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#1 (permalink) | |
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Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
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Quote:
![]() Very occasionally, our tastes coincide but that's usually foretold by some cataclysmic natural event. Otherwise we just wave to each other (or give each other the finger) as we drift past on opposite sides of the street...
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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Zum Henker Defätist!!
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Beating GNR at DDR and keying Axl's new car
Posts: 48,199
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@ Trollheart
If you kind of dig Show No Mercy then South of Heaven may be your back door to Slayer. It's not a million miles from their other stuff, but they toned down the brutality, and brought in more melody than they ever had before.
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Last edited by The Batlord; 10-30-2013 at 10:41 AM. |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Zum Henker Defätist!!
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Beating GNR at DDR and keying Axl's new car
Posts: 48,199
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I hate to keep being that guy, but The Years of Decay was released in '89, not '93.
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#4 (permalink) |
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Just Keep Swimming...
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: See signature...
Posts: 7,765
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For Z, try these guys out for size:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoetrope_(band) zoetrope - Detention - YouTube They have some full albums on youtube too.
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#5 (permalink) |
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Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
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All good things....
![]() And so we finally come to the end of Metal Month. I must say, I don't know about you but I'm drained, but happily so. This has been a gargantuan task involving a shitload of work, research, reviewing, listening, learning and in many cases cowering. I've learned there are bands I will never ever listen to again, but I've also been often surprised by how I've taken to others. If, as I said at the beginning of the month, I didn't feature your favourite album, band or both, forgive me, but there's only so much I can squeeze into thirty-one days. A special note of thanks to the mods, who, despite my constant whinging in various threads, have overall done a stupendous job approving my many daily posts. Without your help, guys and girls, this would not have been possible, so I owe you all a debt of gratitude and I doff my cap towards you. Well, I would if I wore a cap. You get the idea. From here on in you can relax a little as regards my updates, as things begin to return a little to normal. Thanks again, and sorry if I was at times a little over-critical of your efforts. And so, as the last notes fade into the night, the crowd begin to shuffle home, realising there will be no fourth encore, as the last guitar is packed away and the big rigs rev up, and roadies swarm all over the stage area like busy, leather-jacketed ants, we bid you farewell from Metal Month. We hope you enjoyed it; if you are a Metalhead we hope you got a kick out of it, if you weren't then we hope you are now, or have at least gained some appreciation for this wonderful music. If you're someone who hates metal with every fibre of your being (boo!) then we apologise for leaving you waiting all through October, but the doors are open again and you can safely re-enter the premises. Thanks to all who commented, to all who read. Thanks in particular to The Batlord for his contributions and to Unknown Soldier for trying to point out where I fell down, when I did. Your input has been invaluable guys! And now, it's time for me to climb into that stretch limo --- okay okay! Head for the bus! --- and wend my weary way home. The Playlist of Life returns to normal from tomorrow, when we will be featuring something as far removed from Heavy Metal as it is possible to be. Of course Heavy Metal will never die, but for now it's just been moved into a room a little further away, where it can shred and scream and thunder and rock happily away to itself, a room we will most assuredly be visiting again from time to time. But for now, let's just close the door gently and open another one... See ya tomorrow! ![]() has concluded. Thank you for your custom. "Metal Month" is a production of The Playlist of Life Copyright (c) Trollheart MMIII. All rights reserved. No Metalheads were harmed during the making of this feature (though my ears may very well have been on occasion!)
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
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#6 (permalink) | |
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Horribly Creative
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: London, The Big Smoke
Posts: 8,265
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How about some stats like how many albums you actually reviewed and listing the best to the worst out of all the albums that you reviewed, which would make a good listening list to anybody glancing at the 'metal month' section.
Anyway 'metal month' needs a closing theme song and none come any better than this.
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Power Metal Pounding Decibels- A Hard and Heavy History |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
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Quote:
Metal Month is over, Julian. It's over. Just accept it and let it go...
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
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#8 (permalink) | ||
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Horribly Creative
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: London, The Big Smoke
Posts: 8,265
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Power Metal Pounding Decibels- A Hard and Heavy History |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,996
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After a month of posting metal albums and videos, and two months prior to that researching, reviewing and listening for Metal Month, I’m about all metalled out, so am ready for something of a change. Bit of a rest, as they say, so I’d like to turn in a totally different direction. Of course, I do love heavy metal and it will always form a vital and important part of my journals, but right now I’m ready to listen to something other than screaming guitars, thumping drums and singers who growl howl or shriek. So, to borrow an image idea from The Batlord…
