Enter Sadmen: The Hard Rock & Heavy Metal Hall of Fame
mark2s
89 episodes
9 months ago
It's the world's loudest podcast as hosts Steve Davies, Richard Napthine and Mark Norman take their collective 120 years of worship at the altar of golden era hard rock and heavy metal (1970-ish to 1996-ish), cut the ribbon on their newly-built Hard Rock Hall of Fame - and debate the albums that have earned their places in its gilded rooms.
All content for Enter Sadmen: The Hard Rock & Heavy Metal Hall of Fame is the property of mark2s and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
It's the world's loudest podcast as hosts Steve Davies, Richard Napthine and Mark Norman take their collective 120 years of worship at the altar of golden era hard rock and heavy metal (1970-ish to 1996-ish), cut the ribbon on their newly-built Hard Rock Hall of Fame - and debate the albums that have earned their places in its gilded rooms.
The boys didn't have to venture too far for the latest episode of the podcast - in fact, just a short hop and skip on Eurostar across La Manche and straight on to Paris.
Because this time the Tico Torres Tombola of Topics and Themes had tasked Richard, Steve and Mark to find something distinctly French to c state with each other.
Paris wasn't a prerequisite for the show, but nevertheless that's where our plucky trio ended up. Not only that, but they all ended up with a band formed at the arse end of 1979.
Steve and Richard went on a voyage of discovery, while Mark mined a familiar dream at the coalface of rock.
The result? Nicko McBrain's old mob, Trust, with Represssion from 1981 (Mark), and a deuce from 1985 in Desir De Vampyr by Blaspheme (Steve) and Desperados from Vulcain (Richard).
Mon Dieu! What a show ... !
Enter Sadmen: The Hard Rock & Heavy Metal Hall of Fame
It's the world's loudest podcast as hosts Steve Davies, Richard Napthine and Mark Norman take their collective 120 years of worship at the altar of golden era hard rock and heavy metal (1970-ish to 1996-ish), cut the ribbon on their newly-built Hard Rock Hall of Fame - and debate the albums that have earned their places in its gilded rooms.