Mordy's Metal Listening Club - New Albums Every Monday

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oops that should be
21/6 Ioannis
28/6 jeff
05/7 aldo
12/7 A. Begrand.
19/7 Call All Destroyer
26/7 pfunkboy

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Thursday, 17 June 2010 17:50 (thirteen years ago) link

swell. prepare for some Osmond-metal, heathens!

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Thursday, 17 June 2010 17:53 (thirteen years ago) link

Later-Day Armored Saints!

glenn mcdonald, Thursday, 17 June 2010 19:28 (thirteen years ago) link

okay, that was great Glenn.

I did an Osmond-metal thing - you can hear it here: Crazy-Ass Horses

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 17 June 2010 19:34 (thirteen years ago) link

Sure, I'll take whatever the very last week is.

Mordy, Thursday, 17 June 2010 19:37 (thirteen years ago) link

coldworld is reminding me a hell of a lot of a lo-fi agalloch

call all destroyer, Friday, 18 June 2010 13:11 (thirteen years ago) link

really dig this record--naturally it follows that it's going to be a complete pain in the ass to buy it.

call all destroyer, Friday, 18 June 2010 15:38 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah, i listened to the Coldworld disc earlier, too; all those lovely glacial textures and/or riffs were just what the doctor ordered what with this damned heat. great pick, Siegbran; this one goes on my must get list.

\m/

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Friday, 18 June 2010 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

gawd, that "Crazy-ass Horses" mix is giving me the extreme lol's just now! think i preferred your "Working Man" Rush-screw even more, tho. still play that one every so often.

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Friday, 18 June 2010 16:46 (thirteen years ago) link

The Rush wasn't me, but was the inspiration for my own goofing around. My best was probably a version of the Stooges "Loose" which made it sound like Loop.

EZ Snappin, Friday, 18 June 2010 16:51 (thirteen years ago) link

more ketchup:

Arckanum – loving this on the second listen--thought it sounded a little too flat and monochromatic at first. but now I hear all these cool little folky-pagan/occult/what-have-you details all over the place that add just the right sinister touch to the overall atmosphere of the thing. Also, the vocals are tr00ly fierce; more so than in most BM I’d say.

Gorguts – wow! these are damn impressive! i think the key to digging this more technical end of DM is to more or less treat it as if it's some kinda avant jazz-rock hybrid (with COOKIE!). i mean, these fuckers can play! and we're not talking about some "oh look at me wank off in public in order to impress all the other white boys who wish they could shred like i can shred" crap either. nope, we're talking about serious chops of the pure fucking musical DENSITY school here! great shit when you're in the mood for it.

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Sunday, 20 June 2010 12:36 (thirteen years ago) link

volume 11: revenge of the ‘80s

Accept – Balls to the Wall (1983)

http://thisrecording.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/accept_-_balls_to_the_wall-front.jpg

Bathory – Under the Sign of the Black Mark (1987)

http://www.truemetal.org/metalwallpaper/images/underthesignoftheblackmark.jpg

Queensryche – Operation: Mindcrime (1988)

http://fuckingsick.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/1988-operation-mindcrime.jpg

given that EZ Snappin already did an '70s week, i figured i should run with the '80s for my shot. strange thing is i pretty much ignored all things metal--aside from my beloved Motorhead and a number of more-or-less "hair metal" bands, that is--during that misbegotten decade. so this weeks choices are as much an excuse for me to play catch-up with a few ignored (on my part) classics from the era as anything else i guess. i do, however, wholeheartedly recommend these choices to anybody out there who likes to have a rockin' good time.

(still can't believe that O: M ranked fifth in Marty Popoff's Top 500 Heavy Metal Albums of All Time book, tho. i mean, it topped anything and everything by Priest? and given that the book's results were the product of genuine fan/pro voting [iirc], that just seems like an absurdly high placing, if not just plain nuts.)

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Sunday, 20 June 2010 21:11 (thirteen years ago) link

spotify ain't workin' for me (sob). links, anyone?

