Sunday, 27 August 2023

Great Rock Albums of 1984: The Alarm- Declaration

 

In very early months of 1984, when MTV was still playing lots of good music, one song definitely caught my attention. It wasn't metal, not even hard rock. If I were to categorize it, something I don't like doing, I would say it was post punk or new wave. Categories and labels a side, what I knew for sure was that I really liked the song "Sixty Eight Guns" by the Alarm. This song was a true anthem for me at the time and I still find myself singing it after all these years. The guitars were hard enough for my tastes but the way the chorus was belted out totally blew me away.

"Sixty Eight guns will never die

Sixty Eight guns our battle cry."

As I've said many times, I will not buy an album on account of one song so you have to know that the rest of the album kicks just as much ass as the feature song. Most of the first half of "The Declaration" are straight ahead new wave rockers and really cook. I do detect a little Irish folk influence in the track "Where Were You Hiding When the Storm Broke." Then again, when doing further research on the band, I discovered they were Welsh, so I'm not surprised at this. "We Are the Light" is an acoustic track but even that doesn't limit the powerful vocals of lead singer Mike Peters. For years, I have underestimated his vocal ability, I'll never do that again.

"Shout to the Devil" is not a Motley Crue cover but very intelligently combines the acoustic flavour of the previous track and the more powerful sounds of the previous songs. Again, it's very catchy. "Blaze of Glory" is also a good anthem like "Sixty Eight Guns" and like that song, I found myself wanting to sing along to the chorus. Only the lyrics aren't quite as straight forward as "68 Guns." I can at least sing the first part over and over, "Going out in a blaze of glory." I do like how they use the horns on it. "The Deceiver" has an eerie introduction before going into a fast acoustic track with some good harmonica played on it. In fact the second side, isn't quite as hard rock as the first but that doesn't diminish the quality of "The Declaration" in the slightest.

Track Listing:

  1. Declaration
  2. Marching On
  3. Where Were You Hiding When the Storm Broke
  4. Third Light
  5. Sixty Eight Guns
  6. We Are the Light
  7. Shout to the Devil
  8. Blaze of Glory
  9. Tell Me
  10. The Deceiver
  11. The Stand
  12. Howling Wind
[caption id="attachment_3790" align="aligncenter" width="354"] The Alarm[/caption]

Mike Peters- vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica

Dave Sharp- acoustic and electric guitars, backing vocals

Eddie MacDonald- bass, guitar, backing vocals

Twist- drums, percussion, backing vocals

When I listen to "The Declaration" I wonder why The Alarm didn't get more commercial success. Some misguided people did say that they were too much like U2 but I never thought so. They were unique enough to avoid that. So, I wonder if it's down to the discovery I made about them in the early summer of 1984, they were born again Christians. True, Christian rock was getting more attention at this time, something I'll talk about in a future post, but I don't hear any obvious Jesus lyrics in any of the songs that would frighten off listeners. For me, The Alarm's "The Declaration" defined the direction I was heading in 1984 and it's still a great album.

Next post: The Pretenders- Learning to Crawl

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

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