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Dangerous Toys

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10 ноя 2025 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS To Release 'Demolition' Collection Of Previously Unreleased Songs

8 авг 2025 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS' JASON MCMASTER Doesn't Believe Grunge Killed Hair Metal: 'I Think That Hair Metal Killed Hair Metal'

9 сен 2023 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS - Vitamins And Crash Helmets Live Reissued, Pressed On Vinyl For The First Time

29 июн 2021 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS Singer JASON MCMASTER: Why I Turned Down PANTERA Audition

7 май 2020 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS Singer JASON MCMASTER Says He Turned Down Chances To Audition For PANTERA And SKID ROW

9 июн 2017 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS Celebrates “Dirty Thirty” With LP / CD Reissues

10 дек 2010 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS: Video Footage Of Entire 2010 Reunion Concert Posted Online

30 авг 2010 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS Reunion Footage; Unreleased BEATALLICA Song Posted

21 окт 2009 : 
DANGEROUS TOYS - Dangerous Toys, Hellacious Acres To Be Reissued As Double-CD
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|||| 10 ноя 2025

DANGEROUS TOYS To Release 'Demolition' Collection Of Previously Unreleased Songs



zoom
Texas rockers DANGEROUS TOYS, who achieved a short-but-sweet burst of success in the midst of the late 1980s glam metal boom, will release "Demolition" on December 12 on CD, vinyl and limited-edition cassette via Cleopatra Records.

They may not have released a new studio album in 30 years, but few who've seen DANGEROUS TOYS playing out recently would ever doubt that they remain one of the most exhilarating live bands on the circuit — albeit one that rations its appearances to just a handful at most a year. They've already played a few select shows in 2025, and there's still a couple to come, at the Rochester Opera House in Rochester, New York on November 14, and the Met Cafe in Pawtucket, Rhode Island the following evening. And next spring, they're playing the Monsters Of Rock cruise.

Amidst so much activity, and with the band's long-awaited fifth album still in a state of gestation, fans can look forward to the arrival of "Demolition", which features 10 tracks, all previously unreleased and recorded during the hiatus between the band's second and third albums, 1991's "Hellacious Acres" and 1994's "Pissed", as they continued refining their debut album's unique concoction of Southern rock and driving metal.

Hand selected by DANGEROUS TOYS, "these old songs… obviously didn't make the cut when choosing songs for official release," the band remarks in the liner notes. All will be completely new to all the ears that hear them.

But while it's easy to refer to the 10 tracks as "rejects" (even the TOYS do so!),it's also worth remembering the band wrote at least 70 new songs during this period, with most of them being recorded within days of the original idea being brought to the jam room, probably scribbled on a piece of scrap paper, or loosely worked out on a cassette tape. And so the recordings piled up and when it came time to piece "Pissed" together…

Quality had nothing to do with it!. There was just too many songs to release. Until now!

The countdown to "Demolition" begins today, with the first single from the album, "Rock Shock Cowboy", coming at you — as guitarist Scott Dalhover puts it — "straight out of the way back machine from deep within the DANGEROUS TOYS archives. It's a snapshot of what was going on in the D.T. songwriting process at that point in time."

"Demolition" track listing:

01. Rock Shock Cowboy
02. Come Out Swinging
03. Rattle My Cage
04. Rhapsody in Barbed Wire
05. One On One Live
06. Burning Bridges
07. Your Sister
08. Backstreet Girl
09. Shot To Hell
10. SNAFU

In a recent interview with Anthony Bryant of The Hair Metal Guru, DANGEROUS TOYS singer Jason McMaster spoke about how the rise of grunge in the early 1990s forced most hard rock bands off the radio and MTV, with album and tour sales plummeting. He said: "I was kind of living in my own bubble. And if someone says that grunge killed hair metal — I throw up in my mouth every time I say 'hair metal', but I'm trying to be crystal clear — I think that that's wrong. I think that hair metal killed hair metal. Too many bands got signed and there [were] too many terrible bands [that] got signed. And if you think that DANGEROUS TOYS is one of those terrible bands, I'm open to that. I'm cool with you thinking that. But it was ridiculous as to how far it got taken with the whole look and the whole feel of everything. I feel like it didn't have any balls anymore. And it was supposed to have some balls.

