February 24, 2019

Depeche Mode - Playing The Angel (2005)

Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: 49348-2

© 2005 Sire/Reprise/Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Andy Kellman
When Ultra was declared the best Depeche Mode album since Violator, those who said so must have forgotten about Songs of Faith and Devotion. When Exciter was declared the best Depeche Mode album since Violator, those who said so must have also forgotten about Songs of Faith and Devotion, in addition to having found a roundabout way of saying that it was merely better than Ultra. There's no doubt this time: Playing the Angel is both the band's best album since Violator and, more significantly, an album that is near Violator in stature. The biggest clue dropped by the band prior to its release was a quote from Dave Gahan, who said that being in Depeche Mode is better than it has been in 15 years. Some quick math reveals that Gahan was hinting at the Violator era, a time when the band's creativity and popularity peaked synchronously. It also turns out that this is a time as good as any other to be paying attention to the band. Playing the Angel lacks Songs of Faith and Devotion's end-to-end chest-beating, Ultra's grinding murk, and Exciter's desiccated patches. It takes the best qualities from those releases, combines them with a few subtle allusions to Violator -- tiptoeing the border that separates retread from reinvention -- and makes for a highly concentrated set of songs that all but demand to be heard in one uninterrupted shot. Gahan, still riding the confidence he gained as a songwriter from Paper Monsters, his 2003 solo debut, contributes three songs co-written with band associates Christian Eigner and Andrew Phillpott. Though none of them vie to be the album's centerpiece, it's apparent that the move wasn't a concession of desperation on anyone's part. The friendly competition seems to have kicked chief songwriter Martin Gore into high gear; he's in top form. Musically, a lot of analog gear was used, and it's apparent that the arrangements and extra sounds were less fussed over than they have been in the recent past. You get the sense that everything fell into place, as opposed to being forced or aimlessly manipulated. Despite the favoring of older gear, there's no other year in which any of the songs could've been made. Like the best Depeche Mode, almost everything on the album will make an initial wowing impact while remaining layered enough in subtle details to surprise and thrill with repeated listens. It is not the kind of album a 25-year-old band is supposed to make.

tags: depeche mode, playing the angel, 2005, flac,

February 22, 2019

Depeche Mode - Some Great Reward (1984)

*First pressing. 
Contains 9 tracks total.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: INT 846.812

© 1984 Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Ned Raggett
The peak of the band's industrial-gone-mainstream fusion, and still one of the best electronic music albums yet recorded, Some Great Reward still sounds great, with the band's ever-evolving musical and production skills matching even more ambitious songwriting from Martin Gore. "People Are People" appears here, but finds itself outclassed by some of Depeche Mode's undisputed classics, most especially the moody, beautiful "Somebody," a Gore-sung piano ballad that mixes its wit and emotion skillfully; "Master and Servant," an amped-up, slamming dance track that conflates sexual and economic politics to sharp effect; and the closing "Blasphemous Rumors," a slow-building anthemic number supporting one of Gore's most cynical lyrics, addressing a suicidal teen who finds God only to die soon afterward. Even lesser-known tracks like the low-key pulse of "Lie to Me" and the weirdly dreamy "It Doesn't Matter" showcase an increasingly confident band. Alan Wilder's arrangements veer from the big to the stripped down, but always with just the right touch, such as the crowd samples bubbling beneath "Somebody" or the call/response a cappella start to "Master and Servant." With Reward, David Gahan's singing style found the métier it was going to stick with for the next ten years, and while it's never gone down well with some ears, it still has a compelling edge to it that suits the material well.

tags: depeche mode, some great reward, 1984, flac,

Depeche Mode - Construction Time Again (1983)

Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: INT 846.807

© 1983-1984 Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Ned Raggett
The full addition of Alan Wilder to Depeche Mode's lineup created a perfect troika that would last another 11 years, as the combination of Martin Gore's songwriting, Wilder's arranging, and David Gahan's singing and live star power resulted in an ever more compelling series of albums and singles. Construction Time Again, the new lineup's first full effort, is a bit hit and miss nonetheless, but when it does hit, it does so perfectly. Right from the album's first song, "Love, In Itself," something is clearly up; Depeche never sounded quite so thick with its sound before, with synths arranged into a mini-orchestra/horn section and real piano and acoustic guitar spliced in at strategic points. Two tracks later, "Pipeline" offers the first clear hint of an increasing industrial influence (the bandmembers were early fans of Einstürzende Neubauten), with clattering metal samples and oddly chain gang-like lyrics and vocals. The album's clear highlight has to be "Everything Counts," a live staple for years, combining a deceptively simple, ironic lyric about the music business with a perfectly catchy but unusually arranged blending of more metallic scraping samples and melodica amid even more forceful funk/hip-hop beats. Elsewhere, on "Shame" and "Told You So," Gore's lyrics start taking on more of the obsessive personal relationship studies that would soon dominate his writing. Wilder's own songwriting contributions are fine musically, but lyrically, "preachy" puts it mildly, especially the environment-friendly "The Landscape Is Changing."

