Liberty Rock Radio.