Dr. Steel

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Back and Forth 02:55 Tools
Lament for a Toy Factory 03:24 Tools
Build the Robots 03:02 Tools
Fibonacci Sequence 02:21 Tools
Planet X Marks the Spot 03:39 Tools
Bogeyman Boogie 03:51 Tools
Marionette 05:36 Tools
Lullabye-bye 02:37 Tools
Imagination 01:51 Tools
The Dr. Steel Show 02:25 Tools
Greedy 00:00 Tools
Drop Da Bomb 02:37 Tools
We Decide 03:19 Tools
Dr. Steel 03:51 Tools
Childhood (Don't) a Go-Go 04:40 Tools
Spaceboy 03:36 Tools
The Singularity 03:51 Tools
Are We Having Fun Yet? 02:20 Tools
Raja 00:00 Tools
Ode to Revenge 06:07 Tools
Atomic Superstar 02:47 Tools
Bikinigram From Satan 00:00 Tools
Conspiracy 00:00 Tools
Slapped by Moe 00:00 Tools
Prelude to Domination 01:12 Tools
Glutton 02:38 Tools
Winky in C minor 01:39 Tools
Secret Message 00:00 Tools
Bohemian Grove 00:00 Tools
Donkey Town 00:00 Tools
Curse of the Crystal Skull 05:53 Tools
Smokey's Theme 00:00 Tools
Totally Moded 00:00 Tools
On The Run 00:00 Tools
Schizophrenic 00:00 Tools
Getting Directions/Thudd 00:00 Tools
Land of the Lost 00:00 Tools
Drop Da' Bomb 02:36 Tools
Winky in C minor / Inspector Gadget 00:00 Tools
Inspector Gadget 00:00 Tools
Drop the Bomb 00:00 Tools
Schitzophrenic 00:00 Tools
12,000 Miles Through Space 00:00 Tools
Boogieman Boogie 00:00 Tools
Lullabye Bye 00:00 Tools
Winky In C Minor - Inspector Gadget 00:00 Tools
Doctor's Propaganda 00:00 Tools
Winky in C Minor/Inspector Gadget 00:00 Tools
Bitanga 00:00 Tools
Mecanic 00:00 Tools
Don`t go away 00:00 Tools
Darkness 04:53 Tools
Oko Za Oko 00:00 Tools
Kraljica 00:00 Tools
Nightmare 00:00 Tools
Raja / (Hidden Track) 00:00 Tools
Ucini Nesto 00:00 Tools
Bonus 00:00 Tools
čekam na noć 00:00 Tools
Rodjen u tami 00:00 Tools
Gdje je ljubav 00:00 Tools
Make love 00:00 Tools
Istočno od raja 00:00 Tools
Lullaby-Bye 00:00 Tools
Bikinigram From Satan (remix) 00:00 Tools
Heaven or hell 00:00 Tools
The Dr. Steel Show Theme Song 00:00 Tools
Muska kurva 00:00 Tools
Cekam Na Noc 00:00 Tools
Sve što želim 00:00 Tools
Wait for the devil 00:00 Tools
divlji anđeli 00:00 Tools
All for love 00:00 Tools
Marionette remix 00:00 Tools
Bogieman Boogie 00:00 Tools
Zivot u gradu 00:00 Tools
Sve sto zelim 00:00 Tools
Thudd 00:00 Tools
Divlji Andjeli 00:00 Tools
Istocno od raja 00:00 Tools
Childhood Don't A Go-Go 00:00 Tools
Getting Directions 00:00 Tools
Rođen U Tami 00:00 Tools
Učini nešto 00:00 Tools
Sex & drugs & rock'n'roll 00:00 Tools
Sex & drugs & Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Muška kurva 00:00 Tools
Lullabye 00:00 Tools
Život U Gradu 00:00 Tools
Winky in 'C' Minor 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Bye 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Bye Bye 00:00 Tools
Getting Directions / Thudd 00:00 Tools
are we having fun yet 00:00 Tools
Read Along 00:00 Tools
The Doctor Steel Show 00:00 Tools
Meet Your Fibonacci (NIN Steel Mash Up) 00:00 Tools
Sex, Drugs & Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Wait fro the devil 00:00 Tools
Toy Soldiers Unite 00:00 Tools
The Dr Steel Show 00:00 Tools
Kiša pada (bonus track) 00:00 Tools
kung fu 00:00 Tools
Drop Da Bomb 8-bit Revamp 00:00 Tools
14 - 14 Raja 00:00 Tools
Back & Forth 00:00 Tools
Winky in C Minor/ Inspector Gadget 00:00 Tools
Sex and drugs and Rock`n`Roll 00:00 Tools
Winky In C Minor/Inspector Gad 00:00 Tools
Back and Forth (official music video) HQ 00:00 Tools
The Dr.Steel Show 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Bye (With lyrics) 00:00 Tools
Build the Robots [steampunk] 00:00 Tools
People of Earth 00:00 Tools
Don't Go Away 00:00 Tools
Divlji Andeli 00:00 Tools
Sketch1 00:00 Tools
Kiša pada 00:00 Tools
Childhood 00:00 Tools
Bikinigram For Satan 05:32 Tools
Childhood Don't A-Go-Go 00:00 Tools
Roden u tami cd 03 Yugoslavia 00:00 Tools
