REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: November 30, 2021

DIANNO – s/t

We are all aware of Dianno’s past with Maiden and his numerous solo outings. which are most definitely on the heavy side of town, but I’m not sure everyone is aware of this attempt at doing a melodic rock album in a very American Journey style. Well, this is it, and straight from the off, with the keyboard intro to opening track, Flaming Heart, you know this is no heavy metal album.

It’s not a bad album, but his voice does not suit this type of music. To hear him sing on a very Styx style track like Here To Stay is very odd indeed, especially when he puts in the whoah woahs in true Maiden style. Tales Of The Unexpected is the big number on the album but it falls short, as do most of the song really. That is the main problem here, the material is just average – not bad – just average.

I’ve never heard of any of the band as I guess they were just hired in for this project. The only people who would be interested in this are Maiden completists.

6/10 from The Grooveman.

FEAR FACTORY – Demanufacture

As far as extreme/industrial metal goes, this album is classed as royalty in that genre. Their second album in, and it’s an absolute classic of the genre. It’s tough to follow that, and they have had a very turbulent time with line ups to emphasize that point. Fear Factory are all about the groove and riff, no guitar solos or any of that nonsense here. The recipe is machine gun double bass mixed with fat chugga riffs. At times brutal in its execution, but very effective, as the head most definitely wants to bang.

Self Bias Resistor is what this band are all about, supremely heavy and unrelenting, yet very groovy at the same time. This is a great reissue and sounds killer with the extra bonus disc live at Ozzfest in ’96. Side 2 of this set is my favourite side. The awesome chugga of Replica kicks things off with a rather melodic but heavy chord pattern, and Burton C Bell sings his best Tommy Victor impression. Quickly followed by the joint best track on the album with New Breed. This is just freaking awesome with the unreal pounding grooves and the most fattest and evil of guitar tones. Dog Day Sunrise on the other hand is the most melodic that this band gets, mixing indie tones with metal grooves and Burt singing clean vocals. Quite possibly the bands finest hour.

If you are into this genre then you should already own this beast, but if not, get on down to your local music emporium and acquire a copy.

10/10 from The Grooveman.