REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: music (Page 1 of 438)

GOTTHARD – The Eyes Of A Tiger

If anyone was in any doubt about how good Steve Lee was as a vocalist then they should check out this album, with stripped down versions of some of the band’s best known tunes.  This was put out by the band as a tribute to commemorate the 10 years after the tragic passing of Steve, who was killed in a traffic accident in Nevada. These were the last recordings Steve ever did with the band.

You get 12 stripped down versions of Gotthard classics as well as two versions of Survivor’s Eye Of The Tiger, which was one of Steve’s favourite songs. A very sad but yet uplifting experience listening to this now.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

STEVEN WILSON – The Overview

There was a time when the announcement of a new Steven Wilson album would have had me drooling in anticipation. Let’s face it, he has produced two of the best Prog albums ever made. The Raven That Refused To Sing and Hand Cannot Erase are masterpieces of the art. Raven was an album in the classic Prog mode, played with superb musicians and beautifully crafted songs. HCE has to be the ultimate concept album, what an amazing musical journey. To The Bone had its moments, I initially got The Future Bites with is electro pop leanings but I can honestly say I don’t play it at all, and I have grown to dislike Harmony Codex. So, when I read the advance comments of how he had returned to a more proggy outlook with the Overview and it contained only two tracks, my interest was piqued.

I’m reviewing this after listening to it many times and I have to say, sonically it is outstanding and the only way to hear this is in surround sound as it was created to be heard this way for maximum effect. There are references from the past that you will pick up on. The vocal harmonies remind me of early Yes, King Crimson, Floyd, and Tangerine Dream.

I love the way SW puts climbing highs into his music where the musical journey lifts and drops you all leading to a crescendo, but there is none of that here I’m afraid. Sure, there are loud bits that differ from the quiet bits but it’s seemingly all on one level, if that makes sense.

The Wilson acolytes are drooling all over this without being subjective. Yes, it sounds incredible, but sounding incredible and being a great piece of music are two different things. It’s better than the previous two for sure, but it’s nowhere near the first five. For a point of reference, I have been a fan since Porcupine Tree’s Sygnify and have seen him many times, and I guess there comes a time when you just don’t connect anymore.

7.5/10 from The Grooveman.

NORDIC UNION – Animalistic

I always cringe when I see “a project built by Frontiers president Seragino Perugino,” as a credit in the bio of a band. I mean, the guy’s ego must by freakin’ huge, and they are certainly milking the talents of Erik Martensson. How many bands and projects is he involved in?

This, however, is one of those projects that is actually worth checking out because it’s really rather good. Nordic Union is a coming together of the aforementioned Mr. Martensson and Pretty Maids’ vocalist Ronnie Atkins. This is the latest offering in what has been three albums so far by the duo.

Melodic power metal is on the menu here folks, and there are only a couple of tunes that have that Eclipse vibe, the rest power along with double kicks pounding.  So many great tunes here including Every Waking Hour, On This Day I Fight, If I Could Fly, This Means War, and Animalistic. They’re all killer tunes with melody high on the agenda to back those crunching riffs and pounding grooves.

The only thing that bugs me is the fact that Frontiers crammed the 11 tracks onto a single disc, the sound quality is not the best. Anyhoo, a very enjoyable record.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

JACK STARR’S BURNING STARR – No Turning Back

Jack Starr always confused me because he had about 10,000 projects all going at the same time. I first came across him through Virgin Steele, but they were over by late ´83. Then he did a solo album, a Devil Childe record, a Phantom Lord record, and a Burning Starr record all around the same time. This is the second Burning Starr album, which came out in ´86. In fact, his Virgin Steele vocalist David Defeis produced this record.

This band are a more straight up version of a hard rock/heavy metal band. Vocalist Mike Terrelli steals the show, as he possesses a killer set of pipes. Although a very competent player, Jack Starr just lacked that bit of special sauce to make him a great guitarist. It could be his tone or note choices, but it’s something I can’t put my finger on. Light In the Dark and Call Of The Wild are my favourite two tracks, just for the killer vocal performance.

7/10 from The Grooveman.

« Older posts