The Dr.Steel Show [steampunk] 00:00 Tools
Utopian Playland Fanfare 00:00 Tools
èekam na noæ 00:00 Tools
Building A Utopian Playland 00:00 Tools
Divlji Anðeli 00:00 Tools
Dr. Steel - Spaceboy 00:00 Tools
Dr.Steel - Donkey Town 00:00 Tools
Raja & Extra Track 00:00 Tools
Unici nesto cd 02 Yugoslavia 00:00 Tools
Muska kurva cd 03 Yugoslavia 00:00 Tools
Dr. Steel - Back and Forth 00:00 Tools
Marionette [Remix] 00:00 Tools
Lament of a toy factory 00:00 Tools
istoèno od raja 00:00 Tools
02 Build the Robots 00:00 Tools
12.000 Miles Through Space 00:00 Tools
Winky 00:00 Tools
Dr. Steel Show 00:00 Tools
Don`t go away :( 00:00 Tools
Childhood a Go-Go 00:00 Tools
Dr. Steel - Are we having fun yet? 00:00 Tools
Winky In C Minor. Inspector Ga 00:00 Tools
Sex & Drugs & Rock N Roll 00:00 Tools
Toy Soldiers Unite Birthday song by Dr. Steel 00:00 Tools
Build the Robots - Lyrics 00:00 Tools
Lullaby 00:00 Tools
12000 Miles Through Space 00:00 Tools
Dr. Steel - Build the Robots 00:00 Tools
Dr Steel -03- Land of the Lost 00:00 Tools
02 - Fibonacci Sequence 00:00 Tools
Zivot u gradu cd 03 Yugoslavia 00:00 Tools
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There is more than one artist with a similar name: 1.) Doctor Steel (full name, Phineas Waldolf Steel) was an American musician located in Southern California 2.) Dr Steel is (now disbanded) ex-YU heavy metal band from Rijeka, Croatia. 1.) Doctor Steel (full name, Phineas Waldolf Steel), was an American musician located in Southern California, popular in the Steampunk, Goth, and Rivethead scenes. He has performed on rare occasions with a "backup band", claiming that a fictitious robot band had malfunctioned. Shows have incorporated puppetry, multimedia and performances by female members ("Nurses" and "Scouts") of his street team, The Army of Toy Soldiers. Steel has begun breaking into the mainstream media, having made a brief appearance on the Tonight Show, been interviewed by Suicide Girls as well as numerous genre magazines[ and been the subject of an article in Wired Magazine regarding allegations that Dr. Horrible had copied his style. Steel has frequently been cited as an archetypal example of Steampunk music. Steel began publicly performing in 1999, essentially busking on the streets of Los Angeles. A few years later, he began performing at venues like The Key Club and the CIA. His live shows combine music with puppetry and video projection that reflect the stories and meanings of the songs. In 2001 and 2002, the albums Dr. Steel (2001), Dr. Steel II: Eclectic Boogaloo (2001), and People of Earth (2002) were released digitally to iTunes, Amazon and other stores. The Dr. Steel Collection (2004) was the first CD release, featuring many tracks which were released on other albums, slightly altered. The Dr. Steel Collection also features the track "Land of the Lost," about the 1970s version of the show by the same name. Some attempts were made to get the song into the soundtrack of 2009 movie version of Land of the Lost, but they were unsuccessful. Steel's second CD release was The Dr. Steel Read-A-Long album (2006). It was a limited distribution and quickly sold out. The album art included a recreation of the sleeve of read-along records, and the disc design resembled that of a vinyl record. In 2007, Steel re-released the first three albums, once again in digital format. Steel's music can often be heard on a number of steampunk radio broadcasts that stream worldwide, such as The Clockwork Cabaret. His song "Boogieman Boogie" was also included in a compilation of steampunk music released by Gilded Age Records. Steel's music is eclectic in genre, often combining the noise and distortion of industrial with aspects of European folk, classical, and even jazz, as well