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 danger danger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label danger danger. Show all posts

June 14, 2012

Billy Sheehan's Talas ~ Featuring Billy Sheehan (album view) ... Introducing the Van Halen of bass!

Style: hard rock
Label: Metal Blade
Year: 1980
Home: New York

Members: Billy Sheehan ~ bass/vocals
Dave Constantino ~ guitar/vocals
Paul Varga ~ drums/vocals



Some people know bassist Billy Sheehan from hair metal band Mr. Big. Some only know the band for a single MTV acoustic power ballad. If this is your knowledge of Sheehan you've got homework to do. Mr. Big is quite a fascinating prog meets L.A. hair metal band & should not be remembered via the sappy "To Be With You". Yet, for Sheehan Mr. Big is really but a footnote. He previously found his fame touring beside Steve Vai in David Lee Roth's first solo band. Coming right out of Van Halen, one of the most important bands, all eyes on where on Roth & company. It's funky & wild stuff worth checking out, particularly via old videos where the band is as crazy as Roth. It'll then become quickly obvious that Sheehan is one of the ones responsible for making the bass in the rock world than a rhythm instrument but a lead instrument in its own right. If you don't know any of this, let this review be your homework assignment leading to a wikipedia cruise. To really get a feel for Sheehan's musical catalog one needs to go back to 1971 when he formed the pre-hair but with lots of hairspray & spandex power trio Talas. They became known in upstate New York for extended bass solos that were as much performance art as anything. Sheehan's reputation would quickly eclipse the band, often taking him away for temporary gigs with such folks as UFO & the Michael Schenker Band. For one year Talas would even continue without him as a two guitar quartet. It wasn't until 1980 that Talas, with a couple year old solidified line-up, finally went into the studio. They put out two albums, Featuring Billy Sheehan being the first, before yet another complete line-up change & transition into a quartet that would come to feature future members of Danger Danger, Megadeth, Asia & Y&T. Sadly, Talas is a band that reads better on paper. The studio recordings don't fully paint the best picture. Talas is really a band that needs to be seen & thankfully bootleggers have done that with rough picture recordings floating around the internet. While the music is good some of the spark is missing in the studio where there's no audience to push the energy, the songs or the solos into the outer limits that made the group famous. It's a common problem of groups that make the transition from club to studio after making a name for themselves as a live band, particularly one a decade old. So often one speaks of 70's trios in light of Cream, particularly those trios with a heavier edge. But, Talas is much more in the hard rock 80's vein where the blues are but a building block, as would be the 80's hard rock style. Sheehan had already gained a reputation for being the bass playing version of Eddie Van Halen, & would help show how far one could take technical playing for a new generation of musicians that were moving against the excessive free form jamming of the 60's for more technically challenging jamming, or at least sounding more technical. "NV4 3345" is a bass solo that one would expect from the fingers of Eddie Van Halen & is everything but what the bass is expected to sound like in 1980, affirming Billy's role as a pioneer. Actually, its much closer to Jaco Pastorius & some of the jazz guys & the funk scene, but few were doing this in rock. It's not funk, it's not even rock, it's melodic in a way bass solos aren't. It's a bass solo in a way they come to be in the future. It's a bass solo that puts the traditional rhythm player to shame. It shouldn't, but it does. It's a highlight of the album as are all of Sheehan's spotlight moments. The problem is that the rest of the band is churning out un-inspired arrangements of 70's-esque hard rock riffs, nor rising to the technical level of Sheehan. It's not so much band interplay as a bassist & his backing band, however odd that sounds. But, one shouldn't really envision a bass-playing Joe Satriani & band as the arrangements are a fence keeping things too straight forward & safe. Randy Coven, another bassist with a similar feel who came about in the early 80's but would never get the mainstream recognition, attempted for instrumental duets with his guitarists & is worth checking out to see what Sheehan could have achieved if he'd broken from the traditional song structure approach. But, for all its faults, this first album is the best to delve into the Talas sound. The later quartet would tuck Sheehan into the mix & sound like a very bland early 80's Quiet Riot-esque hard rock band. What makes the trio different interesting is the shared vocals, the good singing balances the bad singing. Phil Naro would become the singer for the quartet, later to become the original though non-recorded frontman of Danger Danger which would include fellow Talas members Al Pitrelli & Bruno Ravel. Danger Danger being built from the ashes of Talas. But, Naro is not a distinctive singer. Also, none of the members, in any era of the band, show themselves as particularly good songwriters, relying too much on traditional song structures with weak lyrics. Again, check out Randy Coven for comparison of how a similar technique is taken in a new direction just via a different songwriting approach. There's a reason Sheehan's star shone over Talas's. It's all in the songs. But, in its favor, this early recording still has a lot of 70's influence on it, versus the 80's hard rock that would influence the later two albums. The irony is that Talas had an influence on the 80's sound, much like Hanoi Rocks had an influence, only to eventually be caught as an imitator of the imitator. This debut may not be the best representation of Talas, but there's a glimmer here & its better than nothing. Though, probably, in the end for Sheehan fans only & not going to convert anyone else who will wonder what the fuss around Sheehan is about. The fuss, like Hanoi Rocks, is the big picture. The fuss is doing the homework beyond just litening to the music. Though, for those just wanting a touch of Sheehan I recommend a compilation from Mr. Big.



