Tuesday, 27 June 2023

Great Metal Albums of 1983: Motley Crue- Shout at the Devil

 220px-shoutatthedevil

I believe I'm not the only one who thinks "Shout at the Devil" is Motley Crue's best album. It would be after that Motley Crue would be more into posing instead of the quality of their music. The band's image with that album was darker, to the point they would be accused of Satanism. Then again, I've always said that being accused of that was the mark of a metal band's success.

They first came to my attention courtesy of MTV where I saw the video for the album's first single, "Looks That Kill." You know the one where the band traps a bunch of scantly clad women in a steel fence only to be rescued by some Valkyrie type warrior. In 1983, I found that video to be cool but having watched it again recently, I just laugh at it. Furthermore, nowadays, I agree with anyone who says that video is sexist. Still, I do like the song, probably my favourite Crue song of all time.

Let me be blunt here, I have always thought that Motley Crue weren't the most talented musicians to get together and call themselves a band. However, on "Shout at the Devil," they definitely play to their strengths. There are some good songs on it too. True, beginnings like the way Motley Crue start the album off with "In the Beginning," which sounds like a sermon before crashing headlong into the title track seem more common these days but it was a good attention grabber. "Bastard" is a decent song and the instrumental "God Bless the Children of the Beast" convinces me that Mick Mars is not the worst guitarist in metal. Like Pat Benatar and Vow Wow and quite a few other bands, they have their own cover of the Beatles classic, "Helter Skelter." Probably the most, covered Beatles song in heavy metal. Other bands have produced better covers of it but Motley Crue's isn't bad.

Side two of "Shout at the Devil" isn't quite as good as the first side. The only real standout song is their second single, "Too Young to Fall in Love." However, what they do well is to stick to the basic formula of heavy metal and it works well for them. Then again, I do like some of the riffs on "Knock'em Dead Kid" and Mars's guitar solo on "Ten Seconds to Love" is rather cool. In reference to what said about four of the last five songs not standing out, they do keep the album ticking over to an interesting closer in "Danger."

Track Listing:

  1. In the Beginning
  2. Shout at the Devil
  3. Looks That Kill
  4. Bastard
  5. God Bless the Children of the Beast
  6. Helter Skelter
  7. Red Hot
  8. Too Young to Fall in Love
  9. Knock'Em Dead Kid
  10. Ten Seconds to Love
  11. Danger
[caption id="attachment_2427" align="aligncenter" width="276"]Motley Crue Motley Crue[/caption]

Vince Neil- vocals

Mick Mars- guitars

Nikki Sixx- bass

Tommy Lee- drums

"Shout at the Devil," will always remain for me, Motley Crue's best album. However, it seem when they broke through with it, the abandoned some of the things that this album helped gain them that commercial success.

Next post: Dokken- Breaking the Chains

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

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