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Sunday, 20 June 2010 21:14 (thirteen years ago) link

I love that Bathory and it was actually on my shortlist for my weeks. The vocals in particular are tremendous - they sound like they are coming from very far away (someone who knows more than I do could probably say why, have they been mixed lower than the instrumentals?) and from some very violent cracking place in the vocalist's body. I feel like I can hear all kinds of innards in the vocals -- something violent coming up from the ribs, sticky mucous, lacerated vocal chords, etc. One of those types of performances where it sounds to me like the singer is literally doing damage to his body by singing. I'm sure this is not the case (tho I'm not sure what kind of studies into the longterm affects of singing this way are, I know that a lot of singers can do similar work without doing permanent damage), but it definitely sounds like that to me, and it's a huge part of what draws me to the music.

Mordy, Sunday, 20 June 2010 21:21 (thirteen years ago) link

Ha, I was just listening to Operation: Mindcrime a week or two ago. I'm not sure that "Suite Sister Mary" works but otherwise I think it's quite strong if you like that sort of thing (Rush meets Maiden meets Metallica but even more theatrical and bombastic than that sounds?). Tate's vocal gymnastics are pretty dazzling, e.g. on "Revolution Calling" and the title track. "The Needle Lies" sounds weirdly like a prototype for much mainstream emo from the past decade and may be my favourite. In fact, I like it so much that I want to give Fates Warning another shot.

I'm going to check out those other albums.

Sundar, Sunday, 20 June 2010 21:31 (thirteen years ago) link

excited, as usual!

call all destroyer, Sunday, 20 June 2010 21:35 (thirteen years ago) link

Tempted to see if I still have Operation: Mindcrime in my box of cassettes. It'll be neat to hear it again after all these years. Love the Accept, and the Bathory looks familiar but I can't bring it to mind. Looks like a fun week!

EZ Snappin, Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:00 (thirteen years ago) link

Ugh Queensryche. Despise them, no way will i ever sit through that album again! Yay for Bathory though!

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:05 (thirteen years ago) link

Ha, now we're talking. Outstanding choices, Ioannis. This is my era right here. I don't know where to start.

I'd been into Queensryche since '84, I really dug how daring Rage For Order was, and by 1988 I just knew these guys had a classic album in them. With my tastes in metal getting increasingly proggy I was thrilled to learn they were putting together a rock opera in the vein of The Wall and Quadrophenia, and I was counting the days, that was the most anticipated album of 1988 for me, more than Metallica, Maiden, Megadeth. But I didn't expect Mindcrime to be that good. The songs all stand up on their own as separate pieces, the storyline actually goes somewhere (a rarity for concept albums), and bombastic or not, the lyrics are damn smart. The singles are the best of the band's more accessible fare, the tension and melodrama in "Suite: Sister Mary" is totally over the top, but in the long run the one track that's always stuck with me the most is "The Mission". It's simply gorgeous.

On a side note, the band made the album in Montreal, and the Quebec separatist movement was a big inspiration for the whole "Mindcrime" thing.

A. Begrand, Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:19 (thirteen years ago) link

!

Sundar, Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:20 (thirteen years ago) link

Are those other two albums similar at all?

Sundar, Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:22 (thirteen years ago) link

Rush meets Maiden meets Metallica

I mean, there's something more overtly pop/glam/synth going on in there too, of course.

Sundar, Sunday, 20 June 2010 22:28 (thirteen years ago) link

Sundar - Accept sound kinda like classic AC/DC to me (except more German/metallic than that lame and obvious comparison would imply); riff-rocking sing-along anthems were their thing, and, boy, were they ever great at 'em! Bathory are sorta ground zero for all things BM. the sound is cold, distant, agonized, faintly post-industrial. all that good stuff. and Mordy's otm, re: the vocals.

K - all we are saying is give Geoff a chance! (c'mon, dude, get in the spirit of this thing and try to listen beyond your biases.)

Adrien - completely on the money, re: O: M, concerning the quality of the songs as discrete individual musical pieces--as opposed to mere component parts of a greater whole, a la Tommy and The Wall, say.

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Monday, 21 June 2010 07:03 (thirteen years ago) link

And how awesome is Bathory's "Enter the Eternal Fire"? You see a band like Watain go for broke with similar theatrics, but after listening to their new one repeatedly for a review and then digging out Black Mark tonight, there's no comparison.

