Wednesday, 28 December 2022

Great Metal Albums of 1983: Rainbow- Bent Out of Shape

 220px-bent_out_of_shape_rainbow

"Bent Out of Shape" would be the last album for Rainbow as we knew them. The band would break up after the tour for the album and members would go in different directions but that's a story for further down the line of metal history. I have heard this album called lackluster and the final nail in Rainbow's coffin but was it that bad? I'll be the first to admit that "Bent Out of Shape" doesn't come up to the level of the previous Rainbow album, "Straight Between the Eyes" but I don't think it's a bad album one bit.

With "Bent Out of Shape," Rainbow go towards a more keyboard dominated sound meaning it's less hard rock than what Rainbow fans were used to. Back in the 1980s, I could see how metalheads would have found that disappointing as many were distrustful of any band who incorporated keyboards in their sound. However, David Rosenthal had been with the band for several albums and had proven himself to be a more than capable keyboardist. Proof is his efforts on the intro to "Can't Let You Go," strictly superb and he does smoke on "Fire Dance." The added bonus with that song is that Ritchie Blackmore still lets you know that he can still bend the six string to do his bidding. Rainbow has always been good at the keyboard-guitar solo trade off and "Fire Dance" shows that their ability to do so hadn't gone away. If you want further proof, listen to the two instrumentals on the album. On "Anybody There" the keyboards play a support role for Ritchie to work his guitar magic and "Snowman" is a great piece of instrumental progressive rock!

It might have been that many metalheads were put off by the single, "Street of Dreams," which got a considerable amount of airplay on MTV before it was supposedly banned for its hypnotic clip. It would later be accused of showing bondage but that again, is for a later post. It is a commercial track without argument but it's not bad. In fact, it's played well. "Desperate Heart" is more of a rocker, the second hardest on the album, with "Drinking With the Devil" being the hardest.  So not everything that Rainbow had stood for for nearly a decade went out the window on the album. Besides, the closer, "Make You Move" takes things out on a hard note very well. Overall, I won't debate that "Bent Out of Shape" is more of a commercial AOR album but I didn't hate it then and I appreciate more now.

Track Listing:

  1. Stranded
  2. Can't Let You Go
  3. Fool For the Night
  4. Fire Dance
  5. Anybody There
  6. Desperate Heart
  7. Street of Dreams
  8. Drinking With the Devil
  9. Snowman
  10. Make Your Move
[caption id="attachment_2923" align="aligncenter" width="224"]Rainbow Rainbow[/caption]

Ritchie Blackmore- guitar

Roger Glover- bass

Joe Lynn Turner- vocals

David Rosenthal- keyboards

Chuck Burgi- drums

In spite of whether "Ben Out of Shape" is a good album, Rainbow would disappear after the album. Roger Glover and Ritchie Blackmore would go and rejoin some band they were with back in the early 1970s, you might have heard of them. Not long after, lead singer, Joe Lynn Turner would reappear with his first solo album. One thing that "Bent Out of Shape" proves was that it didn't end the careers of the talented members who made up Rainbow.

Next Post: Black Sabbath- Born Again

To buy Rock and Roll Children, email me at: tobychainsaw@hotmail.com 

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