#830: 1992

1992

I’ve never been much of a winter guy.  I get that from my dad.  The winter of ’92 was long with a number of serious snow days.  I had just learned how to drive and it was certainly a challenge.  Details are not important.  You don’t need an accounting of times my little Plymouth Sundance got stuck or struggled to make it home from school.  All you really need to know was what was in my tape deck.

I was still digesting a lot of the music that I received for Christmas at the end of ’91.  The live Poison and Queensryche sets got a lot of car play once I dubbed them onto cassette.  At this point my attention to detail was becoming overwhelming.  I painstakingly faded in and faded out the sides of the live albums onto cassette.  This had to be done manually as you were recording.  If I missed the cue I’d do it over again until I got it right to my satisfaction.  I should have known there was something wrong with me!

We had one serious snow day that year, and although class wasn’t cancelled I stayed home.  My school friend Rob V made a tape for me of David Lee Roth live in Toronto on the Eat ‘Em and Smile tour.  I know that I played that tape on that day because the memory is so clear.  It was a great concert.  Roth and Steve Vai had a fun interplay, where Steve imitated Roth’s vocal intonations with his guitar.  Vai followed his voice as Roth told the crowd, “Toronto kicks ass, because the girls are soooo fiiiine!”

Time flies, and 1992 didn’t take long to kick into gear with new releases.

I had just discovered Queen.  Suddenly here comes this new movie Wayne’s World which made Queen a worldwide phenomenon for a second time.  More important to me though was the fact that the soundtrack CD included the first new Black Sabbath track with Ronnie James Dio in a decade:  “Time Machine”!  My buddy Peter didn’t care — he was strictly an Ozzy Sabbath fan.  No Dio!  (And certainly no Tony Martin!)  But I was excited.  I wanted to get that soundtrack as soon as possible.

There was a new music store that had just opened at the mall about six months prior.  The very first tape I would ever buy there was the debut album by Mr. Bungle in late ’91.   It would be the very Record Store that I would later dedicate years of my life to…but not yet.  When it opened, I recall my sister and I being glad that there was finally a music store at the mall again, but disappointed in the prices.  $14.99 for a tape was a lot of cash.  CDs were unfortunately out of our price range.  New cassette releases like Wayne’s World were cheaper at $10.99, so I went to the mall before class one morning to get a copy.  And this is a funny memory as you’ll see.

When I worked at the store, the boss would give me shit if he thought I was talking to someone too much.  I think he would have preferred good old fashioned silent labour, but I don’t know that.  He also drilled into us to pay attention to every customer and don’t ignore anybody.  So it’s quite ironic that he lost a sale that day by ignoring me and talking it up with some hot girl visiting him!

I was standing there in front of his new release rack looking for Wayne’s World.  I knew it was out, but didn’t see it anywhere.  I checked his soundtracks and it was missing in action.   I wanted to ask him if he had it, but he was chatting it up with this girl.  Eventually I caught his attention, but only because as I stood there waiting, I thought he did ask me a question.  So I said, “Pardon me?”  But he wasn’t actually talking to me, he was still talking to the girl.  Once he noticed me, he informed me that Wayne’s World was sold out but he could hold a copy for me as soon as the next shipment arrived.  I was ticked off so I said no thanks, and picked it up at the Zellers store down the hall instead.

Wayne’s World in the deck, I happily rocked to Queen, Sabbath, Cinderella, and hell even Gary Wright.  Peter and I saw the movie one Saturday night at a theater in Guelph, and liked it so much that we went back to see it again the following afternoon.  I saw Wayne’s World four times that winter!

I got my fill of Queen with the recent Classic Queen CD, released later that March.  I got the CD for a good price at the local Costco!  This enabled me to get a good chunk of Queen hits all at once in glorious CD quality.

The next big release to hit my car deck was a big one.  A really big one.  An album five years in the making through triumph and tragedy.

On March 31 I went back to the Record Store on my way to class, and the new release I was waiting for had arrived.  I left gripping Adrenalize in my hands.  An album I had been waiting for since highschool and even had actual dreams about!  It was finally real.  Into the tape deck it went as I drove to school.  Less riffy…more reliant on vocal melody…not bad?  I’ll let them have it though.  After what they’ve been through?  Yeah, I’ll cut them some slack.

Two weeks later, I was digesting another massive chunk of music.

I didn’t get Pandora’s Box in 1991 when it was released.  There was so much going on.  But my parents bought it for me as an Easter gift in April ’92.  That Easter I was “Back in the Saddle” with three CDs of Aerosmith!

It was a bittersweet gift.  Traditionally the family spent Easter at the cottage.  I have lots of happy memories of playing GI Joe in the fresh Easter afternoons up there.  This time I had to study for final exams and stayed home with my gift.  I must have played that box set two times through while studying that weekend.

