Rattlesnake Remedy - Magic Man
Release: Rattlesnake Remedy - Magic Man
- Datum: 07.12.2006
Inhaltsangabe
01. Black Sheep Fiddle
02. Drag You Down
03. Free To Feel
04. Payin' My Dues
05. Reach For The Line
06. Killing Time
07. Angels Eyes
08. Nothing Right
09. Falling Away
10. Freestyle
11. Magic Man
12. Don't Say Goodbye
- Genre: Rock
- Qualität: 192 kbit/s
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HinweiseGenre : Hard Rock
Year : 2006
The debut album from this Birmingham five piece certainly pays tribute to such early greats as Zepplin and Deep purple but lacks the spandex splitting originality you'd expect from such a classic rock reincarnation. Slipping from the driving riffage in the audio-slave'esque 'reach for the line' to the painful eighties montage ambience of 'angels eyes', Rattlesnake Remedy prove themselves technically apt but musically unmemorable. Borrowing hooks from the likes of Lynrd Skynryd and Whitesnake serves to capture the classic rock vibe along with the overly extravagant guitar solos, nevertheless its an effort not to confuse them with a velvet revolver cover band. Frontman Lee Stone is a suitably hairy incantation of Robert Plant who's soaring, passionate if slapstick vocals will undoubtedly make little girls cry nationwide. Backed by a surprisingly tight group of decadent young men the overall live performance is impeccable and goes some way to making up for the shabby production on the album - Rattlesnake Remedy have definitely gained a loyal following through hard work and touring whilst fine tuning a flamboyant and impressive performance.
Having turned a few heads playing with Coheed and Cambria and Buckcherry this band definitely pull all the right moves on stage but shoot themselves in the collective foot through lack of imagination on disc, a theme sadly displayed in Stone's own lyrics; 'what you see ain't what you get.' Definitely worth going to see but as for the album... get it for your uncles birthday, he'll appreciate the nostalgia.
Year : 2006
The debut album from this Birmingham five piece certainly pays tribute to such early greats as Zepplin and Deep purple but lacks the spandex splitting originality you'd expect from such a classic rock reincarnation. Slipping from the driving riffage in the audio-slave'esque 'reach for the line' to the painful eighties montage ambience of 'angels eyes', Rattlesnake Remedy prove themselves technically apt but musically unmemorable. Borrowing hooks from the likes of Lynrd Skynryd and Whitesnake serves to capture the classic rock vibe along with the overly extravagant guitar solos, nevertheless its an effort not to confuse them with a velvet revolver cover band. Frontman Lee Stone is a suitably hairy incantation of Robert Plant who's soaring, passionate if slapstick vocals will undoubtedly make little girls cry nationwide. Backed by a surprisingly tight group of decadent young men the overall live performance is impeccable and goes some way to making up for the shabby production on the album - Rattlesnake Remedy have definitely gained a loyal following through hard work and touring whilst fine tuning a flamboyant and impressive performance.
Having turned a few heads playing with Coheed and Cambria and Buckcherry this band definitely pull all the right moves on stage but shoot themselves in the collective foot through lack of imagination on disc, a theme sadly displayed in Stone's own lyrics; 'what you see ain't what you get.' Definitely worth going to see but as for the album... get it for your uncles birthday, he'll appreciate the nostalgia.