tags: depeche mode, construction time again, 1983, flac,

Depeche Mode - Black Celebration (1986)

*U.S. first pressing. 
Contains 12 tracks total.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: 9 25429-2

© 1986 Sire/Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Ned Raggett
Whether the band felt it was simply the time to move on from its most explicit industrial-pop fusion days, or whether increased success and concurrently larger venues pushed the music into different avenues, Depeche Mode's fifth studio album, Black Celebration, saw the group embarking on a path that in many ways defined their sound to the present: emotionally extreme lyrics matched with amped-up tunes, as much anthemic rock as they are compelling dance, along with stark, low-key ballads. The slow, sneaky build of the opening title track, with a strange distorted vocal sample providing a curious opening hook, sets the tone as David Gahan sings of making it through "another black day" while powerful drums and echoing metallic pings carry the song. Black Celebration is actually heavier on the ballads throughout, many sung by Martin Gore -- the most per album he has yet taken lead on -- with notable dramatic beauties including "Sometimes," with its surprise gospel choir start and rough piano sonics, and the hyper-nihilistic "World Full of Nothing." The various singles from the album remain definite highlights, such as "A Question of Time," a brawling, aggressive number with a solid Gahan vocal, and the romantic/physical politics of "Stripped," featuring particularly sharp arrangements from Alan Wilder. However, with such comparatively lesser-known but equally impressive numbers as the quietly intense romance of "Here Is the House" to boast, Black Celebration is solid through and through.

tags: depeche mode, black celebration, 1986, flac,

Six Feet Under - Undead (2012)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Death Metal
Label Number: 3984-15089-2
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© 2012 Metal Blade Records
AllMusic Review by Eduardo Rivadavia
For untold years and scores of LPs, vocalist Chris Barnes and the other members of Six Feet Under have never seen any reason to apologize for their oftentimes predictable, experimentation-averse, even generic brand of death metal -- the group's very simplicity has been its calling card, in fact. But, naturally, this stance has polarized fans into love/hate factions, with very little wiggle room to be had for either argument; you get it or you don't, and no amount of arguing will ever bridge the two opinions. So why don't we cut down to the chase here, save the haters some precious time, and let them know that 2012's Undead will probably fail to change their minds…thanks for coming, folks, be seeing you, drive home safe. Now, as for everyone else who actually digs Six Feet Under for reasons known or unknown, rest assured that Undead is, well, pretty good. No, not every song embeds itself into the ol' memory banks (e.g. "Molest Dead," "Missing Victims," "Vampire Apocalypse," etc.), but several others keep things interesting by sheer force of their well-assembled riffery ("Formaldehyde"), counterpoint guitar work and belated payoff ("Blood on My hands"), groovy rot & roll slam-dancing ("Reckless"), or merely Barnes' oddly lovable roars ("Delayed Combustion Device," and others). Heck, the dreadlocked old goat is sort of like that wacky uncle (if he sounded like, you know, Cookie Monster) that keeps things interesting for the family: you can't really miss him ‘cos he won't go away, but you still invite the old coot for kicks on Thanksgiving. The same is true, in roundabout fashion, of Six Feet Under, even if Undead, like most of their albums, makes better stuffing than cranberry sauce. Who doesn't like a little stuffing now and then?

tags: six feet under, undead, 2012, flac,

Six Feet Under - Death Rituals (Limited Edition) (2008)

