Cabaret singer Bijou (Marlene Dietrich) drifts from one Indonesian island to another due to her talent for inciting riots among the men at the cafés where she sings. Raging fisticuffs at the Blue Devil Café get her deported to Boni-Komba. The little island is a port for the U.S. Navy and a refuge for lowlifes, criminals, and ne'er-do-wells. Bijou lands on her feet with a job singing at the Seven Sinners Café. She also falls head over heels for a strapping navy lieutenant named Dan Brent (Wayne). There's trouble in low-rent paradise when Bijou's knife-throwing ex-flame Antro (Oskar Homolka) develops a jealous streak, and Lt. Brent's superiors find the idea of a naval officer falling for a rabble-rousing cabaret singer distasteful
Manic Sinners, an excellent new rock band, is the first artist from Romania signed to the Frontiers label. Debut album "King Of The Badlands" promises to be one of the most exciting surprises in the international landscape of hard and melodic rock. Manic Sinners' sound has all the elements that fans of this style love: soaring vocals, crushing riffs, blistering solos, ear candy hooks and a splendid power ballad…
‘Songs For The Sinners’ (top marks there for a start, a fantastic album title to pick) is Charon at both their best and their most typical simultaneously. For those who are new to the charms of the Finnish goth metal quintet they will, like any gothic act around today, divide people – deep dark streaks of maudlin angst coat the album at every turn, negotiating deftly with a powerful, dynamic, heavy edge…
What a difference a year makes. After releasing the thoroughly disappointing Come an' Get It, Whitesnake made up for it in spades with 1982's excellent Saints & Sinners, their best record yet…