Armed and Dangerous is the first EP by American heavy metal band Anthrax, released in February 1985 through Megaforce Records. The band produced the album with Carl Canedy and Jon Zazula acting as executive producer. This is the first Anthrax release to feature Joey Belladonna on vocals.
The 1992 issue includes the songs "Soldiers of Metal" and "Howling Furies" as its last two tracks. The line-up for those two tracks is Neil Turbin, Scott Ian, Dan Spitz, Greg D'Angelo (except where Charlie Benante rerecorded the drums), and Dan Lilker. It was released as a double album (along with Fistful of Metal) in Germany in 2000.
The song "Armed and Dangerous" also appears on the album Spreading the Disease with a different mix, which does not include the fade-in intro leading into the initial acoustic guitar melody. That intro was omitted from the album version for unverified reasons but it is possible that it was for album continuity.
The song "Raise Hell" was an original Anthrax recording exclusive to the EP, and "God Save the Queen" was originally recorded by the Sex Pistols on the Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols album. Despite being marked as live versions, "Metal Thrashing Mad" and "Panic" are the studio re-recordings of tracks featured on the band's debut album.
Officer Frank Dooley (John Candy) of the LAPD is framed for the theft of a television set by two corrupt detectives (who Dooley had actually caught robbing an appliance store). He is dismissed from the force, but escapes criminal punishment at his day in court. The next case in the courtroom features hapless defense attorney Norman Kane (Eugene Levy) attempting to defend a Charles Manson-type white supremacist leader named Lawrence Lupik (Glenn Withrow), who threatens him with death should Kane fail to keep him out of prison. A fearful Kane reveals his ineptitude and the death threat to the judge (Stacy Keach, Sr.), who tells Kane that he will give Lupik "A sentence so long he won't even remember his own name, let alone yours" so long as Kane agrees to find another line of work with a "lot less responsibility".
Dangerous is a 1985 album by American singer Natalie Cole released on September 28, 1985 through the Atco Records-distributed Modern Records. The album reached peak positions of number 140 on the Billboard 200 and number 48 on Billboard's R&B Albums chart.
Track listing
"Dangerous" (Marti Sharron, Stephen Mitchell, Gary P. Skardina) (3:47)
"Billy the Kid Next Door" (Eddie Holland, Harold Beatty) (4:39)
"Dangerous" is the second single in the UK & Ireland but third overall to be released by Cascada from their third studio album Evacuate the Dancefloor. The music video was uploaded to YouTube by the UK record company All Around The World records on the August 17, 2009. The single was released in the United Kingdom on October 12, 2009.
The song "Dangerous" was performed on the 'National Lottery Euromillions Draw', broadcast on BBC One on 18 September 2009.
It is composed in the key signature of E-flat minor and has a Tempo of 145 BPM.
Track listing and formats
UK CD single
"Dangerous" (Radio Edit)
"Dangerous" (Cahill Radio Edit)
UK iTunes Pre-Order EP
"Dangerous" (Radio Edit)
"Dangerous" (Cahill Radio Edit)
"Dangerous" (Wideboys Remix)
"Dangerous" (Original Mix)
"Evacuate The Dancefloor" (Unplugged Acoustic Mix)
"Dangerous" is the first single from French singer M. Pokora's third album MP3. The song was produced by Timbaland and features Timbaland and his younger brother, Sebastian.
Presented in preview during the ceremony of the 2008 NRJ Music Awards, the single was released on 22 March 2008, two days before the release of the album. It went straight to number one in France in the first week, selling 5,674 units that week, but achieved a moderate success in other countries in which it was released. However, it was a top three hit in Belgium (Wallonia), reaching number two in its seventh week.
M. Pokora started to receive attention in North American countries like Mexico, where the video for "Dangerous" was in heavy rotation on MTVLA North and MTVLA Center.
Juice is the multi-Platinum 1981 breakthrough album by American country-rock singer Juice Newton. The album was Newton's third solo album and her first major international success.
