Led by frontman and mastermind , the band has released eight studio albums that pay homage to legends like Def Leppard, Mötley Crüe, and Skid Row. The Early Era: Foundation and Breakthrough

Fast, frantic, and pedal-to-the-metal.

Before the polished production of later years, Crazy Lixx introduced themselves with Loud Minority . This album captures the energy of a band playing in a dive bar at 2 AM. While it lacks the radio-ready sheen of their future work, it compensates with pure attitude.

Their latest studio effort is described as a relentless, "pedal to the metal" experience with no power ballads—just pure, adrenaline-fueled fun that attempts to "keep the spirit of the '80s alive". im-musicmagazine.com Album Chronology Album Title Notable Highlights Loud Minority The "lost classic" debut. New Religion Fan-favorite breakthrough. Riot Avenue Heavier, grittier glam style. Crazy Lixx Regarded as a perfect melodic/hard mix. Ruff Justice Featured in Friday the 13th: The Game Forever Wild Highly melodic and polished. Street Lethal Thematic "call to action" for rock. Thrill of the Bite Relentless high-energy hard rock. music videos that pay homage to '80s action films, or perhaps a track-by-track breakdown of their newest release?

Before the slick production, there was grit. The debut album is a punk-infused, whiskey-stained love letter to L.A. Guns and Faster Pussycat. Vocalist (then going by Danny Wilde) hadn't yet fully honed his high-octane screech, but the swagger was undeniable. Tracks like "Rock and a Hard Place" are frantic, raw, and unpolished. It’s a "garage glam" masterpiece—less about radio hits, more about convincing you they’d tear up a dive bar at 2 AM.

Instead of a standard list, fans "travel" through the band's 20-year history based on the movies they love.