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Zombie Live (At the DTE Energy Music Theatre, Detroit)

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Download links and information about Zombie Live (At the DTE Energy Music Theatre, Detroit) by Rob Zombie. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:10:59 minutes.

Artist: Rob Zombie
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:10:59
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sawdust In the Blood (Live) 1:40
2. American Witch (Live) 4:01
3. Demon Speeding (Live) 3:33
4. Living Dead Girl (Live) 3:25
5. More Human Than Human (Live) 4:23
6. Dead Girl Superstar (Live) 3:12
7. House of 1000 Corpses (Live) 4:29
8. Let It All Bleed Out (Live) 4:08
9. Creature of the Wheel (Live) 3:35
10. Demonoid Phenomenon (Live) 4:18
11. Super Charger Heaven (Live) 3:29
12. Never Gonna Stop (The Red Red Kroovy) [Live] 3:06
13. Black Sunshine (Live) 3:53
14. Superbeast (Live) 4:54
15. The Devil's Rejects (Live) 3:59
16. Lords of Salem (Live) 4:19
17. Thunder Kiss '65 (Live) 5:19
18. Dragula (Live) 5:16

Details

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It’s amazing that it took Rob Zombie two decades to finally release a live album. After all, this is a man whose hard rock has always had a strong theatrical bent and who worshipped Kiss as a young man. Kiss broke themselves on a national level with their double-live album Alive!. Zombie, however, can only expect his Live album to satisfy the faithful, as he has settled into a comfortable niche as a horror film director (re-making Halloween and writing his own original material). His music benefits from the live setting. Recorded during his 2006 Educated Horses tour, Live is loose but never sloppy. “More Human Than Human” benefits from its audience interaction and many of the guitar riffs take on an extra dimension as they hit the arena rock air. Since his days in White Zombie, Rob Zombie has wanted the great stage and he never shies from the grand moment. “Dead Girl Superstar” churns with the momentum of classic ’70s hard rock. His limited singing range only makes the notes he can reach that much more intense.