REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Month: June 2022 (Page 13 of 14)

SAXON – Denim And Leather

This is the third of Saxon’s golden period releases. I remember being a tad disappointed at the time mainly due to the title track, which I thought was pandering to the masses somewhat.

The album opens with prime Saxon with Princess Of The Night. An ode to Biff’s love of steam trains and this is what they did the best. A great riff coupled with a very memorable hook and chorus, and a superb groove. Never Surrender follows, a superb simple riff with a few nice key changes, and that huge hands-in-the-air sing-a-long chorus. They manage to combine early Whitesnake with their own sound with Play It Loud, where the lead riff is very Bernie Marsden. The best single on the album is And The Bands Played On, which is a tribute to the first Donnington and what an awesome day that was. Fire In The Sky is my favourite tune on the album. A great fast paced rocker with plenty of guitar histrionics. I still feel as though it’s the weakest of the four, that’s not to say it’s a bad album, it’s not, it’s just that the other three are so good.

9/10 from The Grooveman.

RICK SPRINGFIELD – Tao

Everyone is familiar with the housewives’ favourite Jesse’s Girl, that made Mr Springfield a star. This album is quite removed from that sound, a very eighties album that embraces the technology of the day to create imho a pop/rock masterpiece.

The first two tracks Dance This World Away and Celebrate Youth are great opening tracks, with a very high tempo groove and beat with very catchy hooks and melodies. The lead off single however is a return to the tried and trusted ballad format with State Of The Heart. There is no doubt that the guy can write a hit song. He wrote everything apart from the opening track by himself, and if you get some killer musicians to play the tunes you write then it’s winner winner chicken dinner. I’m sure your familiar by now that ballads aren’t my go-to format, so it’s the rockin’ tunes that appeal the most so, Dance This World Away and Stranger In The House are my favourites on the album.  

Rick is still making music and I think he is on to album # 5000 or something. Very prolific.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

RAVEN – All For One

Where would metal be without the NWOBHM? Interesting question that I have had many a discussion about. Raven are one of the bands that seem to get missed off the influenced list, and I’m sure their brand of athletic power metal was an influence to some American bands for sure. They were a whole bunch of fun Live and never took themselves too seriously that’s for sure. Maybe that was one of the reasons they never made it in the big leagues.

This is the third album and the last before on an independent. Their best album will forever be Rock Until You Drop. I don’t think they will ever beat that, and who can forget Tyrant Of The Airwaves? My favourite tracks on this album are Hung Drawn And Quartered, and Seek And Destroy – they are the two tunes that could sit happily on the first album with huge amounts of energy and head banging grooves that put a big smile on my face. The rest of the album is standard NWOBHM stompers to keep the diehards happy.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

JETHRO TULL – Stand Up

I’m sure most rock fans have at least one Jethro Tull album in their collection, and it’s usually Aqualung. This album was released in ’69 and was two albums before Aqualung.

It’s very much a blues based album, and opening track A New Day Yesterday has been covered by a few people – most notably Joe Bonamassa. It’s amazing how the introduction of one instrument (namely the flute in this case) can transform the band’s sound. The vibe automatically takes on a folky tone almost instantly with tracks like Jeffrey Goes To Leicester Square, and Bouree – they could almost be by a different band.

Back To The Family is a more familiar sounding piece that they would expand on more with Aqualung. Fat Man is the most interesting track on the album, with the use of acoustic instruments and an eastern sound mixed with folk rhythms – they are pushing boundaries. There is no other band that sound like Jethro Tull, they have an instantly recognizable sound and makes them unique. This is the 2016 Steven Wilson remix and sounds amazing.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

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