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TOAD

1971 - Toad

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Track listing

 

"Cottonwood Hill"

"A Life That Ain't Worth Living"

"Tank"

"They Say I'm Mad"

"Life Goes On"

"Pig's Walk"

"The One I Mean"

"Stay"

1974 - Dreams

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Tracklist

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Keep On Movin'              

Dreams               

Let's Get Hi        

Electric Rider     

Because You're Not       

You Know Who I Am      

Boogin' On A Saturday Night      

Break Down

Tomorrow Blue

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Track listing

 

"Thoughts"

"Tomorrow Blue"

"Blind Chapmans Tale"

"Vampires"

"No Need"

"Change in Time"
"Three O' Clock in the Morning"

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CD Extra Tracks

 

"Fly"

"I Saw Her Standing There"

"Green Ham"

Band members

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Original members

 

Benjamin "Beni" Jaeger - vocals

Vittorio "Vic" Vergeat - guitar, vocals, keyboard, piano, mellotron

Werner Fröhlich - bass, vocals, moog synthesizer

Cosimo Lampis - drums, congas, percussion, vocals

 

Later members

 

André Buser - bass

Caesar Perrig - bass

Kelvin Bullen - bass

Claudio Salsi - drums

Placeholder info from All Music

 

Toad Biography by J. Scott McClintock
Open Fire: Live in Basel 1972
Swiss hard rock and blues-rock outfit Toad leaped (sorry) onto their country's charts with their debut single, "Stay," in 1972 -- paving the way for the massive Swiss metal movement of the early '80s and such notable bands as Krokus and Celtic Frost. Mainly a three-piece, consisting of Vittorio "Vic" Vergeat (guitar/vocals), Werner Frohlich (bass), and Cosimo Lampis (drums), Toad often enlisted the help of an additional lead vocalist in much of their studio work (Bens Jaeger sang lead on their debut, but departed the group as soon as recording was completed). That same year, the live album Open Fire: Live in Basel 1972 hit stores, taking advantage of the band's constant and successful touring. Tomorrow Blue followed shortly after, appearing in 1973, and the band released Dreams early in 1974. A few live albums, compilations, and studio works continued to trickle out during the rest of the '70s and early '80s, with the core Toad lineup still firmly in place. By the early 2000s, interest in the early European hard rock scene in general (and Toad in particular) led to a slew of deluxe CD reissues and collections -- the best of which were to be found on the Italian imprint Akarma.

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