April 24, 2012

Billy Sheehan's Talas ~ Live Speed On Ice (live) (album review) ... Billy Sheehan only has one speed: in your face!

Style: hard rock
Label: Combat
Year: 1984
Home: New York

Members: Billy Sheehan ~ bass/vocals
Phil Naro ~ lead vocals
Mitch Perry ~ guitars/b. vocals
Mark Miller ~ drums

Before he became a influential & iconized bass player with such groups as David Lee Roth with Steve Vai & Mr. Big, back in the 70's Billy Sheehan had his own heavy power trio called Talas that gained some fame in upstate New York. Talas recorded two albums over a near decade that would help get Sheehan gigs touring with other bands, such as UFO, before his own reputation eclipsed that of the band causing extended leaves of absence & with other other internal strife Talas's guitarist & drummer left Sheehan for other musical pastures. Sheehan rebuilt the group as a quartet. Instead rotating vocal duties among all the members Talas would now feature a lead singer, though Sheehan would still take a few lead vocals. This new line-up was untraditionally debuted to the mass public via the live album High Speed On Ice, recorded in New York City December 1983. This new Talas, playing the same songs but with a slightly different feel, actually hearkened more towards what Sheehan would come to do with Mr. Big. Sadly, the new Talas also had less of a distinctive identity than its predecessor as while all the playing is great, particularly from Sheehan whose furious & elaborate bass playing is more of a lead instrument, the songs themselves are just somewhat throw away early hair metal. But, to see the big picture of the career of a man who has been as influential to bassists as Van Halen is to guitarists Talas is worth taking a peek at, including both the early trio & the later version. With Talas Sheehan was walking the same fusion & technically challenging turf as Yngwie Malmsteen (i.e. "Do You Feel Any Better") & Dream Theater (i.e. "The Farandole"), but with more emphasis on the bass than would be the habit of hard rock bands, or most bands for that matter, but perfectly at home in the jazz repertoire of Jaco Pastorius. The sad thing is the necessity of vocals & throw away lyrics that just pulls a cloud over the music distracting the ear from what it really wants & needs to hear. Phil Naro doesn't bring the same wild man feeling to the microphone as Sheehan does to the bass & the two don't feel like they are feeding off of each other as just being on the same stage together. The songs may not be the greatest & Sheehan is the obvious standout instrumentalist, but the live context allows him room to breathe in the ways that made him famous ... considering it's the live shows that made Talas popular over the previous decade not the two earlier studio recordings. "7718 (3A17)" features an extended bass solo that's a run of lines that causes one to forget its a bass & not a guitar. It's Jaco Pastorius without the funk. It's essentially what rock bassists weren't doing at the time. It's polarizing ... as now the bass could be seen in the traditional manner as a rhythm instrument staying out of the spotlight pounding out root notes & chord changes or as a lead instrument in its own right. No longer were bass solos something for jazz players. Having this debut to do over again my suggestion would be the addition of some new material as its all songs from the trio days written for a different style of playing & not allowing the new faces of Naro, Miller & Perry to have a chance to contribute in their own way to their full extent. They're somewhat trapped, but it'll take a comparison of previous albums with this live album to discover that. Eventually Sheehan would leave Talas but bassist Bruno Ravel would take the position for a short time. At this point in the band would be future Trans-Siberian Orchestra/Megadeth/Alice Cooper guitarist Al Pitrelli. When Ravel found himself becoming more popular with fans & accidentally making it public Sheehan stepped in &, owning the rights to the name, collapsed the band. Ravel would take Naro with him to form Hotshot, later reuniting with Pitrelli as the band became Danger Danger, who with a different singer & guitarist would find some modest cock rock/glam metal hits on MTV. Ironically, years later Talas guitarist Mitch Perry would eventually come to succeed Al Pitrelli in Asia. Also in the final Talas line-up with Pitrelli & Ravel was drummer Jimmy DeGrasso who'd go on to join Y&T & eventually recommend Pitrelli to join Megadeth. Sadly, no known recordings were made of the final Talas line-up, filling an important early stepping stone for all involved. Sheehan would reunite the original trio for a minor tour after finding commercial success.