Exams were over by the end of April and suddenly…it was summer holidays.  In April!  It was…incredible!  I stubbornly refused to get a summer job.  I have to say I don’t regret that.  I had savings from my previous job at the grocery store and I was getting Chrysler dividends cheques (yeah, baby).  Between that, Christmas & birthday gifts, I got most of the music I wanted.  And I got to spend that summer just enjoying it all.  It felt really good after such a long and frankly lonely winter.

Pandora’s Box tided me over.  After all, it was a lot to absorb having heard very little “old” Aerosmith up til that point.  My favourite track was “Sharpshooter” by Whitford – St. Holmes.  I liked that they included a sampling of solo material by various members.  These were new worlds to discover, but what about the next big release?  Who would be the one to spend my valuable savings on?

Iron Maiden were back on May 11 after a very short absence with Fear of the Dark, their second of the Janick Gers era.  But I needed to save my money, and wait one more week for something even more important to me.  It was Revenge time.

Speaking of triumph and tragedy, it was time for some overdue spoils for Kiss.  Having lost drummer Eric Carr to cancer in late ’91, Kiss deserved to catch a break.  Fortunately Revenge turned out to be a far better album than the previous few.  I recall getting over a really bad cold, and my lungs were still congested on that spring day.  The outdoor air felt amazing.  I walked over to the mall on release day and bought my CD copy at the Record Store.  I probably ran all the way home to play it, lungs be damned.

To say I was happy was an understatement.  In 1992 you had to come out with something strong or you would sink.  It was a more vicious musical world than just a year ago.  Fortunately Kiss did not wimp out and came out with an album just heavy enough, without following trends.  It would be my favourite album of the year, though a few strong contenders were still lined up.

My birthday was coming and I would have to wait a little while to get some more essential tunes.  Fear of the Dark was on the list.  So was Faith No More’s Angel Dust, which was a must.  And, of course, rock’s ultimate royalty returned in 1992.  A band that rock history cannot ignore, though it arguably should.  A band that defined the term “odorous”.  A band with a colourful and tragic backstory.  A band making its long feared return with its first album since 1984’s Smell the Glove.  And with their new album Break Like the Wind, they proudly proclaimed, yes indeed, this is Spinal Tap.

Once again, quite a bit of music to absorb.  I had been anticipating the Iron Maiden.  I heard the first single “Be Quick or Be Dead” on Q107 late one night, and didn’t think much of it at first.  I was concerned that Bruce Dickinson’s voice was becoming more growly and less melodic.  The album helped assuage these concerns with a number of melodic numbers including “Wasting Love”, “Afraid to Shoot Strangers” and “Fear of the Dark”.  But the album was infected with lots of filler.  “Weekend Warrior”, “Fear is the Key”, “Chains of Misery”…lots of songs that were just not memorable.  Fear of the Dark sounded better than its predecessor but could you say it was better than Seventh SonSomewhere in Time Powerslave?  No.

Though it was murky and dense, the Faith No More album blew me away.  The M.E.A.T Magazine review by Drew Masters gave it 2/5 M’s.  I gave it 5/5.  I wanted something heavy and weird from Faith No More.  I got what I wanted.  Peter was a big Faith No More fan too, but I don’t think he dug Angel Dust as much as I did.  We both appreciated the comedic aspects but I really got into the samples, nuances and rhythms.  It was, and is, a masterpiece.  I believe I can say that I was of that opinion from the very beginning.

And Spinal Tap, dear Spinal Tap.  The Majesties of Rock took a little longer for me to fully understand.  And no wonder, for Spinal Tap are playing musical 4-dimensional chess inside your ear canals.  I simply had to accept that several years had passed since Spinal Tap last recorded, and they had grown in their own stunted way.  I’ve always thought that the title track was sincerely brilliant.  But I never liked that Nigel Tufnel had so few lead vocals.  I have long appreciated bands that had multiple lead singers.  While this time even bassist Derek Smalls stepped up to the microphone, it was David St. Hubbins who sang lead on 11 of the 14 tracks.  Now, this is certainly not to criticise the enviable lead pipes of St. Hubbins, but merely to state that there wasn’t enough Nigel.  Having said that, Nigel did branch out by employing a new guitar playing technique — doubling his solos with vocals, like Gillan used to do with Blackmore.  He also got to unleash his new amps that went up to infinity, which debuted live at the Freddie Mercury tribute concert in April.

Like all things, summer eventually came to an end and it was back to school once again.  That fall and into Christmas I got some of the last new releases that were on my radar.  I missed Black Sabbath when Dehumanizer came out in June.  That one took a long time to really like.  While the production was incredibly crisp, the songs didn’t seem up to snuff to me.  At least at first.  In time, it became a personal favourite album.

