Bought in April at the Toronto Musical Collectibles Record & CD Sale.  Not listened to in full until October.  Backlog!
WHITE WOLF – Standing Alone (1984 RCA)
From Edmonton, Alberta, Canada came White Wolf. Â The land that spawned the massive West Edmonton Mall also produced a hard rock band that combined old fashioned Canadian workmanship with prototypical 80’s rock and heavy metal. Â Sharing common ground with bands like Scorpions, Dokken, and even Van Halen and Rainbow, White Wolf weren’t half bad. Â The singer Don Wolf (Wilk) has enough power in his voice to raise the roof just enough to be an opening band in an arena. Â They’re not quite headline quality, but I bet they were damn good openers.
Their debut album Standing Alone is best known for the single/video “Shadows in the Night”, still my favourite song from the band.  In fact I think it’s quite excellent.  The chugging riff, the excellent vocals and chorus, it has everything!  It even had a suitably cheesy and sexist music video, portraying the band as some sort of wilderness totem hero/villains.  Don’t worry, maybe it’s all a dream, or  just a hell of a bush party/concert?  Hell, I don’t know.
I friggin’ love fur hats! So warm!
Thankfully the album is more than just one song. Â The track “Standing Alone” is a mid-tempo but ominous opener, a mournful song about (guess what) standing alone! (Like a wolf? Â Layers!) Â “Headlines” is uptempo, verging on Priest territory. Â Both have plenty of guitar work to go around. Â They are followed by “Shadows in the Night” and the seven minute plus “What the War Will Bring”. Â This a pretty respectable shot at doing an epic. Â Utilizing multiple vocalists and backing keyboards, it’s a tour-de-force suitable for closing side one of the album.
“Night Rider” begins with bad King-Kobra-esque vocal harmonies, but quickly gets into a dual guitar melody before it takes off. Â This would be one of the weakest songs with one of those awful, cliche titles. Â “Homeward Bound” is a fun song utilizing two lead vocalists, but that riff sure does sound familiar. Â Although the guitar rips off “God of Thunder” by Kiss a little bit, this is one of the better songs. Â I love the dual vocalist concept, and it’s a fun sleazy romp like 80’s Kiss. Â “Metal Thunder” is a pretty poor song title, but a decent stomp through territory previously explored by the likes of Judas Priest. Â “Trust Me” is the final song, clearly inspired by Ritchie Blackmore’s Rainbow. Â All it needs is Ronnie James Dio shouting, “Danger! Danger!” and suddenly it’s “Kill the King”.
There’s a certain kind of Canadian mediocrity that exudes from bands like White Wolf and label-mates Thor. Â This even extended to bands like Triumph and Helix, at various parts of their careers. Â I don’t know what it is, but so many Canadian bands of this sub-genre just failed to explode into fully-fledged world-classic song writing and recording. Â Maybe it’s touring in a little van during harsh Canadian winters, but I think I’ve made a valid observation.
All that being said, for the $7.00 I paid for this record, I have no regrets. Â Standing Alone doesn’t overstay its welcome, nor does it fail to raise a smile any time I’ve played it. Â I’m glad to finally have “Shadows in the Night”, and I’m pleased to induct songs like “Homeward Bound” into my collection for the first time.
3/5 stars