Hits
The album features two #1 hits "Angel of the Morning" and "The Sweetest Thing (I've Ever Known)". It also contains "Queen of Hearts," the biggest-selling single of Juice Newton's career, which peaked at #2 on both Billboard's Hot 100 and Adult Contemporary charts ("Endless Love" by Diana Ross and Lionel Richie prevented the song from reaching #1). "Queen of Hearts" was a popular music video during the summer of MTV's debut. Newton would go on to have more hit songs and albums, but this remains the album for which she is best known.
Awards
Juice garnered Juice Newton two "Best Female Vocalist" Grammy Award nominations (in the Pop and Country categories, respectively) neither of which she won. But she did win her first Grammy for her follow-up album Quiet Lies.
Greatest Hits
In 1984, a fourth track from Juice titled "Ride 'Em Cowboy" was released in support of Newton's first "Greatest Hits" album. The single reached #32 on the U.S. Billboard Country charts.
Juice is a podcastaggregator for Windows and OS X used for downloading media files such as ogg and mp3 for playback on the computer or for copying to a digital audio player. Juice lets a user schedule downloading of specific podcasts, and will notify the user when a new show is available. It is free software available under the GNU General Public License. The project is hosted at Sourceforge. Formerly known as iPodder and later as iPodder Lemon, the software's name was changed to Juice in November 2005 in the face of legal pressure from Apple, Inc.
The original development team was formed by Erik de Jonge, Robin Jans, Martijn Venrooy, Perica Zivkovic from the company Active8 based in the Netherlands, Andrew Grumet, Garth Kidd and Mark Posth joined the team soon after the first release. The development team credited the program concept to Adam Curry who wrote a little Applescript as a proof of concept and provided the first podcast shows (then referred to as 'audio enclosures') but primarily to Dave Winer who was the inspiration for Adam Curry. The first version also included a screenscraper for normal HTML files. Initially it was not clear that podcasting would be completely tied to RSS. Although that was eventually the method chosen, during the early development phase a diverse range of people were working on alternatives, including a version based on Freenet.
Heavenly 1985 pop-dance from the exquisite Ms. Cole. Not very well known, but it was a huge dance hit...listen and you'll know why. Joyous :)
published: 23 Dec 2012
Natalie Cole LIVE - Dangerous
published: 29 Jun 2012
Natalie Cole - Dangerous
published: 20 Apr 2017
Dangerous [Dub] - Natalie Cole (Warner-85)
Mega clássico dos 80 em uma versão ultra contagiante, rara e com aqueeeeeeeeeeeeeeela qualidade que eu amo produzir ;-)
published: 18 Feb 2016
Natalie Cole - Dangerous( extended Version)
published: 27 May 2010
NATALIE COLE Dangerous ALBUM VERSION
This is the song that reignited my love affair with Natalie Cole that had begun nearly a decade earlier with 'This Will Be'. 'Dangerous' came to me in 1985 via an import 12 inch single - the most money i had spent on just one song! I must have seen and heard it on 'Solid Gold', as it was not a hit, but Natalie had been promoting it. and it had me hooked on the very first listen. For me high energy dance music had become very popular again, and this song came soon after Hazell Dean, Gloria Gaynor and Pointer Sisters extended versions had been on high rotation on my turntable. Indeed 'Dangerous' was penned by the same songwriter as the Pointers' comeback hit 'Jump'. It became an instant favourite of mine and is still so more than 30 years on! It shows a funky and upbeat side of Natalie's r...
published: 03 Jan 2016
Natalie Cole – Dangerous • HD Remastered 4K (1985)
From the album Dangerous (1985) 🇺🇸
Music video filmed at the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles, California. The movie Blade Runner was also filmed there.
Guitar: Paul Jackson Jr., Michael Boyd
Synthesizer: Stephen Mitchell, Rory Kaplan, Jamie Sheriff, Paul Fox, Charlie Judge
Bass: Nathan East
Percussion: Paulinho da Costa, Gary P. Skardina
Background Vocals: Alex Brown, Porita Griffin, Van Ross Redding
Vocals: Natalie Cole
Producer: Gary P. Skardina & Marti Sharron
*All rights reserved to Warner Records Inc.
www.warnerrecords.com
This video is Remastered with new upscaling and depixelizing AI technology. The audio is the original version from the music video (which was promotional material). The album and single versions of 'Dangerous' are slightly different from the promotiona...
published: 18 Apr 2021
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
She released this incredible song in 1985. Not many people have heard this by her.. It seemed like she went through this Gay Dance phase and then once she started copying her father's style, she disowned this type of music she did and also her gay following. In my eyes, she basically sold out, that's not to say, she isn't good at what she's doing now, I love her music, I just wish once in a while she would go back to the music that boosted her career..
