Vinyl Find: Raven – Don’t Need Your Money 7″

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This one is going way back… all the way back to 1980. We’re talking pre-Kerrang! here folks (which didn’t launch until ’81). While there were more professional acts on the scene — Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Saxon, Def Leppard, and Diamond Head to name a few — who had all signed to major labels, out of Newcastle came a small label that would become home for a much scrappier group of British heavy metal bands.

Neat Records was responsible for introducing punters to the likes of Raven, Tygers of Pan Tang, Tank, Blitzkrieg, Fist, and most notoriously Venom. For Americans who don’t know, Neat was the precursor to American metal labels like Metal Blade and Megaforce (especially since Brian Slagel cut his teeth reviewing Neat vinyl and John Zazula sold a ton of them). This gem here, procured from a nice chap in the UK via ebay, was the sixth single released by Neat in 1980. Unfortunately for Americans, we only got to see the bad Raven. I’m talking the era where they started wearing BMX motorcycle gear, staged pro-wrestling matches during their shows, and wrote really really really bad songs like “On and On.” The Raven on this single however, was a fantastic band. A great example of punk creeping into Metal to give it a little more energy. Still somewhere between bluesy heavy rock and speed metal, with that great raw and dirty mix. You can’t deny the energy on “Don’t Need Your Money.” Such a fantastic old school riff. “Wiped Out” matches it perfectly. Combined together, 8 minutes of hi-energy old school metal and out.

Raven - Don't Need Your Money

Raven - Don't Need Your Money

Raven - Don't Need Your Money

Vinyl Find: Iron Maiden — Maiden Japan 12″ EP

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Iron Maiden - Maiden Japan EPI first became a die-hard Iron Maiden fan during the Piece of Mind era. So my preference has always been for the stretch of albums that included The Number of the Beast, Piece of Mind, and Powerslave. Recently however, I’ve been going back to rediscover the Paul Di’anno era, especially the Killers album which is pretty damn stellar in terms of songs and musicianship. Part of my recent return to this time in Maiden’s career has to do with how hungry the band was — they were starting to build a reputation as a great live act and the songs at this time were still tough, punky, hi-energy barnstormers. Also, the Killers era marks the first appearance of Adrian Smith who would finally give Maiden that signature twin-guitar attack that makes them so notable. Listening to the Maiden Japan EP — recorded right before vocalist Paul Di’anno left the band — I’m still blown away at the band’s over-the-top playing. Both Dave Murray and Adrian Smith make the record. Their guitar playing — with the tone having a great thickness and punch not found on some of the later records — has the swagger of two young guys just going for it. And yet, they’re locked in step perfectly. Listen to the version of “Remember Tomorrow” and you’ll hear what I’m talking about.

It is interesting to note that Maiden Japan wasn’t produced by Martin Birch. Instead, longtime sound engineer Doug Hall mixed and produced the album with the band. This actually gives the EP a unique sound when compared to most Maiden discs. The guitars have more thickness and Steve Harris’ bass has more bottom end (and less of his signature click clacky sound).

A few things I never knew:

  • Apparently there was a limited edition cover produced in Venezuela that had mascot Eddie holding up the decapitated head of singer Paul Di’Anno. Manager Rod Smallwood rejected the cover because Maiden were looking for a new lead singer at that time. But 25,00 or so were still produced and you can find them on eBay if you’re lucky.
  • The live version of “Remember Tomorrow” on Maiden Japan is the same recording included on the B-side of “The Number of the Beast” single, except with Bruce Dickinson’s vocals overdubbed over Paul Di’anno’s original performance (in spite of the band claiming that the later B-side was recorded in Milan, Italy during 1981).

Vinyl Find: Tygers of Pan Tang — Spellbound

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One of the all-time great (and too often forgotten about) New Wave of British Heavy Metal Albums. Released at the same time as Iron Maiden’s Killers, Tygers of Pan Tang’s Spellbound just tears it up. It was their second album, with two new members, so the band had a lot to prove. In addition, they were competing with the likes of Priest, Maiden, Saxon, Def Leppard, Angel Witch, and Motörhead who all released stellar albums around this time. And the album still holds up to this day (as opposed to say Angel Witch’s debut). The opening track “Gangland” and “Don’t Stop By” are still in heavy rotation for me in the old school metal mix. Both Rob Weir and John Sykes (who would go on to play with Thin Lizzy and a ton of other bands) do a stellar job on guitar and new vocalist (at that time) Jon Deverill just belts it out, sticking with more guttural singing rather than trying to mimick Rob Halford or Bruce Dickinson.

Tygers of Pan Tang - Spellbound