
Skid Row - Skid Row
Skid Row by Skid Row hits like a leather-jacketed grin - loud, cocky, and absolutely built for the late-80s hard rock spotlight.
Released in 1989 on Atlantic, the band’s self-titled debut announced Sebastian Bach, Dave “Snake” Sabo, Rachel Bolan, Scotti Hill, and Rob Affuso with enough swagger to rattle the Sunset Strip and then some. It arrived at the sweet spot where glam metal got grittier, heavier, and just a little more dangerous.
The album’s big swings still land with ridiculous confidence. “Youth Gone Wild” is the rebel yell, all gang vocals and street-corner defiance, while “18 And Life” turns tragedy into arena-sized drama. “I Remember You” brings the lighter-waving heartbreak without losing its bite, and “Piece Of Me” snarls with sleazy, riff-first attitude.
Pressed on classic black vinyl, this edition keeps things appropriately no-nonsense: big guitars, bigger choruses, zero apologies. For collectors, it is a sharp snapshot of hard rock before the decade flipped the table - polished enough for radio, rowdy enough to leave scuffs on the floor.
Skid Row - Skid Row
Skid Row by Skid Row hits like a leather-jacketed grin - loud, cocky, and absolutely built for the late-80s hard rock spotlight.
Released in 1989 on Atlantic, the band’s self-titled debut announced Sebastian Bach, Dave “Snake” Sabo, Rachel Bolan, Scotti Hill, and Rob Affuso with enough swagger to rattle the Sunset Strip and then some. It arrived at the sweet spot where glam metal got grittier, heavier, and just a little more dangerous.
The album’s big swings still land with ridiculous confidence. “Youth Gone Wild” is the rebel yell, all gang vocals and street-corner defiance, while “18 And Life” turns tragedy into arena-sized drama. “I Remember You” brings the lighter-waving heartbreak without losing its bite, and “Piece Of Me” snarls with sleazy, riff-first attitude.
Pressed on classic black vinyl, this edition keeps things appropriately no-nonsense: big guitars, bigger choruses, zero apologies. For collectors, it is a sharp snapshot of hard rock before the decade flipped the table - polished enough for radio, rowdy enough to leave scuffs on the floor.
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Skid Row by Skid Row hits like a leather-jacketed grin - loud, cocky, and absolutely built for the late-80s hard rock spotlight.
Released in 1989 on Atlantic, the band’s self-titled debut announced Sebastian Bach, Dave “Snake” Sabo, Rachel Bolan, Scotti Hill, and Rob Affuso with enough swagger to rattle the Sunset Strip and then some. It arrived at the sweet spot where glam metal got grittier, heavier, and just a little more dangerous.
The album’s big swings still land with ridiculous confidence. “Youth Gone Wild” is the rebel yell, all gang vocals and street-corner defiance, while “18 And Life” turns tragedy into arena-sized drama. “I Remember You” brings the lighter-waving heartbreak without losing its bite, and “Piece Of Me” snarls with sleazy, riff-first attitude.
Pressed on classic black vinyl, this edition keeps things appropriately no-nonsense: big guitars, bigger choruses, zero apologies. For collectors, it is a sharp snapshot of hard rock before the decade flipped the table - polished enough for radio, rowdy enough to leave scuffs on the floor.




















