REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: vinyl collector (Page 6 of 475)

BANSHEE – Take Em By Storm

This album originally saw the light of day back in ’93, right bang in the middle of grunge central and you can guess the rest. If you look at the cover, you’d be forgiven for thinking these guys are prime time Sunset Strip glam, but this is way more metal. They have killer riffs, very reminiscent of Jake E Lee and Dime in style, epic grooves, and killer vocals… they deserved a whole lot more that’s for sure. They flew so far under the radar that they passed everyone by.

I love this record, it kicks major ass. Side 1 is one of the best sides of melodic metal anywhere. Color Me, Fight, and my personal favourite Running Wild are just epic. Massively huge riffs and killer grooves are the order of the day, and the guitar tone on Running Wild will floor you.

The band reunited in 2012 and there was an album released in 2019. If you love this type of melodic metal then this is a must have.

9.5/10 from The Grooveman.

ECLIPSE – Megalomanium 2

This is melodic rock’s best kept secret. This is Eclipse’s eleventh album. They are close to celebrating their 25th anniversary and yet, they still don’t mean a whole bunch over on this side of the pond.

They have released ten albums over the past 25 years and they have carved their own niche in a genre which sometimes seems tired and repetitive. They have their own sound and as soon as you hear the music, you know who it is.

Consistently releasing high energy, uplifting, catchy songs seems effortless for these guys and long may they continue to do so. I’m glad to report this is another top quality release chock full of memorable songs. My favourite of the bunch is the heavier groove of The Spark. Killer riff and groove with a huge hook and chorus.

Superb band that should be in everyone’s collection.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

JUDAS PRIEST – Turbo

I think it’s safe to say that amongst hardcore Priest fans, this is the most hated album of the bunch. The media especially made a big deal of the fact that Priest had gone new wave, as there was too much use of the dreaded synthesizer on this labum. The intro to Out In The Cold is all synth and indeed, Turbo Lover has a fair amount of the “dreaded” keys, I think they manage to squeeze some into every song. But, does that make it a bad record?

Now, Turbo Lover has become a fan favourite live because the guitars are turned to stun and it has a great groove to the song. Locked In has a superb main hook and chorus, and I would say this is a classic Priest song. Sure, Private Property is super commercial but so was Livin’ After Midnight. Rock You All Around The World is prime time anthemic Priest. The one thing that is missing is a pedal to the metal rocker – it’s all mid tempo.

It’s not the best Priest album that’s for sure, but it’s far from the turkey it’s made out to be.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

BLUE BLUD – The Big Noise

From the ashes of the NWOBHM band Tresspas, sprouted Blue Blud who released two albums – this is the first. By the time they recorded the second album however, they had returned to a more traditional spelling of Blue Blood.

I always associate Music For Nations with metal and I forgot how widespread their musical releases were. A more harder edge melodic rock/AOR is on the menu here and not a bad effort it is, with a great bright in your face production.

I still think that British bands don’t do the AOR/Melodic Rock as well as other countries because the harder stuff seems to be more in their DNA. This album however, does have its moments especially the opener One More Night with its loud crunchy main riff and really good catchy hook and chorus.

A quite an enjoyable romp through the 11 tracks here, I haven’t heard this in a long while.

7/10 from The Grooveman.

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