Legendary Duo Unleashes Double Dose of Heavy Riffs: Tony Iommi and Glenn Hughes Drop Lyric Videos for “Dopamine” and “Resolution Song
Tony Iommi and Glenn Hughes (Image credit: John McMurtrie)
Tony Iommi and Glenn Hughes Reissue Two Studio Albums
Two <a href="https://www.newsdirectory3.com/hard-candy-girls-303-farewell-memorial-album-dont-be-afraid-of-the-future-will-come-completely-unlocks-continuous-output-of-female-power-qianlong-net-china-capital-net/” title=”Hard Candy Girls 303 Farewell Memorial Album "Don't Be Afraid of the Future Will Come" Completely Unlocks Continuous Output of Female Power-Qianlong Net China Capital Net”>studio albums recorded by Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath with Glenn Hughes, known for Deep Purple, “The 1996 DEP Sessions” (2004) and ”Fused” (2005), will be reissued on October 4th. The reissue will also be released on analog record for the first time.
The lyric video for “Dopamine” and the audio of “Resolution Song” from “Fused” have been officially released on YouTube.
Lyric Video for “Dopamine” and Audio for “Resolution Song”
Watch the lyric video for “Dopamine” and listen to the audio of “Resolution Song” from the album “Fused”.
This reissue of ”Fused” includes three bonus tracks: “Let It Down Easy,” which was a bonus track on the original Japanese release, “The Innocence,” which was a bonus track on iTunes, and “Slip Away,” which was a bonus track on the RealPlayer Music Store.
Tracklist for ”The 1996 DEP Sessions” and “Fused”
Tracklist for “The 1996 DEP Sessions”
- 1. Gone
- 2. From Another World
- 3. Don’t You Tell Me
- 4. Don’t Drag The River
- 5. Fine
- 6. Time Is the Healer
- 7. I’m Not the Same Man
- 8. It Falls Through Me
Tracklist for “Fused”
- 1. Dopamine
- 2. Wasted Again
- 3. Saviour of the Real
- 4. Resolution Song
- 5. Grace
- 6. Deep Inside a Shell
- 7. What You’re Living For
- 8. Face Your Fear
- 9. The Spell
- 10. I Go Insane
- 11. Slip Away (Bonus Track)
- 12. Let It Down Easy (Bonus Track)
- 13. The Innocence (Bonus Track)
Iommi and Hughes previously collaborated on the 1986 album Seventh Star, which was originally intended as Iommi’s first solo album but was eventually released under the name Black Sabbath Featuring Tony Iommi, and also recorded a session together in 1996.