That Christmas came the new Bon Jovi album Keep the Faith, Queen’s new Greatest Hits, and of course AC/DC Live.  It was also the Christmas that I first realized there was something wrong inside my head, and I realized it because of those albums.  It was partly the obsessive-compulsive disorder, but also a massive hangup about being ignored.  I wanted the AC/DC double Live, but was given the single.  I wanted Keep the Faith and Queen on CD but got cassette.  As I grew older and learned more about myself, I realized that I became very upset if I felt like someone was not listening to me or understanding me.  Nobody seemed to get why I wanted specific versions (because of my OCD actually), and I couldn’t explain it, so that set me off even further.  I became extremely grumpy that Christmas over these gifts, and it was ugly.  I isolated myself to stew in my own negativity.  It’s not something I’m proud of, and you can call me a spoiled brat if you want to (you wouldn’t be wrong).  At least I’ve worked at trying to figure out my defects.

It’s not like any of it mattered in the long term.  I have re-bought all of those albums twice since, each!

1992 went out much like it came in, cold and snowy.  Canadian winters are hard.  Some people have the DNA for it, but I don’t.  I’m half Italian.  I wasn’t designed for snowy, damp winters.  That’s why music is so important to me in the winter months.  Music can be a completely indoor activity and I had a continually fresh supply.  1992 was a big year for heavy metal even though the grunge revolution had already started.  Of course, things were not to stay as they are.  Iron Maiden and Faith No More were about to hit some major speedbumps, and Black Sabbath had already split in two by the end of the year!  1992 was the last time we could pretend heavy metal was still in good health.    Hard rock was about to endure further challenges and hardships.  At least we had ’92.

 

30 comments

  1. My dad hates winter but I’m definitely more of a winter guy. I hate it when it’s hot, and boy does it get hot over here in summer

    And I get to repay the filler favour now. I’d firstly state that No Prayer>Fear of the Dark, because Fear of the Dark is a bit bloated and most of the better songs on it aren’t their definitive versions.

    Also I’d say that Chains of Misery isn’t filler.

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  2. I seem to feel the cold more in my later years so I don’t think I could cope with the Canadian winters these days. You were certainly busy in 1992 and had some great music as well.

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  3. Great read man.

    1992 was good year for going to concerts for myself and my friends. Bryan Adams/Extreme/Sass Jordan/Steve Miller was one show(Winnipeg). Def Leppard saw twice (Winnipeg and Duluth) Tesla/Firehouse(Duluth) Skid Row/Killer Dwarfs(Thunder Bay) Ozzy Osbourne/Slaughter/Ugly Kid Joe(Minneapolis) Guns N Roses/Metallica/Faith No More (Minneapolis).
    Crazy thing is all these shows I saw between the middle of June til early October.

    Your discovery of Queen was like my discovery of Zeppelin. The only difference was I discovered Zep in 82 as you did Queen in 92.

    Still some good hard rock floating about. Agree with your Maiden comments but that was bound to happen I mean look at the output from 1980 on. Tour and album repeat cycle 10 times. lol

    KISS it was good to see a return to the charts with Revenge but the tour did not sell. So we all know what happened next.

    I like these stories of ones’ self to go along with the music listening habits.

    Great stuff

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    1. Thanks! This one being 2300 words, I may just take it easy for most of the rest of the week. I didn’t want to break it down into smaller parts like I did with 1991.

      It was really a shame for the bands that Kiss that couldn’t see out arenas anymore. And yeah Maiden were burned out, it was obvious. They really should have taken a 4 year break after 7th Son. They worked so hard, and they could have taken time off, and if they had Adrian probably never would have left. But then we’d never have Janick, either.

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      1. All those bands took a hit. I mean Def Leppard sold out Duluth at 8,000. Leppard 3 weeks before played Winnipeg and drew 8000 as well but there was still 4000 empty seats which blew my mind.
        My friend living out there said Leppard only drew 6000 in 88 during hysteria! Bizarre!
        The other shows I seen drew well.

        Some bands like you said were burned out by 92 and we don’t need to get into the lead vocal changes that happened in 92-93!

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        1. The lead vocal changes in 92-93 was like nuclear fallout. Of those, Bruce hit me the hardest. By far. More than Halford. One thing that I said at the time (and nobody got what I meant) was that I was going to miss Bruce’s sense of humour. And it’s true — the whole time Bruce was gone, they really became humourless bastards. My sister said “What if Rob Halford joined Maiden? Or Bruce joined Priest?” That question blew my mind a little.