I have never been a fan of electronic music, as most of you know, though I’m beginning to make small inroads into a genre I had never really thought I would be interested in. When I were a lad, bands like Human League, Heaven 17, Pet Shop Boys and Fiction Factory were all treated with equal disdain by me, who was a long-haired rocker and metaller, and as a workmate labelled these outfits, as “puff bands”. I had neither the desire nor the interest in exploring their music. I still don’t really, but when I heard about this album I thought I’d give it a go, for novelty value if nothing else. All I know of Visage is encapsulated in one track --- well, two, but mostly “Fade to grey”. Everyone my age knows that, and it for me typified what these sort of new romantic/electronic/”puff bands” were all about: droning, soulless, lifeless drivel that made you want to slash your wrists and just depressed the hell out of you. It seems they have had something of an interesting career though. Hearts and knives --- Visage --- 2013 (Blitz Ckub) ![]() Strictly speaking, we’re talking about Visage Mk II here. Seems the original band, of whom the mighty Midge Ure was once a member, split back in 1985, after their third album, released the previous year, bombed in every way. Steve Strange, founder of the band, hung around with various projects but eventually got the band back together, so to speak, in 2004 but no new material surfaced until 2007, and that only one track. So this is only their fourth album, with a gap of just short of thirty years between this and the last one. That has to be the longest any band has left their fans waiting. I mentioned the delay between Helloween’s “Keeper of the seven keys” parts two and three, as it were, but that was nothing compared to this. And it’s not the same band. Strange is there, of course, but longtime founder members Rusty Egan and the man who later found fame with Ultravox and of course Live Aid is nowhere to be seen either. Essentially this is a new band, formed by Strange under the Visage name, so whether we can expect a radical departure from the downbeat electro of their eighties music or not I don’t know, but I intend to find out. Of course, the whole scene has changed now; electronic music is still popular certainly, in some ways even moreso than when Steve and the boys trod the boards. But it has undergone something of a revolution and is barely recognisable from the likes of Ultravox, Depeche Mode and Bronskibeat, who commanded the charts and ruled the radio airwaves back then. It’s a boppy, uptempo beginning that puts me more in mind of Human League or Ultravox really to get us underway as “Never enough” announces the rebirth of Visage. And it’s not half bad. Definite shades of Phil Oakey here. Interesting that there’s quite a lot of guitar, though in fairness there are a total of five keyboard players used on the album, so it’s very much keys and synth-oriented, but then you’d expect that. It’s almost a return to the heyday of the New Romantic period in the 1980s; certainly a lot of restrained energy and while it’s hardly rock and roll, I could see people dancing to this. Good start. Strange is in good voice for a man who hasn’t sung in a band since 2007, and yet I can’t shake the comparison to the Human League frontman. Maybe they just all sounded the same? This similarity in singing style continues into “Shameless fashion”, where the synths take control more, especially the synth bass so recognisable from the music of that period. It’s still relatively uptempo though, and there is a decent guitar solo in the song. Interesting to see Visage kind of mock themselves, or at least the clothing fad at the time. A little slower then is “She’s electric (Coming around) with some nice backing vocals, mostly courtesy of Lauren Duvall. Little keyboard riff there right out of Tubeway Army, and we’re into “Hidden sign” with a nice funky bassline and the tempo rising again. Very synth-centric again. A spoken vocal section brings to mind Neil Tennant’s work with the Pet Shop Boys and again there are nice backing vox from Duvall. “On we go”. No, that’s not me saying on we go, though on we do go. It’s the title of the next track, and it has a nice sort of atmospheric, almost organ sound reminiscent of Kraftwerk and a big dark bassy synth carrying the tune in a somewhat ominous vein. Could very well be an instrumental, as we’re halfway through the song’s four minutes and so far no --- ah no wait. There’s the vocal now. Very slow and almost menacing as the deep bassy synth propels the track, with another, almost vocal synth adding its own flavour to the tune. Probably the bleakest track so far on an album I expected to be fairly downbeat, and which so far has not really been. Though again I admit I know little of Visage’s work; “Fade to grey” may not have been typical of them. Something like cello or violin, probably synth-based, opens “Dreamer I know”, the dark mood dispelled as the pop sensibility returns to the album, and it could almost be Johnny Hates Jazz or Curiosity Killed the Cat, or any of another hundred eighties pop bands; bit bland really and probably my least favourite track so far. Yeah, but it does make my toes tap, have to admit. “Lost in static” has another nice atmospheric, almost ambient introduction, some soft piano ushering in the bass as the song gets going, tripping along nicely. Squelchy, bassy synth then takes control as the vocal comes in, and Strange is more subdued here, though truth to tell this is not the sort of music where you hear too much in the way of passion: a little mechanised, a little synthetic, a little --- well, let’s be honest: a little soulless. “I am watching” is not a lot better: very generic by-the-numbers electropop I feel, sort of mid-paced but not a lot to make me remember it. The rhythm almost puts me in mind of the dreaded Stock, Aitken and Waterman, though I wouldn’t be that disrespectful to any band as to link them with the awful Hit Factory. Still, it’s close. “Diaries of a madman” is in fact the one track that presaged the return of Visage, the one Steve Strange recorded way back in 2007, and so is the oldest song on this album. Nice guitar intro, but then it descends into very much a Human League rip-off song; I could hear this on “Dare”. The album then ends on a low-key ballad, not at all bad, with a nice soft texture and a smooth line flowing through it. TRACKLISTING 1. Never enough 2. Shameless fashion 3. She’s electric (Coming around) 4. Hidden sign 5. On we go 6. Dreamer I know 7. Lost in static 8. I am watching 9. Diaries of a madman 10. Breathe life Yeah, definitely not for me. I’m sure Visage’s fans, waiting for three decades for a new album will be delighted with it, and it will probably do well overall. But it’s not my kind of music. Echoing the dislike I had for electronic pop music back when I was young, this comes across as sterile, dull and pretty lifeless. There’s no doubt they’re good at what they do, all accomplished musicians and Steve Strange is a good singer, but there’s nothing here that excites or even vaguely interests me. I may be looking somewhat guiltily in the direction of electronica, thinking I haven’t exactly given it a fair shake down the years, and be searching for bands I can enjoy, but Visage won’t be one of them. Unfortunately, a review that has to consist more of knives than hearts, I’m sorry to say.
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Groupie
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: London
Posts: 5
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Steve and myself were a couple for a while way way back in the early eighties, from 1980-1982. Our on-off relationship finally ended when I met my future husband not long after 'The Anvil' was released in March 1982; however, I always continued following Steve's career and my interest was piqued when it transpired Visage had recorded a new album. I was unsure of what to expect but found it to be a very pleasant surprise!! It has perfectly captured the original sound of Visage. I thoroughly enjoyed this album although I do concede that the tracks are a touch 'soulless'. Throughout my late teens and early twenties I was CRAZY for synthpop and have always had a soft spot for it.
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