October 2, 2011

Danger Danger ~ Screw It! (album review) ... Too much monkey business!


Style: hair metal, hard rock, glam rock
Label: Epic
Year: 1991
Home: New York City

Members: Ted Poley ~ vocals

Andy Timmons ~ guitars/b. vocals
Bruno Ravel ~ bass/cello/b. vocals
Steve West ~ drums/b. vocals
Kasey Smith ~ keyboards

Additional: Koen Van Baal ~ programming/strings

Jimmie Haskell ~ strings
Erwin Musper ~ piano/b. vocals
Eddie Conard ~ percussion
Mom Ravel ~ violin
Dad Ravel ~ viola
Todd Confessore, Joss Mennen, Pete Lovell, Ginger Lynn , Denis Arabatzis, Lena Arabatzis, Chris Bello, Cathy Brandow, Castagna, Becky Cogert, Danny Delarue, Anthony DiGirolamo, James Eagan, Lance Elias, Merari Escudero, Amber G., Debbie GAnnelt, Briana Goldman, Karcy H., Kathryn, Heidi Katz, Dianna Kish, Hilary Korte, Veronica Mendoza, Mary Moore, Chris Mullins, Jennifer Mullins, Kelly F. Mullins, Normany Piccolo, Maria Ricci, Serge, Rob Simone, Keith Whitby, George Yates ~ b. vocals