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        2. Bruce runs around waaaay too much to use one of those. You can tell Axl never had use for one either!

          If I were a singer, I’d need one. I’m always signing the wrong words.

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  4. Nice one Mike. I couldn’t take those Winters, so more power to you. 1992 was my first year in the real world with a real job. I had money to buy music, but not time. I do remember I was working down in South Georgia in the middle of freaking no where. I was really close to the Florida State line. On a Tuesday, I knew the new Def Leppard album was coming out, but the closest music store was in Tallahassee FL about an hour from the little town I was in. I took the company car and drove down there to buy that thing. It was worth the drive. Outside of that, I don’t remember anything else I bought except maybe Kiss.

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    1. That’s dedication pal! I’m glad you still got it on the day of release. Were you disappointed at all? Did you play it in the car?

      I wanted to root so hard for Leppard but they didn’t give us much to cheer about, compared to Hysteria.

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      1. Yes, I played it in the car and Yes, I was a little disappointed. I rarely go back to that one. There are some great songs, but some stinkers as well. They didn’t advance themselves from Hysteria and tried to repeat the same formula to no avail.

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        1. Agreed. But without Steve’s riffs. Phil’s guitar parts were usually part of the song melody. But Steve wrote actual riffs with crunchy chords, and Phil just didn’t write that way. To me it was very obvious that this was a band that lost both original guitar players. But I stood behind the album, because I think at least half of it is quite good. Stuff like Stand Up, White Lightning, and Tonight.

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  5. listening to ac/dc backtracks at the moment and reading your story. I always pair wayne’s world with beavis and butthead. Same kinda humour? Liked both. Always liked Maiden videos. Angel Dust is my favorite fnm album. For some reason I didn’t get Dehumanizer either although Dio was onboard. And I have been a massive Dio fan from the start. I remember loaning albums from my friends older brother and taping them on cassette. Don’t have those any more. I quess I’m in the minority here but I like winter.

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    1. Beavis and Butthead, Wayne and Garth, it was all playing off the dumb rocker stereotype. Airheads is another one. I think Wayne and Garth did it best. And Garth wasn’t all that dumb. He figured out Rob Lowe’s evil plan…

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  6. Jailbreak just came on. I love this track…All in the name of liberty….hey, maybe when showing off your vinyl could u include naming the fav track and if it has changed over the years?

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    1. Sure! I was just kind of winging it but I will try and remember to do that.

      This time I will also be showing off some 45’s and whatnot, although I don’t have any new helmets to show you this time.

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  7. Great post. 92 is a great year. Lucky for me Winters in Australia are not as harsh as the Northern ones. Hell we even pay premium to go to the snow fields.
    Angel Dust is a huge album, big sound and some serious riffage. And I was reading the comments between Jon and yourself about Def Leppard and I agree that the loss of Willis and Clark changed the riffage in Def Lep.

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    1. Yeah that’s an interesting topic — Collen/Viv vs Clark/Willis. You can argue that the heart of a band is usually the singer and guitarists. So here is a band with half its heart ripped out in a sense. They were definitely riffier players. Having said that Def Leppard carried on with much grace and success.

      Man, you are welcome to as much snow fields here as you can handle. They are calling for snow again this weekend. Haven’t we had enough? Have we not atoned for our sins yet??

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  8. Weekend Warrior???? FILLER??!?!?!?!

    Hahahahahahaha I’ll give you that one. I think I remember really liking that song when I first heard the album. It’s in the “review pile” for sure!

    Revenge is Kiss’ best album since Lick It Up (for the non-makeup years). It’s such a shame that that line up only got two outings in the studio….. I would have LOVED a third album…. or perhaps a better second?

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    1. I think it’s strange that Gene and Paul were talking about the next album being a “brother record” to Revenge. Although they’re both heavy they’re not really similar at all are they? Not brother records. Maybe if Ezrin stayed involved they would have put out something a little more Kiss — and maybe not. I’d still like to hear them do one more with Bob Ezrin. If he’s not too busy with Ian Gillan and the boys.

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      1. Well the established story is that Gene pushed the band into a more “grunge” vein and Paul went along with it. Which…. is… kinda strange when you think about it. Paul Stanley, in the 80s, wasn’t a guy that bowed down to Gene so it strikes me as VERY odd that he just went along with the CoS vibe and sound. I think so retroactive airbrushing has been done there…. (something Kiss are great at doing!)

        It’s just like the whole thing about ‘Alive 3 should have been the Carr/Kulick line up’…. wishful thinking. If they had banged out an album in the vein of Revenge in 94/95 they might have had somewhat more of a legacy for the Singer/Kulick era. Kind of a letdown the way it is.

        But we still have the albums we love and the memories that go with them and that’s all that really matters.

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