*Contains 16 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Death Metal
Label Number: 3984 14690 0
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© 2008 Metal Blade Records
AllMusic Review by James Christopher Monger
Often touted as the last true practitioners of "pure American death metal," Cannibal Corpse vocalist Chris Barnes' 1995 side project has blossomed into a full-time career. On its eighth full-length recording, Six Feet Under does little to ruffle the feathers of the genre it helped to define over the last ten years, but the band's pragmatic, unfussy approach to brutality demands respect, even if it fails to encourage repeated listens. Death Rituals is tight, compact, and blissfully free of muddy reverb and ten-minute epics (anyone wondering what a doom-laden, black metal-ized Motörhead fronted by an "Orc" would sound like, check out "Bastard"). It's also a hastily recorded slab of meat that didn't hang on the hook long enough, but despite an opening quartet of cuts that could have been scraped off of the floor of any old Metal Blade recording session, Death Rituals dabbles in enough unpredictable time signatures "Seed of Filth") and song structures ("Crossroads to Armageddon") that step outside of the standard aggro-metal, kneecap remover template to save itself.

tags: six feet under, death ritual, limited edition, 2008, flac,

Six Feet Under - Unborn (2013)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Death Metal
Label Number: 3984-15169-2
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© 2013 Metal Blade Records
AllMusic Review by Gregory Heaney
Exploring the slower side of death metal, Six Feet Under continue to focus on heaviness over chaos on their tenth album, Unborn. Sticking to their groove-oriented formula, Six Feet Under do what they do best and deliver a solid slab of crushing riffs that hit like a wrecking ball. While this approach might not have the visceral impact that a frenzy of blastbeats can have, the band's slow and brutal methods show that death metal doesn't necessarily have to be fast to feel destructive.

tags: six feet under, unborn, 2013, flac,

Depeche Mode - Speak & Spell (1981)

*European first pressing. 
Contains 11 tracks total.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: INT 846.801

© 1981-1984 Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Ned Raggett
Though probably nobody fully appreciated it at the time -- perhaps least of all the band! -- Depeche Mode's debut is at once both a conservative, functional pop record and a groundbreaking release. While various synth pioneers had come before -- Gary Numan, early Human League, late-'70s Euro-disco, and above all Kraftwerk all had clear influence on Speak & Spell -- Depeche became the undisputed founder of straight-up synth pop with the album's 11 songs, light, hooky, and danceable numbers about love, life, and clubs. For all the claims about "dated" '80s sounds from rock purists, it should be noted that the basic guitar/bass/drums lineup of rock is almost 25 years older than the catchy keyboard lines and electronic drums making the music here. That such a sound would eventually become ubiquitous during the Reagan years, spawning lots of crud along the way, means the band should no more be held to blame for that than Motown and the Beatles for inspiring lots of bad stuff in the '60s. Credit for the album's success has to go to main songwriter Vince Clarke, who would extend and arguably perfect the synth pop formula with Yazoo and Erasure; the classic early singles "New Life," "Dreaming of Me," and "Just Can't Get Enough," along with numbers ranging from the slyly homoerotic "Pretty Boy" to the moody thumper "Photographic," keep everything moving throughout. David Gahan undersings about half the album, and Martin Gore's two numbers lack the distinctiveness of his later work, but Speak & Spell remains an undiluted joy.

tags: depeche mode, speak and spell, 1981, flac,

Depeche Mode - A Broken Frame (1982)

*European first pressing. 
Contains 10 tracks total.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Synth Pop
Label Number: MUTE INT 846.804

© 1982-1984 Mute Records
AllMusic Review by Ned Raggett
Martin Gore has famously noted that Depeche Mode stopped worrying about its future when the first post-Vince Clarke-departure single, "See You," placed even higher on the English charts than anything else Clarke had done with them. Such confidence carries through all of A Broken Frame, a notably more ambitious effort than the pure pop/disco of the band's debut. With arranging genius Alan Wilder still one album away from fully joining the band, Frame became very much Gore's record, writing all the songs and exploring various styles never again touched upon in later years. "Satellite" and "Monument" take distinct dub/reggae turns, while "Shouldn't Have Done That" delivers its slightly precious message about the dangers of adulthood with a spare arrangement and hollow, weirdly sweet vocals. Much of the album follows in a dark vein, forsaking earlier sprightliness, aside from tracks like "A Photograph of You" and "The Meaning of Love," for more melancholy reflections about love gone wrong as "Leave in Silence" and "My Secret Garden." More complex arrangements and juxtaposed sounds, such as the sparkle of breaking glass in "Leave in Silence," help give this underrated album even more of an intriguing, unexpected edge. Gore's lyrics sometimes veer on the facile, but David Gahan's singing comes more clearly to the fore throughout -- things aren't all there yet, but they were definitely starting to get close.