Guests: Nuno Bettencourt, Gary Cherone, Pat Badger ~ b. vocals

Of interest to history buffs is that the original line-up of DD featured vocalist Mike Pont & future Megadeth guitarist Al Pitrelli, who would both quit when their joint writing was getting ignored & form the ill-fated Hotshot that would be courted by Motley Crue's Nikki Sixx as his new management project ... if only Vince Neil didn't need kicking out of the band the project might have materialized instead of landing in the gutter, though by this time Pitrelli was touring the world with Alice Cooper. All remnants of the Pont/Pitrelli days from sound to songs are wiped clean by the time of DD's second album Screw It!, the songwriting & path of the band nearly completely dominated by the creative union of founding members bassist Bruno Ravel & drummer Steve West. Pont/Pitrelli had a gritty underground NYC sound, but Ravel/West was a more polished pretty boy affair of slick guitars & lyrics shallowly focused on girls & parties ... successor frontman Ted Poley's habit of grabbing himself on stage, intentional or not, didn't help matters. Anyone questioning the potential longevity of such shallow music had their skepticism proven right when DD quickly faded into obscurity with the landing of grunge. Though, grunge would in turn pave a path for new types of equally shallow music, so it's trading one pawn with another. Rock & Roll will always be shallow on some level so it's really a matter of just enjoying it & calling it a day with that. DD's self-titled debut might be what made the band famous, with the oversexualized hits "Naughty Naughty" & "Bang Bang", & their flame might have never been rekindled with anything beyond that first parade out the door but Screw It! isn't a bad follow-up. It may not stretch the boundaries of its limited hair metal palette but it does show a band with potential to grow musically if they're willing ... sadly, later releases would show they were happy to stay where they were & live off the success of that first release. DD's debut had no writing credits by Pont/Pitrelli but there were some songs on it demoed by that early line-up, plus most of the songs were written while still a struggling club band, while Screw It! is a band composing while their hair sprayed locks were gleaming gold in the newly discovered spotlight. Thus, Screw It! is a more cohesive whole than the debut. Following Screw It! Ted Poley & keyboardist Kasey Smith exited, replaced by vocalist Paul Laine while Ravel & West took took to playing all instruments, with occasional guests, & making DD less of a band & more of a vanity project with a static sound. None of the Laine era would ever have much of a commercial impact, so when one thinks of DD it is the debut & Screw It! that comes to mind & it's these two albums that have been touted by current sleaze rock revivalists as Steel Panther as an inspiration. But, one should be honest. There's a reason bands like this DD couldn't compete against Nirvana & grunge while others, for example Metallica & Soundgarden, got bigger. There's only so much sexual posing one can do before fans get restless for something new. Even over a single album it gets a bit tedious unless one is a top-notch songwriter. There are a few standout tracks: "Monkey Business", the obligatory acoustic power ballad "I Still Think About You" that reached MTV, "Crazy Nites" & "Everybody Wants Some" but nothing that is any different from earlier hits "Naughty Naughty" & "Bang Bang". Actually, it's amazing just how easily duplicated the hair metal sound is, as DD sounds like every band on the scene with no real distinct personality. Also, like so many of their peers the desire for a slick commercial sound actually works against the end result. Rock & Roll needs an impromptu feeling to rock & not just pop. Though, the shallow lyrical fair isn't much to work off of. Thus, essentially DD is all about having fun. This is party time music going full-throttle. Of course, Van Halen threw the same party a decade earlier but they knew when to pull back or aim for a target that was above the belt once in a while. DD has no interest in letting the party sink just because all that is left are the party crashers. You can't blame them. They worked hard to get as high as they did & its not their fault that the scene was over before they could prove themselves. There is really one embarrassing track that deserves mention. "Yeah, You Want It!" ends the album with electronic beats & rapping right off of a Beastie Boys album. At the time DD probably thought they were cool, particularly as they're singing such lines as "went from L.A. Guns to Enuff Z'Nuff, you party with Poison on the back of their trucks ... Tipper says we're trash". As a bonus track it has merit, but followed by a campfire sing-along doesn't help, while today it just sounds dated. Next time include it as a hidden track. It's an ode to a world of rap long gone & for that is a gutsy inclusion.

March 3, 2011

Mike Pont's Hotshot ~ The Bomb (comp) (album review) ... From the world of Danger Danger!


Style: hard rock
Label: Split Finger Records
Year: 2005
Home: New York City

Members: Mike Pont ~ vocals
Al Pitrelli ~ guitars/keyboards/harmonica/b. vocals
Spike Francis ~ guitars
Tony Bruno ~ guitar/b. vocals
Timmy Starace ~ bass
Bruno Ravel, T.C. Cook ~ bass/b. vocals
Kurt Fairchild ~ drums/b. vocals
Chuck Bonfonte, Steve West ~ drums
Al Greenwood, Steve Savides ~ keyboards

