SOUNDTRACK: QUEENSRŸCHE-The Warning (1984).
Queensrÿche fulfilled the promise of their debut EP with this album. It takes the blueprint of the EP and expands it wonderfully. They introduce some cool low vocal chants to compliment Tate’s soaring alto (like on “En Force”), they also introduce some wonderful effects and riffs and scales (also on “En Force”).
There’s also some really great, odd “keyboard” bits thrown in as kind of sound effects or jarring moments (“Deliverance”). “Deliverance” also has great backing vocals, and I love the way the “Deliver Us” part of the song is quite different from the soaring of the rest of the vocals. The back and forth of “No Sanctuary” also showcases the bands skills very well.
The band even shows signs that they’re not sticking to standard heavy metal. On “N.M. 156” there’s some sci-fi chanting and the really cool section of the song in which Tate sings “Forgotten…Lost…Memories” and the “Lost” part is a completely unexpected note. They were taking chances from the beginning.
“The Lady Wore Black” is updated with the stunning “Take Hold of the Flame,” a slightly more progressive version of that first song. “Before the Storm” was the first song I heard from this album and it has always been my favorite on the record (this is one of those few albums where the better songs aren’t front loaded). “We watch the sun rise and hope it won’t be our last” (they were always happy guys).
“Child of Fire” opens with a wonderful riff and the compelling, “the souls that are damned by the pain that you bring send you higher.” The song settles down into a slow part and Tate growls “Damn you and the pain they must feel” and you can tell he means it (whatever else the song is about).
All this time I don’t think I ever realized that “Roads to Madness” was nine minutes long. It is definitely foreshadowing the kind of epic work they would do later. And it closes out the album in a cathartic blast. It’s wonderfully pure metal from the mid-80s.
[READ: October 20, 2011] Celebrations of Curious Characters
I had never heard of Ricky Jay before getting this book, but apparently he is a reasonably well know radio personality (on KCRW), he is also an actor on Deadwood, and he’s a magician. This book is a collection of his KCRW radio show broadcasts along with accompanying pictures from his vast collection of obscure ephemera.
There are forty-five entries in the book–each one is a page long (it’s an oversized book and they are two columns each). Each essay is Jay’s take on a particular subject or, as the title says, curious character. Jay is a collector of esoteric information, especially that related to magic and, for lack of a better word, freakish behavior. One of the most enjoyable parts of the book are the pictures that accompany each entry. The pictures come from Jay’s collection and each picture’s provenance is given in the back of the book. So we get pictures like “The little Count Boruwlaski, engraving by A. van Assed ([London]) Borowlaski [sic], 1788). or Lithograph of Chung Ling Soo (Birmingham: J. Upton, c. 1912) or Frontispiece portrait from George Devol, Forty Years a Gambler on the Mississippi (Cincinnati: Devol & Haines, 1887). Some of these photos you can see on his website. Or you can enjoy this picture of a chicken firing a gun that is not in the book (it comes from his site). (more…)
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