Sunday, 11 June 2023

Great Metal Albums of 1983: Virgin Steele- Guardians of the Flame

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Virgin Steele's 1982 debut album might have passed me by, (I blame being in the service at the time), but their second album, "Guardians of the Flame," didn't. I have a friend of my sister's to thank for that because she was a big Virgin Steele fan. It was this album that she played on cassette in her car one day and the rest was history.

What hooked me straight away is that my all time favourite Virgin Steele song is the opener on "Guardians of the Flame." "Don't Say Goodbye Tonight" is one of those with a fast catchy beat that hooks you immediately. One can't helped to headbang away to this tune. It is helped by the guitar work of Jack Starr, then the entire album is as well, and the rhythm section sounds the tightest on this song. What's best is that lead singer, David DeFeis doesn't try so much to be Joe Cool metal singer on it. His vocals are good enough but his attempts at high screams have always been off putting for me. He doesn't do that on "Don't Say Goodbye Tonight."

DeFeis does those things on the next two tracks but fortunately, Starr's guitar work cancels out the screams and makes those songs enjoyable. Maybe he gets the hint by track four because he doesn't scream on "The Redeemer" making it a strong, powerful track. I sense a little Black Sabbath influence here and done well. The song is seven minutes long but a lot of that is Jack laying down the jams, so it's a very enjoyable track.

Following a brief instrumental is the title cut. It begins like any other straight forward Virgin Steele metal tune but then in the middle, it goes totally progressive rock. I mean that when I listen to this part, I could be listening to Emerson, Lake and Palmer. However, it works with the second longest song on the album, just shy of seven minutes. You got to give them credit for having the balls to stretch out a bit here and credit where do for pulling it off. Again, Jack Starr has an influence on it too.

Things go back to more power metal after that with three really strong metal tracks. Then the album closes with the ballad like, "A Cry in the Night." Using a ballad as a closer is always risky but there is a great guitar solo towards the end that helps to take the song out in very good way and has me making mental notes to listen to it again.

Track Listing:

  1. Don't Say Goodbye Tonight
  2. Burn the Sun
  3. Life of Crime
  4. The Redeemer
  5. Birth Through Fire
  6. Guardians of the Flame
  7. Metal City
  8. Hell or High Water
  9. Go All the Way
  10. A Cry in the Night
[caption id="attachment_3729" align="aligncenter" width="308"]Virgin Steele Virgin Steele[/caption]

David DeFies- vocals, keyboards

Jack Starr- guitar

Joe O'Reilly- bass

Joey Avazian- drums

I was impressed by the second album from Virgin Steele, "Guardians of the Flame" and I would seek out their later material. So what I ask myself is why I never got their debut album. If any of you can shed light on whether I've committed a travesty or had a lucky escape by not listening to it, I would be very grateful.

Next post: Waysted- Vices

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

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