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After a single concert, Pane was replaced with Mark "Gus" Scott, and the band changed its name to Trixter. By 1986, Trixter was a constant fixture on the concert scene, quickly growing a fan base on the strength of their live shows. By 1987, Trixter was performing to sold-out crowds, playing with acts like Kix and Skid Row. In addition to their ...
Great White & Trixter: Face the Heat Tour July 17, 1994 The Poor 2003 World Tour: January 29, 2003 Whitesnake & Dokken: Seals & Crofts: Unborn Child Tour May 18, 1974 The Smashing Pumpkins: 1997 Tour February 2, 1997 Fountains of Wayne: Spring Star Spectacular April 7, 1967 [2] The Statler Brothers: Maple Street Memories Tour January 16, 1988 ...
2 Setlist. 3 Tour dates. 4 Personnel. 5 Notes. ... "Tonight, Tonight, Tonight" "Invisible Touch" "Turn It On Again" Tour dates. Date City Country Venue Attendance
Here’s the setlist for night 3 of the tour, which resumes Oct. 25-27 in New Orleans, moves on to Indianapolis Nov. 1-3 and ends in Canada, with shows Nov. 14-23 in Toronto and Dec. 6-8 in Vancouver.
It was the first tour with drummer Eric Singer, [1] replacing Eric Carr who died of cancer on November 24, 1991. [2] [3] Singer had previously performed with Paul Stanley's solo tour and was seen as a 'natural choice' according to Gene Simmons.
Trixter is the debut album of the band Trixter. It attained gold status, reaching No. 28 on the Billboard 200 chart. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The album spawned three minor hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100 : "Give It to Me Good" at No. 65, "Surrender" at No. 72, and " One in a Million " at No. 75.
Human Era is the fourth studio album from American hard rock band Trixter. Released on the Frontiers Records [3] label, the album was released on June 5, 2015. [4] [5] A video for "Human Era" was released on June 25, 2015. [6]
The album was produced by James Barton. [6] Trixter wrote and demoed eight of the songs while touring in support of their debut. [7] The band hoped to move away from the pop metal of Trixter by titling the album Hear! and opting to forgo a band cover photo; Trixter considered the music to be rock 'n' roll.