Artist: Sammy Hagar: mp3 download Genre(s): Rock: Hard-Rock Rock Other Sammy Hagar's discography: Live Hallelujah! Year: 2003 Tracks: 17 Not 4 Sale Year: 2001 Tracks: 10 Ten 13 Year: 2000 Tracks: 11 Marching To Mars Year: 1997 Tracks: 11 The Best Of Sammy Hagar Year: 1992 Tracks: 14 Voa Year: 1984 Tracks: 8 Three Lock Box Year: 1983 Tracks: 10 Standing Hampton Year: 1981 Tracks: 10 Musical Chair Year: 1981 Tracks: 10 Street Machine Year: 1979 Tracks: 11 Danger Zone Year: 1979 Tracks: 10 Sammy Hagar Year: 1977 Tracks: 10 Musical Chairs Year: 1977 Tracks: 10 The Essential Red Collection Year: Tracks: 20 After disbursement several age as the star singer and regular recurrence guitar player for the mid-'70s hard rock ring Montrose, Sammy Hagar began a solo life story that produced respective hits and made him an album john Rock darling. Hagar became a true trail once he joined Van Halen in 1985, but he was a pop gruelling rocking chair always since his first gear album with Montrose. After gift up a boxing calling, Hagar began singing in the late '60s, playing with assorted California bands including Skinny, the Fabulous Catillas, Justice Brothers, and Dust Cloud. During this time, he reinforced up a solid repute in the California hard rock scene. Former Edgar Winter guitarist Ronnie Montrose asked Hagar to join his band, Montrose, in 1973. Hagar recorded two albums with Montrose in front leaving solo in 1976, pickings the group's bassist, Bill Church. Montrose's drummer Denny Carmassi later linked Hagar's ring, on with keyboardist Geoff Workman. Hagar's self-titled "red ink album" was his first-class honours degree chart entry; it finally went gold. In 1979, he created a new supporting band featuring Workman, Church, guitarist Gary Pihl, and drummer Chuck Ruff. This lineup played on Hagar's virtually pop solo album, 1981's platinum Standing Hampton, addition 1982's gold Trio Lock Box with only one penis missing -- drummer Ruff was replaced by David Lauser. After Trey Lock Box and its numeral 13 gain single "Your Love Is Driving Me Crazy," Hagar played several shows with guitar player Neal Schon, bassist Kenny Aaronson, and drummer Mike Shrieve; the group recorded a live album under the diagnose Hagar Schon Arronson Shrieve (HSAS), as well as a studio interpretation of Procol Harum's "A Whiter Shade of Pale." His 1984 album VOA contained the hit unmarried "I Can't Drive 55," which peaked at number 26. In 1985, Hagar replaced David Lee Roth in Van Halen; his low gear album with the group was 1986's 5150. Hagar released his last solo record album in 1987; the record was coined I Never Said Goodbye in an MTV competition. Hagar stayed with Van Halen through the remnant of the '80s and half of the '90s. During that time, the band had quadruplet other multi-platinum albums -- OU812 (1988), For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge (1991), Live: Right Here, Right Now (1993), Balance (1995) -- in front tensions began to earth's surface between Hagar and the rest of the band. In the summertime of 1996, Hagar either lay off Van Halen or was dismissed; the band had Roth return to sing 2 tracks on Best of Van Halen, Vol. 1 in battlefront hiring other Extreme utterer Gary Cherone as Hagar's successor. The entire incident became a media sentiency, ensuring that Hagar's 1997 solo album Marching to Mars -- his low-pitched gear in ten long time -- would be greeted with much media-generated ostentation. It sold astonishingly well, peaking in the Top 20 and re-establishing Hagar as a workable solo roleplay. With a financial bread and butter band called the Waboritas in tow (consisting of guitar player Vic Johnson, keyboardist Jesse Harms, bassist Mona, and drummer David Lauser), Hagar followed the success with Red Voodoo deuce years later; it excessively sold identical respectably on the strength of the single "Mas Tequila," just lacking the Top 20. Hagar's resurgence continued with 2000's Tenner 13. Not 4 Sale arrived in 2003, followed by his low geartrain live record album in 20 age, Live: Hallelujah. 2006 saw the release of Livin' It Up! |