Hollywood Vampires (L.A. Guns album) explained

Hollywood Vampires
Type:studio
Artist:L.A. Guns
Cover:Laguns-hollywoodvampires.jpg
Released:June 25, 1991
Recorded:Fall 1990
Genre:
Length:52:18
Label:PolyGram/Polydor
Producer:Michael James Jackson
Prev Title:Cocked & Loaded
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:Holiday Foreplay
Next Year:1991

Hollywood Vampires is the third studio album by the American glam metal band L.A. Guns, released in 1991. While no track from the album topped the charts (and the band's success declined soon afterwards as their style fell out of commercial favor), Hollywood Vampires presents various shades of the band and is representative of the late 1980s/early 1990s glam metal scene, with riff-laden songs and big choruses on every song. The meticulous production gives the album a sound typical of the period — a full sound, with many background harmony vocals, layered guitars and additional keyboard tracks.

The album starts in a more somber note with "Over the Edge", which was used in the film Point Break, but the bulk of it consists of standard hard rockers, such as "Kiss My Love Goodbye" and "My Koo Ka Choo". The band aims for the ballad hit several times, in "Crystal Eyes", "It's Over Now" and the 1950s-style "I Found You", attempting to repeat the earlier success of their major single "The Ballad of Jayne". "Kiss my Love Goodbye" is featured in the 1992 comedy film Ladybugs. The Japan pressing adds the original version of "Ain't the Same" from the Cuts EP, with the addition of several saxophone solos. The original CD and cassette releases featured a 3-D photo cover and a small pair of 3-D glasses was included designed by John Kosh.

Personnel

L.A. Guns

Additional musicians

Production

Charts

Chart (1991)Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[1] 91
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[2] 20
US Billboard 200[3] 42

Notes and References

  1. 159.
  2. Book: Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970–2005. Oricon Entertainment. Roppongi, Tokyo. 2006. 4-87131-077-9. ja.
  3. Web site: L.A. Guns Chart History: Billboard 200 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171026223211/http://www.billboard.com/music/la-guns/chart-history/billboard-200 . dead . October 26, 2017 . Billboard.com . . 2017-11-07 .