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Disco de Judas Priest: “Priest in the East”
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Priest in the East |
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Fecha de Publicación:1998-06-30
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Tipo:Desconocido
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Género:Rock, Classic Rock, Hard Rock
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Sello Discográfico:Import
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Letras Explícitas:Si
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UPC:4988010766627
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Análisis (en inglés) - :
The '70s will forever be known as the decade of the "live album," when releases by {$Peter Frampton} ({^Frampton Comes Alive!}), {$Kiss} ({^Alive!}), and {$Cheap Trick} ({^At Budokan}) helped break each artist to an enormous audience. But there were other just-as-deserving live sets that slipped through the cracks -- {$Thin Lizzy}'s {^Live and Dangerous}, {$UFO}'s {^Strangers in the Night}, and {$Judas Priest}'s {^Unleashed in the East}. The latter release by the mighty {$Priest} has been the subject of debate by fans over the years, regarding just how "live" the album actually was (some jokingly refer to the album as "Unleashed in the Studio"). Either way, it faithfully conveyed the power of {$Priest} in concert, but with the original release only weighing in at a paltry nine tracks, you were left wondering if there were any leftovers. In 1998, a more expanded version of {^Unleashed} was issued: {^Priest in the East}. Another argument over the original {^Unleashed} was that some of {$Priest}'s best-known tracks up until that point were mysteriously not included, which this new version corrects, by adding such classics as {&"Delivering the Goods,"} {&"Hell Bent for Leather,"} and {&"Starbreaker"} (as well as the so-so {&"Rock Forever"}). The already strong original album has somehow gotten even better. [Instead of plunking down the extra clams for {^Priest in the East}, you'll be doing your wallet a favor by simply purchasing the 2001 reissue of {^Unleashed in the East}, which includes the same exact track listing as {^Priest in the East}.] ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
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