A. Begrand, Monday, 21 June 2010 07:53 (thirteen years ago) link

more catchup--everyone pretty much saying what i was feeling abt gorefest--great drummer and lots of fun riffs. dude's voice on the live tracks was really annoying but on the tracks that sounded like they were the actual album it didn't bother me. unfortunately my mp3s were all out of order in this case. good choice tho!

call all destroyer, Monday, 21 June 2010 19:05 (thirteen years ago) link

Great choices. As a big fan of Rush, Voivod, The Wall, Tommy, and SF Sorrow--I've never understood why Operation : Mindcrime love has eluded me. It's time to try again.

Accept - love them, but it's been years since I spun anything off Ball to the Wall except the title track.

Bathroy - this is the most important album in the catalog that I've never spent time with.

Looking forward to a great week! :)

Nate Carson, Monday, 21 June 2010 20:16 (thirteen years ago) link

I came to Bathory a bit late, so my personal favorites are the second 3 (Blood Fire Death, Hammerheart and Twilight of the Gods), but even so I can see that arguably Under the Sign of the Black Mark is the first perfection of the style. I always adored Bathory most for the combination of epic bombast and guy-in-a-garage insularity, which in a way for me connected black metal to some other more synth-based non-metal stuff I was into at the time, and thus helped kind of reunify my musical world.

Operation: Mindcrime is a fascinating piece. For me Rage for Order was genre-definitive, and O:M is clearly a refinement of the aesthetic, musically. But the weird semi-inverse-Orwellian concept-album baggage squats on it like a giant aluminum-foil-hat-wearing toad. It doesn't exactly interfere with my appreciation of the music, but it definitely makes me reluctant to push the record on others. (On the other hand, it makes all those Rush albums seem subtle and literary by comparison, so that's a kind of roundabout public service.) Taken song-by-song, though, it remains monumental. If I had time and re-production skills, I'd love to make a de-conceptized version that grinds out all the dialogue and interstitial stuff and makes a ruthless 40-minute song-based album out of this. I suspect that would actually surpass Rage for Order for me.

But oh, man, what a tragedy to watch this band's decline over the years since.

[Accept is up next. I don't think I've ever heard this whole album!]

glenn mcdonald, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 13:32 (thirteen years ago) link

scorpions alb is from the hard rock/early metal era that i don't really care for, but even ignoring that, there's something pretty tacky about that record.

call all destroyer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 14:57 (thirteen years ago) link

Well, I can't say the Accept record does a lot for me. I've heard worse AC/DC albums from AC/DC, but I guess I don't really need more of them from anybody.

glenn mcdonald, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:20 (thirteen years ago) link

Dieter Dierks' production on Balls to the Wall is incredible. It's like chrome. Really unique sound.

A. Begrand, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:39 (thirteen years ago) link

man, I am so far behind on this thread that it's not even funny. but I'd just like to say that the last few weeks of picks have all been REALLY interesting and I'm looking forward to setting aside a chunk of time for em.

original bgm, Wednesday, 23 June 2010 15:44 (thirteen years ago) link

I just end up playing the Bathory instead of the others, even though I've heard it hundreds of times! Spotify has all of the Bathory and its just too tempting to listen to Bathory.

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Friday, 25 June 2010 15:42 (thirteen years ago) link

Spent the morning with this weeks picks, and I'm surprised to say I like them all! Well, maybe not really surprised; the only one new to me was this specific Bathory album.

I'll start there - I love, love, love the production. It sounds like they recorded in the same cement box Motley Crue used for their debut, only the microphones were left outside the door. I think a higher fidelity recording would have ruined it; the scuzzy patina keeps the bombast from being ridiculous. I have no interest in a black metal Manowar, though I'm sure it's been done by now. The long sequence from "Woman of Dark Desires" to "13 Candles" is amazing. Really happy to be introduced to this record.

Balls To The Wall is classic for a reason. Great tracks, great production, and the result is probably my favorite early 80s Judas Priest album (I'd have loved to hear Halford and co. tackle "Losers and Winners" and "Turn Me On"). I know the stock comparison is always AC/DC, but - except for Udo's raspy growl occasionally calling to mind Brian Johnson - I think they're past it by this point. Anthemic sing-alongs but not hip-shaking in any way; the rhythm section has zero swing (sadly, AC/DC lost their swing too as the 80s went on, but 83's Flick of the Switch still has some groove). I like Restless and Wild more, but I'm always happy to revisit this record.