tags: depeche mode, a broken frame, 1982, flac,

February 21, 2019

Culture Club - Colour By Numbers (1983)

Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Pop, Reggae Pop
Label Number: CDV 2285

© 1983 Virgin Records
AllMusic Review by Jose F. Promis
Colour by Numbers was Culture Club's most successful album, and, undoubtedly, one of the most popular albums from the 1980s. Scoring no less than four U.S. hit singles (and five overseas), this set dominated the charts for a full year, both in the United States and in Europe. The songs were infectious, the videos were all over MTV, and the band was a media magnet. Boy George sounded as warm and soulful as ever, but one of the real stars on this set was backing vocalist Helen Terry, who really brought the house down on the album's unforgettable first single, "Church of the Poison Mind." This album also featured the band's biggest (and only number one) hit, the irresistibly catchy "Karma Chameleon," its more rock & roll Top Five follow-up "Miss Me Blind," and the fourth single (and big club hit), "It's a Miracle" (which also featured Helen Terry's unmistakable belting). Also here are "Victims," a big, dark, deep, and bombastic power ballad that was a huge hit overseas but never released in the U.S., and other soulful favorites such as "Black Money" and "That's the Way (I'm Only Trying to Help You)," where Boy George truly flexed his vocal muscles. In the 1980s music was, in many cases, flamboyant, fun, sexy, soulful, colorful, androgynous, and carefree, and this album captured that spirit perfectly. A must for any collector of 1980s music, and the artistic and commercial pinnacle of a band that still attracted new fans years later.

tags: culture club, colour by numbers, color, 1983, flac,

Echo & The Bunnymen - Echo & The Bunnymen (1987) ☠

Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Pop Rock
Label Number: 242137-2
☠: Selected by Lass
© 1987 WEA
AllMusic Review by David Cleary
Echo & the Bunnymen caught the group at a fortuitous career juncture; the clutch of songs here were among the hookiest and most memorable the band would ever write, while the arrangements are noticeably clean and punchy, mostly eliminating strings and similar clutter to focus almost exclusively on guitars, keyboards, drums, and occasional percussion touches. The warmly expressive "All My Life," which might perhaps have received an overheated arrangement on prior albums, benefited especially from this approach. The band rocked out convincingly on other selections, such as "Satellite" and "All in Your Mind." Pete DeFreitas' solid drumming at times veered toward the danceable on tracks like "Lost and Found," "Lips Like Sugar," and the overtly Doors-influenced "Bedbugs and Ballyhoo." Surprisingly, vocalist Ian MuCulloch appeared to have rediscovered the maxim "less is more"; his singing was comparatively restrained and tasteful, resulting in a more natural, unforced emotiveness that was extremely effective. The production values were excellent, with many subtle touches that do not detract from the album's overall directness. In short, doing it clean really paid off here.

tags: echo and the bunnymen, bunny men, echo and the bunnymen album, 1987, flac,

Deep Blue Something - Deep Blue Something (2001) ☠

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Alternative Rock, Post Grunge
Label Number: 75766 70602 2 8
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☠: Selected by Lass
© 2001 Aezra/Orpheus Music
AllMusic Review by William Ruhlmann
By May 2001, when Deep Blue Something released their self-titled third album, the band from Denton, TX, led by brothers Todd and Toby Pipes, had been away from record stores long enough to qualify for inclusion in the next edition of The Billboard Book of One-Hit Wonders for "Breakfast at Tiffany's," which peaked in the Top Five in January 1996 and helped the band's second album, Home, to gold-record status. The group planned a follow-up called Byzantium for a fall 1998 release, but it never appeared, and in the wake of the Universal/PolyGram merger, they parted ways with Interscope records. At long last, Phoenix, AZ-based independent label Aezra issued Deep Blue Something, which contains many of the tracks bruited for Byzantium. Home was largely the product of Todd Pipes' lyrical vision, a brainy mixture of culture references and young-adult romantic musings, but Deep Blue Something is split between his and Toby Pipes' songs, as both brothers have become more introspective and less direct in their statements. Certainly, there is a sense of struggle in the words to songs like "Burning a Past," "Hell in Itself," and "Who Wants It" (all penned by Todd), and uncertainty is also a constant, notably in the first single, "She Is," which begins, "Who am I to say what I believe is the way things should be?" The band sets such sentiments to spacious rock arrangements dominated by strong guitar riffs, with occasional horn and string parts. It's a sparkling pop sound that should be welcomed by music fans currently rediscovering the 1980s, as well as the Beatles. There isn't another "Breakfast at Tiffany's" here (maybe that's why Interscope bowed out), but that seems to be deliberate. Deep Blue Something attempts to redefine the band as a more mature, serious, and, inevitably, less accessible unit.

