Enjoy this first of two White Lion reviews. Stay tuned for the second in a couple days!
WHITE LION – Pride (1987 Atlantic)
I’ve had some fierce arguments with some rock fans about this album. Â Regardless of its flaws, I steadfastly defend it and especially the talents of one Vito Bratta, the best guitarist to never become a guitar hero. Â After the breakup of White Lion in 1991, Bratta retreated from public life and music completely. Â Some have argued to me, “If he was such a talent, he’d still be around.” Â Such talk is ignorant of the facts. Â Bratta spent many years as a caregiver to ill parents, and whatever decisions he made have to be respected.
I mentioned that this album is flawed, so I’m going to get that part out of the way first. Â There are two things about this album that suck. Â One is the production, by the normally awesome Michael Wagener (engineered by Canadian “Gggarth” Richardson). Â It’s really muddy, echoey, and annoying. Â It is indicative of the times.
The second thing that drives me nuts are the lyrics. Â I know Mike Tramp is Danish and English is his second language, but there were three guys from New York (Staten Island and Brooklyn) in the band that could have helped. Â As Exhibit A, I present you “Lady of the Valley”:
Lady of the valley
Can you hear me cry
In the stillness of the night
I have lost my brother
In the fights of the war
And my heart has broken down
I always stumble over that “In the fights of the war” line. Â That’s one of the “serious” songs, something that White Lion tackled frequently (improving over the years). Â For their flaws I’ll at least respect Mike Tramp’s willingness to present a personal point of view on specific issues (“Little Fighter”, “Cry For Freedom”, “Warsong”, “El Salvador”). Â Unfortunately Pride is loaded with songs about young girls and what Mike Tramp would like to do with them. Â Below, Exhibit B:
Keep your engine running high
When you take my love inside
But hold the trigger on my loaded gun (“Hungry”)
Little miss Dee’s got a dirty mind
All around the boys she’s one of a kind
If you wanna good time you can take her home
Cause everyone knows she is good in bed (“Sweet Little Loving”)
I’ll stop there.
Musically, and performance-wise, Pride is a joy to listen to. Â What an untapped well of talent Vito Bratta is. Â In the guitar magazines, he was noted for having captured some of the magic of Eddie Van Halen, and I agree with that. Â Bratta has definitely mastered the Van Halen book of rock. Â His riffs are much like Van Halen’s, with one guitar playing the rhythm and flicking in and out with tricky little licks. Â It sounds difficult as hell. Â “Hungry” is the most Van Halen-like. Â The difference is that Bratta sounds like a much more schooled player. Â Everything sounds meticulously planned and written. Â When he takes a solo, it’s a combination of Van Halen and neoclassical discipline. Â And every song is absolutely loaded with fills and tricks. Â Pride is very busy guitar-wise, in a good way.
“Hungry” is a great song, a dark Dokken-esque opener. Â Also similar to Dokken is the second track, the mid-tempo “Lonely Nights”. Â It’s another strong track, and I find Mike Tramp’s raspy voice similar to Jon Bon Jovi’s from time to time. Â Bratta executes a fluttery solo, and then it’s on to the next one, “Don’t Give Up”. Â Again, I find the lyrics tedious. Â I like positivity, but I don’t find, “Don’t give up, even when it’s tough,” to be very profound. Â Thankfully this uptempo banger is another winner musically. Â Once again I struggle to keep up with Bratta’s stunning fretwork.
“Lady of the Valley” is pretty impressive. Â It’s the “epic” I suppose, 6 1/2 minutes in length. Â The riff is choppy and smoking, and the rhythm section of James LoMenzo and Greg D’Angelo is spot-in. Â Then Bratta gets his echoey acoustic guitar out and the song mutates. Â An anthemic chorus tops a great song.
Side Two of the album was packed with singles: Â the hits “Wait”, “Tell Me”, and “When the Chrildren Cry”. Â “Wait” and “Tell Me” are both songs that Bon Jovi would have given their nuts to write. Â Tramp’s raspy vocals are absolutely perfect, as was his blonde mane, and the girls went wild. Â “When the Children Cry” was and still is an impressive acoustic performance. Â Even in 1987 I was impressed that White Lion chose to forgo drums and backing instrumentation. Â This simple, quiet song is the template for what Extreme would do three years later with “More Than Words”. Â Bratta was a guitar player able to pull off such an arrangement without sacrificing integrity.
The album is rounded out by “All Join Our Hands” and “All You Need Is Rock N Roll”, two odes to the greatest music ever invented. Â “All You Need Is Rock N Roll” is quite cool, beginning with what sounds like a drunken acoustic jam, and ending with with some killer bluesy playing from everyone. Â Both songs are great. Â I have always felt that the album tracks were as strong as the singles; like an album of 10 singles.
Shame about the sound and the lyrics, though.
 3.5/5 stars
