When I first heard the acclaimed British Steel, my initial perceptions of the album were lukewarm. It didn't feel like a metal album to me - after all, I was acclimatized to the heavier, harsher thrash metal sounds of bands such as Metallica and Megadeth. But since then it has grown on me significantly as the classic album that it righfully is. Now, when I listen to the album I'm reviewing here, Screaming for Vengeance, I'm thinking to myself, "this is perhaps a more mainstream archetype of heavy metal music, this is certainly my impression of heavy metal as it was when I was a kid. And it's friggin' good too!" This album is why I love the band. That, and 1990's Painkiller. Halford's piercing scream, coupled with Glenn Tipton and K.K. Downing's ripping guitar work, creates a unique and sensational sound that quite rightly deserves its perception as a de facto poster boy of sorts for the heavy metal subgenre. A great opening with the prelude "The Hellion", which in turn leads on into the powerful and electrifying "The Electric Eye." "Screaming for Vengeance" rips your ears a new one with its speed metal rage attack, and let us not forget the classic "You've Got Another Thing Comin.'" If you're into classic heavy metal and don't know that song, you're in trouble. "Riding On The Wind" and "Fever" are likewise worth listening to as well and shouldn't be skipped under any circumstances. One of Judas Priest's best albums by a country mile. A-
Music reviews by some short sanity-challenged yobbo from the land of elves, hobbits and animal husbandry - New Zealand.
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Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Album Review: The Ramones - Leave Home (1977)
I LOVE The Ramones. Not because of any perceived technical proficiency (their songs were delightfully basic and straightforward) but because if the first four albums are anything to go by, they're a band who sounded like they were about good clean fun, conjuring up songs without an overload of excessive piety and fuss. Simple rock and roll was their game, and it worked out brilliantly to boot. Great material through and through. I've already reviewed their eponymous debut album, as well as Rocket to Russia, and now I'm reviewing their second album, Leave Home. Released in the same year as Rocket to Russia, it's not as good, but nonetheless still a very good album and definitely worth buying and listening to. Filled with classics such as their excellent cover of "California Sun", the assertively brilliant "Glad to See You Go"as well as the deliciously somber "Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment." "I Remember You" sounds like a Blondie song, and I love that. "Oh Oh I Love Her So" is appropriately named, because it's one of the best on the album. It's punk rock in its element. A great album all around. Now, go out and get it. A-
Friday, December 16, 2016
Album Review: Bryan Ferry - Avonmore (2014)
Bryan Ferry almost seems to get better with age. Boys and Girls from 1985, for instance, is overall an average album, but it does contain in my opinion the greatest love song ever written, "Slave to Love." 1993's Taxi was a surprise - it's common for long established artists to wane musically as time moves on. But Bryan Ferry never stagnates - he matures. Olympia again reinforced this, and once more, having listened to Avonmore, the album which I am writing about here, I am more convinced of this than ever. And whilst Olympia was perhaps a spiritual successor to Roxy Music's Avalon in many ways, this new album is not a spiritual successor to any other album as such, but a contemporary rendition of Ferry at his best. Much better than Boys and Girls, but it is nonetheless rich in that musical finesse that makes "Slave to Love" the ultimate love song that it was, and of course, still is. Starting off great with "Loop de Li" and "Midnight Train", it slips a bit on "Soldier of Fortune", but picks up again from then on. "Lost", "One Night Stand" and "Johnny & Mary" are my favorites for the second half of the album. I can only hope Bryan maintains the momentum and keeps knocking out brilliant albums like this for many more years to come. A
Album Review: The Commodores - Machine Gun (1974)
Most of my favorite instrumentals are of the heavy metal variety - Metallica, I'm looking at you in particular. But there is one non-metal instrumental that I regard very, very favorably. In fact, it's so good it's the title of an album! Here's a hint - it's a type of automatic firearm. Some of you may have already guessed by now - yep, Machine Gun by The Commodores. Bar two successive slips, the album is brilliant. First half is back-to-back epic funk numbers - "Machine Gun", the title track, never fails to satisfy, nor does it's "sister" instrumental, "Rapid Fire." I'm loving both of them. The nowadays questionably titled, "Young Girls are My Weakness" is a great second number, followed by "I Feel Satisfied" and "The Bump", all good solid funk numbers that all up make up the excellent side one of the album. Side two gets off to a less impressive, if not slightly disappointing start with "Assembly Line" and "The Zoo (The Human Zoo)." But this is quickly rectified by the much better, "Gonna Blow Your Mind", "There's a Song in My Heart" and to end it all in spectacular fashion, the epic, "Superman." A great debut not just by The Commodores, but by any band, really. In fact, I haven't been this impressed by a debut album since Cyndi Lauper's She's So Unusual. And just like Lionel's 80s hit, this album could've had me 'dancing on the ceiling.' For me at least, this record is definitely a keeper. A-
