Calling the Wild explained

Calling the Wild
Type:Album
Artist:Doro
Cover:Doro Calling the Wild.jpg
Released:11 September 2000 (Germany)
12 September 2000 (USA)
Studio:3:20 Studios, New York City, USA
Atom H Studios, Düsseldorf, Germany
Office Studios, Los Angeles, USA
Intermediapost, New Jersey, USA
Crownhyll Studio, Remscheid, Germany
Egopark, Hamburg, Germany
Genre:Hard rock, heavy metal
Length:62:48
54:31 (US version)
Label:SPV/Steamhammer (Germany)
Koch (USA)
Producer:Jimmy Harry, Jürgen Engler, Chris Lietz, Doro Pesch, Lemmy, Bob Kulick, Bruce Bouillet, Andreas Bruhn, Mike Goldberg, Nelson Ayres, Rudy Kronenberger
Prev Title:Love Me in Black
Prev Year:1998
Next Title:Fight
Next Year:2002

Calling the Wild is the seventh solo album by German hard rock singer Doro Pesch. It was released in 2000, in two different editions for the European market and the American one. For this release, Doro changed labels again, having signed contracts with SPV/Steamhammer for Germany and with Koch Records for the USA. Calling the Wild was the first album published in the US after the eponymous one in 1990. The US edition contains also remixed tracks taken from the previous Doro album Love Me in Black."Love Me Forever" is a cover of Motörhead's song from the album 1916 of 1991. "White Wedding" is a cover of Billy Idol's hit single of 1982 .

Overview

After unsatisfying promotion and distribution of Love Me in Black by WEA, Doro signed in 2000 with German label SPV/Steamhammer. With the aide of her American fan club that had her demos circulating in the offices of various labels,[1] she received an offer for an American release of her new album by Koch Records. She signed this second contract and decided to release two different editions of the album: the first one for the European market, with only unpublished songs; the second one for the American market, which included some songs from Love Me in Black.

Calling the Wild had a production process even more fragmented than the previous album and for the first time Doro herself took the job of producer. Producers and composers Jürgen Engler, Chris Lietz and Jimmy Harry, who had produced Love Me in Black, contributed again some new songs and remixed some old ones for the US edition. Motörhead singer Lemmy Kilmister contributed two songs that were independently produced in Los Angeles, and so did former The Sisters of Mercy guitarist Andreas Bruhn in Germany. The Gary Scruggs' songs and the contributions by the guest musicians required even more independent production.

The music of Calling the Wild trades the industrial and electronic sounds present in Love Me in Black for straight heavy metal, filling the tracks with riffs and guitar solos galore. The remixed songs from the previous album had the drum machine parts replaced by live tracks by German drummer Thomas Franke, with guitar solos provided by former Detente guitarist Mario Parillo and by Jürgen Engler himself. Other guitar solos came from Savatage guitarist Al Pitrelli and Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash. Of the latter, Doro said: "He was mixing his record in New York… The guys in my band and my engineer were laying down basic tracks and they met Slash hanging out backstage at a Type O Negative gig. Slash said he had two more days in the studio and my engineer asked him if he fancied playing the solo. He thought it was a great idea and, the next day, he came into the studio. I telephoned in – I was still in Germany… I was fucking blown away."[2]

Following the release of the album, Doro went on a successful US tour supporting Dio, her first in America in more than ten years.

The album was re-released by SPV/Steamhammer on 25 January 2010 as a digipak 2 CD edition. The track listing includes all the songs of the European edition, all the bonus tracks and b-sides of the singles extracted from the album. The extensive booklet includes new photos and liner notes by Doro Pesch and Nick Douglas.[3]

Calling the Wild peaked at position No. 16 in the German Longplay chart.[4]

Personnel

Tracks 1, 2, 3, 5 (EU) – 1, 2, 5, 7, 14 (US)
Tracks 8 (EU) – 3 (US)
Tracks 6, 9, 12 (EU) – 4, 10, 13 (US)
Tracks 10, 16 (EU) – 6, 12 (US)
Tracks 4, 11 (EU) – 8, 9 (US)
Track 14 (EU) – 11 (US)
Tracks 7, 13, 15 (EU)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Doro interview . 26 April 2010 . Hinds . Daniel . 2001 . The Plague.net . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030817151106/http://www.the-plague.net/doro.htm . 17 August 2003 .
  2. Siân. Llewellyn. Face off with… Doro Pesch. . 28. June 2001. 25.
  3. Web site: Doro – Calling the Wild . 2 May 2010 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20081222164936/http://www.metal-archives.com/release.php?id=10389 . 22 December 2008 . dead .
  4. Web site: Doro Calling the Wild Zusammenfassung . 4 September 2010 . Musicline.de . https://web.archive.org/web/20120828090341/http://musicline.de/de/chartverfolgung_summary/title/Doro/Calling+The+Wild/longplay . 28 August 2012 . dead .