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Dust - Hard Attack (CD)

Hard Attack
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5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (2 Reviews)

Album Details: Hard Attack

Release Date:01/01/1972
Label:Repertoire
UPC:4009910403013

Track List: Hard Attack

  1. Pull Away/So Many Times
  2. Walk in the Soft Rain
  3. Thusly Spoken
  4. Learning to Die
  5. All in All
  1. I Been Thinkin'
  2. Ivory
  3. How Many Horses
  4. Suicide
  5. Entranco

Other Available Formats: Hard Attack

User Reviews: Hard Attack

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    the best of the 2 Dust LP's

    By slobodan buttdick  Jun 4, 2006

    Pros: the song Suicide

    Cons: not all together as heavy as the first

    this album is played much tighter than Dust's debut LP, which has its rag tag moments. the songs are a bit more melodic and accessible, hell one is even a bit country. but i'd say this a great slab of proto metal, heavier than say Gun, but no...t as heavy as say Buffalo, cept for maybe the closer Suicide, which is not only a classic but a massive headstomp, and worth the price and postage alone. also of note is the fact that Marc Bell (renamed Marky Ramome) is the drummer on this thing, and he really rounds it out well. doing his own little homage to Keith Moon, he's all over the kit hard and fast. way more complex than anything he did with the Ramones. these songs are timeless to my ears, could be huge if they were getting the word out these days. this album originally came out in '72 i believe, the cover on here is not the actual cover. the origial being 2 viking dudes in an axe fight. also was said they recorded a third LP that never came out, too bad. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Outstanding

    By hardcore_patriot_69  Apr 9, 2003

    Purchased this on vinyl.soon afterward met Kenny Aaronson.Hung out with him & went to several concerts when He played Bass with Rick Derringer.Highly Recommend this along with the other one.

Pro Reviews: Hard Attack

  • All Music Guide

    Hard Attack by Dust is an improvement over the acceptable performance of the self-titled debut from the year before. The team of producer Kenny Kerner and vocalist/guitarist/producer Richie Wise do just what the title suggests, bringing a harder attack to songs like "Pull Away/So Many Times" and "Ivory," the latter an instrumental with emphasis on guitar riffs and cymbal work. It's an all-out assault from the trio and pretty interesting, though the album as a whole works better when Thog's Fred Singer adds piano and organ. "How Many Horses" benefits from keyboard presence, and brings the group back to the Leslie West/Mountain flavors so obvious on the group's 1971 debut. That song definitely sounds like Dust was intent on remaking the Jack Bruce/Mountain classic "Theme From an Imaginary Western," one of that group's highlights. That the quieter moments, the elegant "Walk in the Soft Rain" and "How Many Horses," work better than the brutally hard "Suicide" hints at the adult contemporar...y leanings of Kerner and Wise. That they would merge this group with their labelmates in the band Stories for 1973's Traveling Underground is more evidence of what musical style they were more comfortable with. Unlike the commercial happy style of Stories, this album is obsessed with death -- perhaps a marketing tool to the hard rock audience with that theme running through the disc. It's no secret why Stories lead singer Ian Lloyd ended up on Scotti Brothers Records in 1979 and 1980: Producer Wise, the lead singer of Dust, was AR man at that label. The two Dust albums provide evidence that there were some music business execs who actually had talent. The wonderful Frank Frazetta artwork on the front of the album also shows good taste. Frazetta did many a cover drawing for ~Creepy and ~Eerie magazines. It's a well-known fact that Gene Simmons from Kiss came from the world of fanzines and fantasy, and it should be no surprise that Wise and Kerner went on to produce the debut from Kiss in 1974 on Neil Bogart's Casablanca imprint. They also did the follow-up, Hotter Than Hell. You see, Bogart was VP of Kama Sutra's Buddah imprint as far back as 1967, and these Dust albums are truly the prototype to what became Kiss, at least in terms of sound. How could it not be so? The two men who made the first Kiss albums made these two albums a couple of years before Simmons and crew made their debut. All Music Guide writer Greg Prato calls Kiss (their debut album) "one of hard rock's all-time classic studio recordings." It was a product of the people who made Dust. Interesting that Buddah hasn't considered combining the first two Dust and third Stories album on a double CD to show the roots of Kiss; it would certainly be a neat marketing ploy. There's a pretty 19-second bonus 11th song/tenth track entitled "Entrance," which concludes the dark poetry of the Hard Attack album, an album that is one of the forgotten soldiers in rock history. - Joe Viglione, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Dust

At the dawn of the '70s, hard rock and early heavy metal were almost completely dominated by British innovators. Dust was one of the few American bands to try picking up the gauntlet, playing a progressive brand of proto-metal that was explicitly indebted to their British contemporaries. Formed around 1968, the group featured vocalist/guitarist Richie Wise and the teena... Read more