as hip-hop and opera. Many songs feature samples from vintage public service announcements and educational films, such as Duck and Cover. Rue Morgue Magazine described the sound as "Industrial Hip-Hop Opera". Steel cites, as some of his musical influences, Igor Stravinsky, Tom Waits, Pink Floyd, Queen, Mike Patton, Nine Inch Nails, Danny Elfman, Beck, and John Zorn. On stage, and in all public performances and interviews, Steel maintains the fictitious persona of a mad scientist bent on conquering the world. The fictitious Dr. Steel was a former toymaker who, in a fit of rage over being fired for creating drastic designs such as babies with buzzsaws for hands,burned down the factory he worked at and was committed to a psychiatric institution.The back-story relates that Steel escaped the sanitarium and retreated to a deserted island laboratory, where he became bent on world conquest in order to create a "Utopian Playland" where his toy designs could be enjoyed. As a mad scientist, Steel is obsessed with conspiracy theories, giant robots,baking cupcakes and experimenting with hamsters. In appearance, Steel draws on the mad scientist archetype, dressing in a white PVC lab coat (with comically large black buttons), black PVC gloves, black boots, shaved head, sinister goatee, and antique welder's goggles. When not in his "mad scientist" costume, Steel typically dresses in a very aristocratic neo-Victorian steampunk style, while still retaining his goggles. He has never been seen without the goggles. Doctor Steel appears in numerous short videos released on his website. One such is a six minute "propaganda" film called Building a Utopian Playland (which is also available in DVD form along with a sample CD with music on it, for free simply by contacting Doctor Steel via email). Another is a series called The Dr. Steel Show, set in his fictitious lab on his fictitious private island. Episode 3, which is the official music video for his song, Back and Forth, which featured video clips sent in by Toy Soldiers, was showcased on MTV's website as a part of their online video series, Steampunk Infiltrates The Mainstream. Steel also releases what he calls "public service announcements" covering philosophical subjects such as transhumanism, freedom of thought, and subjective reality. Finally, the Toy Soldiers Unite website features a series of videos called Ask Dr. Steel, in which Steel himself answers questions asked by Toy Soldiers. Controversy In 2008, Joss Whedon released a short musical film online entitled Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog. A firestorm of controversy quickly erupted as fans of Steel, and Steel himself,[32] noted the similarities between Dr. Steel and Dr. Horrible: * both featured singing mad scientists who produced web videos; * both had an "Ask Dr. ___" segment; * the name of the production was eerily similar to the title of one of Steel's albums, Dr. Steel Read-A-Long. This controversy attracted the attention of national media and was reported in Wired magazine, in which Dr. Horrible co-writer Maurissa Tancharoen responded, "All we have to say on the subject is we've never heard of Dr. Steel before." "There’s room for everyone in this party," she added. Army of Toy Soldiers Example of Steel's "propaganda" artwork, resembling WWII recruitment posters (also illustrative of a fan club uniform) The "Army of Toy Soldiers" is Steel's fan club, street team and viral marketing apparatus. The army plays into the Dr. Steel fiction, in that it is ostensibly a tool in his plan for global domination. Toy Soldiers have "uniforms" with patches and color schemes, but are encouraged to design their own uniform so long as the required patches and colors are used. The Toy Soldier Army has three main regiments: