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DISCID=7c07d80a,8207d70a
DTITLE=Poison / Look What The Cat Dragged In
DYEAR=1986
DGENRE=Rock
TTITLE0=Cry Tough
TTITLE1=I Want Action
TTITLE2=I Won't Forget You
TTITLE3=Play Dirty
TTITLE4=Look What The Cat Dragged In
TTITLE5=Talk Dirty To Me
TTITLE6=Want Some, Need Some
TTITLE7=Blame It On you
TTITLE8=#1 Bad Boy
TTITLE9=Let Me Got To The Show
EXTD=Originally Released 1986\nCD Edition Released 1987\n\nAMG EXPERT 
EXTD=REVIEW: Poison's debut album took its cues from the big, anthemic
EXTD= pop hooks of Def Leppard and the rebellious street-tough posturi
EXTD=ng of Mtley Cre, as well as a raunchy, adolescent obsession wit
EXTD=h sex. But Poison really carved out their niche as the ultimate g
EXTD=lam metal band, using tight-assed boogie and over-the-top visual 
EXTD=extravagance -- costumes, makeup, teased hair, and so on -- to an
EXTD= even greater extent than most of their contemporaries. It was de
EXTD=rivative and formulaic, to be sure, but Poison wholeheartedly emb
EXTD=raced that formula from the beginning with a conviction often mis
EXTD=sing in their peers, and it's that ridiculous, good-time excess t
EXTD=hat keeps Look What the Cat Dragged In's catchiest songs, especia
EXTD=lly the party anthems "Talk Dirty to Me" and "I Want Action," jus
EXTD=t as much fun today, if not more so.  -- Steve Huey\n\nAmazon.com
EXTD= Editorial Review\nPoison was the ultimate party band of the '80s
EXTD=; they seized on the trappings of pop metal, and played them to t
EXTD=he hilt. While their music was never exactly original, it was fun
EXTD=, and it still is. Look What the Cat Dragged In is arguably their
EXTD= most entertaining album, because it was recorded before they tri
EXTD=ed to infuse their music with "serious" themes that ultimately dr
EXTD=agged down their later recordings. The best songs on this album a
EXTD=re the unabashed party anthems, including "I Want Action" and "Ta
EXTD=lk Dirty to Me". "Let Me Go to the Show" is pure tongue-in-cheek,
EXTD= its adolescent viewpoint and fervor showing just how well Poison
EXTD= knew their target audience. A guilty pleasure if ever there was 
EXTD=one. --Genevieve Williams \n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\n4.5 s
EXTD=tars - solid debut from the classic glam rockers, April 13, 2005\n
EXTD=Reviewer: Darth Kommissar (Las Vegas, NV (USA))\n\nPoison were th
EXTD=e kings of the glam rock genre, no questions asked (VH1 even call
EXTD=ed them the greatest hair rock band of all time!) You either LOVE
EXTD=D Poison or HATED Poison - there was no "in-between." Interesting
EXTD=ly enough, the boys from back east were one of the LATER glam met
EXTD=al bands to arrive on the scene in southern California - Bret, Ri
EXTD=kki, C.C. (the replacement for original guitarist Matt Smith), am
EXTD=d Bobby didn't released their debut album until 1986. But in actu
EXTD=ality, the late release of their debut was a good thing. Glam met
EXTD=al hadn't quite died yet (it would virtually go extinct by 1991),
EXTD= yet the boys had plenty of time to gain influences from other ba
EXTD=nds in the genre. As another reviewer stated, this album "scores 
EXTD=points for the cover alone." I'm not sure why glam metal stars fe
EXTD=lt it necessary to dress up like women, but still, the cover is p
EXTD=ricless for this reason. Read on for my review of Poison's 1986 d
EXTD=ebut album - Look What The Cat Dragged In. \n\nIf you don't like 
EXTD=glam metal, this disc is NOT going to change your mind. If you're
EXTD= a fan of the lighter side of metal, though, Poison's debut is su
EXTD=re to please you. Poison's first single, Cry Tough, kicks things 
EXTD=off. A melodic rocker about making dreams come true, this was an 
EXTD=excellent way to start the album. Next up we have I Want Action -
EXTD= Classic glam rock about having a good time on the Sunset Strip. 