tags: deep blue something, deep blue something album, 2001, flac,

Twisted Sister - Love Is For Suckers (1987)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Hard Rock
Label Number: 7 81772-2

© 1987 Atlantic Records
AllMusic Review by Greg Prato
When Twisted Sister issued their 1985 album, Come Out and Play, the members were convinced they'd created their best work yet. But ultimately, the record was met with a very cool response by their fans -- a major disappointment after the double platinum success of their preceding album, 1984's Stay Hungry. For their next album, Love Is for Suckers (issued in 1987), the band attempted returning to more straight-ahead, hard rock-based songwriting. Long-time drummer A.J. Pero left the band prior to the album (replaced by session drummer Joey Franco), and the raw approach of their early work was noticeably absent -- producer Beau Hill (Ratt, Winger) gave the album a very '80s pop-metal sound. Standouts included "Hot Love," the title track, and "Tonight," but like the album before it, Love Is for Suckers died quickly on the charts. Having been together for over ten years, Twisted Sister decided to call it a day shortly after the album's release. The 1999 CD re-issue included four bonus tracks not included on the original -- "Feel Appeal," "Statutory Date," "If That's What You Want," and "I Will Win."

tags: twisted sister, love is for suckers, 1987, flac,

Twisted Sister - Stay Hungry (1984) ☠

*This is the original U.S. first pressing with a 9 track index. 
Contains 9 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Label Number: 7 80156-2
☠: Selected by Buccaneer
© 1984 Atlantic Records
AllMusic Review by Eduardo Rivadavia
After nearly a decade trying to make it to "The Show," Twisted Sister were finally up to bat. Their first album was a wild swing, their second had flown just barely foul, but with their third -- the unstoppable Stay Hungry -- the New York veterans finally hit one out of the park. And few bands were as deserving. Having paid their dues on the tough as nails N.Y.C. club scene (half of the band looked like the Ramones, the other half like the Dictators, and Dee Snider looked like, well, Dee Snider), Twisted Sister had finally worn down the opposition and truly arrived. With their comedic videos and bubblegum undertones, hit singles "We're Not Gonna Take It" and "I Wanna Rock" helped the band bridge the "beauty gap" into MTV acceptance, and a competent power ballad in "The Price" would cement their consumer-friendly status. But it was the irrefutable menace of tracks like "The Beast," "S.M.F.," and the massive "Burn in Hell" that connected with their loyal fans and displayed Twisted Sister's true power. Equally grim, "Captain Howdy" and "Street Justice" -- the two songs comprising the "Horror-teria" suite (later the basis for Snider's ill-fated movie project Strangeland) -- are a cross between Alice Cooper and its stated source of influence, Stephen King. And don't forget the all-out metal ambition of the title track. Ironically, the album's very mainstream appeal would alienate their core heavy metal fan base and spell the band's overexposure-induced fall from grace, but for this brief moment, Twisted Sister were truly the "talk of the town, top of the heap."

tags: twisted sister, stay hungry, 1984, flac,

Deep Blue Something - 11th Song (1993)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Alternative Rock, Pop Rock
Label Number: cm 3278-2
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© 1993 Doberman Records
*No professional reviews available for this release.

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Deep Blue Something - Home (1995 Reissue)

