Fantastic anniversary weekend…
hard rock
REVIEW: Mr. Big – Lean Into It (1991)
Today, the album. Â Tomorrow, the singles! Â Yes it’s a two-part Mr. Big feature! Â Happy long weekend, hope you’re partying safely! Â
MR. BIG – Lean Into It (1991 Atlantic)
Yeah yeah yeah…”To Be With You”! Â As Mr. Big said themselves on a later album, “Get over it”!
I’ve always considered Mr. Big to be more shred-lite than glam metal or pop metal. After all, with credentials like these…Talas…Racer X…Impelliteri…these guys know how to play. Eric Martin is a unique blue-eyed-soul singer, one of a kind, absolutely brilliant.  Martin and the band also know how to write catchy hard rock tunes. Combine that with their playing pedigree and adventurous arrangements, and I’ll call ’em shred-lite if you let me. And this is a pretty damn good album for rockers who want just a touch of integrity in their pop.
The opener kicks you right in the nuts with one of the best Big tunes ever, “Daddy, Brother, Lover, Little Boy (The Electric Drill Song)” (whew). Â The album starts with an adrenaline rush straight to the head. Â Why the “Electric Drill Song”? Â Because it opens with the sound of Paul Gilbert and Billy Sheehan playing their instruments with electric drills with guitar picks glued to the bit! Â In unison? Â Basically spoofing the whole “How fast can you play?” question, Big’s creativity make this speed rocker a standout.
“Alive and Kickin'” is nothing more than a hard rocker with soulful vocal and killer chorus, but “Green-Tinted Sixties Mind” is classy and cool. Pure pop with an incredible retro melody and adventurous guitar arrangement, this first single went tragically ignored. Â I don’t remember it getting much airplay though it deserved it. Â I’m not sure if the world of 1991 would have accepted a song like this from a hard rock band.
“CDFF – Lucky This Time” is another weird title. See, “CDFF” stands for CD Fast Forward which is the sound you’re hearing at the opening of this rather ordinary ballad. The only thing really oustanding about this song is Billy’s rumbling bass groove. Â The guy doesn’t sound like anybody else, and he raises the song to another level. Â “CDFF” Â is followed by the cool and swampy “Voodoo Kiss”, which ended side 1 of the original album.
Side 2 kicked off with another pop rocker, “Never Say Never”, co-written by Canada’s own Jim Vallance. Catchy but non-descript. “Just Take My Heart” is the second ballad, and a forgettable song to me. “My Kinda Woman” kicks the adrenaline back in. Yet it is Paul Gilbert’s “A Little Too Loose” that rekindles the creative fires on this album. Bluesy and fun, this was one of the high points of this record. “Road To Ruin” shows off the vocal harmonies of the guys, all good singers in their own right. It’s another creative arrangement. Then, of course, the album ends with “To Be With You” which, hard to believe, was actually a really creative song too! Â Before it got played to death. Now, it’s the typical rock ballad, but at the time of release, it was very different from the kind of ballads that other bands were putting out, except possibly Extreme. Â It has a sparse, vocal-oriented arrangement, an acoustic guitar solo, and no drums to speak of.
Tomorrow we’ll be talking about two singles from this album “Green-Tinted  Sixties Mind”, and “To Be With You” itself, both of which have worthwhile rare songs!
4/5 stars
Gallery: Iron Maiden’s EDDIE (2012 Neca figure)
This one goes out to FanFigureZero and his jaw-dropping site.
In downtown Kitchener last night, I dropped in at the great store Lookin’ For Heroes, to pick up the lastest issue (#94) of Transformers Re-Generation One.  Unfortunately I was a week early, but they did have Eddie! Several different Eddies.  I decided to start yet another Iron Maiden collection!
I already had the old McFarlane figures from a long time ago, but this new series has seven figures in it. Â And I plan on getting them all!
