Dead Moon Lyrics — by Popularity
120 songs · Page 2 of 3
| 51 | DOA |
| 52 | Dagger Moon |
| 53 | Day After Day |
| 54 | Dead Moon Night |
| 55 | Dead in the Saddle |
| 56 | Destination X |
| 57 | Diamonds in the Rough |
| 58 | Don't Burn the Fires |
| 59 | Don’t Look Back |
| 60 | Down the Road |
| 61 | Down to the Dogs |
| 62 | Echoes To You |
| 63 | Evil Eye |
| 64 | Fire in the Western World |
| 65 | Folsom Prison |
| 66 | Going South |
| 67 | Graveyard |
| 68 | Hey Joe |
| 69 | I Hate the Blues |
| 70 | I Tried |
| 71 | I Won’t Be the One |
| 72 | I'll Follow You |
| 73 | I'm Wise |
| 74 | Ill of the Dead |
| 75 | It's OK |
| 76 | It’s O.K. |
| 77 | I’m Not Afraid |
| 78 | I’m Out Nine |
| 79 | Jane |
| 80 | Johnny's Got a Gun |
| 81 | Kicked Out - Kicked In |
| 82 | Killing Me |
| 83 | Last Train |
| 84 | Milk Cow Blues |
| 85 | My Escape |
| 86 | Never Again |
| 87 | Nightline |
| 88 | Not the Only One |
| 89 | On Another Plane |
| 90 | Out in the Blue |
| 91 | Over the Edge |
| 92 | Parchment Farm |
| 93 | Play With Fire |
| 94 | Point of No Return |
| 95 | Poor Born |
| 96 | Poorborn |
| 97 | Psychedelic Nightmare |
| 98 | Psychodelic Nightmare |
| 99 | Remember Me |
| 100 | Rescue |
Dead Moon Albums
About Dead Moon
Dead Moon was a Portland rock trio that emerged from the underground in 1986 to become one of the most authentic and uncompromising bands in garage rock history. Led by the husband-wife duo of Fred and Toody Cole, along with drummer Andrew Loomis, the band crafted a raw, primitive sound that stripped rock and roll down to its essential elements-distorted guitars, pounding rhythms, and emotionally charged vocals that seemed to channel the spirits of punk, garage rock, and classic rock simultaneously. Their lo-fi aesthetic wasn't just a stylistic choice but a philosophical statement, as they recorded most of their 39 albums on vintage equipment in their own studio, creating a deliberately murky, analog warmth that made songs like "Where Did I Go Wrong" and "Out On A Wire" feel like transmissions from rock's underground. Dead Moon's cultural impact extended far beyond their prolific output of 168 songs; they became patron saints of DIY ethics, inspiring countless garage rock revivalists and proving that authenticity could triumph over polish in an increasingly commercialized music landscape. Their covers of classics like Led Zeppelin's "Communication Breakdown" and Johnny Cash's "Folsom Prison" weren't mere tributes but fierce reinterpretations that made these songs their own through sheer intensity. Albums like "Trash & Burn" and "Destination X" captured the band's evolution from scrappy punk upstarts to seasoned masters of atmospheric garage rock, with tracks like "Shadows Of The Night" showcasing their ability to balance darkness and melody. When they disbanded in 2006 after two decades, Dead Moon left behind a legacy that proved rock and roll's power lay not in technical perfection but in the raw, unfiltered expression of human emotion.