REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: May 7, 2024

VICIOUS RUMORS – Digital Dictator

Having been existed since ’79, it wasn’t until ’85 that Vicious Rumors recorded their first album. This chunk of awesome was album number two for the band and came out in ’88 through good old Shrapnel, who at the time released all the ripping guitar metal music. I actually thought the band would break out of smallsville onto to a bigger stage, but sadly that did not happen. That double guitar onslaught of Geoff Thorpe and Mark McGee and the soaring vocals of Carl Albert should have been a home run.

This record was voted album of the year in a lot of metal magazines and they were hailed as the new power metal kings. They have been continuously releasing albums and are still going today, they just sort of slowly slipped down the ladder. Nevertheless, this is still one hell of a record with some epic guitar solos, crushing riffs, and high octane vocals.

Favourite tracks? Well, the title track is a bonafide speed metal classic, and the full on gallop of Worlds And Machines is top notch, but I’m going for the more classic sounding Towns On fire for top track. It has killer solos and a hook and chorus that is infectious.

If you’re a guitar freak then you really need this one. Great band and a great album.

9/10 from The Grooveman.

GREAT WHITE – S/T

Now, just to confuse people, this album has multiple covers. There is a plain black cover with the logo in white, and there is this one, with the band pictured in an alley. This was the only album Great White did for EMI, as they wear dropped after this.

I’m obviously in the minority as I like the heavier sound and vibe on this record compared to the blues groove they have got going later. Now, this has a decent Michael Wagener production with a very crisp sound and great separation, unlike some he has done. Out Of The Night has to be one of the heaviest tunes the band have done and it gets a big thumbs up from me, it’s my favourite tune. Killer tune!

Their version of The Who’s Substitute is pretty rockin; and the intro is soooo metal. The big production number of the album is Streetkiller, which has a Zeppelin-style intro before locking down into a solid riff heavy groove. The track Hold On got quite a bit of attention and airplay, being more commercial, and is the direction the band would choose to follow with subsequent releases.

Thoroughly enjoyable record.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.