Album Review: Bee Gees - Spirits Having Flown (1979)
Having been surprised a second time around by the acclaimed Main Course, I decided to have a crack at another "great" Gibb Brothers album - 1979's Spirits Having Flown. Not too bad an album, greatest hits "Tragedy", "Too Much Heaven" and "Love You Inside Out" all guarantee some form of listening pleasure to varying degrees. Too soft and dulcet in some parts for my personal preference, there are nonetheless some noteworthy numbers to consider here. "Search, Find" is good and "Living Together" resonates fairly well as well. But I'm not sure where I stand on "Reaching Out" - it's a bit of a mixed bag there. The final track on the album, "Until" gets the stop button treatment almost immediately. All up, it's not a bad album, but it pales in comparison to the surprisingly good Main Course. You should own this album if you're crazy for the Bee Gees, but for those of us who can appreciate the brother's remarkable pop songwriting ability, but not to the extent of outright fandom, this album is worth a miss. B
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Album Review: Mr. Mister - Welcome to the Real World (1985)
Think of Mr. Mister and the song "Broken Wings" is likely to spring to mind. Or perhaps "Kyrie." Good songs you say? The latter certainly is, and should be on every quintessential 80s playlist. The former, "Broken Wings", I feel, is somewhat overrated and its inclusion on such playlists is more or less obligatory in terms of historical importance and nothing more. "Kyrie" is a proper power ballad and is by far the best song I have heard from them. Well, right now I'm reviewing the album from which both songs originate. Welcome to the New World is not a good album, but it's not awful either. It barely scrapes into 'OK' territory, and its only saving graces are the two aforementioned songs, especially "Kyrie" which is the only real highlight of the album and which is more or less keeping my rating of the record afloat. Granted there are some interesting songs outside of the hits on this album, such as "Uniform of Youth" and "Into My Own Hands", but unfortunately, they're not quite interesting enough to thrill or excite you. Distinctively eighties in sound of course, but all up it fails to capture that upbeat, emotionally stirring sensation that pop and rock music of that era often invokes. Not so much a letdown, but there are much, much better albums from the eighties to be savored than this one. I for one will stick with "Kyrie." For the rest of the album, "Meh" is the word here. C+
Monday, December 5, 2016
Album Review: Willie Nelson - The Troublemaker (1976)
I never envisioned Willie Nelson singing gospel - I thought that kind of thing was Johnny Cash's forte, given his theological convictions and his (perhaps) more cover-happy proclivities. Johnny almost always did gospel well, in fact, he usually did covers well as a whole. Bob Dylan's crack at gospel wasn't too bad, either. To start with, anyway. But I was definitely surprised to hear Willie do it, and do it remarkably well to boot. The Troublemaker from 1976 is astonishingly good, with plenty of faster tempos to see me through to the end of the album, as well as some more tempered and carefully crafted ballads to fill in the gaps. But they're not 'fillers' in the derogatory sense of the term. Whilst my preference is for a faster song, I find myself happily indulging in songs like, "In the Garden." But of course my favorites here are of that "On the Road Again" upbeat tempo variety - "Uncloudy Day", "When The Road is Called Up Yonder", "Will the Circle be Unbroken" and the best song here, "Shall We Gather", I song I know best from John Ford western films such as The Searchers and My Darling Clementine. This record exemplifies Willie at his best, and yet at the same time, out of his element. And the end result is nothing short of brilliant! A-
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Album Review: Paul Simon - Graceland (1986)
This particular album seems to be one of those records that everybody who knows a thing or ten about popular music will tell you is the cat's ass. Well, almost everybody. I'm sure somebody out there think it's vile, overrated, or uninspiring. I for one ain't one of those people. I'm one of the multitude of music lovers who think it's the cat's ass. It really is, regardless of how seemingly cliche and predictable it has become to be giving it any sort of appraisal. Having appreciated to varying degrees the dulcet acoustic folk-isms of Simon & Garfunkel, I'm not surprised that this album is as good as it is. Very very good, in fact. Paul Simon is without a doubt a musical genius and a creative force to be reckoned with, and nor does he need Art Garfunkel to show people he could pen songs as gracefully and as thoughtful as the likes of Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan. But Art Garfunkel made Simon & Garfunkel just as Simon did, and I'm grateful for both. But with Graceland, I'm likewise glad he went out on his own as well. Making what was then a controversial decision to travel to South Africa to record the album, the end result was an amicable consolidation of indigenous South African genres as well as the staple rock and pop varieties of the eighties. Audacious and radical, Graceland is unexpected in its brilliance, and predictable in the competence and greatness of its authors. "Boy In The Bubble", "Graceland", "Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes", "Crazy Love, Vol. II", "Under African Skies" and "Homeless" are what you should be playing first. If you don't own a copy of this album, buy it. But at least put listening to it on your bucket list. A+
