Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Extra Hot Sauce - Taco Of Death (1988) LP Peaceville Records
When I have a bummer day at work, this is one of the few records I liked to put on at work (via you tube) and listen to. It never fails to make me smile. Extra Hot Sauce is a thrash/crossover/grindcore band with a damn good sense of humor. They only released this album from what I can tell and were notable for their drummer, Dan Liker, who would later play bass with the fabled Nuclear Assault.
Pretty much every song here is offensive in a late-1980's kinda way, like the lyriks for AIDS which go:
AIDS/Who fucking cares?
Which is funny if you are into offensive and massively irreverant humor, but no so much if you are thin-skinned.
They also cover a slew of songs, most notably 'Communication Breakdown' by Zeppelin - in a bit over a minute. It's pretty much unreconizable, but its still damn funny and I laugh ever time I hear it. Their cover of Sabbath's 'Paranoid' is way less thrashy and fast - at least for the intro. Then it speeds up with blast beats and its just awesome.
This was a record I really had to argue myself into getting as I tend to stay away from this kind of fringe joke band stuff, especially hard-to-find records that command big money. This was found on the cheap on eBay and I snagged it happily. It's an interesting release in the pantheon of late 1980's thrash and one that you could easily see inspiring modern thrash bands like Municipal Waste.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Iron Maiden - In Concert - 773 (1993) LP BBC Transcription Service
My understanding of this LP is that the BBC makes its archived recordings available to buy for other commercial radio stations. Iron Maiden has two such recordings from what I can find, this, the 773 disc, and an earlier 669 recording. I picked it up from Reckless here in Chicago and its looks legit enough to me, but the music is what really matters.
It's an awesome live show, recorded in Holland and from what I can tell, during the "Fear Of The Dark Tour" in 1992, Bruce Dickenson's second to last tour with Maiden. The set list is amazing, comprising the best of the later part of Maiden's catalog, including "Bring Your Daughter To The Slaughter," "Can I Play With Madness?," "Heaven Can Wait" and "Fear Of The Dark."
I'm a huge Maiden fan and have listened to the entire Dickenson catalog many, many times. I haven't posted anything up here as I only have cassettes and CD's of the catalog, save for this lone, LP release.
And its a killer one at that. This was probably Bruce's last great tour with the band as the 1993 tour saw him having already announced his leaving the band. Those dates had to be bittersweet for all involved, especially as bassist Steve Harris said he thought Dickenson was phoning it in on more than a few occasions.
What blew me away here is the relentless energy Maiden has live, how crushingly they perform every song. Totally professional at every turn. The mix is damn near perfect - way better than the Rock in Rio live release which has the guitars way back in the mix and the bass up front.
As far as I can tell, there is no other official release of these recordings beyond what I have here, which is a bit of a bummer as this LP is fantastic. I've had it on the turntable for the past month at least once a day.
Reckless is in the process of tracking down a copy of the 669 recording for me and I'll hopefully post about that when it arrives. As it is, there doesn't seem to be any youtube clips of the music from this one, so here is "Sanctuary" from another date in 1992. Long live Maiden!
Destruction - Live Without Sense (1989) LP Noise International
The first time I heard 'Mad Butcher', I was pretty blown away and that set one track sold me on their entire catalog. Back in 1989, I bought this live record (on cassette, which has been lost to the ravages of time) and couldn't listen to it enough.
In the late 1980's, thrash and metal records had a tendency to be very, very treble heavy and bass seemed relegated to the way background. Most Destruction records suffered from this pretty badly, though the highlight of the band has always been the technical guitar playing anyway. This live record has a fantastic mix and the bass comes out, giving this release a punch lacking in a lot of their studio LP's.
There are a ton of highlights to this record - "Curse The Gods" and "Thrash Attack" being my favorties, but "Mad Butcher" is awesome here with a long into and crowd going nuts - you can almost feel the air cycling out of the pit way back in '89.
Considered one of the best technical metal bands back in the day along side Kreator, Destruction is two parts thrash to one part technical virtuosity and the later really makes the thrash part hit hard. I wouldn't consider them a technical band, more a thrash band with some really good guitar work. The vocals can be a hit or miss for some with the high-pitched squeals on "Curse..." and others. But really, if you listen to "Mad Butcher" and don't dig the band totally, the vocals won't change your mind one way or other other.
There are so many great early thrash bands, but Destruction still seems a cut above the rest, a rare treat for fans of technical metal and thrash.
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