Anyway, Hope you guys enjoy, and if anyone has any additional info, Feel free to post. I just don't like a lot of negativity, If someone doesn't have something nice to say, don't watch it.. Didn't anyone ever teach these people manners? It's usually the selfish people that have never taken the ti...
This is the song that reignited my love affair with Natalie Cole that had begun nearly a decade earlier with 'This Will Be'. 'Dangerous' came to me in 1985 via...
This is the song that reignited my love affair with Natalie Cole that had begun nearly a decade earlier with 'This Will Be'. 'Dangerous' came to me in 1985 via an import 12 inch single - the most money i had spent on just one song! I must have seen and heard it on 'Solid Gold', as it was not a hit, but Natalie had been promoting it. and it had me hooked on the very first listen. For me high energy dance music had become very popular again, and this song came soon after Hazell Dean, Gloria Gaynor and Pointer Sisters extended versions had been on high rotation on my turntable. Indeed 'Dangerous' was penned by the same songwriter as the Pointers' comeback hit 'Jump'. It became an instant favourite of mine and is still so more than 30 years on! It shows a funky and upbeat side of Natalie's range as a vocalist. The arrangement and production is so infectious. Shame it was not the hit that it should have been. But Natalie Cole's comeback was not far away; with the 'Jump Start' track and singles 'Pink Cadillac', 'Everlasting' (the title track to the 1987 LP) reintroducing the record buying public to her talent. The 1989 opus 'Good to be back' was prophetic and yielded the beautiful hit 'Miss you like crazy'. Her career would come full circle in 1991 with the Grammy winning 'Unforgettable'. Several more traditional pop albums and Grammys followed, as did releases in the pop, r&b and jazz genres. Natalie Cole was indeed a singer's singer - she did it all; with style and power. Long may her music and spirit shine!
This is the song that reignited my love affair with Natalie Cole that had begun nearly a decade earlier with 'This Will Be'. 'Dangerous' came to me in 1985 via an import 12 inch single - the most money i had spent on just one song! I must have seen and heard it on 'Solid Gold', as it was not a hit, but Natalie had been promoting it. and it had me hooked on the very first listen. For me high energy dance music had become very popular again, and this song came soon after Hazell Dean, Gloria Gaynor and Pointer Sisters extended versions had been on high rotation on my turntable. Indeed 'Dangerous' was penned by the same songwriter as the Pointers' comeback hit 'Jump'. It became an instant favourite of mine and is still so more than 30 years on! It shows a funky and upbeat side of Natalie's range as a vocalist. The arrangement and production is so infectious. Shame it was not the hit that it should have been. But Natalie Cole's comeback was not far away; with the 'Jump Start' track and singles 'Pink Cadillac', 'Everlasting' (the title track to the 1987 LP) reintroducing the record buying public to her talent. The 1989 opus 'Good to be back' was prophetic and yielded the beautiful hit 'Miss you like crazy'. Her career would come full circle in 1991 with the Grammy winning 'Unforgettable'. Several more traditional pop albums and Grammys followed, as did releases in the pop, r&b and jazz genres. Natalie Cole was indeed a singer's singer - she did it all; with style and power. Long may her music and spirit shine!
From the album Dangerous (1985) 🇺🇸
Music video filmed at the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles, California. The movie Blade Runner was also filmed there...
From the album Dangerous (1985) 🇺🇸
Music video filmed at the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles, California. The movie Blade Runner was also filmed there.