EXTD=This one became a big hit for the band, and rightfully so. I Won'
EXTD=t Forget You, the next track on the album, is one of the best pow
EXTD=er ballads of all time. It's WAY better than their most popular b
EXTD=allad, Every Rose Has Its Thorn (from their next album after this
EXTD= one.)Play Dirty gives you hard glam rock the way you like it. Th
EXTD=e title track serves up more classic hard glam rock. You've gotta
EXTD= love the chorus. Talk Dirty to Me, a rocker about a guy and a gi
EXTD=rl having a good time, would become the band's first hit. The son
EXTD=g remains one of the band's most popular, and with good reason. T
EXTD=he last few tracks are more classic, glam-oriented hard rockers. 
EXTD=If you like hard glam rock, the last few tracks don't fail to ple
EXTD=ase. Ultimately, Poison's debut is epitomizes everything the glam
EXTD= metal genre stood for. You'll love it if you love glam metal, an
EXTD=d vice versa. \n\nThe availability of this album is a strange iss
EXTD=ue. It's not as easy to find as some of the band's more recent wo
EXTD=rk, but you can sometimes find it in the budget bin for a ridicul
EXTD=ously low price. If you find it and you like glam metal, buy it. 
EXTD=At that price you can't go wrong! \n\nPoison's debut album is a g
EXTD=lam metal masterpiece. If you don't like the genre, this isn't go
EXTD=ing to change your mind though. If you do enjoy the genre, Look W
EXTD=hat The Cat Dragged In is the album for you. Poison rules, and th
EXTD=eir debut album stands as solid proof of that. The band tends to 
EXTD=get a bad rap for their poppy sound and ridiculous image, but the
EXTD= fact of the matter is that they are excellent musicians that mad
EXTD=e metal acceptable to the masses. Any true metal fan appreciates 
EXTD=Poison through what they are.\n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nOh
EXTD=, give me some mascara, April 23, 2006\nReviewer: Paul Montag "Co
EXTD=le Vitale" (Minneapolis, MN)\n\nUpon listening to this debut albu
EXTD=m by Poison, I was beginning to think the only things in life tha
EXTD=t really mattered were girls, sexily puffed up hair, screeching, 
EXTD=sometimes spacy guitars, and the right shade of eyeshadow, all ba
EXTD=cked up by a never-ending summer. \n\nListening to this created i
EXTD=n me mental vignettes of long-haired people at a beach, playing v
EXTD=olleyball, while the barbeque sits on the tailgate of their truck
EXTD= in the parking lot, being watched over by more long-haired peopl
EXTD=e, and all the women are, of course, in bikinis. Some are haughty
EXTD= to coincide with their leanness while others are crying tough du
EXTD=e to some breakup. Who says it's not okay to be a 38-year old sti
EXTD=ll feeling the thunder when Betty just won't say 'yes' (and when 
EXTD=she does, it's time to brag). \n\nVisual mental results aside, th
EXTD=is music is dated in such an enjoyable way as it makes me wish I 
EXTD=wasn't 8 years old when it came out; I listen to this and can't s
EXTD=top wishing the modern age was a little more fun. Even though thi
EXTD=s music, with all its campiness and station wagon charm, isn't a 
EXTD=royal form of rock, it is so much more lively and funny and emoti
EXTD=onal (in such an 11th grade way) than the prone-to-spirit-less st
EXTD=uff the music managers and producers allow to be realeased today.