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Album Review: Whitesnake - Whitesnake/1987 (1987)
It's amazing how one's perceptions of certain albums can potentially change over the years. Of course, there will always be albums that will never get better. But on occasion, revisiting what you once considered a dud can come back and bite you in the ass. When I first heard Whitesnake's eponymous album from 1987 (in some markets, this album is known as 1987) there were the two power ballads, "Here I Go Again" and "Is This Love", which I loved and still love, and then there was the rest of the album, which at the time I thought, "meh, not my thing." But in a rare change of heart, in hindsight I was mistaken. Listening to it again I'm thinking, "this is actually a bloody good album." Its classic hard rock/heavy metal sensibilities have quickly grown on me considerably since the last 10-12 years or so since I last heard the album. If you loved the two aforementioned power ballads, and you usually don't listen to hard rock or heavy metal, then this album is definitely not for you. Some of the other songs have of course grown on me - "Give Me All Your Love", "You're Gonna Break My Heart Again", "Bad Boys", and "Straight For The Heart" are great examples to start with. I'm really glad I chose to review this album. And I am definitely regretting my initial perceptions of this great album. But that was 10-12 years ago, of course. A-
Friday, November 18, 2016
Album Review: Metallica - Hardwired...to Self Destruct (2016)
What a fantastic return to form Metallica's new album is. This is easily the best studio album they've done since 1991's Metallica album. And James' voice is in the best shape that it's been since Garage, Inc. That is saying something. Their previous album, Death Magnetic, was undoubtedly a marked improvement over the forgettable St. Anger. But despite the massive improvements, there were still problems with it. Hardwired...to Self Destruct is phenomenally good. It has done well in ironing out the minor shortcomings of its predecessor. It's phenomenally long as well, and that may prove to be an issue for some. But here, every song, and I mean EVERY song has something great about it. Indeed, the hardest part about listening to this album is picking the best songs. The standard edition of the album contains a total of twelve songs, with an additional 14 on the additional deluxe edition disc, including a improved version of the previously released "Lords of Summer." "Spit Out the Bone" is my personal favorite here, followed by "Hardwired", "Dream No More", "Atlas Rising" and "Confusion." But I love the rest of the album as well. If you love Metallica, buy it! Now! It's good enough to make the perpetually flaccid positively tumescent. And in the immortal words of Master Yoda, "phenomenally good, this album is!" A
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Album Review: ZZ Top - El Loco (1981)
I loved 1983's Eliminator and 1985's Afterburner. 1990's Recycler is pretty damn good too. And 1992's Greatest Hits has some interesting (but still inferior) remixed versions of the likes of "Legs" and "La Grange." Some of their 1990s and 2000s stuff is good too. But going back a bit before Eliminator really had the band breaking out onto the scene in the 1980s and you'll stumble across 1981's El Loco. Eccentric, but not dull, and even better on a second play through, you'll instantly recognize it as the precursor to their 1983 classic - it's here where the synths creep in. And whilst my initial assessment ranked only side one as being brilliant, the second playthrough confirms my mistake. Side two isn't as good as side one, but it's good enough to warrant neglecting the skip buttons. Two classic tracks are here "Tube Snake Boogie" and "Pearl Necklace." In addition to these, "I Wanna Drive You Home", "Ten Foot Pole", "Party on the Patio" and "Don't Tease Me" are the one's that float my boat the most. "Groovy Little Hippie Pad" is definitely worth checking out too. El Loco? More like Brilliante! A-
Sunday, November 13, 2016
Album Review: White Zombie - Astrocreep: 2000 Songs of Love, Destruction and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head (1995)