Guitar: Paul Jackson Jr., Michael Boyd
Synthesizer: Stephen Mitchell, Rory Kaplan, Jamie Sheriff, Paul Fox, Charlie Judge
Bass: Nathan East
Percussion: Paulinho da Costa, Gary P. Skardina
Background Vocals: Alex Brown, Porita Griffin, Van Ross Redding
Vocals: Natalie Cole
Producer: Gary P. Skardina & Marti Sharron
*All rights reserved to Warner Records Inc.
www.warnerrecords.com
This video is Remastered with new upscaling and depixelizing AI technology. The audio is the original version from the music video (which was promotional material). The album and single versions of 'Dangerous' are slightly different from the promotional music video and is actually slower in BPM. (The MV version is better in mixing and speed).
The music was originally recorded on analog equipment. Warner Music have attempted to preserve, as closely as possible, the sound of the original recording. Because of its high resolution, however, the music + video can reveal limitations of the source tape.
Our goal at 'The 80's Dream' is to always retain the original analog music video's feel and look, while providing a modern maximum viewing quality for larger screens (40" or greater!).
🇺🇸 Natalie Cole is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. Natalie was the daughter of American singer and jazz pianist Nat King Cole. She rose to success in the mid-1970s as an R&B singer with the hits "This Will Be", "Inseparable" (1975), and "Our Love" (1977). She returned as a pop singer on the 1987 album Everlasting and her cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Pink Cadillac". In the 1990s, she sang traditional pop by her father, resulting in her biggest success, Unforgettable... with Love, which sold over seven million copies and won her seven Grammy Awards. She sold over 30 million records worldwide.
Natalie passed away on December 31, 2015 at the age 65. Although she has left this earth, her legacy and beautiful art will forever live on. We miss you Natalie!!!
*Official Website: https://www.nataliecole.com/
Over 250 musical credits:
*All known releases: https://www.discogs.com/artist/12686-Natalie-Cole
_______________________________
The 80’s Dream is a historical society dedicated to researching, collecting, interpreting and preserving information from the analog era.
----------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
—————————
All rights reserved to the original authors/composers/publishers of this album. By posting this here I intend no malice to any of the aforementioned individuals/groups/companies. If you feel that your rights have been breached by posting this video please contact me. I'll take immediate action in removing the content from this channel.
From the album Dangerous (1985) 🇺🇸
Music video filmed at the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles, California. The movie Blade Runner was also filmed there.
Guitar: Paul Jackson Jr., Michael Boyd
Synthesizer: Stephen Mitchell, Rory Kaplan, Jamie Sheriff, Paul Fox, Charlie Judge
Bass: Nathan East
Percussion: Paulinho da Costa, Gary P. Skardina
Background Vocals: Alex Brown, Porita Griffin, Van Ross Redding
Vocals: Natalie Cole
Producer: Gary P. Skardina & Marti Sharron
*All rights reserved to Warner Records Inc.
www.warnerrecords.com
This video is Remastered with new upscaling and depixelizing AI technology. The audio is the original version from the music video (which was promotional material). The album and single versions of 'Dangerous' are slightly different from the promotional music video and is actually slower in BPM. (The MV version is better in mixing and speed).
The music was originally recorded on analog equipment. Warner Music have attempted to preserve, as closely as possible, the sound of the original recording. Because of its high resolution, however, the music + video can reveal limitations of the source tape.
Our goal at 'The 80's Dream' is to always retain the original analog music video's feel and look, while providing a modern maximum viewing quality for larger screens (40" or greater!).
🇺🇸 Natalie Cole is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. Natalie was the daughter of American singer and jazz pianist Nat King Cole. She rose to success in the mid-1970s as an R&B singer with the hits "This Will Be", "Inseparable" (1975), and "Our Love" (1977). She returned as a pop singer on the 1987 album Everlasting and her cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Pink Cadillac". In the 1990s, she sang traditional pop by her father, resulting in her biggest success, Unforgettable... with Love, which sold over seven million copies and won her seven Grammy Awards. She sold over 30 million records worldwide.
Natalie passed away on December 31, 2015 at the age 65. Although she has left this earth, her legacy and beautiful art will forever live on. We miss you Natalie!!!
