Welcome to the meandering musical insights of Aaron Joy (me!), formerly known as the Roman Midnight Music Blog. Here you'll find nearly 750 reviews of CDs & DVDs of rock & metal in all its variations, mainstream & indie, good & bad, U.S. & foreign. A new review every Monday.

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Showing posts with label King's X. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King's X. Show all posts

April 16, 2011

Sin-Atra (album review) ... A good try, but full of sin!

Style: heavy metal
Label: Armoury Records
Year: 2011
Home: n/a

Members: Bob Kulick ~ guitars/b. vocals
Brett Chassen ~ drums/b. vocals
Billy Sheehan ~ bass
Doug Katsaros ~ keyboards

Additional: Andrea Becker ~ b. vocals

Guests: Ritchie Kotzen ~ guitar
Devin Townsend, Glenn Hughes, Geoff Tate, Dee Snider, Tim “Ripper” Owens, Robin Zander, Eric Martin, Joey Belladonna, Franky Perez, dUg Pinnick, Elias Soriano, Jani Lane ~ vocals

Guitarist Bob Kulick, brother of Kiss's Bruce Kulick, has created a second career producing an ongoing series of cover/tribute albums, such as for Metallica & Aerosmith, featuring many of his musical friends in unusual one-time only line-ups. The talent has never been less than top rate though the results have been mixed. In previous efforts Kulick as set up a different band for each song making every song star-studded & unique, but in his newest tribute executive producer duties have been handed over to others, including Ronnie James Dio widow Wendy Dio, allowing him to front a band that is featured on every track with only the vocalist changing on each song. With a single band the sound is much more even from song to song than on past albums, which often ended up feeling like compilations with some line-ups stronger than others, but at the same time having a single band removes some of the unexpected diversity that previous tribute albums offered. Here each song is the same distorted guitar chugging. Even the inclusion of keyboard created horns, however odd at times, doesn't really make much of an impact though it's an interesting inclusion & when songs do stand out for their arrangements its often due to this inclusion. Sadly, the great Billy Sheehan is on bass but there's not much space given over to him to play in the upfront quasi-lead style he's known for, let alone giving the arrangements any breathing room. The songs themselves are untouchable classics, so essentially, the success of Sin-Atra lies wholly with the arrangements & singers. The vocalists, culled from the metal world, are under particular scrutiny as they are all performing in a musical style & with a band that doesn't match their known styles/bands. At times the result almost feels like an audition recording where everyone is straining to let their musical personality shine in the best way. Sadly, it's quickly noticeable who is straining, who has the pipes & who doesn't & who should stay within their usual musical context because their weaknesses become incredibly obvious. Not every voice is suited to every musical context, though one might want to think otherwise to be fair. Highlights include Devin Townsend of Strapping Young Lad (i.e. "New York, New York"), Eric Martin of Mr. Big (i.e. "Lady Is A Tramp"), Tim "Ripper" Owens of Judas Priest/Iced Earth ("Witchcraft") & Glenn Hughes of Deep Purple (i.e. "I’ve Got You Under My Skin"). The lesser known Franky Perez of Scars On Broadway puts in a real highlight with "High Hopes", probably because the album itself is a bit of a joke & Perez is one of the few to not take his rendition too seriously. More of the songs should have been treated with the same attitude & the highlights would have outweighed the lows. The worst songs suffer from over-the-top singing &/or poor arrangements, witnessed in "It Was A Very Good Year" with Dee Snider of Twisted Sister that sounds uncannily like an industrial version of Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir". What might have made this better would be more melodic arrangements offering something behind the singers outside of just a rush of chords & muddy riffs. The album also features "Fly Me To The Moon" with Robin Zander of Cheap Trick, "Love & Marriage" with Elias Soriano of Nonpoint, "Strangers In The Night" with Joey Belladonna of Anthrax, "Summerwind" with Geoff Tate of Queensrÿche, "I’ve Got The World On A String" with dUg Pinnick of King’s X & "That’s Life" with Jani Lane of Warrant & the one outside guitar solo with Ritchie Kotzen of Poison/Mr. Big. Thankfully, no sign of "My Way". If you're a Sinatra fan will you like this? Probably not. Metal fan? You'll love the playing which is good if not always interesting & if your favorite singer is here - probably, though you may also find yourself laughing ... but, kudos to Bob & company for at least trying.



February 15, 2011

Rez Band (aka Resurrection Band, Rez) ~ The Lament (album review) ... Before Christian rock there was this blues-rock resurrection!


Style: hard rock, blues-rock, heavy metal, Christian
Label: Grrr Records
Year: 1995
Home: Chicago

Members: Glenn Kaiser ~ guitar/vocals/dulcimer/harmonica
Wendy Kaiser ~ vocals
Stu Heiss ~ guitar/keyboards
Roy Montroy ~ bass/b. vocals
John Herrin ~ Drums

Guest: Ty Tabor ~ guitar

Additional: Roger Heiss, Ed Bialach ~ percussion
Chris Cameron ~ organ
Hilde Bialach ~ cello
Eric Clayton ~ pan pipes
Julie Andrews, Diane Borden, Colleen Davick, Shelli Friede, Chris Garno, Micky Griffin, Bonnie Groth, Laurel Heiss, Lottie Jones, Caryl Montroy, Andrea Spicer ~ b. vocals

Christian rock fathers Rez Band, formerly Resurrection Band only to return to the old moniker with this album, produced an outstanding catalog of music before their break-up in 2000 that spanned 3 decades & ranged from psychedelic to heavy metal to hard rock to pop to power ballads & the blues, barely a style of music passed through the music charts without Rez Band following suit with great success. Albeit, due to their heavy Christian lyrics they never got the commercial success that their mainstream peers had, though it was for no lack of trying or talent. While most of their albums tended to fall comfortably into one of these categories The Lament stands out as an experiment that is a mix of the blues-rock with other elements to make something unique that in many ways brings them back to their early progressive albums. The songs still rock hard & heavy but the blistering metal of previous albums has been reigned in & the outcome is something hypnotic & intense. It's laced with some of their most emotionally powerful ballads with intricate lyrics that went beyond just Christian themes or praise songs. Part of this was due to the inclusion of producer Ty Tabor, lead singer of fellow Christian rockers King's X, but it's also because The Lament is Rez Band's first concept album, dealing with a man's disillusionment with life & the necessity of spiritual change. The result has been hailed as one of the best Rez Band albums which it is definitely a contender for. But, with the diversity of music over a 30 year career its almost an injustice to what came before to call this the highlight as the band wouldn't have been around so long with the success it did had if it hadn't always been putting out great music. The Lament would be the final studio output of the band & it's nothing but an absolutely wonderful curtain call. They'd reunite to record Ampendectomy but that was only a re-arrangement of their hits in an acoustic setting to take advantage of the Unplugged craze sweeping the nation. Ironically, Ampendectomy is a wonderful album could have potentially led to an acoustic reinvention of Rez Band, or a literal resurrection, but Glenn Kaiser was pumping out the blues in a solo career & Rez band was set aside not to be ... resurrected again in the studio. Even for Lazarus there comes a curtain call. But, it's a curtain call that is anything but a lament the title implies as the music is too joyful to let the listener feel sad that no more is to come. Both the curtain call & the encore are fan necessities. Few bands have called it a day in such a graceful way. Anyone who thinks Christian music doesn't 'kick ass' has never heard Rez Band.