REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Month: March 2023 (Page 3 of 11)

BLACK STAR RIDERS – Wrong Side Of Paradise

So this is album number five for the band that morphed out of the ashes of a version of Thin Lizzy. If rumours are to be believed, then a version of Thin Lizzy maybe on the cards again.

Other than occasionally when Ricky does his best Phil Lynott impression, the music sounds not much like Lizzy at all, and instead you get eleven stripped back hard rockin’ tunes. The only time up I thought of Mr Lynott’s mob was Better Than Saturday Night, which reminded of early Lizzy. Rat Pack is probably my favourite tune on this album. I like that punk attitude coupled with an early seventies guitar groove. I usually like my rock with more blood, thunder, and riffs but I found Ricky’s tales of nostalgia and life quite entertaining.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

TANGIER – Four Winds

This is album number two from this Philly based rock band, and it was released back in ’89. This is another band I thought would have done a lot better than they did. Whether it was the four year gap between first and second albums who knows, but I will say they deserved to be a lot bigger as they sure know how to write killer tunes.

Opener Ripcord is kick ass. A superb swing to the groove, and the hook and melody are to die for. Mississippi follows and that slow, slight funk vibe is killer, plus the production by Andy Johns is superb, it brings out all the dynamics of the music. Definitely my favourite track. Love the guitar intro to On The Line. A more laid back vibe, but the hook and chorus are huge. Another slow intro to In Time before, a very simple but effective chord progression drives the song along. The hook and chorus have that Southern feel to them. Side 1 closes out with the title track Four Winds. Another track with the southern country vibe, mainly due to the slide in background.

Side 2 opens up with Fever For Gold and I’ve just twigged that Bill Mattson’s vocals remind me of Ricky Medlocke, another reason why those southern vibes are present. Southbound Train is a super slick aor melodic rocker with quite a slow main groove. The tempo is increased somewhat for Sweet Surrender, a four to the floor Friday night special. Bad Girl could be a Skynyrd tune as the vibe and feel are that close. The album closes out with Good Lovin’ a very classy melodic rocker with a great groove, and you’ll be humming the hook and chorus all day.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

EXODUS – Bonded By Blood

A band that gets overlooked somewhat when we are talking about the beginnings of thrash. Exodus should be included in the so-called “big four,” as other than Metallica’s Kill Em All, Bonded By Blood is the best early thrash album.

No let up right from the get go, it’s pedal firmly to the metal all the way. That twin guitar of Holt and Hunholt was the best, coupled with the crazed vocal style of Paul Baloff, who sadly is no longer with us, made Exodus special. Piranha, Strike Of The Beast, and my favourite A Lesson In Violence are insanely killer thrash epics.

Of course, Baloff was replaced by Zetro Souza after this album and I do love the records that came after, but this was a special album at a special place in time that will never be repeated.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

EMERSON LAKE PALMER – Brain Salad Surgery

The band the punks hated the most, as they saw them as all that was bad with the excesses of the music industry. And to a point, I have to agree with the whole stage show and the stabbing of the Hammond in Emerson’s solo was a tad ridiculous.

The first two pieces are interpretations of classical pieces with quite a patriotic version of Jerusalem and Toccata, which is cool if you like timpani solos. We have to wait until track 3 until we get to an original piece, a Greg Lake tune – Still You Turn Me On. This album is all about Karn Evil 9 though, which takes up the last track on Side 1 and the whole of Side 2. I think everyone is familiar with “Welcome my friends to the show that never ends” and other than Fanfare For The Common, this is their most well known piece. The whole of Side 2 is my favourite ELP moment.

Prog to jazz, and all points in between makes it very challenging indeed. Listening to it after such a long time it does sound quite dated, but I do have fond memories hearing it for the first time.

7/10 from The Grooveman.

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