Street Machine is the fourth studio album by American rock vocalist Sammy Hagar, released in 1979 by Capitol Records.[3] The album peaked at number 71 on the Billboard 200 album charts on October 20, 1979.[4]
| This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2024) |
Quick Facts Studio album by Sammy Hagar, Released ...
Close
More information Review scores, Source ...
Close
All songs written by Sammy Hagar, except where noted.
- "Growing Pains" – 3:46
- "Child to Man" – 4:28
- "Trans Am (Highway Wonderland)" – 3:46
- "Feels Like Love" – 4:21
- "Plain Jane" – 3:49
- "Never Say Die" – 4:47
- "This Planet's on Fire (Burn in Hell)" – 4:34
- "Wounded in Love" (Betsy Hagar, Sammy Hagar) – 3:50
- "Falling in Love" – 4:44
- "Straight to the Top" – 3:29
- The 1996 One Way Records re-release includes a bonus live track, "Miles from Boredom", which was recorded at the Long Beach Arena in Long Beach, California, on July 13, 1980. This was a previously unreleased track from the recordings that were released on Live 1980.
- On May 26, 2009, Rock Candy records re-released the album as a "Collector's Edition: Remaster & Reloaded". The collection contains extensive liner notes, photos and bonus tracks from a 1979 non-album single, "(Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay" and "I've Done Everything for You".
- "Plain Jane" (mono) b/w "Plain Jane" (stereo) - US (Capitol P-4757)
- "Plain Jane" (mono) b/w "Plain Jane" (stereo) - US (Capitol PRO-9189/9190)
- "Plain Jane" b/w "Wounded in Love" - UK (Capitol CL 16101)
- "This Planet's on Fire (Burn in Hell)" b/w "Space Station #5" (live) - UK (Capitol CL 16114)
- "Straight to the Top" b/w "Growing Pains" - US (Capitol 4825)
More information Chart (1979), Peak position ...
Close
- Capitol (US) : ST-11983
- Capitol (Japan) : ECS-81278
- Revolver (1986 UK reissue) : REV LP 72
- Capitol (US) : CDP 748433 2
- BGO (1992 UK reissue) : BGOCD150
- One Way Records (1996 reissue) : 72438 19092 25
- Capitol (1996 Japan reissue) : TOCP-8344
- Rock Candy Records (2009 reissue) : CANDY052
Gerbich, Carlin (16 July 1997). "Hagar album a triumph". Features. Evening Standard. Palmerston North. p. 14.