*Reissued in 1995 by Interscope Records
Contains 12 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Alternative Rock, Pop Rock
Label Number: INTD-92608
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© 1994-1995 Interscope Records
AllMusic Review by William Ruhlmann
The worldview of Todd Pipes, who wrote nine of the 12 songs on Deep Blue Sometbing's debut album, Home (the other three had lyrics by his brother Toby), is that of the educated American twenty-something of the 1990s: referencing art objects from the movie Breakfast at Tiffany's to the paintings of Kandinsky, he and his friends suffer the travails of romance, compromise, and suicide while trying to establish themselves as independent adults. Pipes sets these concerns to a power-pop sound straight out of late-'70s/early-'80s Great Britain (in turn indebted to the Brit rock of 1965), perhaps an odd stylistic choice for a band from Denton, TX, but it's a small world after all, and they find enough hooks to offer a literally upbeat contrast to the youthful uncertainty in the lyrics. Ironically, given the defiantly uncommercial stance put forth on the album-closing "Wouldn't Change a Thing," Home, propelled by the Top Ten success of "Breakfast at Tiffany's," became a substantial hit. (Deep Blue Something released an earlier version of Home on RainMaker Records in October 1994. The Interscope version released in June 1995 contained two fewer songs; three songs had been re-recorded; and the remaining songs had been remixed.)

tags: deep blue something, home, home album, 1994, 1995, reissue, flac,

Echo & The Bunnymen - Meteorites (2014)

Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Alternative Rock
Label Number: COOK CD 208
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© 2014 429 Records
AllMusic Review by Tim Sendra
After they reunited in the mid-'90s, Echo & the Bunnymen cranked out album after album of decent-to-good material, spotlighting Ian McCulloch's ageless vocals and the band's sure way with a dramatic hook. For 2014's Meteorites, the duo of McCulloch and guitarist Will Sergeant turned to legendary producer Youth to help guide the album, and came up with a record that compares favorably to the best work of their original run in the '80s. Where their previous effort, Fountain, was a big-sounding, very clean modern rock album that reduced the band to its essential core, this one aspires to more epic heights. Teeming with giant string arrangements, widescreen vocal production, and songs that hark back to the glory days of Ocean Rain, the album is a mysterious, murky, impressively nostalgic affair. With Sergeant providing his typically concise and perfectly complementary guitar lines and Mac digging deep to turn in one of his better vocal performances in a while, the duo give Youth a lot to work with and he spins it into some gauzy magic. Tracks like "Lovers on the Run" and "Holy Moses" have a dramatic intensity and sweeping power that their more focused and stripped-back songs of recent years have surely missed. When they go big, it works extremely well, like on the opening title track, a slowly unspooling epic with truly heart-rending string crescendos and some of Mac's most broken-sounding singing in a long time, or the huge-sounding "Market Town," which runs seven minutes, features a long Sergeant guitar solo, and doesn't flag at all. Even the simpler, more direct songs, like the quiet ballad "Grapes Upon the Vine," have a big sound, though not so big as to overwhelm the fragile emotions on display. Youth and the group walk the line between grandiose and epic throughout, never falling on the wrong side even once. Between the impressive set of songs, the totally invested performances, and Youth's brilliant production, Meteorites ends up as a late-in-the-game triumph for the band and a worthy successor to their finest album, Ocean Rain. It may be too late to really matter, and they may be doomed to be seen as a nostalgia act, but many of the bands in 2014 that are making neo-psychedelic albums would be well served to check with the Bunnymen to see how to go about things the correct way.

tags: echo and the bunnymen, bunny men, meteorites, 2014, flac,

February 20, 2019

Fozzy - Fozzy (2000)

Country: U.S.A./Canada
Language: English
Genre: Heavy Metal
Label Number: PALMCD 1980-2

© 2000 Megaforce Records
AllMusic Review by Steve Huey
Although the concept of Fozzy -- an American metal band trapped in Japan for 20 years finds that its material has been stolen by other artists -- suggests parallels with Spinal Tap, there's one very important difference: Spinal Tap wrote all its own original material, whereas Fozzy sticks exclusively to covers. So, in practice, when it's divorced from the story line of the accompanying web broadcasts, Fozzy just feels like an excuse for Chris Jericho and Stuck Mojo to perform their favorite early-'80s metal songs. But, considering that Fozzy is in reality a rap-metal band fronted by a professional wrestler, the album is surprisingly not bad. Jericho is a more than competent vocalist, and despite an occasional tendency to go a little too far over the top ("Over the Mountain" and the spoken intro to "The Prisoner"), he generally acquits himself well. The band, meanwhile, injects enough technical flash and showmanship to sound like a genuine early-'80s metal outfit. What's more, the all-around enthusiasm for this music is readily apparent (either that, or faked really well); it's played straight all the way through, with no attempts to make anything into ironic kitsch. So, all in all, the project turned out as well as was probably possible. Still, since these are all covers of fairly familiar items, Fozzy the album can't really stand on its own; it will likely be appreciated mainly by fans of the web series or of the people involved.

tags: fozzy, fozzy album, 2000, flac,

Twisted Sister - Under The Blade (1982)

*First pressing on CD. 
This pressing contain the original 1982 LP mix.
Contains  9 tracks total.

