Genre: Heavy Metal
Label Number: 9 25292-2
© 1985 Warner Bros. Records
AllMusic Review by Eduardo Rivadavia
© 1985 Warner Bros. Records
AllMusic Review by Eduardo Rivadavia
Although relatively strong sales at the time of its release would appear to refute this claim, Dio's third album in three years, 1985's Sacred Heart,
was a terribly divisive affair, and is largely viewed as a
disappointment in retrospect. This is because, although many brand-new
yet fickle-minded fans were attracted by the album's noticeably more
commercial hard rock songwriting, almost as many of Dio's
most loyal, long-serving supporters were turned off by this new
direction -- as well as the already stagnant clichés being recycled from
prior triumphs. If only writer's block had been to blame, but the
unnecessary live audience added to the album's obviously
self-referencing opener, "King of Rock and Roll," seemed to point to a
single-minded and egotistical leader instead. So when he wasn't putting
his ever more despondent (and soon to be terminated) henchmen through
the motions on rote metallic anthems like the title track, "Like the
Beat of a Heart," and "Fallen Angels," singer Ronnie James Dio
seemed intent on strangling every last creative spark out of them in a
bid to score a pop-metal hit. Among the top candidates, the synth-drunk
"Hungry for Heaven" and the deplorable "Shoot Shoot" proved especially
forgettable and contrived, and even though "Rock 'n' Roll Children"
succeeded in cropping up frequently on MTV at least, Ronnie's
distinct lack of sex appeal (not to mention his 40-plus years of age!)
killed any possibility of true crossover success in image-conscious
America. In the end, selling out with Sacred Heart plunged Dio's career into a steep decline from which it would never entirely recover.
tags: dio, sacred heart, 1985, DIO, ronnie james, flac,
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