For a guy who once owned a Rob Zombie shirt, and is an unabashed fan of his music, I should be listening to a lot more of it these days than what I do now. I must come clean in saying that I haven't been listening to his stuff for a long, long time now, and frankly that just won't do. After watching Beavis & Butt-head Do America last night, I decided that I have been living under a rock. Living under a rock and listening to everything BUT Rob Zombie or White Zombie. Or anything else regarding industrial metal (that reminds me, I MUST write a review of Sehnsucht by Rammstein!) for that matter. Well, I've made amends by checking out Astrocreep: 2000 Songs of Love, Destruction and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head from 1995. I haven't heard the album in its entirety before, but having recently done so, I am going to say that it is pretty much everything I've come to expect from White Zombie. Realizing that there is more to the band than songs such as "More Human Than Human" and "Super Charger Heaven", I'm soon reveling in "Electric Head, Part 1 (The Agony" and "Electric Head, Part 2 (The Ecstasy). And I'm quite attached to "Real Solution #9" and "Grease Paint and Monkey Brains" too. "Blur The Technicolor" and "Blood, Milk and Sky" I tend to play the least. Discovering new music is always a joy, but rediscovering something you once loved and forgot is just as satisfying too. And for some reason, I can't help but think of Frank Zappa when I listen to it again. A-
Album Review: Heart - Heart (1985)
I'm so pleased I went out of my way today to listen to Heart's eponymous album from 1985. After taking the liberty of skimming over the review ratings for the album on its Wikipedia page, and of course having listened to the album from start to finish, I've concluded that this album is much better than what some people have said about it. From my perspective at least, the band's stuff from the 1970s (i.e. "Barracuda") is good, but not as good as their 1980s material, and this record is at the very pinnacle of what I consider to be their 80s prime. "These Dreams" is the number one pick on this album, and it's usually the first track I listen to on their Essential Heart album. "What About Love?" "Never", "If Looks Could Kill" and "Nothin' At All" are also on the Essential Heart compilation, although "Never" and "Nothin' At All" have been remixed somewhat, and for the better. But the original versions here can't be discounted either. My favorite track outside of "These Dreams" is "All Eyes", and it gets better every time I play it. Screw what other reviews say about this album, I like it, and I like it a lot, to my surprise. And when it comes to music, I love surprises. A-
Monday, November 7, 2016
Album Review: Queen - A Night At The Opera (1975)
I've been itching to review a Queen album for a while now, and I've always cherished the three Greatest Hits albums that they've released since 1992. And now, I've finally got around to listening to what is supposed to be one of their better albums, A Night At The Opera from 1975. And I have to say that I'm a tad disappointed with it. There are some noteworthy and interesting songs on it, such as "Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon", "'39", staples such as "You're My Best Friend" and obviously "Bohemian Rhapsody." But on the whole it feels tedious and drawn out, which for me reproduces the feeling of being at an Opera very well (hence the title), and perhaps I should've known better by the title. But of course, this album is not trying to sound like "Keep Yourself Alive" or "Stone Cold Crazy", and slow tempos aren't my forte. But why "I'm in Love With my Car" reminds me of Pink Floyd I will never fully understand. I myself would steer well clear of "The Prophet Song" and "Love of my Life" - too tedious for my liking. I do find myself going back to the wonderful Brian May-led "'39" and "Seaside Rendezvous", though. That's the Queen I know and like. B
Album Review: Yngwie Malmsteen - Eclipse (1990)
Given heavy metal's image amongst much of the mainstream populace as being unsophisticated, uncouth neanderthal drivel, many will be surprised, if not shocked, to learn of the existence of a particular sub-genre called neoclassical metal. Among various circles, the very notion of a metal-classical music synthesis seems absurd, if not unheard of. And that would be understandable. But it is important to note that heavy metal is a diverse, technical and complicated style of music worthy of appraisal far beyond socially mediated, (and very unfair) preconceptions of metal fans as being trashy knuckleheads. People need to give it a chance - hell, as a traditionally synth-pop, new-wave loving 80s kids, I did. And I have absolutely no regrets whatsoever. Swedish faster-than-light guitar guru Yngwie Malmsteen demonstrates aptly just how classical music and heavy metal aren't necessary diametrically opposed to the point of complete incompatibility. Take his 1990 album Eclipse - not the best metal album I've heard, but I love uber-fast shredding, and this record has it in spades. The solos are a bit lengthy and drag on for a bit, but nonetheless they are impressive in their speed and precision and of course, their classical homages. And coupled with a competent vocalist, Malmsteen successfully transforms mainstream heavy metal into a more focused art form. "Making Love", "Judas" and "Eclipse" are great starting points, and everyone who has owned his "best of" albums will know them. But my shredding favorite on this album is 'Demon Driver." And don't forget to give "Motherless Child" a go as well. Not bad, I must say. Not bad at all. B
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Album Review: Meat Loaf - Bat Out of Hell (1977)