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Hard Rock
Label Number: INT 848.902

© 1982-1985 Secret/Roadrunner Records
AllMusic Review by Greg Prato
Although Twisted Sister had been slugging it out on the New York-area bar/club scene for nearly a decade by the early '80s (developing a large following in the process), no major record label would sign the act. Noticing that England was in the midst of a heavy metal resurgence (dubbed the New Wave of British Heavy Metal), the quintet moved over to the U.K., where they recorded their debut album, Under the Blade, issued in 1982 on the independent Secret Records. UFO bassist Pete Way produced the album, which featured many of the band's best compositions from their club days. The chilling title track remains one of the band's best and has became a perennial concert favorite, while other metallic highlights include the opening "What You Don't Know (Sure Can Hurt You)," "Sin After Sin," "Shoot 'Em Down," and "Tear It Loose." The band also brings the volume down a notch or two with the slow-burning tracks "Run for Your Life" and "Destroyer," while the 1999 CD reissue on Spitfire included a bonus track not on the original record ("I'll Never Grow Up Now!"). Under the Blade remains one of Twisted Sister's hardest rocking albums and is highly recommended to lovers of early-'80s British heavy metal.

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Six Feet Under - 13 (2005)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Death Metal
Label Number: 3984 14527 2
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© 2005 Metal Blade Records
AllMusic Review by Wade Kergan
This double-CD set pairs two Six Feet Under albums, 13 (2005) and Graveyard Classics, Vol. 2 (2004), together in a limited-edition slipcase. The pairing was offered at a discounted price, giving fans a chance to pick up the latest album of original material along with the band's song-for-song tribute to AC/DC's Back in Black.

tags: six feet under, 13, 13 album, 2005, flac,

Six Feet Under - Commandment (2007)

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Death Metal
Label Number: 3984-14613-2
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© 2007 Metal Blade Records
Review by Allmusic.com
Pummeling drums, slabs of evil guitar, and searing lyrics mark the triumphant return of death-metal juggernaut Six Feet Under. About half the album apes the old grindcore approach of their earlier work, while the rest steps up the pace to breakneck speed. Written and recorded entirely in the studio within a two-week period, the songs on the album seem of a piece but never samey.

tags: six feet under, commandment, 2007, flac,

Nine Days - The Madding Crowd (2000) ☠

Country: U.S.A.
Genre: Alternative Rock, Pop Rock
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☠: Selected by Lass
© 2000 Epic/550 Music
AllMusic Review by William Ruhlmann
Nine Days references Thomas Hardy in the title of its major-label debut, The Madding Crowd, but beyond the literary association the group is also making a point about its songs, which are embedded in modern life, not, as in Hardy, far from it. Co-leaders John Hampson (he of the smoother voice and the somewhat perkier attitude) and Brian Desveaux (whose throaty singing usually expresses more desperate feelings) have written an album's worth of songs about personal relationships that are often rocky, but always involved and involving. The "I" who is addressing a "you" most of the time frequently is trying to get back into her good graces, while admitting mistakes, though sometimes "you" isn't in such great shape, either. "If I Am," for example, begins with the line, "So you're standing on a ledge," but pledges, "I will not let you down," an assurance with a double meaning. You don't have to listen for the Hammond organ wail to realize that these guys have been influenced by Bob Dylan, and they erase any doubt in "Bob Dylan," for which they have received permission to sample excerpts from the master's "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." But fans of more contemporary rock will be reminded more of Pearl Jam and They Might Be Giants, with the catchy "Absolutely (Story of a Girl)" suggesting Barenaked Ladies. The alternating and harmonizing voices of the two lead singers often are reminiscent of BoDeans, though the group's music is usually more complexly arranged. Hampson and Desveaux still need to work on their songwriting, which can get too wordy and occasionally trips over itself ("If I Am," for example, employs the awkward line "Have in me a little faith" for the sake of a near-rhyme), just as their music can be a little dense at times. But The Madding Crowd is a promising debut by talented musicians who are headed in the right direction.

tags: nine days, the madding crowd, 2000, flac,