REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: music review (Page 125 of 485)

JELUSICK – Follow The Blind Man

I thought this would be a definite record that Frontiers would be putting out, but no. Those nice folks at Escape Music are putting it out and that means at least the pressing will be of decent quality.

I think most people who listen to hard rock will be aware of the vocal talents of Dino Jelusick who exploded onto the scene just a few short years ago. I first came upon him after listening to the Dirty Shirley project with George Lynch and being mightily impressed with his voice. He is being hailed as the new Dio and I think he has more range and power than Ronnie. Dino could sing the phone book if you gave it to him.

I know this album took a long time to get out there as it was recorded over various sessions over a few years, but it was definitely worth the wait. I think this is a killer record that veers more down the metal path than hard rock, but it has loads of melody with the vocals and superb guitar from Ivan Keller (who I knew nothing about until hearing this).

What are my high points? Well, it’s all a freakin’ high point and if I’m pushed for a favourite track, it’s Side 1 closer What I Want. This is a high octane up tempo rocker with maximum fat and chunky riffage, and Dino just kills it on vocals.

Hard rock doesn’t get better than this boys and girls. There are many many high points on this record and it is a definite contender for album of the year.

200/10 from The Grooveman.

MUSHROOMHEAD – The Righteous And The Butterfly

It’s hard to believe that this album is nearly ten years old, I remember picking it up like it was yesterday. I don’t usually care for Nu-metal, but I have a man crush on Mushroomhead. Mainly due to the fact that groove is at the heart of the music they make. A lot of bands put groove at the bottom of their needs list around this time, so basically I just switched off. However, I find Mushroomhead very intriguing. Their stage imagery is quite cool, I dig that whole schlock horror thing they do and it fits really well with the tunes.

They’ve been around since ’93 and have managed to release eight albums, this is number seven. There are lots of good things on this record but the outstanding track is We Are The Truth. Joined on vocals by Jackie Laponza from Unsaid Fate, this tune goes down varying paths including funk, rap, and of course metal with hints of Rage Against The Machine. Great tune! Just to prove that they can do it old school, Out Of Mind is a close second for my favourite. It’s big, fat, d-tuned goodness all the way.

I know this won’t float everybody’s boat, but I really like it.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

21 Guns – Nothings Real

This is a criminally underrated album that seemed to disappear without trace at the time. I think this is mainly due to RCA not believing in them because hard rock albums were hard to come by in the late nineties and it’s amazing that their second album actually saw the light of day. Formed by Scott Gorham in ’90 after the death of Phil Lynott in ’86 it was obvious Scott still had a lot of music in him and needed a vehicle to do it. For me, this is the better of the two albums they put out and if it was released today it would be hailed as a classic.

There are not many nods to Lizzy here but the one song that has Lizzy stamped all over it is Kings Vengeance. It’s an awesome tune with Scott playing his ass off adding that dual guitar stamp that Lizzy fans know so well, this is my favourite track. Other highlights are album opener No Soul. What a great uptempo rocker with a great riff, and I really love Solli’s voice on this one. Nothings Real has a slight Zeppelin classic rock vibe to it with Scott again giving some killer fretboard histrionics. As well, Moving On has an even deeper 70’s classic rock groove with a superb hook and chorus.

If you see this around pick it up, you won’t be disappointed.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

PRIMAL FEAR – s/t

For those of you who do not know, Ralph Scheepers auditioned for Judas Priest after Halford departed. Then, he formed a cover band called Just Priest and toured around Germany. Matt Sinner and guitarist Tom Neumann actually got up and guested at one of their shows. After that, a conversation a seed was planted and Primal Fear was born. Their brief was to just play good old Heavy Metal and this is the their first album.

Is it close to the Priest sound? Oh absolutely, but it’s one hell of an album. There is not a bad moment on the whole record. It is totally metal from beginning to end, but with the eye on the melody. That’s what metal once was, you could always sing along to the songs. Apart from the little intro piece, you can pick any track here and I would be happy to call it my favourite.

Great record and if you’re an old school metal fan it will definitely put a smile on your face. Killer!

10/10 from The Grooveman.

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