Guest: Nikki Sixx ~ voice
Leslie West ~ guitar

Additional: George Cintron ~ guitar/b. vocals

At first listen this sole release by disbanded hard rockers Hotshot sounds like so many of its peers that were on the scene in the mid/late-1980's. It's got everything fans have come to expect from Ratt, Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, Skid Row & countless other hair bands that frequented MTV, the difference being that Hotshot never had the same level of national commercial success. Today some listeners and maybe even former band members might cringe at hearing how dated Hotshot sounds as what was once a popular style of hard rock has now become history, but on the other hand, once the listener lets oneself fall into the pleasures that this particular genre still offers regardless of changing musical trends this becomes an album that would be a wonderful addition to any music collection. Those who once frequented New York's club scene may remember Hotshot while others might be more familiar with the faces in the band as it's alumni would achieve greater fame outside of the band making this a historical snapshot, or relic, of what a group of musicians were doing before they became famous. Hotshot started as a NYC new wave cover band led by Mike Pont with future Danger Danger members Bruno Ravel & Steve West, amongst others including roadie Kelly Nickels who'd join L.A. Guns. Moving to L.A. Pont discovered the Motley Crue-led scene there only to return to NYC & form the Mike Pont Band with Gary Binova, original Foreigner keyboardist Al Greenwood, future Megadeth/Trans-Siberian Orchestra/Savatage guitarist Al Pitrelli, future Joan Jett/Joe Lynn Turner/Danger Danger guitarist Tony "Rey" Bruno & future Morning Wood drummer Chuck Bonfonte. In the meantime Ravel & West had formed Danger Danger with whom Pont & Pitrelli would join. Another excursion to L.A. found Pitrelli, who'd left Danger Danger & can be heard on their early demos via the hard to find Rare Cuts, convincing Pont to return east once again where they reformed Hotshot with bassist TC Cook & drummer Kurt Fairchild. Cook went on to Dio while Pitrelli to Alice Cooper. Hotshot now found itself going through line-up changes and gaining attention climaxing with their demo landing in the hands of Motley Crue's Nikki Sixx. Sixx wanted to manage the band but kicking Vince Neil out of Crue took priority & Hotshot's career came to a near overnight premature end. Fourteen years later the demos, recorded between 1986 & 1990, were collected & finally released by Pont. It's unknown if there's more recordings out there or if this the complete recording output of Hotshot. Given all that history this might be a historical relic but it's far from moldy or for collector's only or even full of disastrous musical experiments one comes to expect on early demos, even though the album opens with the original phone message left by Sixx that feels sad knowing the outcome. Hotshot comes from the days when one assumed a guitar player could run modes, scales & riffs to land at some melodic & memorable outcome that combined feeling and technical skills, versus much of today's bands where there's often a difference between musician & guitarist. Memorable riffs, great solos, love ballads, complex but seemingly simple arrangements & lots of typical 80's dynamics highlight these songs. Seeing whose behind all the riffs is what takes this album a step above many of its more famous peers, but the songs can still stand on their own regardless of the who's who. These may be some of the earliest recordings/compositions by Pitrelli, Bruno, Ravel & co. but they are anything but demos or musicians just getting started & honing their chops or even experimenting. It's a shame it took so long to make this music available & it never saw the charts at the time. Some musicians hone their skills over their career but here a 20-something Pitrelli, featured on about half the tracks, is blasting out the door with wicked & raw guitar solos with his common choice to play something melodic instead of fast or heavily distorted. Obviously his playing has improved in the decades since, but these early recordings show a young axeman overflowing in talent & ability some well-experienced guitarists don't have. He also lends his backing vocals to the arrangements, a highlight of the songs that is sorely missed on the tracks he's absent on. The arrangements & compositions are top-notch 80's rock, though sometimes a bit too AOR & heavy on ballads. The production is also top-notch even though they are essentially low-budget recordings, which is probably due to a much later mixing session. Outside of the overabundance of love songs or the largely dated sound of the some of the keyboard heavy ballads one would be challenged to really find something wrong with this collection. For those wanting to hear young musicians who haven't developed their chops yet this is everything but that. With three line-ups featured it's also interesting to hear how much the different members dominated the sound. Pont might have written the lyrics but the outcome is clearly influenced by whoever he was playing with. The Pitrelli/Cook/Fairchild line-up have a commercial rock reminiscent of early Whitesnake. It's somewhat by-the-numbers hard rock, not glam or power metal, but have, or more properly would have had, great radio appeal. Two tracks ("Always In My Heart" & "In The Groove") find Pitrelli/Cook replaced by guitarist Spike Francis & bassist Timmy Starace in what sounds like a completely different band with Francis's distorted solos being the complete opposite of melodic Pitrelli. He doesn't blend in as so much as take-over. There's a whole other album waiting to be shared with this particular line-up. The Pitrelli/Bruno Ravel/Steve West/Steve Savides & the Tony Bruno/Ravel/Chuck Bonfonte/Al Greenwood line-ups are the earliest recordings & sound as much with less intricate arrangements & is a more reserved band. The best way to listen to this album & get the full picture, which is arranged by most radio friendly to the early demos with Francis/Starace/Fairchild being a bump in the middle, is to play that tracks in chronological order & hear how one band that was hot on the scene & could have been hotter had they been given the chance and how much they had to offer as they developed their sound.