"Me and all the TOYS guys really respected a lot of the bands that were sort of not at war against hairspray or whatever," Jason continued. "It was more like they felt real to me, and those are bands like JUNKYARD and RHINO BUCKET and RAGING SLAB and CIRCUS OF POWER, and there's a shit-ton of them. There's a bunch of that sort of movement that had more of a punk, dirty alleycat style of whatever — just rock and roll. It was coming more from maybe a southern rock attitude or an early AC/DC attitude where it wasn't about hair. I mean, I know people that call AC/DC a hair metal band. I know that [TWISTED SISTER's] Dee Snider doesn't like the term 'hair metal' because it doesn't really play in to what they were kind of about, because they were kind of a street rock band. And anyway, I think that DIRTY LOOKS was one of those bands as well. And like I said, I could keep going — there's a stack of them that didn't really play in to… And I won't mention — just whatever you think is hair metal might be quite different than what I think is hair metal."

McMaster added: "So I think hair metal killed hair metal. I think grunge was about to happen anyway. For those of you who might not know, SOUNDGARDEN and NIRVANA — I'll just stick with them — they were touring their first records in, like, '87. So, I don't know. It just took a minute [for those bands to break], just like it took a minute for GUNS [N' ROSES to have commercial success]. GUNS didn't break [right away], and that record, 'Appetite [For Destruction]' was out for a year, year and a half before it really had any numbers to speak of.

"It's interesting how music kind of has to sort of warm up and people have to discover it in the underground before someone can really make it stick," Jason concluded. "And that's usually radio and back then MTV. Now it's content."

Founded in 1987, DANGEROUS TOYS released four full-length albums and one live album before unofficially disbanding at the turn of the millennium.

DANGEROUS TOYS' self-titled debut album, which came out in 1989, eventually went gold (although it took until 1994),while the group's follow-up, 1991's "Hellacious Acres", failed to launch.

Although DANGEROUS TOYS continues to perform live, the band has not released any new material since 1995.

A few years ago, McMaster was asked by Metal Edge magazine why he thinks "Hellacious Acres" failed to reach the same levels of success as DANGEROUS TOYS' debut. He responded: "I think it had a lot to do with the whole Seattle movement. That record came out in '91, the same year NIRVANA and PEARL JAM dropped their first albums. But a lot of people got really into grunge, and that buried a band like DANGEROUS TOYS. It felt like the streets in cities like L.A. emptied, and everyone changed their wardrobes overnight. So, when I think of 'Hellacious Acres', I think about what could have been. It's an awesome record, and at the time, it boggled my mind that people weren't into it."

Asked if that is what led to DANGEROUS TOYS eventually being dropped from Columbia, McMaster said: "Absolutely. You had this new style of rock music that had all these people latching on to it, and it killed bands like us. The radio and MTV wanted nothing to do with us and refused to play our stuff. So, an album like 'Hellacious Acres' never had a chance. Couple that with the giant moguls and money-making machines throwing all their weight behind grunge and acts like DANGEROUS TOYS were essentially dead in the water. So, with Columbia, labels have to do whatever the trends say they must do for them to pay their giant rents or whatever. It wasn't a shock that Columbia jumped ship on us, just like all the other major labels did with other bands. I mean… I know they were trying their best to have some sort of ditch effort with Alice Cooper, JUDAS PRIEST, METAL CHURCH and MOTÖRHEAD around that time, but it didn't matter. If you played hard rock or metal, you were screwed. By '91, they cleaned the shelf of all that was popular in the '80s, which meant sleazy hard rock was dying, and our record and our deal died with it."

Image courtesy of Memnoch's Curse




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