*Official Website: https://www.nataliecole.com/
Over 250 musical credits:
*All known releases: https://www.discogs.com/artist/12686-Natalie-Cole
_______________________________
The 80’s Dream is a historical society dedicated to researching, collecting, interpreting and preserving information from the analog era.
----------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
—————————
All rights reserved to the original authors/composers/publishers of this album. By posting this here I intend no malice to any of the aforementioned individuals/groups/companies. If you feel that your rights have been breached by posting this video please contact me. I'll take immediate action in removing the content from this channel.
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
She released this incredible song in 1985. Not many people have heard this by her.. It seemed like she went through t...
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
She released this incredible song in 1985. Not many people have heard this by her.. It seemed like she went through this Gay Dance phase and then once she started copying her father's style, she disowned this type of music she did and also her gay following. In my eyes, she basically sold out, that's not to say, she isn't good at what she's doing now, I love her music, I just wish once in a while she would go back to the music that boosted her career..
Anyway, Hope you guys enjoy, and if anyone has any additional info, Feel free to post. I just don't like a lot of negativity, If someone doesn't have something nice to say, don't watch it.. Didn't anyone ever teach these people manners? It's usually the selfish people that have never taken the time to upload or give back anything..
Thanks for listening to me 'rant' if you guys could see some of the nasty things people email me, it would upset you all too..
I WOULD LOVE TO HAVE THE ACAPELLA VERSION WHICH WAS ORIGINALLY ON THE B SIDE (Mine is damaged from way too much play)
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
She released this incredible song in 1985. Not many people have heard this by her.. It seemed like she went through this Gay Dance phase and then once she started copying her father's style, she disowned this type of music she did and also her gay following. In my eyes, she basically sold out, that's not to say, she isn't good at what she's doing now, I love her music, I just wish once in a while she would go back to the music that boosted her career..
Anyway, Hope you guys enjoy, and if anyone has any additional info, Feel free to post. I just don't like a lot of negativity, If someone doesn't have something nice to say, don't watch it.. Didn't anyone ever teach these people manners? It's usually the selfish people that have never taken the time to upload or give back anything..
Thanks for listening to me 'rant' if you guys could see some of the nasty things people email me, it would upset you all too..
I WOULD LOVE TO HAVE THE ACAPELLA VERSION WHICH WAS ORIGINALLY ON THE B SIDE (Mine is damaged from way too much play)
This is the song that reignited my love affair with Natalie Cole that had begun nearly a decade earlier with 'This Will Be'. 'Dangerous' came to me in 1985 via an import 12 inch single - the most money i had spent on just one song! I must have seen and heard it on 'Solid Gold', as it was not a hit, but Natalie had been promoting it. and it had me hooked on the very first listen. For me high energy dance music had become very popular again, and this song came soon after Hazell Dean, Gloria Gaynor and Pointer Sisters extended versions had been on high rotation on my turntable. Indeed 'Dangerous' was penned by the same songwriter as the Pointers' comeback hit 'Jump'. It became an instant favourite of mine and is still so more than 30 years on! It shows a funky and upbeat side of Natalie's range as a vocalist. The arrangement and production is so infectious. Shame it was not the hit that it should have been. But Natalie Cole's comeback was not far away; with the 'Jump Start' track and singles 'Pink Cadillac', 'Everlasting' (the title track to the 1987 LP) reintroducing the record buying public to her talent. The 1989 opus 'Good to be back' was prophetic and yielded the beautiful hit 'Miss you like crazy'. Her career would come full circle in 1991 with the Grammy winning 'Unforgettable'. Several more traditional pop albums and Grammys followed, as did releases in the pop, r&b and jazz genres. Natalie Cole was indeed a singer's singer - she did it all; with style and power. Long may her music and spirit shine!
From the album Dangerous (1985) 🇺🇸
Music video filmed at the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles, California. The movie Blade Runner was also filmed there.