EXTD= \n\nWhen Poison sings about how much they like it when girls tal
EXTD=k dirty to them, there's something of the intrigue of the romance
EXTD= novel, and combine that with this lightened form of heavy metal 
EXTD=and all the hair, and you've got yourself a memory of a different
EXTD= time that seems more intersting than the one we're in now. \n\n\n
EXTD=AMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nThis is where it all began., November
EXTD= 11, 2003\nReviewer: "dokken6008" (somewhere drinking decaffeinat
EXTD=ed tea.)\nThis album gets points for the cover alone. A four-pane
EXTD=lled split image of dragqueen musicians who called themselves "Po
EXTD=ison" scared the living daylights out of parents in 1986. Childre
EXTD=n were rushed into churches, medical clinics, treatment centers--
EXTD=you name it--so to be kept from the evil glam quintet. And we're 
EXTD=not even talking about the music! Titles such as "I Won't Forget 
EXTD=You" made senile old ladies with walkers jump off buildings. It w
EXTD=as shocking! Oh, wait. No, that was "Talk Dirty To Me". That was 
EXTD=the one (great solo, CC!). \nIn the 80's, people were seperated i
EXTD=nto three concentration camps. It all depended on the music you l
EXTD=istened to. You were either a Poison fan, a Motley Crue fan, or a
EXTD= *GASP!!* Bon Jovi fan. If you liked Madonna, they would just thr
EXTD=ow you into a cellar and let you starve to death. But the 80's ha
EXTD=dn't ever really begun until 'Look What The Cat Dragged In' had b
EXTD=een released.\n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nBe honest, April 2
EXTD=4, 2001\nReviewer: Johny Bottom "Insane and lonely guitarist" (Ja
EXTD=cksonville, NC)\n\nWhen this album first hit the shelves, what ha
EXTD=rdcore heterosexual guy didn't look at this cover and point to th
EXTD=e chick they wanted to bang? Yeah they looked that bad. Until the
EXTD= videos and Hit Parader photos came out, I thought this was a chi
EXTD=ck band.\nThe music? Yeah, it's mindless piffle, but it was hair 
EXTD=rock taken to the extreme. Did I like them then? No way. Maybe I'
EXTD=m getting old and long for the 80's, because I'll play them every
EXTD= now and then when I'm thinking about all those high school girls
EXTD= that looked just like them. For nostalgia, they're better now th
EXTD=an they were then.\n\n\nHalf.com Details \nProducer: Jim Faraci, 
EXTD=Ric Browde \n\nAlbum Notes\nPoison: Bret Michaels (vocals), C.C. 
EXTD=DeVille (guitar), Bobby Dall (bass), Rikki Rocket (drums).\n\nRec
EXTD=orded at Music Grinder Studios, Hollywood, California.\n\nPoison 
EXTD=(Metal): Bret Michaels (vocals); C.C. DeVille (guitar); Bobby Dal
EXTD=l (bass guitar); Rikki Rockett (drums).\nRecording information: 1
EXTD=986.\n\nPoison's debut album takes cues from Kiss and Def Leppard
EXTD=, combining anthemic pop hooks and rebellious street-tough postur
EXTD=ing to create a distinctive sound and image. These rowdy rockers 
EXTD=have taken glam metal to the next level and produced a masterpiec
EXTD=e for reckless youth the world over. While the band members have 
EXTD=taken much flack for their girlish looks, it's their music that u
EXTD=ltimately tells the tale. And it is the band's conviction that gi
EXTD=ves this album its enduring appeal.\n"Cry Tough" proclaims the sh
EXTD=eer desire and will needed to make your dreams come true. "I Want
EXTD= Action" and "Talk Dirty To Me" are prime head-banging singalongs
EXTD= that sailed straight into the Top 10. "I Won't Forget You" is a 
EXTD=classic power ballad. "Let Me Go To The Show" tells of a teenager
EXTD='s desire to attend his first (Poison?) concert, while the title 
EXTD=track is a tale of excessive partying and the consequences the da
EXTD=y after. Poison's penchant for good time party music paid off. CA
EXTD=T has sold over three million copies.\n
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