REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: March 17, 2021

PERIPHERY – II This Time Its Personal

Ah, the difficult second album…that won’t be applicable gere. This album is monster huge and an absolute killer album. Call it Djent, Math Metal, Prog Metal -hell, you can even call it a jam sandwich if it’s this good. There is so much going on within the confines of one song, that it would give any normal metal band enough material for their entire careers.

The main difference between this and the first album is the introduction of new members Adam’ Nolly’ Getgood on bass, and Mark Holcomb on guitar. Also the production has gone up a notch. For a very nice change the vinyl has two extra tracks compared to the CD release. Spence’s vocals have also come on leaps and bounds on this release, he goes from beautiful cleans to the most gut wrenching growls in one note. Check out the track Have A Blast to emphasize this point, and Guthrie Govan lends an unreal solo to the tune.

I’m not going to do a track by track as the album is 10/10 material. I will just pick out the super epic moments. Facepalm Mute should be called Facepalm Melt – as that’s what it does – with an insane riff and unreal drumming from Matt Halpern. In the beast of an intro to Luck Is A Constant you ask yourself how the hell do they pull that off?! I ask myself quite a lot throughout this album. Also how the heck does Matt Halpern play that complicated stuff on a kit so tiny?! Ragnarock… I have no words. Make Total Destroy is just insane! There is so much happening and yet you can make it all out. Erased is just a beautiful piece and shows how great Spence is as a vocalist. Just to emphasize that they are fully paid up members of the djenty club, Mile Zero has it a plenty. The first bonus track, Far Out, is an awesome instrumental that is a guitar workout, and the second, The Hectic Anthem, is a great cover of a Slipknot tune.

I love this band, and I love this album so it’s a 10/10 from The Grooveman.

ACE FREHLEY – Frehley’s Comet

Ace is back and he told you so. Quite an apt lyric as this was Ace’s first attempt at going solo after his removal from Kiss. His battles with exotic substances have been well documented, especially by his former band mates who would use this as an excuse not to bring him back in to Kiss.

When you compare this album to what Kiss were doing at the same time – this holds up really well – and I would say it’s better. At least Ace is being honest with who writes the tunes – unlike his ex employers who would buy songs from outside writers and then put them down as Simmons/Stanley compositions. So the anthem that is Rock Soldiers get us underway, with it’s spoken lyrics by Ace – its very Kiss sounding. Breakout is next and is a great song and a nice track to follow on. The next song shows how weak Ace’s voice is, and it’s not that good of a tune if I’m honest – even though Ace plays a nice solo. Something Moved follows and is a better tune, and a typical hair rock track of the day – written and sang by Tod Howarth who would later join Dave Lee Roth’s band. Side closer, We Got Your Rock, is a typical 80’s stomper sing-a-long tune.

Over to side 2 we go and Love Me Right gets things underway with it’s semi funky riff and an Ace vocal. Calling To You starts off with a riff you have heard a million times before, and could have been any band of the time, but it’s an ok tune. Dolls is a quirky tune about Ace’s love of dolls. He doesn’t specify which type, but you get the drift. Stranger In A Strange Land is the penultimate track and is another typical stomper track. The final track is the instrumental, Fractured Too, not a bad tune – it just doesn’t do a whole lot and doesn’t go anywhere.

As I said earlier, it’s comparable with what Kiss were churning out, and in places it is really good. It sort of sums up Ace really.

7.5/10 from The Grooveman.