REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: June 29, 2022

GIUFFRIA – Silk & Steel

This the band’s second album, released in ’86. By the time they got around to recording this album, original guitarist Craig Goldy had jumped ship to join Dio, and he was replaced by Lanny Cordola. Of course by now Journey’s Escape was mega huge everywhere, and all the record companies were after their own version, and in David Glen Eisley they sure had a power house vocalist who could sing the ass off anything; especially the ballads.

Check out Love You Forever, this could have been on any Journey album. For some reason the format of putting all your best tracks on the first side is reversed for this album, as all the best tracks are on Side 2; which is quite apt as it is called Side Steel. Side 1 is overloaded with ballads and slower AOR style tunes, except for opener No Escape which rocks hard with a killer solo. Side 2 kicks in with Radio, and a fat riff opens things up instead of the usual keyboard intro. Lethal Lover is the standout track on the album, with some great guitar histrionics in the intro, as well as a huge hook and chorus. The very Def Leppard sounding Dirty Secrets closes out the album with a bang. There were demos made for a third album but they were dropped by MCA, and a lot of these demos would end up on the first House Of Lords album.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

STEELY DAN – Can’t Buy A Thrill

This was their first album released way back in ’72, and since then I believe they have sold in excess of 40 million albums over all formats. I mean, you have to be doing something right with figures like that. The format is pretty simple; write what we want to write and get the best session guys around to record it.

They sort of hit the ground running with the singles Do It Again (which opens the album and was a smash) and the sublime Reeling In The Years, with its ear-worm hook and chorus, and a great solo from Elliot Randall. As would be their trademark in all later albums, this record is super slick, well written, and perfectly recorded. As well as the already mentioned Reeling In The Years, which is such a great a tune, my other favourite is Fire In The Hole with Donald’s great piano playing – and I love his word play in his lyrics. They just don’t make albums like this anymore and the seventies brought out some brilliantly recorded albums, of which all Steely Dan output from this period are in there.

8/10 from The Grooveman.