Toy Soldiers, Nurses, and Toy Scouts. The Nurse and Scout regiments are reserved for those who are female or identify as female within the Army, whereas people of any gender can be in the Toy Soldier regiment. There are no ranks—all Toy Soldiers are considered equal. However, Toy Soldiers who go "above and beyond" may be awarded the honorary title of "Yellow Jacket" personally by Doctor Steel. Toy Soldiers promote Dr. Steel individually through "missions", while larger group events are known as "invasions".Some Soldiers use their connections and access to the media for promotion, while others may choose to "propagandize" their school or workplace. Toy Soldiers have frequently done charity and volunteer work in uniform or in the name of Dr. Steel, such as starting local clothing or toy drives and even donating to drives such as Toys for Tots and Adopt a Highway. *Retirement In January 2012, Dr. Steel, after a year long absence and non-communication, informed Commander JET the owner and administrator of Toysoldiersunite.com of his retirement. This was written in a personal letter which Commander JET has shared with the Army of Toy Soldiers. Due to the nature of his retirement, Dr. Steel removed his websites Doctorsteel.com and Worlddominationtoys.com, and deleted his facebook profile. In his last communication with the Administrators, he made it explicitly clear that he no longer wished to be promoted, his merchandise sold, or be contacted again. This has been confirmed with a third party close to Dr. Steel. After 12 years of performing, entertaining, and attempting world domination, he’s decided to call it a day, and move on. Website: http://www.toysoldiersunite.com 2011 2.) Dr Steel was an ex-Yugoslavian heavy metal band from Rijeka, Croatia, formed in '81 under the name "Nož u leđa" ("Knife in the Back"), but they soon changed it to Dr Steel, due to censorship issues with government's local authorities. Soon followed series of various gigs all around ex-Yugoslavia, with highlight in '83 when they played as an opening act for Divlje Jagode in Zagreb, Rijeka and Pula on their most successful "Motori" tour. In 1986 they won the first place at guitar festival in Zaječar, which managed them to get the record deal with "PGP-RTB", major label from Belgrade. Soon the band entered "Top Ten studio" in Ljubljana, and their debut LP Čekam na noć was released at the end of 1986 and presented the sound similar to Judas Priest or Saxon. After releasing their debut LP, the band toured all over the ex-Yugoslavia. They also played on cult Heavy Metal Festival in Sarajevo, which gathered the most prominent ex-YU metal bands of 80s such as Bombarder, Legija, Heller, Pergament etc. Other gigs also included appearances on Radio 202 from Belgrade "Hit meseca"concerts and as well gigs at Ri-Rock festival in their hometown. Guitarist Miro Klarić also played in cult underground punk band Grč from Rijeka in times when Dr Steel was in hiatus. In 1991 Dr Steel recorded their second album Učini nešto in Radio Pula studio. The album was planned to be released by label "Sarajevo Disk", but due to financial problems, economical crisis and political situation in former Yugoslavia which went really bad and followed with war very soon - that unfortunately never happened and Dr Steel just disappeared from the scene. That second album was never officially released, only some bootleg tapes were in circulation. However, master recordings were saved, and in 2001., ten years after recording, Serbian label One Records officially released that Dr Steel's material on CD called Učini nešto / Heaven or Hell. The first album, Čekam na noć, was re-mastered and re-released by One Records at the end of 2013. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.