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Slade

Slade are from the Black Country area of the West Midlands: Drummer Don Powell and bass guitarist Jim Lea were both born and raised around Wolverhampton, whilst lead guitarist Dave Hill was born in Devon but moved to Wolverhampton as a child. Lead singer Noddy Holder was born and raised in the nearby town of Walsall. In writings by and about Slade, the Trumpet public house in Bilston is mentioned frequently as a band meeting place, especially in their early days.The group dominated the UK charts during the early 1970s. During the height of their success, Slade out-performed their chart rivals, ...read more

Slade are from the Black Country area of the West Midlands: Drummer Don Powell and bass guitarist Jim Lea were both born and raised around Wolverhampton, whilst lead guitarist Dave Hill was born in Devon but moved to Wolverhampton as a child. Lead singer Noddy Holder was born and raised in the nearby town of Walsall. In writings by and about Slade, the Trumpet public house in Bilston is mentioned frequently as a band meeting place, especially in their early days.The group dominated the UK charts during the early 1970s. During the height of their success, Slade out-performed their chart rivals, such as Wizzard, Sweet, T. Rex, Suzi Quatro, Mud, Smokie, Gary Glitter, Roxy Music and David Bowie.[3] In the UK, they achieved twelve Top 5 hit singles from 1971 to 1974, six of which topped the chart.[1] In total, Slade had seventeen Top 20 hits between 1971 and 1976 including six #1s, three #2s and two #3s.[1] No other UK act of the period enjoyed such consistency in the UK Top 40 and Slade actually came the closest to matching The Beatles' twenty two Top 10 records in a single decade (1960s). Three of their singles entered the charts at #1 and they sold more singles in the UK than any other group of the 1970s. By 1973 alone, "Merry Xmas Everybody" had sold over one million copies globally, and gained gold disc status.[4] They toured Europe in 1973 and the US in 1974.[4]Slade have released over thirty albums, three of which reached #1 on the UK Albums Chart.[1]While Slade's attempts at cracking the United States market were largely unsuccessful, they left their mark on several US bands who cite Slade as an influence.[5] Kiss bassist Gene Simmons admitted that his band's early songwriting ethos and stage performance style was influenced by Slade. In his book, Kiss and Make-Up, Simmons wrote on page 85, "the one we kept returning to was Slade," and "we liked the way they connected with the crowd, and the way they wrote anthems... we wanted that same energy, that same irresistible simplicity. but we wanted it American-style". Tom Petersson of Cheap Trick said on their From Tokyo to you DVD that his band went to see Slade perform, and that they used "every cheap trick in the book", thus inadvertently coining his group's name. Cheap Trick covered the song "When the Lights are Out" (the original appeared on Old New Borrowed and Blue) on their 2009 release, The Latest. Quiet Riot had US hits with their covers of "Cum On Feel the Noize" and "Mama Weer All Crazee Now". The origins of Slade's influence on Quiet Riot dated back to the early 1970s, when Kevin DuBrow photographed Slade during their first Los Angeles appearances at the Whisky a Go Go. « hide

Similar Bands: Sweet, Nazareth, Status Quo, Alice Cooper, T. Rex

LPs
Keep On Rockin'
1994

You Boyz Make Big Noize
1987

3.4
17 Votes
Crackers - The Christmas Party Album
1985

2.6
6 Votes
Rogues Gallery
1985

3.4
22 Votes
Keep Your Hands Off My Power Supply
1984

2.8
3 Votes
The Amazing Kamikaze Syndrome
1983

3.8
23 Votes
Till Deaf Do Us Part
1981

3.9
22 Votes
We'll Bring the House Down
1981

3.8
21 Votes
Return to Base...
1979

4
20 Votes
Whatever Happened to Slade
1977

3.5
20 Votes
Nobody's Fools
1976

3.6
22 Votes
Slade in Flame
1974

3.9
31 Votes
Old New Borrowed and Blue
1974

3.9
34 Votes
Slayed?
1972

3.7
53 Votes
Play It Loud
1970

3.3
23 Votes
Beginnings
1969

2.7
20 Votes
Live Albums
Slade on Stage
1982

4.3
8 Votes
Slade Alive, Vol. 2
1978

3.9
8 Votes
Slade Alive!
1972

4
12 Votes
Compilations
Cum On Feel the Hitz: The Best of Slade
2020

5
1 Votes
The Slade Box
2006

4.4
4 Votes
The Very Best of Slade
2005

3.8
2 Votes
Feel the Noize - Greatest Hits
1997

4.3
5 Votes
Wall of Hits
1991

4.3
4 Votes
Slade Smashes!
1980

Sladest
1973

4.2
13 Votes

Contributors: discovolante, hooligan77, Nagrarok, jamest33, Batareziz, Asdfp277, Nagrarok,

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