REVIEW: Slash – Slash (Deluxe edition)
SLASH – Slash (2010 Universal Deluxe edition)
This album was a revelation to me. Â Truth be told, I didn’t expect too much. Â I didn’t consider Slash to be among the best songwriters in Guns N’ Roses (Izzy and Duff for that honor). Â So, a couple things about Slash struck me right away. One, every track on this album is strong, almost every one would make a great single. Two, I was surprised how these songs kind of chameleon themselves to resemble the bands that the singers come from. Almost every guest does a co-write, which might explain this.
I’ll discuss my favourite tracks. I have always been a Cult fan, so Ian Astbury’s “Ghost” kicked off the album with a bang. It doesn’t quite sound like the Cult, but at first it didn’t sound like Slash either. Astbury’s voice, deep and low, is almost as strong as ever. Ozzy’s track is next, and my immediate feeling was, “This song could have been a Sabbath number with a little tweaking.” I very much enjoyed this song.
I’m not a Black Eyed Peas fan; at all! Â Â All I really know about Fergie is “Big Girls Don’t Cry”. To my surprise, she is capable of the rock. Her vocal is highly stylized (as are many on this CD) and she just rips it up on “Dangerous Beautiful”! Of all the singers on this CD, Fergie is the most similar in attitude to Axl. Every once in a while she does a squeal or two that sound positively Axl. This is a decent song made memorable by Fergie’s vocal, although I think the lyrics leave something to be desired.
I wasn’t at all familiar with Alter Bridge, but Myles Kennedy blew me away. I guess there must have been a reason that the Led Zeppelin guys were jamming with him as a potential replacement for Robert Plant. I get that, but although he has a powerful voice with great range, he has his own sound. My new favourite singer! His two songs, “Back To Cali” and “Starlight” couldn’t be less alike. However they both boast one thing in common, and that is a chorus to raise the roof. These two choruses are among the strongest moments on Slash.
Chris Cornell is up next with “Promise”, a good song which struck me as more similar to Cornell’s early solo work than Soundgarden. Let it be remembered that Chris opened for Guns N’ Roses on their 1992 European tour. The first single “By The Sword” featuring Wolfmother’s Andrew Stockdale is another one that blew me away. It struck me as very “metal” with the kind of lead vocal that is high and powerful, like Wolfmother itself. Great song, and bears similarities to “Beggars and Hangers-On” from the first Slash’s Snakepit album.
I’m especially not a Maroon 5 fan. Â I burned out on them in the record store, and the person responsible knows who she is, I do like Adam Levine’s stylized vocal on the ballad “Gotten”. Â This guy is smooth like butter. My only wish is that there was more of his music with Slash. The way his vocal and Slash’s guitar melodies intertwine is quite beautiful.
Lemmy’s tune sounds like some sort of Motorhead outtake (don’t forget Slash appeared on Motorhead’s March Or Die CD). Anything Lemmy touches automatically sounds like Motorhead. Up next is an instrumental featuring Dave Grohl on drums and Duff McKagan on bass. Immediately, that familiar Dave Grohl drum sound kicks you in the face, on this rocker that is pure groove, with Slash playing a low grinding riff.
I didn’t mind Kid Rock’s “I Hold On”, and I found his vocal quite appealing. Another one that surprised me was M Shadows’ “Nothing To Say”. I’ve never listened to Avenged Sevenfold but this guy’s voice has enough melody to carry the tune. The song itself was riffy, like late 90’s Megadeth or black album era Metallica. Good song. Very similar to “Chains and Shackles” (more on that song later). I have to listen to both back to back, but it’s possible they are both based on the same music.
I have no idea who Rocco DeLuca was, but his tune is another winner. The final track of the regular album songs is the immortal Iggy Pop’s “We’re All Gonna Die”. One of the most fun tunes on the album with great lyrics, Pop and Slash have an obvious chemistry. What a great tune with which to close the regular edition!
Oh, and three ex-GN’R members appear: Duff, Izzy, and Josh Freese (who was in the band after Slash).
