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Tag Archives: heavy metal

Thor

05 Saturday May 2012

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heavy metal, humor, Keep the Dogs Away, Military Matters, Thor

One look at the album art and you know that, either this guy has a great sense of humor or else he is one of the most self deluded egomaniacs of all time.  Humor wins!  This is because he really is one of those bigger-than-life people, and has the self confidence and self awareness to make fun of himself.  On the cover he holds a group of snarling dobermans.  But his body!  Herculean proportions, oaken limbs, puissant visage, he looks like an assemblage of over-inflated condoms tied together to approximate the form of a human being.  It turns out that Thor is really a successful professional bodybuilder.  Among his accomplishments were the titles of Mr. Canada in the 1973 International Federation of Bodybuilders competition and Mr. USA in the 1973 American Amateur Bodybuilding Association competition.

All the songs are boastful and cartoonish.  This one, “Military Matters,” begins with nimble descending and ascending scales on the lead guitar.  A military beat introduces the singers, declaiming in unison:

I think we’re heading for the rising storm
Show you sights you‘ve never seen before
They’re getting ready for the Third World War
As they ride ride ride ride ri-ide
On the wings of the Valkyrie

Thor orates in stentorian voice:

There’s talk of military matters
I can hear that in the wind
It’s much too hot to handle
As the rumble starts again

This song does not awaken in me the Third-World-War terrors that kept me awake at night in third grade.  Rather, it is out of the pages of the comics from that time, like DC’s Sgt. Rock and Marvel’s Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos, and, of course, Marvel’s The Mighty Thor.  Thor issues forth like a real life comic book hero.

Willi Morrison, John Shand, Ian Guenther, “Military Matters,” Pondfield Music, Inc./Ample Parking Publishing (ASCAP) (1978).  From Thor, Keep the Dogs Away, Midsong Records, Manufactured and Distributed by MCA, MCA 2337 (1978).  Album Design – John Williamson, Leslie Smart & Associates; Photography – Normands Berzins.

Judas Priest

10 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by garystormsongs in Music I Love

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Glenn Tipton, heavy metal, Judas Priest, K.K. Downing, Rob Halford, Rock Hard Ride Free

Judas Priest is on a mission to conquer, to engage in unfettered revelry, to never suffer defeat, to destroy the enemy, to defend the faith, to guard against evil, to march forth with a mighty army, to murder the challengers, to behead the power mad freaks, and, at every opportunity, to ride scorchingly fast vehicles, have raging sex, and inflict the kind of hurt that feels really good.

I have no idea what Judas Priest is fighting against, who the enemy is, what they are advocating, or what happens if they win.  But their music is incredibly exciting and the musicianship is fantastic.  The lead guitar duo of Glenn Tipton and K.K. Downing grab you by the hair, Rob Halford’s operatic singing hits you in the head, and you have to be dead not to punch the sky and charge out wanting to conquer something – even if you’re not sure what – just because you know you can do it – after hearing their music.

Take this great anthem, “Rock Hard Ride Free.”  After a long guitar duo introduction, the song leaps into a fierce call for defiance.  We are being exhorted to exert ourselves without compromise:  “Gotta get a reaction / Push for all that you’re worth.”  And someone is trying to stop us, but we will triumph:

No denying
We’re going against the grain
So defiant
But they’ll never put us down

And to the jubilant thundering chorus – “Rock hard, ride free / All day, all night” – punctuated by screeching that must have blown out Halford’s eyeballs – “Rock hard, ride free / All your life” – we roar forth on molten wheels, invincible, undaunted.  It doesn’t matter that we don’t have a clue who “they” are who were trying to put us down.  They can’t escape us!

The band’s name is of noble origin, being borrowed from Bob Dylan’s song “The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest.”  Independent of the Dylan aspect, the band’s name has a clearly Christian connotation, but, unlike a lot of earlier metal bands, I find nothing religious about any of their songs.

Glenn Tipton, Rob Halford, K.K. Downing.  “Rock Hard Ride Free.”  April Music Inc., Crewglen Ltd., Ebonytree Ltd., Geargate Ltd. (ASCAP), 1984.  From Judas Priest.  Defenders of the Faith.  CBS Records, FC 39219.  1984.  Cover design:  Doug Johnson.

Dust

01 Thursday Mar 2012

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1970s, Backstreet Boys, Dust, Frank Frazetta, heavy metal, Kenny Aaronson, Marc Bell, Marky Ramone, Richard Hell, Richie Wise, Wayne County

A forgotten heavy rock trio.  Dust.  I received this disc from Louie the Mad Vinyl Junkie.  The members of the group were Richie Wise, Kenny Aaronson, and Marc Bell.  While this group is an interesting example of early American metal, it is important because its members made significant contributions in the punk world.  Aaronson and Bell were members of the Backstreet Boys, Wayne County’s incredibly hot band.  Bell played with Richard Hell & The Voidoids, and, most significantly, joined the Ramones in 1978 as Marky Ramone after Tommy left the band.

