REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: music (Page 332 of 454)

ELTON JOHN – Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

I remember buying this album like it was yesterday, back in the good old school days. There was so much amazing music released in that four year period when I was at high school. When I look back on that period now, it blows my mind that I was surrounded by such amazing music. This is hands down Elton John’s finest hour, as this album is just superb from beginning to end.

I love every inch of this album right from the almost Prog opening of Funeral For A Friend, to the beautiful ending of Harmony. I don’t care who you are, but any artist would have been proud of just Side 1 alone. The aforementioned Funeral For A Friend/Love Lies Bleeding, Candle In The Wind, and Bennie And The Jets. I mean come on! Elton and Bernie sure tapped into something in ’73 – this is such an incredible side of music.

Funeral For A Friend (Love Lies Bleeding) is my favourite Elton piece of all the things he has recorded – it’s such an epic awesome piece of music that I love dearly. There are two other big singles on the album, namely the awesome title track and the rockin’ Saturday Nights Alright For Fighting. Nobody could touch Elton in his prime, and he had the knack of painting pictures in your mind with his music -that’s a gift not many musicians have. The record company must have wet themselves when Elton handed them this, as they must have seen dollar signs going off into the sunset. Elton has sold over 300 million albums throughout his career, and this has sold over 30 million of them. I would advise handing over your cash to be one of them.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

YNGWIE MALMSTEEN – Parabellum

It’s been a while since I bought a new Yngwie album. It’s not because he doesn’t put many out, on the contrary – he throws albums out quite regularly. It’s just that I can only listen to so much new classical metal then all the lines seem to blur. It’s definitely more of the same, except with one big change. He now seems to sing as well.

The opening track, Wolves At The Door, is not a bad track with lots extreme widdly-diddly to keep all his disciples happy, and not a bad vocal either. It’s the songs with vocals that are actually the best for me anyway. The very Rainbow sounding, Relentless Fury, is probably my favourite track as it’s him at his best. Most of the album is shred, shred, and more shred, with as usual lots of classical pieces interspersed throughout the record.

There is no denying he is at the top of his game, and no one can play this new classical stuff as good as Yngwie can, it just leaves me a bit cold after a while. Sonically, the album does sound a bit dead in place and I would have liked a bit more brightness, but overall it’s a good effort and he produced it himself. I am not sure when I would go out and buy another Yngwie album, but this one will keep me going for now.

7.5/10 from The Grooveman.

CHEAP TRICK – Standing On The Edge

These guys a have been around since ’77 and have recorded about 2,000 records -and that’s not including live albums. I joke of course, but it sure feels that way as every Record Store Day that comes around they seem to release something. I’d like to say the quality is still there and they consistently put out great records, but unfortunately that’s not the case – they have put a few stinkers since their heyday.

This album of course is not one of those – imho this is as good as the band got. This record is superb and every song is an absolute belter of a power pop/rock masterpiece. Tonight It’s You has to be one of the best songs that the band have ever recorded, and every time I hear it I still get goosebumps. The band’s love of the Beatles is well documented, and the opening track, Little Sister, takes lots of inspiration from the Fab Four – especially the vocal. The title track and the opener of Side 2 is such a great song and the melody, hook, and chorus are just superb. Even when they drop the tempo down and the songs become more insightful, like on Love Comes, they hit it out of the park – this is another track that reminds me of John Lennon.

I can’t praise this album enough. Buy it or miss out on an a classic.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

HUGHES/THRALL – s/t

Cards on the table straight away – this is the best album that Glenn Hughes has put out, and the same goes for Pat Thrall. I know Hughes was involved with some great Deep Purple albums, but he wasn’t the main focal point. Thrall was on some great Pat Travers records, but he was just a part of a machine. It’s mind blowing that they only made the one record when you hear how good this album is. The main reason is that they were both off there faces with every exotic substance known to man, and they both agree if they had stayed together they would both have probably died. I know there were rumours a few years ago that they were going to get together again, but alas, nothing so far apart from the odd track.

This is superb eighties rock that came out in ’82 and I can guarantee that every song is winner. Straddling the lines between rock, funk and pop, this album grooves in every possible way. The highlights for me are the superb opening track, I Got Your Number, which rocks, grooves, and swings all in three and a half minutes of pure genius. The heavy groove of Muscle and Blood which has a killer riff by Pat. The amazing funk rock of Hold Out Your Life which is my favourite track on the album. If someone had their head screwed on right at the record company, this should have been released as a single. And finally the big close out number, First Step Of Love – that’s how you finish a record!

The music business is a strange thing – this album should have been huge. Every home should have one, and it’s a 10/10 all day, every day from The Grooveman.

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