REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: August 16, 2021

PRIMAL FEAR – 16.6 (Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead)

Now for me, the whole Euro Metal scene has become very stagnant. Every band sounds the same, and it’s hard to tell the bands apart, but these guys are a step above. Early on in Primal Fear’s career, they were labelled as the German Judas Priest, which is quite ironic, as Ralf Scheepers auditioned for the singer in Judas Priest when Halford split with the band. Scheepers was in Gamma Ray, and he teamed up with Matt Sinner (from the band Sinner), to form Primal Fear.

This is the band’s eighth studio album, and produced by the band and Matt Sinner. In fact, the production on this album is the best I have heard them sound. Six Times Dead sounds absolutely huge. The guitar sound is vast and deep, and the vocal is epic. There are so many good moments on this album, so I will just highlight a few. 5.0/Torn has a killer riff and groove, and Scheepers’ vocals just flow over the track. The very heavy sounding, Soar, is killer with the electronic start. Night After Night is more JP than JP themselves, and I still find it incredible that Priest never hired Ralph. The Exorcist is pure pounding metal and has a huge guitar sound. Even the bonus track, Scream, is a killer tune.

Primal Fear don’t make bad records and this is no exception.

9/10 from The Grooveman.

RADIOHEAD – Ok Computer OKNOTOK 1997-2017

As of now, this album is coming up to its 25th anniversary. This version is the all singing, all dancing version from 2017. This was the band’s third full length album, and is now considered one of the best albums in popular music. Even though the guitar is obvious throughout this record, this was a departure from the previous album (The Bends), which was totally guitar centric. The main theme that flows through the record is dealing with alienation brought on by consumerism.

There were four singles released from the album: the brilliant Paranoid Android, Karma Police, Lucky and No Surprises. I have this on CD also and I find it a hard listen, but the record is a lot better – I find 20 minute chunks a lot easier to absorb. This album has more in common with Prog than Pop, as the arrangements lean more in that direction, and old Pink Floyd comes to mind on a lot of the tracks. Tom Yorke’s vocals and delivery are the driving force of the band, and again, the music is quite basic – it’s how it’s layered together that makes it unique. The production and mix on this version is incredible, and if I were to recommend any version – it would be this. As I have already mentioned, it’s a tough album to get through in one sitting, but if you manage it it’s very rewarding.

9/10 from The Grooveman.