Gee, they weren't kidding when they said Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell was a great classic album. And likewise, it's little wonder it has sold like hot cakes. Plenty of hit songs on this album - "Bat Out of Hell", "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad", "Paradise By the Dashboard Light", "You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth (Hot Summer Night)" are all well known, but throw in "All Revved Up With No Place to Go" and "For Crying Out Loud" and you've got a brilliant, sometimes maligned, but nonetheless praiseworthy record whose sales figures are frankly well justified. Meat Loaf and Jim Steinman together made some cracking music, as its 1993 successor Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell will also testify to. I personally prefer the heavy metal-esque/hard rock oompf factor of B.O.O.H. II, but in truth this breakthrough album is no less pleasant on the ears. Nothing to complain about here! A
Album Review: ABBA - Gold: Greatest Hits (1992)
"Greatest Hits" and "Best Of" compilations are by default good, or very good, albums. Very rarely, however, are they teetering on the edge of flawlessness. Sometimes, they're all you need from a band or artist, either because they contain every good song on offer, or they contain all of the essential hits. The phenomenally successful Gold: Greatest Hits by ABBA is of the former. Well, sort of. "Fernando" I don't like and have never liked, and thus would rather see the likes of "Super Trouper" or "Honey, Honey" on here instead. But everything else that is brilliant is on here, 17 classic gems from Bjorn, Benny, Agnetha and Anni-Frid ("Rock Me" isn't too hot either, in my opinion). Bookended by "Dancing Queen" and "Waterloo", and featuring every big hit from "Knowing Me, Knowing You" to "S.O.S", you'll never go wrong buying this record, what with 30 million or so albums being sold to date. In short, Bjorn and Benny are pop songwriting geniuses, and this record serves to verify that fact. A+
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Album Review: Rod Stewart - Tonight I'm Yours (1981)
Tonight I'm Yours, Rod Stewart's album from 1981 flies in the face of everything I've expected from Rod Stewart. Most songs of his that I know of (I'm no expert on his music, but I know enough to say that he makes great music) tend to be of a slower, more mellow tempo (with the exception of "Young Turks", which comes from this particular album), and despite my preference for a fast song, I'm highly amicable toward all of them. This album changes all of that (not my amiability, of course!), introducing a number of fast-paced tracks, three of which are "just the bee's knees", including the better known "Young Turks", which I rank as one of Rod's best. "Tonight, I'm Yours" is a fantastic little number, and "Tora, Tora, Tora" is just as quick too. All three of those songs together form a quintessential trinity that make for priority listening if you are looking for choice cuts to listen to first before actually delving into the rest of the album. And of course, not every song is a musical speedball. Some are actually cover versions - "How Long" by Paul Carrack and "Just Like a Woman" by Bob Dylan for example. To sum it up briefly, the album sounds motivated, and of course, good. Check it out some time. B+
Friday, October 14, 2016
Michael Jackson - Thriller (1982)
Michael Jackson danced like a one-legged sparrow having a fit on an electric fence. But that's a very good thing. Fast, spontaneous, improvized and electrifying, Jackson is one of history's greatest entertainers for a reason. And at the peak of his career, prior to the kiddy-fiddling accusations and his general decline into even deeper eccentricity and obscurity, he was the best in the business. The world hadn't seen a pop star like him. Even when his more eccentric proclivities became more and more public, in death he was remembered for the megastar he really was. And that's how he should be remembered, really. His breakthrough album, Thriller, sold countless millions of records and is still the best selling album in all history. I personally grew up on his Bad material, and I personally prefer that album myself to this one. But there's good songs here aplenty too, as you should expect from the best-selling album in history. "Billie Jean", "Beat It", "Thriller." Those are the staple classics here. But "Human Nature" and "Pretty Young Thing" are good enough to be played more than ten times as well. Not my favorite Jacko album, but still a very good album nonetheless. A-
Album Review: Black Sabbath - Paranoid (1970)
I love Black Sabbath more than I let on, even to myself. After all, they practically pioneered the heavy metal genre, and of course, without them Ozzy Osbourne wouldn't have the successful solo career that he has enjoyed, and certainly not the mainstream television celebrity status without them. They took blues music and made it considerably less blue and more angry and motivated. And of course, more enjoyable and palatable. Their second album from 1970, Paranoid, is without a doubt their magnum opus and contains some of their more iconic tracks, from "War Pigs" to the trippy "Planet Caravan", and of course, the famous, "Iron Man." "Paranoid" is the best known track from this record, but despite being a great song it certainly isn't the greatest. I would reserve that honor for either "War Pigs" or "Electric Funeral." And I love the novelty of such tracks such as "Iron Man" "Planet Caravan" and the drumming masterpiece, "Rat Salad." Everybody who loves heavy metal owes a debt of gratitude to this band, and to this album. I for one, am sure as hell grateful. A-
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