Dust put out two sick (in the positive murder death wipeout drowning leaden driving ponderous rock sense of the word) albums.  This album, Hard Attack, has a sick (in the creepy fascinating gory ugly captivating repulsive beautiful Frank Frazetta sense of the word) album cover.  Check this tune: “Learning to Die.”  Sick.

Dust, Hard Attack, Kama Sutra Records, KSBS2059 (1972).  Painting – Frank Frazetta; Art Direction – Glen Christensen.

Girlschool

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

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1980s, Denise Dufort, Enid Williams, Girlschool, heavy metal, Kelly Johnson, Screaming Blue Murder

I think the early 1980s metal groups, especially the ones out of England, were riding on the shoulders of the punks.  The punks brought us back to real rock’n’roll.  And the new metal groups like Iron Maiden and Motorhead, and this great group, Girlschool, were jumping off that sensibility with faster rhythms, shorter songs, and a sexier streetwise lyrics than the old school metal.  Girlschool further supports this hypothesis because their second album, Hit and Run, came out on the Stiff Record label, the same label that gave us Elvis Costello, Wreckless Eric, Ian Dury, and most relevantly, Motorhead.

By any standard Hit and Run is a fantastic album.  Shut your eyes.  Would you believe this is an all girl metal quartet?  Well the fact that I ask that question, and the fact that you’re even a little bit surprised shows us exactly how screwed up our parents made us, and affirms exactly what Girlschool set out to prove by being an all-girl group in the first place:  that girls can play rougher than boys.  I don’t think they do a single ballad or remotely spiritual tune.

Check out this song:  “Flesh and Blood” from their third album, Screaming Blue Murder.  WHAM Kim McAuliffe’s driving power chords.  And WHAAAAAAA Kelly Johnson screaming her pure self through each guitar solo.  And WHOMP the shockwave pounding foundation laid by Denise Dufort on Drums and Enid Williams thumping bass.  They do rawer-and-hotter-than-the-original versions of songs by boys, like Gun’s immortal “Race With the Devil” and ZZ Top’s “Tush.”

Girlschool, Screaming Blue Murder, PolyGram Records, SRM 1-4066 (1982).  Photography – Fin Costello; Album Design – not credited.

Iron Maiden

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

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1980s, classical, Eddie, heavy metal, Iron Maiden, Killers, Paul Di’Anno

Like many other groups with great album covers – such as Miles Davis, Blind Faith, Yes, King Crimson, Little Feat, Herb Alpert, Alan Parsons, Santana, Duran Duran – this group might not have enjoyed half the notoriety it received if it did not have thought-provoking iconic album art. There’s something about Derek Riggs’ images of the cadaverous maleficent Eddie, a/k/a/ Edward The Head, that raises as many questions as are answered by the stories they tell. You just gotta look and look. Most notable is the cover of the single, “Flight of Icarus,” in which Eddie careens away on bat wings, having just used a flame thrower to incinerate the wings of the beautiful son of Daedalus.

And then while you’re looking at the album art, you notice the music. Each musician is a wonder because musicianship is a huge part of what this band is about. Thus, many of the songs have long instrumental introductions or instrumental interludes that diverge in rhythm and key signature from the song of which they are a part. Individual songs have segments that differ from one another in melody and tempo – and I do not mean they merely have a verse, chorus, and bridge – rather they have different movements. Steve Harris on bass occasionally rises above the tumult to take over from the driving dominance of the lead-guitar duo, Adrian Smith and Dave Murray. At times the bass, guitars, and drums, are slamming along in unison. Paul Di’Anno growls like Alberich in Das Rheingold and then he soars and squeals like a banshee. And the subject matters of the songs are gothic, mythological, religious, literary. In a word, the forms of Iron Maiden’s music are classical.

The brilliance of Di’Anno’s singing is spectacularly represented by the song “Purgatory.” Barking words so fast they can barely be sung then suddenly he glissandos a scream an octave high.

The protagonist of the song is trapped in a doldrum. His incorporeal self reaches out to past lives, past memories of love, while his corporeal body holds him back.

My body tries to leave my soul.
Or is it me, I just don’t know.
Memories rising from the past, the future’s shadow overcast.
Something’s clutching at my head, through the darkness I’ll be led.

He is caught in a purgatory between long dead pleasure and present living pain. The song ends with a hopeless begging refrain:

Please take me away, take me away, so far away.

I note the influence of the punks on the 1980’s new wave of British metal. The metalists adopted the drive, the frenzy, the rage. But they rejected a huge part of the punk sensibility – the folk ethos – the philosophy that ANYONE can do this music. So it is with Iron Maiden. Only the few, the chosen, the spectacular virtuosos, can play this music.

Steve Harris, “Purgatory,” No publisher (BMI) (1981).  From Iron Maiden, Killers, Harvest Records Limited, Capitol Records Inc., ST-12141 (1981).  Illustration – Derek Riggs; Album design – Not credited.

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