Among the bonus stuff, an English version of “Sahara” featuring a singer I never heard of called Koshi Inaba. Good song, but is is followed by Alice Cooper’s track with…someone I never heard of apparently from Pussycat Dolls. This actually sounds a lot like an Alice Cooper song, say circa The Eyes of Alice Cooper. Another good song, and we all know how big a fan Slash is. Lastly there is Fergie and Cypress Hill’s “Paradise City” remake. Good choice for the very Axl-ish Fergie to sing, and Cypress Hill add their sound to the verses. Great version, a guilty pleasure. There is also a Japanese version of “Sahara”, and a song with Beth Hart called “Mother Maria” which is a really nice one featuring her strong bluesy voice. I’m telling you, Beth Hart can really sing, she is a the real deal. I just wish they didn’t add distortion to her voice…she does not need it.
The new acoustic live material with Myles Kennedy is sheer awesome. Kennedy’s got an incredible voice and you can tell this is really live. The backing guitar player makes a few mistakes during Slash’s solo in “Sweet Child” and it’s right there, unfixed. I like that. It’s like a guarantee. It’s like the Stones and Henry Rollins say — “The only way to know for sure.”
I’m disappointed that Nick Oliveri’s “Chains & Shackles”, the best song in my opinion, is not present on this edition. It remains exclusive to the Australian iTunes. However, by my reckoning every other bonus track from every other format is on this disc. There are also two previously unheard demos. These demos are interesting jams and they show great interaction between Slash and his players. Also included are some live electric versions (also seemingly unpolished) and a bonus DVD. All of this is worth owning if you really love the album like I do.
I made a bonus CD with the Oliveri track, and other “bonus tracks” that I found online, as well. Â How official these downloaded tracks are I can’t say; Wikipedia is silent on the issue.
You may have noticed I didn’t comment on Slash’s presence too much. I dare say it, the only weakness to this album is that Slash is overshadowed by his guests. That happened to Santana on some of his records as well. Slash’s guitar playing is still unique and stylish, not hogging the spotlight but sharing it more than fairly. Slash himself explores more sounds on his Gibson than I’ve ever heard him play before. When he solos, it’s Slash; it’s the old GN’R sound, and it sure is cool.
5/5 stars
Part 224: Rockin’ Is Ma Business
For a closer look at the album itself, check out 1537’s cool writeup!
RECORD STORE TALES Part 224: Â Rockin’ Is Ma Business
In 1995, this guy I knew named Freddy was looking for more new tunes. Â He’d been playing all the Gary Moore and Stevie Ray Vaughn that I could get him, but he wanted some rock as well. Â Something a little heavier.
“Have you heard of the Four Horsemen?” I asked.
“Nope,” he answered. Â “Who’re the Four Horsemen?”
The Four Horsemen were a great band. Â They had a solid AC/DC vibe mixed in with assloads of southern rock. Â They were an odd mixture of personnel, with members from Wales, America and Canada. Â They featured ex-members of DOA and The Cult (Haggis), along with a charismatic unknown singer from Long Island who went by the name of Frank C. Starr. Â They were a volatile band and the original lineup imploded, but there were also rumours of a reunion and second album. Â (Sadly, drummer Ken “Dimwit” Montgomery passed away, and after recording the second album, Frank Starr would be close behind.) Â They did manage to crank out a solid debut, helmed by Rick Rubin, called Nobody Said It Was Easy.*
Freddy was sold without hearing a single song, after I described how strong the debut was. Â We had it stocked new for the low, low price of $14.99. Â Freddy made his purchase and headed out.I was confident he would be satisfied.
A week later, Freddy returned. Â He had a bone to pick with me about Nobody Said It Was Easy.
“It was good music,” he said, “But not what I was looking for. Â You said it was more like AC/DC. Â This doesn’t sound anything like AC/DC. Â It’s more country. Â I don’t know why you said it sounded like AC/DC.”
I was really confused. Â How could you miss those AC/DC-isms? Â The rock solid beats, smoking guitars, and screamin’ lead vocalist? Â What Freddy was saying didn’t make much sense.
We talked for a while trying to make sense of each others’ side of the story, getting nowhere, so I asked him to bring the CD back in. Â He did, and I put it in the player. Â Sure enough, Freddy was right — but on a CD clearly labelled The Four Horsemen was music by Dwight Yoakam! Â The voice was unmistakable.
