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Posts Tagged ‘Scorpions’

5 Albums That Changed the Way I Rock

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Cover art is metal to the max - and so are the tunes.

Cover art is metal to the max - and so are the tunes.

Let me take you back to when I was 14 years old. This is gonna surprise you, but I didn’t really listen to much music. None of it got me excited. I often listened to Top 40 radio while playing computer games, but that was more like background noise.

My hesher of a neighbor at that time took it upon himself to set me on the right track (at least musically). He started me off slowly, ramping up the intensity as I began to immerse myself into his metal culture. Though he led the way, I also began discovering my own stuff. Here are 5 albums that changed the way I rock, in no particular order. Those supplied by The Hesher Neighbor are starred.

Savage Amusement* (Scorpions) - The Hesher and I might be the only people on the planet who actually like this album. Word is the Scorps themselves don’t even like it because of its meticulous over-production. But this was my first exposure, and I loved Klaus’s voice and the HUGE guitar tone. Even today, this album also has a dark, menacing gleam absent in any other Scorpions album.

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part II* (Helloween) - Okay, so riddle me this: Why did Master of Puppets get so much more attention than Keeper Part II? After all, this album is more intense, the playing more mind-boggling, the themes just as apocalyptic (yet often humorous). My theory? Helloween drew heavily from classicial music with wild harmony parts and a singer with crazy vocal range. Metallica drew from more accessible punk. I also think Helloween’s often-absurd lyrics -and farm animal noises- made it hard for them to take as seriously, even after they’d clean house with a blazing dual harmony guitar solo. I will also say that every Helloween riff had a point, where Metallica often got bogged down in riffs for riffs’ sake, just to through something in there. Kind of like The Dave Mustaine Project (aka Megadeth).

Live After Death (Iron Maiden) - My first exposure to Iron Maiden came from a mix tape a dude named Neil made for me. One listen, and I scuttled to the record store for a live album. It was like giving a espresso to an infant, an instant shot of “WTF that rules!” that delighted me. Everybody in the band sounds like they have a piece of Stonehenge its very self tucked away in their stretchy pants. “Aces High” remains an all-time favorite, as do many of the other classics on this stupendously awesome live album. I even love that spot in “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” where Bruce Dickinson sounds more like Al Bundy than himself (”Then, the spell starts t’break!”).

Beast from the East (Dokken) - As a high school junior, a girl named Tracy sat behind me in English class. She decreed that I needed to listen to Dokken, so she dubbed a copy of her live Beast album. And let me tell you, this thing rocked me silly. George Lynch’s guitar tone was monumental, and Don Dokken had a gritty vibe that sounded heavy as hell. I was almost crushed when I got a hold of a studio album - oy vey, so overproduced, shiny and barren. But this … this was awesome stuff. The same songs, but stripped to their essentials and delivered with feeling.

Queensryche's Michael Wilton - He rules, and plays the most awesome ESP on the planet. Photo from Hotsource.com.au.

Queensryche's Michael Wilton - He rules, and plays the most awesome ESP on the planet. Photo from Hotsource.com.au.

Operation Mindcrime* (Queensryche) - Gadzooks! To this day, no album impacts my mood as much as Mindcrime. I’ve removed it from my car, because it makes me want to crash my Subaru into a Hummer, steal a steamroller and go on an anti-authority rampage. The guitar tone is studiously and purposefully annoying (as admitted by the members), but so evocative. The songs interlink quite well. The arrangements are dense. They employ both guitarists to good effect, rather than just having them double each other. I love the way the play different voicings of the same chord, a technique I try to apply in Hung Dynasty songs. I know this list isn’t supposed to have any order, but this might be the #1.

Old Live Scorpions Show a Blast from the Past

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

When I was in high school, I bought a live Scorpions tape called Tokyo Tapes. It was all the earlier stuff from the Uli John Roth era. I don’t remember digging it very much, though my friend Jodi (the second-ranked Scorps fan in the school) and I really liked the part where thousands of Japanese people yelled for an encore by chanting “Scawpions! Scawpions!” over and over.

I just picked it up on disc out of curiosity, and I like it a lot better. I’m bummed “Is There Anybody There?” wasn’t on the set list, and Klaus’ pronunciation was way funnier back in those days. But man, Uli can play his ass off. It’s clear that Yngwie Malmsteen was watching that cat carefully back in the day. He had modern tone and very modern technique, even in 1978.

The songs are still a bit weird and spacey overall. But the boys lock into some monster grooves, and Klaus will always possess one of the most distinct and awesome voices in rock history. And just look at that longevity! They can still pack a stadium, and they bring the rock (even with a substantially changed lineup).

Where it all began

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

This is kind of odd. Until I was about 14 years old, I really didn’t care about music. Nothing really did much for me. I actually made it deep into 7th grade without actually knowing who the hell Bon Jovi was - quite an accomplishment for an 80s kid.

A neighbor changed all that. He was a few years older than me. He decided that I shouldn’t be cast adrift listening to crap. My salvation came in the form of Savage Amusement, an album by The Scorpions.

Now, this currently stands as one of the more maligned Scorpions albums. But

Mathias Jabs, guitarist for the Scorpions. He's cooler than you, and he knows it. (Photo by Photo Agency)

Mathias Jabs, guitarist for the Scorpions. He's cooler than you, and he knows it. (Photo by Photo Agency)

I still love it, and I completely know why it hooked me. First of all, the band’s singer, Klaus Meine, sounds like nobody else. He just has this really mysterious, almost superhuman, quality. Then there was the guitar sound. I wasn’t a guitar aficionado back then. But they just sounded lethal, like chainsaws slathered in rattlesnake venom. Too cool!

That propelled me to take up the guitar. Which also led me to Queensryche. I still love this band, too.  And I love them for more than their individual parts. Geoff Tate isn’t my favorite singer by a long shot. And the guitar sounds? They offend my ears, to be honest.

So why the love? Because the band has two guitarists, and they work hard to differentiate their parts and back them lock together, playing different lines and chord voicings. Brilliant! And they work hard on lyrics and themes, not just sticking to what worked for one album. Also, there’s always been an earnest quality about them that says they love music, and they take it seriously. And their music is always able to evoke some emotion from me. That merits my respect.

Stuff like Iron Maiden, Helloween, Gammy Ray and whatnot followed The Scorps and Queensryche. The Grunge Era was horrible for me, but I’m grateful for much of the new metal coming out of Europe. But that’s a post for another day.

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