![]() The song was later reworked in to a hit-version titled " Don't You Ever Leave Me", which is featured on the album Two Steps from the Move. On the Japanese single, the song "Don't Never Leave Me" was used as the B-side. ![]() "Café Avenue" wasn't released on an album until 1982's Self Destruction Blues. This song was also recorded at Park Studios outside Stockholm at the Bangkok Shocks, Saigon Shakes, Hanoi Rocks recordings. The story is largely inspired by Hanoi Rocks's own life on the streets of Stockholm, where people thought the band were homosexual prostitutes because of their glam rock-look. The song also features a story told from the point of view of a character who lives a rough, young and wild life, but eventually has to turn to prostitution to earn money. "Café Avenue" talks about Hanoi Rocks's individualist-attitude and how it doesn't matter how you look and who you are. "Tragedy" was recorded at Park Studios outside Stockholm at the Bangkok Shocks, Saigon Shakes, Hanoi Rocks recordings. It is also melodic, even though the guitar parts are a punk style. The song is very energetic and has a fast tempo. At some point it all collapses and it feels that the world is breaking. The lyrics basically deal with a typical teen story of a first love and how one imagines it will last forever. "Tragedy" was written by the band's guitarist Andy McCoy when he was 15 or 16. ![]() "Tragedy" and its B-side, "Café Avenue", are the most well-known songs from Hanoi Rocks's early career. " Tragedy" is a single by the Finnish rock band Hanoi Rocks, from the album Bangkok Shocks, Saigon Shakes, Hanoi Rocks, but "Tragedy" was released a little before the release of the album. However, Monroe and McCoy re-formed Hanoi Rocks in 2002, releasing Twelve Shots on the Rocks on the Major. Monroe, Suicide, and Yaffa reunited in 1994 as Demolition 23. The Muddy Twins ( Andy McCoy and Michael Monroe) Chimes, McCoy, and Suicide formed the short-lived Cherry Bombz, Yaffa joined Jetboy, and Monroe recorded a solo album, Not Fakin' It, that briefly made the U.S. Johanna Kustannus, Tandan, Nippon Phonogram ![]()
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