How could this happen? Â It was rare, but not impossible, for a CD to be manufactured but then labelled and packaged as the wrong album. Â Dwight Yoakam was on Reprise, and the Horsemen on Def American. Â Both labels were subsidiaries of Warner Brothers. Â Obviously the CDs were also manufactured in a Warner plant, for this mix-up to happen.
I insisted that Freddy return the CD so we could make it right, but he didn’t want to!  He liked the Dwight Yoakam album and wanted to keep it!  I ordered him a replacement copy of Nobody Said It Was Easy, and he liked that one too.
A lot of people were surprised that a CD could end up with the wrong music or artwork (however you want to look at it) printed on it. Â It was rare, but it could happen and did. Â Fortunately Freddy was happy with both records!
*The Four Horsemen finally reached a wider audience in 2012, in the movie GI Joe: Retaliation. From their second album, “Back In Business” is featured completely out of context during a frantic action sequence. The lyrics of the song are clearly about getting screwed over by record labels and passing trends in music.
REVIEW: WhoCares – “Out of My Mind” / “Holy Water”
WHOCARES: Ian Gillan, Tony Iommi & Friends – “Holy Water” / “Out of My Mind” (2011 Edel charity single)
Remember Rock Aid Armenia? Ian Gillan, Tony Iommi, and many other friends gathered together to raise money for earthquake victims in Armenia.  21 years later, Gillan and Iommi returned to help again, by recording two more awesome songs. Joining them are Nicko McBrain, Jon Lord, Jason Newsted, and Linde Lindstrom from H.I.M.
First of all, I will just say how wonderful it is to hear Ian Gillan’s voice in front of Tony’s guitar again, first time since the Gillan’s Inn album. Even better is hearing Jon Lord’s organ with Ian. It’s just jaw-dropping and awe-inspiring. It makes you miss Jon Lord even more.  It’s great that they managed to collaborate once more.
“Out Of My Mind” is a heavy-groove-sludge-monster, with some exotic sounding notes in the powerful riff. I don’t think I’ve ever heard Nicko McBrain play a groove like this before, proof that the man is one of metal’s greatest drummers; he’s versatile. The song vaguely reminded me of a more ominous “Soon Forgotten”, from Purpendicular. There’s also some face-melting guitar solos if all that wasn’t enough for you.
The second track, “Holy Water” is even more exotic. Â It has flute sounds and other non-rock sounding instruments. Once the song gets going though, it’s a little more upbeat than “Out Of My Mind”. Â The organ here is by someone named Jesse O’Brien, but once again the Hammond provides muscle.
To make this CD a little bit more worth the purchase price, they included the video for “Out Of My Mind” (made up of studio footage, much like the old Rock Aid Armenia video) and a 27 minute documentary.
I would have loved a vinyl copy. Â Only 1000 were made. Â I had it on pre-order from Amazon, but they never got it.
4/5 stars
REVIEW: Skid Row – Thickskin (2003)
SKID ROW – Thickskin (2003 Skid Row Records)
Thickskin came out in 2003, a full 8 years since their last record. Â They’d been through a lot, including firing their charismatic lead singer. Â Sebastian Bach was one hell of a frontman with a voice to be envied. Â In was Johnny Solinger, the little-known frontman of Texas band Solinger. Â Could they gel as a band, and put out a decent record?
Yes, they could and did.
Solinger only has one writing credit on Thickskin, leaving the majority of the writing to Rachel Bolan and Snake Sabo  That pair wrote much of Skid Row’s older material anyway, and the sound does not stray far from classic Skid Row. Thickskin sounds like a natural followup to the excellent Subhuman Race, though less twisted and exploratory.  Where Solinger succeeds is in continuing to sing in the Skid Row style. He doesn’t stray too far from the blueprint, although his voice does not have the power of Bach’s.  He still throws in the shrieks in the right places, the roughness, the toughness, and the expressiveness.  If only he’d avoided those Nickelcrap-sounding moments on “Swallow Me”, but hey, he didn’t write the song.
