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Twenty Five Years of Anarchy and Chaos: The Best of the Exploited: Released: March 2004; Label: Dream Catcher; Formats: CD, MC — Anthology of the Exploited: Released: 23 July 2012; Label: Cherry Red; Formats: digital download — Exploited Barmy Army – The Collection: Released: 6 May 2013; Label: PressPlay; Formats: CD — "—" denotes ...
Influenced by 1970s punk rock music, such as that by the Sex Pistols, [3] the quartet developed a straightforward, no-frills sound characterised by speed and aggression. In 1980, the group founded their own independent record label, Exploited Records, and released their debut EP Army Life, which ranked #6 in the Indie/Independent charts for eight weeks and remained in the Top 20 for eighteen ...
Beat the Bastards is the seventh album by Scottish punk rock band The Exploited, released in 1996 through Rough Justice Records. The song "They Lie" was covered on End of Disclosure by Hypocrisy . Track listing
Punks Not Dead is the first studio album by the Scottish punk rock band The Exploited, released in April 1981 on Secret Records. [1] [8] Working class and loyal to the first impulses of the 1970s punk movement, the album was a reaction to critics who believed the punk rock genre was dead, and went against popular trends such as new wave and post-punk. [9]
Download QR code; Print/export ... The Exploited: ... The track was the first time the band had recorded music since the 1999 album California. [5]
A music video of the band playing live with a woman was released for the song "Sexual Favours". [8] "Sexual Favours", a single from the album Death Before Dishonour, was released in 1987. The album cover features the Grim Reaper and former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The album ranked in the top 200 of the Britain Alternative Music list. [9]
Related: ‘Silent Night’ Tops List of 10 Most-Covered Christmas Songs of All Time. 61. Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton, "You Make It Feel Like Christmas"
The Massacre is the sixth studio album by Scottish hardcore punk band The Exploited, released in 1990 through Rough Justice. It is the second crossover thrash album by The Exploited and is the band's most successful album so far. [2] The intro was taken from the 1978 movie Faces of Death. [3]