Best heavy classic-rock proto metal band

Rainbow
Total votes: 2 (9%)
Deep Purple
Total votes: 9 (39%)
Uriah Heep
Total votes: 1 (4%)
Vanilla Fudge (No votes)
Blue Cheer
Total votes: 8 (35%)
UFO
Total votes: 3 (13%)
Total votes: 23

Re: Heavy Classic Rock Proto-metal Thunderdome

43
Choose just one? I love 'em all. This is seriously some of my favorite music. Have to go with Deep Purple for the excellence of Ian Gillan (THE best hard rock vocalist of the early '70s) and flash lefty drummer Ian Paice. In Rock, Fireball, Machine Head and Made In Japan are all essential. The Book Of Taleisyn (with early vocalist Rod Evans) has its moments, especially the supercharged version of Neil Diamond's Kentucky Woman. Burn (with David Coverdale) is primo shit as well.

Captain Beyond, Groundhogs, Randy Holden's Population II, Budgie, Hawkwind, Sir Lord Baltimore, and St. Cecilia by Stalk-Forrest Group (aka Blue Oyster Cult) are also in heavy rotation at my house.

This, right here. Play it LOUD:

https://thegemshow.bandcamp.com/album/a-mountain-2
https://spitegeist.bandcamp.com/
https://wandajunes.bandcamp.com/

Re: Heavy Classic Rock Proto-metal Thunderdome

47
Krev wrote: Fri Jul 29, 2022 10:56 am

I Iike Argus by Wishbone Ash, but it's not really heavy at all.
History Channel should do a docu-series on records that didn't sound like their covers; Argus could be an episode, with that big metal af knight on the cover.

Another candidate would be Olias of Sunhillow by Jon Anderson. Looks metal af but is just the wimpiest goddamned thing. Got it sound unheard from a Goodwill hin when I was eighteen. Cool gatefold cover. But damn. Wimpy.
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Re: Heavy Classic Rock Proto-metal Thunderdome

48
losthighway wrote: Sun Jul 31, 2022 1:58 pm Next question:

Favorite Hawkwind records?

I dipped my toe in mostly due to the Lemmy connection, but their discography is so deep and varied that I never found my way.
I fucking love Hawkwind.

OK, so Hawkwind has "periods" the way The Fall did. The Fall had Mark Smith, Hawkwind has Dave Brock.

For the early stuff (1970-1975), I'd recommend starting with In Search of Space, but all the studio releases up through Warrior on the Edge of Time are good. I really love the S/T debut as well, though this has more a krautrock/hippy vibe. Lemmy appears on much of this stuff.

The next period is the Robert Calvert years, 1976-1979. This period is much different, and moves into pop/prog territory. Calvert was a strange cat who wrote great lyrics, very sci-fi, probably a PKD fan. Quark, Strangeness, and Charm, 25 Years On (released as Hawklords), and PXR5 are all really good. Astounding... I'm not such a fan of. Jello Biafra is a huge fan of Hawkwind and Calvert in particular, and Biafra kind of took something from Calvert's vocal style. A couple of favorites:





Calvert also fronted the albums Lucky Leif & the Longships and Captain Lockheed & the Starfighters, both concept albums, the latter of which is excellent. On both of those he was backed by Hawkwind and others. IIRC, Brian Eno produced the former.

The releases after Calvert I have little interest in.

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Re: Heavy Classic Rock Proto-metal Thunderdome

49
Charlie D wrote: Mon Aug 01, 2022 12:35 pm
Krev wrote: Fri Jul 29, 2022 10:56 am

I Iike Argus by Wishbone Ash, but it's not really heavy at all.
History Channel should do a docu-series on records that didn't sound like their covers; Argus could be an episode, with that big metal af knight on the cover.

Another candidate would be Olias of Sunhillow by Jon Anderson. Looks metal af but is just the wimpiest goddamned thing. Got it sound unheard from a Goodwill hin when I was eighteen. Cool gatefold cover. But damn. Wimpy.
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