Guitar: Paul Jackson Jr., Michael Boyd
Synthesizer: Stephen Mitchell, Rory Kaplan, Jamie Sheriff, Paul Fox, Charlie Judge
Bass: Nathan East
Percussion: Paulinho da Costa, Gary P. Skardina
Background Vocals: Alex Brown, Porita Griffin, Van Ross Redding
Vocals: Natalie Cole
Producer: Gary P. Skardina & Marti Sharron
*All rights reserved to Warner Records Inc.
www.warnerrecords.com
This video is Remastered with new upscaling and depixelizing AI technology. The audio is the original version from the music video (which was promotional material). The album and single versions of 'Dangerous' are slightly different from the promotional music video and is actually slower in BPM. (The MV version is better in mixing and speed).
The music was originally recorded on analog equipment. Warner Music have attempted to preserve, as closely as possible, the sound of the original recording. Because of its high resolution, however, the music + video can reveal limitations of the source tape.
Our goal at 'The 80's Dream' is to always retain the original analog music video's feel and look, while providing a modern maximum viewing quality for larger screens (40" or greater!).
🇺🇸 Natalie Cole is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. Natalie was the daughter of American singer and jazz pianist Nat King Cole. She rose to success in the mid-1970s as an R&B singer with the hits "This Will Be", "Inseparable" (1975), and "Our Love" (1977). She returned as a pop singer on the 1987 album Everlasting and her cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Pink Cadillac". In the 1990s, she sang traditional pop by her father, resulting in her biggest success, Unforgettable... with Love, which sold over seven million copies and won her seven Grammy Awards. She sold over 30 million records worldwide.
Natalie passed away on December 31, 2015 at the age 65. Although she has left this earth, her legacy and beautiful art will forever live on. We miss you Natalie!!!
*Official Website: https://www.nataliecole.com/
Over 250 musical credits:
*All known releases: https://www.discogs.com/artist/12686-Natalie-Cole
_______________________________
The 80’s Dream is a historical society dedicated to researching, collecting, interpreting and preserving information from the analog era.
----------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
—————————
All rights reserved to the original authors/composers/publishers of this album. By posting this here I intend no malice to any of the aforementioned individuals/groups/companies. If you feel that your rights have been breached by posting this video please contact me. I'll take immediate action in removing the content from this channel.
Natalie Cole - Dangerous (Extended Mix)
She released this incredible song in 1985. Not many people have heard this by her.. It seemed like she went through this Gay Dance phase and then once she started copying her father's style, she disowned this type of music she did and also her gay following. In my eyes, she basically sold out, that's not to say, she isn't good at what she's doing now, I love her music, I just wish once in a while she would go back to the music that boosted her career..
Anyway, Hope you guys enjoy, and if anyone has any additional info, Feel free to post. I just don't like a lot of negativity, If someone doesn't have something nice to say, don't watch it.. Didn't anyone ever teach these people manners? It's usually the selfish people that have never taken the time to upload or give back anything..
Thanks for listening to me 'rant' if you guys could see some of the nasty things people email me, it would upset you all too..
I WOULD LOVE TO HAVE THE ACAPELLA VERSION WHICH WAS ORIGINALLY ON THE B SIDE (Mine is damaged from way too much play)
Armed and Dangerous is the first EP by American heavy metal band Anthrax, released in February 1985 through Megaforce Records. The band produced the album with Carl Canedy and Jon Zazula acting as executive producer. This is the first Anthrax release to feature Joey Belladonna on vocals.
The 1992 issue includes the songs "Soldiers of Metal" and "Howling Furies" as its last two tracks. The line-up for those two tracks is Neil Turbin, Scott Ian, Dan Spitz, Greg D'Angelo (except where Charlie Benante rerecorded the drums), and Dan Lilker. It was released as a double album (along with Fistful of Metal) in Germany in 2000.
The song "Armed and Dangerous" also appears on the album Spreading the Disease with a different mix, which does not include the fade-in intro leading into the initial acoustic guitar melody. That intro was omitted from the album version for unverified reasons but it is possible that it was for album continuity.
The song "Raise Hell" was an original Anthrax recording exclusive to the EP, and "God Save the Queen" was originally recorded by the Sex Pistols on the Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols album. Despite being marked as live versions, "Metal Thrashing Mad" and "Panic" are the studio re-recordings of tracks featured on the band's debut album.