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Black Sabbath - Seventh Star - Album Review
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<blockquote data-quote="Floyd" data-source="post: 2020" data-attributes="member: 1"><p><em>Seventh Star</em> shouldn't even have been a Black Sabbath record. Label pressure has led to more dissapointing releases, and the Black Sabbath name suffered from this ill fate just as many others. The group's twelth album, already rather strangely headed with <em>Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi</em>, was meant to be Iommi's first solo album, but of course, the label (correctly) felt more money was to be made if the name Black Sabbath was put on the album rather than Tony Iommi. But who's that on the album cover? That's right: Tony Iommi. True Sabbath fans do not even consider this a Black Sabbath album, a claim which is completely justified.</p><p></p><p>There is nothing Sabbath-esque about <em>Seventh Star</em>. Yes, Iommi plays guitar here, but those lines I hear could come from any other decent 80's rock guitarist. His playing is not necessarily bad, just not distinctive. On all of Sabbath's records up till <em>Mob Rules</em>, it could be clearly heard who was playing guitar. <em>Born Again</em> and this album do not have this, and Iommi was the one that made the band in the first place. Handling vocals this time is Glenn Hughes, formerly of Mark III/IV <em>Deep Purple</em>, on bass we have Dave Spitz (yes, no Geezer either), and <em>KISS</em> drummer Eric Singer can be found behind the kit. As is expected of a solo record though, it is really not those last two that stick out. Iommi rips away, which he still does with some flair, and Hughes performance is overdramatic but also fitting to the sound of the album.</p><p></p><p>What this all results in is a standard, uneventful cheesy 80's metal album. Tracks such as the short closing ballad <em>In Memory...</em> are pretty laughable, but fans of the typical sound of rock and metal in this decade will find something to enjoy in huge-chorused songs such as <em>In For the Kill</em> and <em>Heart Like a Wheel</em>. Overall though, and certainly as a Black Sabbath album, <em>Seventh Star</em> is rather poor. It is however a step up from the abomination <em>Born Again</em>: this palette of musicians are a much better combination than Ian Gillan was with then original band, and the production is a blessing compared to the horror of the previous album. But all in all: you still won't be going to buy this anyway.</p><p></p><p>Tracklist for <strong>Seventh Star</strong>:</p><p></p><p>1. In for the Kill</p><p></p><p>2. No Stranger to Love</p><p></p><p>3. Turn to Stone</p><p></p><p>4. Sphinx (The Guardian)</p><p></p><p>5. Seventh Star</p><p></p><p>6. Danger Zone</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1249[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>7. Heart Like a Wheel</p><p></p><p>8. Angry Heart</p><p></p><p>9. In Memory...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Floyd, post: 2020, member: 1"] [I]Seventh Star[/I] shouldn't even have been a Black Sabbath record. Label pressure has led to more dissapointing releases, and the Black Sabbath name suffered from this ill fate just as many others. The group's twelth album, already rather strangely headed with [I]Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi[/I], was meant to be Iommi's first solo album, but of course, the label (correctly) felt more money was to be made if the name Black Sabbath was put on the album rather than Tony Iommi. But who's that on the album cover? That's right: Tony Iommi. True Sabbath fans do not even consider this a Black Sabbath album, a claim which is completely justified. There is nothing Sabbath-esque about [I]Seventh Star[/I]. Yes, Iommi plays guitar here, but those lines I hear could come from any other decent 80's rock guitarist. His playing is not necessarily bad, just not distinctive. On all of Sabbath's records up till [I]Mob Rules[/I], it could be clearly heard who was playing guitar. [I]Born Again[/I] and this album do not have this, and Iommi was the one that made the band in the first place. Handling vocals this time is Glenn Hughes, formerly of Mark III/IV [I]Deep Purple[/I], on bass we have Dave Spitz (yes, no Geezer either), and [I]KISS[/I] drummer Eric Singer can be found behind the kit. As is expected of a solo record though, it is really not those last two that stick out. Iommi rips away, which he still does with some flair, and Hughes performance is overdramatic but also fitting to the sound of the album. What this all results in is a standard, uneventful cheesy 80's metal album. Tracks such as the short closing ballad [I]In Memory...[/I] are pretty laughable, but fans of the typical sound of rock and metal in this decade will find something to enjoy in huge-chorused songs such as [I]In For the Kill[/I] and [I]Heart Like a Wheel[/I]. Overall though, and certainly as a Black Sabbath album, [I]Seventh Star[/I] is rather poor. It is however a step up from the abomination [I]Born Again[/I]: this palette of musicians are a much better combination than Ian Gillan was with then original band, and the production is a blessing compared to the horror of the previous album. But all in all: you still won't be going to buy this anyway. Tracklist for [B]Seventh Star[/B]: 1. In for the Kill 2. No Stranger to Love 3. Turn to Stone 4. Sphinx (The Guardian) 5. Seventh Star 6. Danger Zone [ATTACH type="full"]1249[/ATTACH] 7. Heart Like a Wheel 8. Angry Heart 9. In Memory... [/QUOTE]
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Black Sabbath - Seventh Star - Album Review
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