REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: music review (Page 419 of 486)

LIMELIGHT – s/t

In my Saxon review recently, I mentioned how I first got to know them by seeing them in their previous incarnation in working men’s clubs around Doncaster. Well, Limelight were maybe more famous in that scene as they had quite a following wherever they played. Even this record was released on Future Earth Records, which was a local Doncaster label. Hailing from Mansfield, which is just down the road from Doncaster, they were another local band that I thought would make it. The band are made up of Mike Scrimshaw on bass and vocals, his brother Glenn Scrimshaw on guitar, and Pat Coleman on drums. They can best be described as a poor man’s Rush.

Opening track, Going Home, is decent but the first thing you notice is how flat and sparse the production is. Knife In Your Back is a pretty basic tune and doesn’t really try too hard to stand out from the crowd. Mamma I Don’t Want To Lose You is not a bad track but again suffers from that flat production. Next track, Man Of Colours, was the band’s showpiece song when they played live. This is where the Rush comparisons came, but I guess it’s influences are based in Prog . It’s still a good track today and holds up quite well.

Side 2 starts with another favourite with Metal Man. This was as NWOBHM as they got. They were thrust into that scene as this album came out in 1980, even though they had been around as Limelight since ’74. An opportunity is an opportunity right? Walk On Water is next and it starts with a twin guitar assault – this is one of their best tracks. How do they get a twin guitar with a three piece I hear you ask ? Well, Mike played a double neck guitar for this piece, a guitar on one, and bass on the other. They were quite an ambitious band, even with very limited resources. Last track, Don’t Look Back, which is the epic track for this side. The Prog shines bright with this one young Skywalker.

Some bands are destined not to make it, and I’m afraid Limelight falls into this category.

6.5/10 from The Grooveman.

HONEYMOON SUITE – The Big Prize

Hailing from Niagara Falls (the Canadian side), this was the band’s 2nd album released in ’85. After the success of the first album, which spawned four singles, Warner Bothers decided to throw the kitchen sink at this release to hope lightening struck twice. They got mega producer Bruce Fairbairn to produce, and Bob Rock was the engineer. Well it worked, as four singles were also released from this one.

Bad Attitude was one of those singles and opens up the album with its polished rock sound tailor made for the North American market. Second track, Feel It Again, was an even bigger hit with its huge chorus, melody, and huge production – it couldn’t fail – they had that pop/rock sound nailed down. Lost And Found has that big eighties keyboard driven sound, again with the big chorus, and everything sounds super polished. Of course the ballad rears its ugly head with What Does It Take. When the band writes such good pop/rock songs it amazes me that they are put under pressure to write them. And again, what do I know, as this was a hit also. Side 1 closes out with One By One, again with the big keyboard intro, and the guitars are a bit louder to give it that extra bounce.

Side 2 kicks off with Wounded. It’s an ok track with a bit of a cheesy lyric but the big production carries it through. Words In The Wind is up next, again with the super processed keyboards, it’s nearly a mirror image of the previous track – at least this track has a decent solo. The final single from the record is All Along You Knew and its claim to fame is that it had flute played by none other than Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull. How that came about I would love to know. Once The Feeling follows and we’re back to the slick big rock sound which Fairbairn is known for. Album closer, Take My Hand, is super disappointing as it’s a ballad. Who closes an album with a ballad? Anyway, this is what an album sounds like after it’s had a million bucks thrown at it (slight exaggeration).

8/10 from The Grooveman.

SAXON – Wheels Of Steel

This, ladies and hemorrhoids, is what NWOBHM was all about. To me, Saxon were the best band to come out of this period. Even though they disappeared into the wilderness for a while, they had all the songs and could write a tune. Now, I know everyone will say Maiden were the best – blah blah blah – but to me, a lad from “OOP NORTH”, Saxon were the schnizz!!! I’m from Doncaster, a working class town where the coal mines and railways were the main industries (until Thatcher destroyed them, but that’s another story) – it was also the land of the working man’s club. I remember seeing Son Of A Bitch a few times in said clubs before they were Saxon. To see one of our own making it was awesome.

There is not one bad track on this record – in fact – there were even two hit singles on this opus of awesomeness. 747 Strangers In The Night, which is a great choice for a single, and Wheels Of Steel with that repetitive riff – plus they got to play on Top Of The Pops. Opening track was an anthem for the NWOBHM movement as a whole – what a flag bearing track it is. Freeway Mad carries on the fast bike and car theme that opens side two – a belter of a track. Every song is just fantastic right up until album closer, Machine Gun, where Graham would do his tribute to Hendrix by setting fire and smashing up a guitar.

I could go into lengthy detail how one person took control of the band, which is a sad tale to tell as the heart and soul of the band was removed. The band are still rocking today, and I hold out hope for Graham and Steve that one day all hatchets can be buried and see them all on stage again. A classic.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

WISHBONE ASH – Live Dates

Wishbone Ash are one of the UK’s best bands, and the originators of the harmony twin guitar attack. This live show was recorded in ’73 on the British tour to promote the Wishbone Four album. The guitars of Andy Powell and Ted Turner would be the band’s signature sound and copied by many. They have a very unique sound with the vocal harmonies that compliment the guitars to great effect.

The album starts with The King Will Come, and if I where to name a tune that best encompasses the band’s sound – this would be it. A brilliant song that sounds great in the live environment. Warrior is next from the brilliant Argus album. The song has an almost hypnotic Celtic feel that is strangely haunting. Throw Down The Sword closes out Side 1 and we continue with the Celtic medieval vibe. The lyrics conjure up images of King Arthur, which isn’t to far from Torquay where the band originate from.

The Ballad Of The Beacon on Side 2 is a great tune and one of the tracks I have loved since I first heard it. The melodies and harmonies really shine. Side 3 contains three of the band’s best know tunes: The Pilgrim, Jail Bait and Blowin’ Free (which surprisingly was released as a single in the UK and did really well). Side 4 closes out the record with 2 live favourites in Lady Whiskey and Phoenix. Phoenix is timeless, and the arrangements of the guitars and vocals is sublime.

The band were great up until the New England album, then after that they seemed to lose the spark. Anyway, this a really good live album that showcases them in their prime.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

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