REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: manowar

MANOWAR – Into Glory Ride

This is album number two of the first trilogy of Manowar albums that I don’t think they ever bettered. Sure, they may have made better produced records but for sheer vibe, image, and attitude I don’t think you can beat those first albums.

Laugh and snigger all you want (and believe me I have), they were steadfast in their belief, “We fight to the death. To the last man. To the last breath. Death To False Metal. into Glory Ride.” I mean c’mon that has to stir the metal disciples into action right?

I love Gloves Of Metal, at the time and I still now. Manowar weren’t about speed or any of that nonsense, they wrote anthems and Gloves Of Metal is surely one of their best. I love Ross The Boss’s simple and effective riff, and you just have to pump those fists in the air when Eric Adams screams “Hands High” and “Metal Spikes and Chains.” It was their theme song to the fans.

I sought of laugh at it all now, but they sure caused a stir at the time.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

MANOWAR – Hail To England

It’s everyone’s favourite metal band to hate. Death to false metal! Did they ever mention what false metal was?

This is my favourite Manowar album. I definitely remember seeing them on this tour and thoroughly enjoying the show. I started to loose interest after this as it all got a bit silly. I mean, if Conan The Barbarian was put to music then this album would be the soundtrack.

They are at their best and worst on this album. The best would be the opening track, and my favourite, Blood Of My Enemies. It’s a great track that sets the mood perfectly for the whole album. The worst would be Bridge Of Death, which despite the great title and subject matter is just amateur hour. Notable mention goes to Hail To England where the band pay tribute to their fans there. Basically, at the time no one else cared that much and how can one forget all the crowd singing Hail To England. Black wind indeed!

This is the one album where that whole medieval vibe actually worked. As you can probably tell I blow hot and cold with this album, but it’s still entertaining.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

MANOWAR – Kings Of Metal

Early on in their career, I could never quite decide whether they were real or just one big gimmick. Other than the demo album (that was not widely available), this is Manowar’s sixth studio album. Proudly displaying “Full Digital Recording” on the cover, it sounds pretty good on this original analog record. By this time, it was becoming more like a Joey DeMaio solo album, as all but two of the tracks were written by him alone – the others were joint efforts with Ross The Boss (who would leave the band after this album).

The album has a mix of grandiose over the top statements like Hearts Of Steel, The Crown And The King, and The Warriors Prayer, and straight melodic rockers like Kings Of Metal, and Hail And Kill. The band are telling us they are going to kick our asses, as Manowar kills and other bands just play. Of course this is all rabble rousing stuff and it’s what made them fun. I loved all the imagery as they looked like they sounded – pure warriors of metal. It’s still fun to listen to this some 34 years later, and I am transported back to a night in a phone box. Happy days!

9/10 from The Grooveman.

MANOWAR – Battle Hymns

“Death to false metal!” Anyone remember that mantra that the band used to peddle around at the time? They sure lived and breathed what they said, even though the music in the beginning was not that heavy and that metal if I’m honest…They hold the record for the world’s loudest band, which they have deemed “The Black Wind”. It’s really hard not to laugh out loud while I’m writing this, but the band were deadly serious about this way of life that they lived honouring the metal. When they toured Europe, they even openly encouraged women to be in their “harem” of sex slaves to tour with them. Ridiculous! Was it a PR stunt, or was it real?

Anyway, it’s the music what we are here for and opening track, Death Tone, is what the band were all about – both musically and lyrically. Pretty straightforward hard rock with a very metal singer. Metal Daze is next and it’s more of the same really. It’s worth pointing out that guitarist Ross The Boss came from the Dictators when they were a noise/punk hybrid band – they weren’t that metal at all. Fast Taker is quite an average tune. Last track on this Side, Shell Shock, is about war and the riff reminds me of one of Ross’s side project’s, the French band, Shaking Street – its an ok tune.

Side 2 starts off with the band’s theme song, Manowar, and it feels a bit Twisted Sister, which is quite ironic as they hated each other. Who remembers Dee Snider calling out Manowar for a fight outside Shades record store in London? It’s just a good hard rock song. The metal would be more evident later, especially with albums like Hail To England. Dark Avenger has the rather dulcet tones of Orson Welles as narrator, and is probably the most metal song here, both in sound and execution. Williams Tale is just a show off piece for bass player and band leader, Joey DeMaio. Final track is the title track, Battle Hymns, and we have waited for the best track on the album. Very medieval sounding, full of swords and sorcery – this is how the band garnered their reputation and image. The production is not that great as the band did it themselves, arrogantly thinking they knew best when a known producer would have given it the treatment it so needed. Not bad, but a fun listen anyway.

7/10 from The Grooveman.