Breakout (Import) (CD) ~ Dead End Kids (Artist) Cover Art

Breakout (Import) (CD)

By: Dead End Kids (Artist)


List Price: $18.98
Tower Price: $16.99
You Save: $1.99 (11%)
Add to BagAdd to Bag Click to go directly to the checkout.
This item qualifies for FREE Shop N' Save Shipping for orders over $25. Check individual shipping price. *Some Restrictions Apply.
Availability: Ships within 3 to 5 weeks
Share This:
Add To KaboodleAdd To Kaboodle  Submit To Digg!Submit To Digg!  Share On FacebookShare On Facebook  Add to FavoritesAdd to Favorites  TwitterTwitter 

Product Description


Track Listing

DISC 1 for Breakout (Import) (CD) Album By Dead End Kids (Artist)
1   Glad All Over  
2   All My Love Always  
3   Going Out The Back Door  
4   Roxanne  
5   Have I The Right  
6   Tough Kids  
7   Last Night In Chinatown  
8   C'Mon Let's Go  
9   I'm You Music Man  
10   Breakaway  
11   Lady (Put The Light On Me) (bonus track)  
12   Heart Get Ready For Love (bonus track)  
13   Radancer (bonus track)  
 

Run a Quick Search on "Breakout" by Dead End Kids to Browse Related Products:

Browse more products related to "Breakout"

Browse more products related to "Dead End Kids"


Title Note

The Dead End Kids got their first big break when they opened for the Bay City Rollers during a British tour in 1976, and the two bands were likely a good match -- on their first and only album, 1977's Breakout, the Dead End Kids play calculated, commercial pop music aimed at the younger side of the teen market, following the same approach that had made the Rollers a massive success. While the Dead End Kids lack the same "guilty pleasure" appeal as the Rollers all these year later, Breakout at least shows that the group were good at what they were doing. Singer Robbie Gray had solid pipes, and while producer Barry Blue and arrangers John Cameron and Graham Preskett turn these songs Teflon-slick, the band delivers the material with enthusiasm and as much conviction as one can muster for songs like "I'm Your Music Man," "All My Love Always," and "Last Night in Chinatown" (the latter complete with rinky-tink "Chinese" keyboard lines). While "Tough Kids" is a laughable attempt to make the boys sound like they came from the wrong side of the tracks, the covers of "C'mon Let's Go" and "Have I the Right" are solid, and when the band work up a decent head of steam they suggest that if they'd been encouraged to rock harder they could have become a teeny-bopper version of Slade. The Dead End Kids were over and done with by the end of the '70s, and while Breakout is far from a lost classic, its suggests the group had a potential for better things they never quite reached. [The Glam/7T 2007 CD reissue of the 1978 LP features three non-LP single sides, making it a practically definitive overview of their recording career.] ~ Mark Deming

Album Description

The Dead End Kids got their first big break when they opened for the Bay City Rollers during a British tour in 1976, and the two bands were likely a good match -- on their first and only album, 1977's Breakout, the Dead End Kids play calculated, commercial pop music aimed at the younger side of the teen market, following the same approach that had made the Rollers a massive success. While the Dead End Kids lack the same "guilty pleasure" appeal as the Rollers all these year later, Breakout at least shows that the group were good at what they were doing. Singer Robbie Gray had solid pipes, and while producer Barry Blue and arrangers John Cameron and Graham Preskett turn these songs Teflon-slick, the band delivers the material with enthusiasm and as much conviction as one can muster for songs like "I'm Your Music Man," "All My Love Always," and "Last Night in Chinatown" (the latter complete with rinky-tink "Chinese" keyboard lines). While "Tough Kids" is a laughable attempt to make the boys sound like they came from the wrong side of the tracks, the covers of "C'mon Let's Go" and "Have I the Right" are solid, and when the band work up a decent head of steam they suggest that if they'd been encouraged to rock harder they could have become a teeny-bopper version of Slade. The Dead End Kids were over and done with by the end of the '70s, and while Breakout is far from a lost classic, its suggests the group had a potential for better things they never quite reached. [The Glam/7T 2007 CD reissue of the 1978 LP features three non-LP single sides, making it a practically definitive overview of their recording career.] ~ Mark Deming



Customer Reviews for "Breakout (Import) (CD)" by Dead End Kids (Artist)

There are no customer reviews yet. Be the first to write a review!

Submit your Review




Explore More Great Tower Sales & Specials



Tower Records music Sales, Promotions & Special Features

Today's Most Popular Music Genres

Tower.com Music Boutique Stores

  • Greatest Hits Boutique
    Expand your musical horizons with our monthly selections for "Greatest Hits" and "Best Of" CD Collections.
  • Tower Records Vinyl Store
    Enjoy some of our favorite new pressings, indie rock releases, and milk crate essentials priced at up to 30% off so you can keep spinning right round (Like a record!)
  • The Beatles Collector's Boutique
    On 09-09-09, experience music history when the original studio albums by The Beatles are re-released, digitally remastered for the first time! Browse our favorite Beatles music, video and book titles!
  • Woodstock Anniversary Boutique
    Celebrating 40 years of Woodstock - Three days of music that changed the world forever!
  • The History Of Indie Rock Boutique
    Browse Our Album Art History of Indie Rock Influencers, from the 1960s to today!

Interact with Tower.com