The Queensryche record is better than I remembered, but i'd rather hear the two that proceeded it (The Warning and Rage For Order), despite the improvement in songwriting and skills. Like Glenn said, this is just a bit too bloated. Some great stuff ("The Mission" stands out) but a bit of a slog. And Geoff Tate, talented as he is, sounds absurd when he sings the word "fuck." He swears as convincingly as my mom.

Good week - thank Ioannis!

EZ Snappin, Friday, 25 June 2010 17:48 (thirteen years ago) link

cool.

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Friday, 25 June 2010 18:07 (thirteen years ago) link

28/6 jeff
05/7 aldo
12/7 A. Begrand.
19/7 Call All Destroyer
26/7 pfunkboy
02/8 mordy

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Sunday, 27 June 2010 20:30 (thirteen years ago) link

ahhh...lookin' forward to a pleasantly girly week. ;^)

"enduring lack of street cred" (Ioannis), Sunday, 27 June 2010 20:40 (thirteen years ago) link

dammit, how many tech death albums am I going to have to review to get rid of that reputation?

X-Wing fighter in hand, "Godzilla" cranked on the stereo (J3ff T.), Sunday, 27 June 2010 20:55 (thirteen years ago) link

dude I'll take girly power metal over the top three most popular other forms of metal right now - get as girly as you want in my opinion

get your bucket of free wings (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Sunday, 27 June 2010 20:58 (thirteen years ago) link

What are the top 3? Doom, whatever Killswitch Engage is, and uh -- stoner metal?

Mordy, Sunday, 27 June 2010 21:20 (thirteen years ago) link

I would guess Death, Black and Metalcore?

EZ Snappin, Sunday, 27 June 2010 21:23 (thirteen years ago) link

metalcore, black metal, and indie rock

get your bucket of free wings (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Sunday, 27 June 2010 21:23 (thirteen years ago) link

id be very surprised if black metal was outselling death metal in the usa

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Sunday, 27 June 2010 21:36 (thirteen years ago) link

i wonder who the biggest selling "doom" band in the US is and how much they sell? about 5k max?

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Sunday, 27 June 2010 21:40 (thirteen years ago) link

Volume 12: Stuff Jeff Likes

Cirith Ungol - King of the Dead
http://www.metal-archives.com/images/1/7/6/6/1766.jpg

Doom(?) metal classic. I'm not sure how to classify this, other than "awesome." Still ahead of its time, 25 years later.

http://open.spotify.com/album/5yFnOSjF9MFMokZwXvwofm

Warlock - Triumph and Agony
http://www.metal-archives.com/images/1/9/4/2/1942.jpg

Female-fronted power metal at it's finest! The pop singer they have fronting Nightwish right now could learn a thing or 666 from Doro Pesch.

http://open.spotify.com/album/1Vdxmu8PwATvePFNVrjPMO

Sigh - Imaginary Sonicscape
http://www.metal-archives.com/images/1/6/0/160.jpg

One of the most dizzyingly experimental metal records of all time, this took everything killer about metal, threw it through the Japan filter, and then got the band dropped from their label. Great driving music!

http://open.spotify.com/album/6vX4o28Pp5IFFjCyvhVqqV

X-Wing fighter in hand, "Godzilla" cranked on the stereo (J3ff T.), Sunday, 27 June 2010 22:22 (thirteen years ago) link

love that sigh album!

call all destroyer, Sunday, 27 June 2010 22:28 (thirteen years ago) link

I love that Cirith Ungol record! So good. Looking forward to hearing the other two which look promising.

EZ Snappin, Sunday, 27 June 2010 22:29 (thirteen years ago) link

A friend introuced me to that Sigh album, and it blew me away. They haven't topped that one since, in my opinion.

The Warlock album is part incredible ("I Rule the Ruins", the ubiquitous "All We Are"), part head-scratcher ("Metal Tango"). But definitely a solid album overall. Doro still sounds great to this day.

A. Begrand, Sunday, 27 June 2010 22:54 (thirteen years ago) link

Still a remarkably attractive woman.

X-Wing fighter in hand, "Godzilla" cranked on the stereo (J3ff T.), Sunday, 27 June 2010 23:12 (thirteen years ago) link


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