Song-wise, we have an album here that comes pretty close to Subhuman Race in quality. There are those who prefer early Skid Row, when they were more hard rock and less dark heavy alterna-rock. Â That’s fair — but be forewarned, this album won’t turn you around. Â I find that very few weak songs blemish the album, and even the weak songs have pretty strong choruses.
My favourites include “Ghost” (killer chorus!), “Born A Beggar” (even better chrorus!), “Thick Is The Skin” (the sort of speedy metal that Skid Row did on Slave to the Grind), and “See You Around” (a sort-of ballad that reminds me of “I Remember You”). Â Most controversial of all was “I Remember You Two”. Â This remake is more a re-imagining of the hit ballad as a fast punk rocker. Â And it works! Â Try to listen to it as if you don’t even know the original song exists. Â It’s fun if you can accept it.
Impressive also-rans include “One Light” (another ballad) and “Hittin’ A Wall” which is pure speed and aggression. Â Solinger succeeds at pulling off both extremes. Â He also pulls of the more grungy styled lead vocal on the opening verse of the title track, a Weiland-esque moment. Â He’s versatile enough to do the job.
One complaint: Â the lame-o cover art. Â When Baz was in the band, his father David Bierk provided some pretty wild paintings. Â This cover is lifeless, not even barely hinting at the rock and roll thunder within.
I have to give this album a solid:
4.25/5 stars
It’s the best of the Solinger era, and the song “Born A Beggar” still makes my road tapes 10 years later.
REVIEW: VAI – Sex & Religion (1993)
VAI – Sex & Religion (1993 Relativity)
Flash back to summer 1993: Â Steve Vai was just about to debut his brand new “commercial” rock band on Jay Leno. I had been tracking the progress of this band via the guitar mags. Vai already had TM Stevens (bass) on board, as well as the singer Devin Townsend, from Vancouver’s Caustic Thought on vocals. Â I had heard Vai say in a previous interview that “Nobody sings better than David Coverdale, and nobody is a better showman than David Lee Roth. But I need a singer who combines the best of both singers.” How could you not be psyched? Expectations and hopes were high.
Back to Leno — Â Vai comes out, his hair in dreads, and he strums the first chord of “Still My Bleeding Heart”. Â And the singer…holy crap…there was this bald, psycho-looking dude with stuff written all over his body in magic marker. “Caustic Thought” was written in huge letters on his leg. I was taken aback! What the deuce was this?
HI TRACY
I taped the performance, so I rewound, rewatched…and quickly became hooked on the song, and the vocalist, Devin Townsend. Here was a guy, I thought, who would be the next Mike Patton. He had the power, and range and quirkiness, yet had his own style. Â Devin was a unique right from his first major release! Â Here, his style is based mostly on (as Devin once put it, and I quote) “screaming his balls off!” Â Devin said he was usually pretty happy as long as he sounded as if his larynx was bouncing off the studio walls.
This album is my second favourite Vai platter after Passion and Warfare. A band effort with Terry Bozzio on drums, Sex & Religion was a mindblowing album to me at the time. Â I thought it was extremely profound, though it sounds somewhat dated today. Â It still kicks my kicks my ass to listen to it, you cannot go wrong with this lineup. Â The music is intricate, composed with great care to both stimulate and rock. Â I don’t need to tell you that the guitar is a shredder’s wet dream.
To me, 90% of the songs here are winners. Highlights are “Still My Bleeding Heart” and the single “In My Dreams With You”. Both are extremely catchy rock songs with slightly off-kilter arrangement, innovative guitar playing, and challenging but powerful vocals. Â There is an emphasis on melody, even if they melodies are not typical of modern rock music. Â Elsewhere you will find “Down Deep Into The Pain”, a very fast and heavy song that was obviously designed to keep up with some of the newer heavy bands that were out at the time. The lead vocal here is absolutely shriek-tastic.
