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Wheels of Steel is the second studio album by English heavy metal band Saxon. Released in 1980 by Carrere Records, [4] [5] it was their first album to enter the UK Albums Chart, peaking at number 5, and is their highest-charting album in the UK Albums Chart to date. [6] [7] The album eventually went on to achieve gold status in the UK. [8]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... The Complete Albums 1979-1988 (10-CD boxed set) ... "Wheels of Steel" B-side: "Stand Up and Be Counted" 20
Saxon also played Download Festival 2012, and were recorded playing "Wheels of Steel" for the festival's Highlights show shown on Sky Arts. On 13 February 2012, the band announced that they were releasing a new live DVD and CD package entitled Heavy Metal Thunder - Live: Eagles Over Wacken , which compiled their 2004, 2007 and 2009 performances ...
In his piece on remixing, Kyle Adams cites "Wheels of Steel", alongside Double Dee and Steinski's "Lesson 1-The Payoff Mix" (1983), as "two seminal early remixes", [22] while author Matt Mason wrote Flash and Afrika Bambaataa were historic in the development of the remix as the process 'mutated' on vinyl, describing Flash's record as "[showing ...
Adventures on the Wheels of Steel. Released: 1999; Label: Castle Music — — — — 1999 The Showdown: The Sugarhill Gang Vs. Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five. Released: February 2, 1999; Label: Rhino Records / Warner-Elektra-Atlantic — — — — 2005 Essential Cuts. Released: June 27, 2005; Label: Union Square Music — — — — 2006
"ATLiens" and "Wheelz of Steel" are two songs by American hip-hop duo OutKast, released as the second single from their second studio album, ATLiens (1996). Both songs were written and produced by OutKast.
Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic called the album "equally timeless" to its predecessor, Wheels of Steel and commented, "All the right ingredients pretty much fell into place for Saxon on this amazing record, and though it lacked as many clear-cut hits as its predecessor, Strong Arm of the Law's unmatched consistency from start to finish makes it the definitive Saxon album in the eyes of many ...
Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic gave the album three stars out of five, and, in his mixed review, described it as "the quiet before the storm", in terms of the band's subsequent success, and the rising New Wave of British Heavy Metal. Rivadavia also criticized the band's then-lack of experience in the studio as well as their record label, Carrere ...