REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: February 18, 2025

IRON MAIDEN – Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son

Surprise surprise, if you hadn’t guessed already, this is album number 7 for Arry’s Army. Is this Maiden’s entry into the progsphere? We have lots of extended tunes (what’s new there then), synths, and a much softer production, so sure sounds like it to me.

This is a million miles away from that raw Dianno fronted band that I loved so much, and you have to really dig deep to find anything like that here. You get a super radio friendly single in Can I Play With Madness, which I tolerate. The opener Moonchild is not too shabby once you put those awful sounding synths in a dark place in your mind, but the only song here that has that old Maiden feel is The Clairvoyant which gets my vote as favourite tune.

I know they are know for their “gallops” but there are too many on this one, and this album cries out for something heavy and different. As you can tell, it’s not my favuorite Maiden album but it’s a solid effort nonetheless.

7/10 from The Grooveman.

HARLOW – S/T

Another one and only. This time, it’s a very slick sounding arena rock band from LA. Harlow features one Tommy Thayer on geetar, Todd Jenson (who was in Hardline), Pat Regan (who was a member of the killer Eyes project with JSS), and is fronted by powerhouse female vocalist, Teresa Stanley (who wrote every song).

You should always open the album with a banger, and that’s what you get here with Chain Reaction. Superb song with a great riff and a massive hook and chorus. Silence is a very moody and brooding track with a killer vocal. Don’t Say We’re Over is a full on ballad with a superb production. In fact, the whole album sounds huge and clear.

Empty ups the tempo somewhat with a four to the floor groove, a kickin’ riff, and a big hook and chorus – this just pips it for my favourite track. When You Love Someone is a slick 80’s groove with a hint of old Zeppelin. Side 2 kicks off with Cry Murder and it’s an okay rocker with that “I’ve heard it a million times before” vibe.

We have a cool acoustic groove to the opening of No Escape, which builds and builds to a cool Americana vibe. Beyond Control has a very similar feel with those Zeppelin vibes reappearing. Pictures could be a mirror image of the previous song because that vibe continues throughout Side 2. The album closes out with Edge Of Love and we go out with a whimper.

Side 1 rules and Side 2 struggles to keep the vibe going somewhat, but it’s still a really good record.

8/10 from The Grooveman.