I’m also a big fan of “Dirty Black Hole” which combines a speedy assault of instrumentation with a soul-rock chorus. Â The title track is a bit funky, with Devin doing some scream-rapping. Â I remember my mom being offended by the lyric, “Jesus Christ is in your bed tonight.”
More standard rock arrangements can be found on songs like “Survive” and “Here And Now”, although they are still well coated in Vai-isms and guitar madness. There are instrumentals sprinkled in as well, “Touching Tongues” being especially sublime. And then there is “Pig”. Â It’s the only song with a co-write by Townsend. This is what happened, according to Vai, when he tried to write song “Remedy” by the Black Crowes. Â Vai was into the Crowes at the time, and somehow “Pig” was the result of that. Can you hear any connection to “Remedy”? I sure can’t! This song is where the album hits its peak of absolute madness. As Vai likes to say, “Sorry folks, I just can’t help myself”.
That sums up this album in a nutshell. “Sorry folks, I just can’t help myself.” It is a simply brilliant piece of work that will take some folks a while to get used to. For Vai fans, this might be easy listening compared to some of his instrumental workouts.  Either way, if you can penetrate its sometimes off-putting weirdness, you’ll find a rewarding listening experience.
The final song , “Rescue Me or Bury Me”, is the only one I can do without. Featuring Steve singing lead, I find it too long and meandering, spoiling what was for me an otherwise gripping ride the whole way through.
5/5 stars
REVIEW: Deep Purple – Come Taste the Band (35th Anniversary edition)
DEEP PURPLEÂ – Come Taste the Band (35th Anniversary edition, 2010 originally 1975, EMI)
For those keeping score, now every single album from the original run of Deep Purple 1968-1976 has been remastered with some sort of deluxe edition. Come Taste The Band is the final album of this series. Deep Purple imploded shortly after and the band was no more until Perfect Strangers in 1983.
Personally I have always liked Come Taste The Band right from first listen. However, I never heard the album until 1996 so the idea of a great Purple album without Richie Blackmore was not foreign to me. With open ears you can really appreciate what Deep Purple were up to on this powerfully rocking album. It has a solid groove, a much harder sound than Stormbringer and some greasy unconventional guitar playing from Tommy Bolin. Everybody is playing amazingly, even the coked-out Glenn Hughes who just rips it to shreds on “Gettin’ Tighter”, my favourite track. Paicey is awesome on said breakneck track.
Really though there are no losers on Come Taste The Band. Every song is incredible right from the opener of the ferocious “Comin’ Home” to the philosophical “You Keep On Movin'”. Another personal favourite is the sliding groover “Dealer”, a tale of warning from David Coverdale to Glenn Hughes about his habit. Bolin takes his first and only studio Deep Purple lead vocal on the bridge.
As with all previous special editions, the liner notes are excellent, revealing, and loaded with pictures. One fact I didn’t know: The band were going to kick out Hughes if he didn’t kick the coke.
Bonus material is present. The single edit of “You Keep On Movin'” is tacked on to the end of disc one, but this is previously available on such albums as Singles A’s and B’s. The second disc contains the entire album remixed by Kevin Shirley. Shirley is truly a great mixer. It’s hard to discern what he did differently here, except the songs are a bit more punchy. Some now continue on past their original fade points, revealing never before heard playing from the band, right to the end of the song. This was done on previous remasters such as Machine Head and I like this touch a lot.
Two previously unreleased tracks are included. These tracks will be worth the price of purchase alone to Purple collectors. “Same In L.A.” is a nearly complete song with lead vocals and lyrics. If it had been included on the original album, it would easily have been the most pop, it sounds more suited to Stormbringer material. “Bolin Paice Jam” is also unreleased — not even heard before on Days May Come and Days May Go or the limited edition 1420 Beachwood Drive albums. This is a massive, fiery jam capturing the best of both players. Difficult to understand why this was not included on the aforementioned two compilations, but it’s just awesome and I’m glad it’s out.
Once again, Simon Robinson has outdone himself with the final Deep Purple remaster of this series. These albums, while expensive and difficult to obtain (mine took almost two months to ship) are well worth it to the faithful.
5/5 stars






