REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: music review (Page 333 of 493)

KICK AXE – Welcome To The Club

This is the band’s second album, and is a slight change in style compared to their hard riffing debut, Vices. This is a much more slick commercial sounding record, and whether this was the record company giving them advice or not I’m not sure, but the album after this (Rock The World) was back to the metal and riffs.

Anyway, it doesn’t detract away from what is a still a fun record and very typical rock record of the time (when Def Leppard were riding high). Highlights for me are Feels Good Don’t Stop, which has a large dose of the Leppard formula, the stomp grooves of Make Your Move, and the only real metal sounding track on the album, Too Loud Too Old – this is the direction the album should have gone in.

It sucks when bands are maneuvered to do things that aren’t necessarily are in their best interests. By the time they recorded the next album, all the momentum they hard worked hard to build up had gone.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

LIVING COLOUR – Time’s Up

This is the band’s follow up album to their super successful first album, Vivid. This record is all over the map musically, as varying styles and vibes are explored throughout the album. It’s much a continuation from the first album.

The title track kicks things off with a very eclectic tune that goes from jazz, to metal, to pop, and funk all in the space of 3 minutes. Pride has a great funk rock groove with a great vocal from Corey Glover. Love Rears It’s Ugly Head has a killer slow blues/funk vibe with a superb vocal and great guitar from Vernon Reid. New Jack Theme is a superb metal/groove crossover monster of a tune.

This album was looked on as a bit of a let down after the success of the first album, but I really like it as it goes a lot of places the first album didn’t – plus it has a groovier feel to it. Elvis Is Dead is just such a fun track and grooves hard with a killer beat. The best track on the album for me is Type. This tune just makes you want to bounce around the room of doom, and the melody and hook are superb – such a great feel! Hard on the heels of Type, is the pure beauty and groove of Under Cover Of Darkness with the Prince style funk.

Not as immediate as the first album, but it’s still a killer album.

9.5 /10 from The Grooveman.

WHITE LION – Fight To Survive

This was the band’s first release on the independent label, Grand Slamm Records, back in ’85 after having signed to Elektra Records who refused to release the album. Who knows why that decision was made? After the release, the band toured it to death and they were snapped up by Atlantic who released the Pride album – and we all know how huge that album turned out to be.

The first two tracks are pretty straight forward killer melodic rock songs with typical big hooks and catchy chorus’, but track three (the title track) starts with a very Van Halen/Randy Rhodes style guitar intro and sound. Absolute killer guitar from Vito Bratta! You think he would be huge and a household name right? But no, he gave it all up and hasn’t played guitar for years – totally disillusioned with the music business. Frankly I would have bought the album just for this track. In fact, it’s Bratta that makes the album for me as on tracks like In The City, Kid Of 1000 Face, and El Salvador, his guitar tone and sound are epic. There is plenty to keep the glam brigade happy as well with stomper tracks like All The Fallen Men.

I’m not the biggest Mike Tramp fan as that strained vocal tone doesn’t do it for me but this is still a good first album.

9/10 from The Grooveman.

THE STRANGLERS – IV (Rattus Norvegicus)

I think this the very first punk album I bought, just after its release in ’77, although my memory is a bit fuzzy about that. There was way more to The Stranglers than the two chord heroes from the rest of the punk movement. They were around banging away for a few years before punk exploded, and had paid their dues somewhat – they could also write half decent songs. A big reason in what differed them from all the other punks was that the guitar was not the dominating sound – a lot of the songs were driven by the keyboards of Dave Greenfield.

This is one of the defining albums of the punk period as they were the first to have some chart success with the single, Peaches. There are some really good tunes here with the likes of Grip, Down In The Sewer, and Hanging Around. The surprise to me though is Princess Of The Streets with an old school blues vibe complete with a guitar solo – which was very un-punk. Still a fun album to listen to.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

« Older posts Newer posts »