How many albums did dokken sell




















Sexy Trippy All Moods. Drinking Hanging Out In Love. Introspection Late Night Partying. Rainy Day Relaxation Road Trip. Romantic Evening Sex All Themes. Articles Features Interviews Lists. Streams Videos All Posts. My Profile. Advanced Search. Artist Biography by Barry Weber. Formed in Los Angeles, CA. Don Dokken has been kicking around the Los Angeles hard rock scene since the late s, when he fronted a band called "Airborn.

Don's first big break came in when he got a call from the managers of the Scorpions, who were in the midst of recording their Blackout album. Scorpions vocalist Klaus Meine had just undergone throat surgery and the band needed a singer to provide "guide vocals" and backing tracks that the musicians could work around while Meine recovered.

While in Germany working with the Scorpions, Dokken managed to land a European record deal for his own band, which by this time included guitarist George Lynch, drummer Mick Brown, and bassist Juan Croucier. Useless trivia: though Croucier is credited with the bass work on the album, the actual bass tracks were recorded by Peter Baltes of Accept fame.

When Dokken returned to America, their Los Angeles stomping grounds were in the midst of a hard rock major-label signing frenzy spurred on by the sudden success of local metal heroes Quiet Riot. Dokken quickly signed a deal with Elektra Records, who re-released an altered version of Breaking the Chains in Breaking the Chains sold respectably and Dokken quickly gained a reputation as a must-see live act due mainly to the guitar heroics of George Lynch, who was soon being tapped by guitar magazines as the heir apparent to Eddie Van Halen.

Dokken struck platinum with their third album, 's Under Lock and Key , on which the band found the perfect balance between their heavy metal tendencies and slick, airplay-friendly harmonics. The band continued living on the road, most notably serving as the opening act for Judas Priest's highly successful Turbo tour in Unfortunately the ride wouldn't last. Even though proved to be Dokken's most successful year yet, the band had been fraying around the edges for quite some time.

Personality clashes between Don Dokken and George Lynch made for great press, but it made working relationships within the band unbearable. Back For the Attack hit 14 on Billboard, produced two more hit singles - "Burning Like a Flame" and "Heaven Sent" - and went platinum, but by the time the band hooked up with Van Halen for the "Monsters of Rock" festival tour in the Summer of , tensions were at an all time high between the band members and it was clear that the end was coming.

A live album taped in Japan, Beast From the East , appeared in but it was soon followed by the announcement of Dokken's breakup. Don Dokken released a solo album Up From the Ashes in , which failed to recapture the sales figures of his old band, while George Lynch formed Lynch Mob. Dokken mounted a comeback in , reportedly at the request of the Japanese record label Victor Entertainment.

The original members recorded a new, self-titled album and quietly released it only in Japan at first. Positive response in the Land of the Rising Sun resulted in the record getting remixed and re-released worldwide by Columbia Records in under the very-appropriate title Dysfunctional.

Considering that it was released at the height of Grunge Mania in the U. An acoustic live album, the fine One Live Night , surfaced through new label CMC International in , then Dokken hit the wall -- again -- with 's Shadowlife , an ill-fated attempt to jump on the alternative-music bandwagon. Shadowlife was met with massive fan backlash and resulted in the exit of George Lynch.

Reb Beach exited the Dokken fold almost as quickly as he'd arrived, and for the next few years Dokken suffered from near-constant instability in the personnel department. For the next several years, constant touring and the release of numerous "greatest hits" compilation albums helped to keep the band in the public eye.

Dokken's studio album, Lightning Strikes Again , was their most successful in a number of years, achieving a Billboard chart position of and garnering some of the strongest reviews they'd had since the glory days of the s.

We were already playing arenas and selling out 10, seaters, and then we were playing stadiums. We were right on the precipice of next album, world tour, done deal.

The drug abuse was so rampant. Dokken was known for infighting because they publicized it. I can name you five bands that have the same problem. Van Halen had the same problem. If we would have survived the Monsters of Rock tour, I think we probably would have been a huge headliner, but it was bad timing. When we did Monsters of Rock , we had already been on the road for over a year. We had just finished a world tour with like, five other bands, playing all over the world twice. We were pretty burned out.

I need a break. And hence, because we were tired, the drugs got worse, and people were doing coke to keep going. And I was drinking my wine. I fought and fought for this, and here we are, playing stadiums.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000