Still Not Black Enough

W.A.S.P. Still Not Black Enough

Released in 1995, Still Not Black Enough stands as one of the most personal and emotionally charged albums in the W. A. S. P. catalog. Emerging during a period of deep transition — both for the band and for heavy metal as a whole — the record captures Blackie Lawless at his most vulnerable, confrontational, and introspective.

Helldorado

W.A.S.P. Helldorado

Released in 1999, Helldorado is one of the most polarizing albums in W. A. S. P.’s discography. Arriving after the dark, introspective weight of Still Not Black Enough and the conceptual ambition that would soon resurface, this album takes an unexpected turn — leaning heavily into sleaze, groove, and irreverence.

Unholy Terror

W.A.S.P. Unholy Terror

Released in 2001, Unholy Terror marks a moment of recalibration for W. A. S. P. After years of stylistic shifts, concept driven ambition, and internal turbulence, the band returned with an album that felt leaner, angrier, and deliberately confrontational.

reIdolized

W A S P Reidolized

Reidolized ( The Soundtrack to The Crimson Idol) is not a revisionist gimmick — it is a reclamation. Released decades after the original The Crimson Idol (1992), this version presents Blackie Lawless’s intended vision in its complete form, restoring narrative elements, dialogue, and structural cohesion that were previously constrained by label pressure and format limitations.

W.A.S.P. W.A.S.P.

W.A.S.P. W.A.S.P.

Released in 1984, W. A. S. P. is not just a debut album — it is a provocation captured on tape. At a time when American heavy metal was splitting between technical ambition and commercial polish, W. A. S. P. arrived with something far more confrontational spectacle as sound, danger as identity.

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