
Rockit just never took off - but the Guns were a blast. Guns: One More Reason (Music Video 1988) on IMDb: Movies, TV, Celebs, and more. The music video opens with shots of burning. Guns VHS Video Tape Scarce Rare 16.82 The Best Of The Real Ghostbusters Volume 1 Vhs - Rare Retro Video Tape - VGC 15.72 + 20.

Guns' worst was a notch above opening act Laas Rockit, a young Bay Area outfit whose enthusiasm couldn't make up for its stifling, generic speed metal. Guns performs in the music video One More Reason from the album L.A. L.A.GUNS - One More Reason VHS Video PAL Very Good Glam Rock RARE Phil Lewis 24.93 + 14.87 shipping Hopalong Cassidy/Lone Ranger Double-VHS Video Retro RARE 33.75 LA Guns One More Reason L.A. Guitarist Guns was afforded a solo for every number but could only recycle so many riffs, and the synchronized stage moves during "One More Reason" were stiff and silly. Sometimes the Guns' panache worked against them.
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Play online or download to listen offline free - in HD audio, only on JioSaavn. This relentless beat was at the center of the night's best number, "Shoot for Thrills," a Slade-like chant-along that inspired a sea of raised fists on the floor. Listen to One More Reason on the English music album L.A. Guns One More Reason lyrics: Angel mercy, tears like rain / Hurt so good, cant feel no pain / Paint. However, the band's real strength lay in its rhythms - driving, gut-thudding and turned all the way up. As Lewis caterwauled anthems and thrust his leather-clad hips, lead guitarist Tracii Guns fed a hungry audience with solos, noodling effortlessly while holding his guitar over his head. Thunder chords, polished until they shone, were the staple of the set, and such numbers as "No Mercy," "Hollywood Tease" and "Sex Action," all from the band's recently released debut album, cleverly fused '70s hard rock, British metal and pure glam. What's more, the Guns' pageantry found its match in their sonic power.


Thursday night the Bayou stage was flooded with dry-ice smoke, flashing police lights and strobes during the entire 90-minute set, while singer Phil Lewis, looking as pretty as the boys in Poison, strutted beneath the band's fluorescent logo. Guns' first tour, but the West Coast heavy-metal rockers boast the glitter of arena veterans.
