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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 20:24:16 GMT -5
2-1 for the Crue.
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Franchise
Hank Scorpio
No you didn't.
Ronnie Garvin, you idiot! I like steak, not soup, Ronnie Garvin!
Posts: 6,879
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Post by Franchise on May 15, 2008 20:44:20 GMT -5
I'll say the Crue.
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 20:54:12 GMT -5
Crue wins the slowest match of the tournament. ------------------------------------------------------------------- Let's see how slow this one goes! Golden Earring - Twlight ZoneTwilight Zone is a 1982 hit song by the Dutch hard rock band Golden Earring. It was written by band member George Kooymans, and it appears on their 1982 album "Cut". The single had a good run on the charts in Europe as well as in the United States, where it was helped out in part by MTV. It reached #10 in the US, the band's only Top 10 hit in that country. Vs. Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Refugee"Refugee" is the second single from Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' album Damn the Torpedoes. It peaked at #15 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in 1980. It was covered by Melissa Etheridge in 2005 for her Greatest Hits: The Road Less Traveled album, and reached #96 on the Billboard Pop 100.
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Post by Chilly McFreeze on May 15, 2008 20:58:44 GMT -5
Fudge.
I'm-a go Twlight Zone.
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 21:03:44 GMT -5
I know, I love both these songs.
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Post by Insomniac on May 15, 2008 21:10:31 GMT -5
I love Petty, but Twilight Zone is absolutely terrific. I vote Golden Earring.
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 21:16:39 GMT -5
I love Petty, but Twilight Zone is absolutely terrific. I vote Golden Earring. 2-0 Twlight Zone over Refugee. I'm glad to see the Golden Earring love after Lunatic Fringe lost. Those were my two "Wildcards" for the tourney.
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Post by Mister Pigwell on May 15, 2008 21:17:29 GMT -5
Zone to move this along.
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 21:20:49 GMT -5
Tom Petty got taken in by the Twlight Zone... --------------------------------------------------------------------- But that doesn't mean Tom is through... Whitesnake - Here I Go Again"Here I Go Again" is a song recorded by Whitesnake. Originally released on their 1982 Saints & Sinners album, it was re-recorded for their eponymous 1987 album Whitesnake. The 1987 version is more well known as it hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 charts on October 10, 1987, and number nine on the UK Singles Chart. Vs. Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Don't Come Around Here No MoreMad Hatter. That's all I got to say.
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Post by Mister Pigwell on May 15, 2008 21:22:13 GMT -5
Tom Petty here without a doubt.
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Post by Chilly McFreeze on May 15, 2008 21:25:18 GMT -5
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
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Post by Bob Schlapowitz on May 15, 2008 21:28:46 GMT -5
Whitesnake.
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Post by Drillbit Taylor on May 15, 2008 21:42:36 GMT -5
Is this the Drifter version or Hobo Version of Here we go again that we are voting on?
That is my deciding factor
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 21:49:15 GMT -5
Whatever version is in the video Hotrod. That's the only version I know.
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Post by Insomniac on May 15, 2008 22:04:08 GMT -5
I don't care for that Petty song. I'll go with Whitesnake.
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 22:05:54 GMT -5
2-2.... I don't care for your lack of sleep Insomniac... you don't see me voting against it.
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Post by Insomniac on May 15, 2008 22:07:11 GMT -5
2-2.... I don't care for your lack of sleep Insomniac... you don't see me voting against it. I don't care for a lot of things that you, DP. But you don't see me going behind your back to get you fired from your Mod position, do you? Although that doesn't mean I'm not doing it. You just don't see it.
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Post by Drillbit Taylor on May 15, 2008 22:07:36 GMT -5
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Don't Come Around Here No More
Because it is the drifter version. The real version is Hobo. But some people heard Homo and they changed it
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Post by Maidpool w/ Cleaning Action on May 15, 2008 22:13:33 GMT -5
Petty wins, via Mad Hatter mind control devices. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Next match on this slow night, must be a bunch a' tha youngin's on the board tonight. Joan Jett - I Love Rock and RollJoan Jett saw the Arrows perform "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" on their weekly television series The Arrows Show when she was touring England with The Runaways in 1976. She first recorded the song in 1979 with two of the Sex Pistols: Steve Jones and Paul Cook. This first version was not a hit. In 1982, Jett re-recorded the song, this time with her band, the Blackhearts, and this recording became a U.S. Billboard Hot 100 number-one single for seven weeks, effectively launching Jett's solo career and later reached number one in the Australian charts as well. Its success propelled Jett's I Love Rock 'n' Roll album to number two in the U.S. "I Love Rock 'n' Roll"'s gritty, black-and-white music video received heavy play from the then-young MTV network. In it Jett and the Blackhearts travel to a small, dingy bar and proceed to excite the drunken crowd by performing the song and yelling out its famous chorus. Jett followed "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" up with another cover — her version of Tommy James & the Shondells' "Crimson and Clover" was a top-ten U.S. hit. The video was originally in color, but it was converted to black and white due to how Joan Jett felt how the red leather jacket looked in color. In March 2005, Q magazine placed Jett's version of the song at number 85 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks. Vs. Def Leppard - Poor Some Sugar On Me"Pour Some Sugar on Me" is a song recorded by British hard rock band Def Leppard in 1987 from the album Hysteria. It reached number 2 on the U.S. Hot 100. It later became an MTV classic[citation needed], and is generally regarded as their signature song. The title of the song alludes to the coda of the 1969 bubblegum pop classic "Sugar, Sugar" by The Archies. Although the band was nearing the end of recording sessions for Hysteria in 1986, producer Mutt Lange felt that the album was still lacking a song that would have an appeal beyond the hard rock fans who had bought Pyromania. That song came to him during a bathroom break. Singer Joe Elliott was jamming with a riff he'd come up with recently on the guitar, and Lange suggested that the riff be taken a step further. It was a risky move, as everyone in the band had been worn out by the never-ending sessions.
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Post by Bob Schlapowitz on May 15, 2008 22:18:16 GMT -5
Def Leppard.
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