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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Classic metal amidst the grunge, September 5, 2006
If Iron Maiden and Def Leppard were the two most successful bands to come out of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal in the late '70's and early '80's, a great time for real metal fans, then Saxon probably is the most underrated, at least in the US.
Maiden has hung tough, thanks to a ferocious following, and Def Leppard ceased to be metal after their first two albums. Saxon has retained enough of a primarily European audience to remain active to this day. Metal is a strange beast - the music is the most confining in all of rock, but those who excel enjoy life spans that far exceed most any other genre.
Saxon's reissue of 1995's "Dogs Of War" defiantly retains the classic metal sound they helped forge, thanks in part to being influenced by Judas Priest and Thin Lizzy, to name a few seminal metal bands. Biff Byford's vocals and lyrics remain the cornerstone of the Saxon sound, but his voice has aged noticeably to more of a boozy Bon Scott style tone, especially on "Big Twin Rolling".
The guitars are sharp and thankfully have not copped out to the dropped "D" grunge tuning that took over damn near every heavy band in the '90's. The title track should be plenty heavy enough for anybody, and I must admit it takes balls to record a very '80's sounding pop-metal tune on "Hold On."
"Great White Buffalo" and "Walking Through Tokyo" show how bands weren't afraid to stretch their creative wings at one time, and bully for Saxon for doing it.
All in all, "Dogs Of War" is a fine latter day effort from a band that deserves much more credit than they've received over the years.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
At least they found their way again!!, November 11, 2002
This review is from: Dogs of War (Audio CD)
Band line-ip here: Biff - vocals Graham OLiver - guitar (his last album with Saxon) Paul Quinn - guitar Nibbs Carter - bass Nigel Glockler - drums After trying to change their sound a lot for the American market, and obtaining a nule result, SAXON at last decided to go back to form: straigh heavy metal, but THEIR kind of heavy metal> British, original, muscular, strong. DOGS OF WAR is a pleasant surprise. It's well crafted, well produced (by Bii and Ransel Hainer). It only has one sadreminiscence of their utterly commercial period back in the middle eighties, the commercial pop metal song "Hold on". But, due to the sheer quality of the alum, this mistep is easily forgotten! Long Live SAXON!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Solid mid-period Saxon album - reissued, April 29, 2011
Originally released in 1995, Dogs of War was the twelfth studio album from British heavy metal pioneers Saxon. Once one of the forerunners of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) movement, Saxon struggled as the `80s gave way to the `90s. After a couple of less than impressive attempts at mainstream radio success, the band used this album to move back towards a more metal sound.
Dogs of War doesn't quite find the band recapturing the glory of their NWOBHM years, but it does rock a bit more than Destiny and Innocence Is No Excuse. Aside from the metal anthems "Dogs of War" and "Demolition Alley," this album seems like an odd cross between Thin Lizzy and the blues rock Samson did so well. The emphasis is definitely more on melody and soulful vocals rather than fist-pumping heavy metal. Sometimes this works well (see "The Great White Buffalo" and "Give It All Away") and other times it's just not pretty ("Don't Worry"), but overall there's a lot to like about Dogs of War.
It's not an essential album like Saxon's early albums (or their post-2000 albums), but Dogs of War is still an enjoyable hard rock album. Besides, even an average Saxon album is still well worth owning if you're into British metal.
Edition Notes: SPV reissued Dogs of War in 2006, adding expanded liner notes and a pair of bonus tracks, live versions of "The Great White Buffalo" and "Denim and Leather." It's not an essential reissue, so if you have the previous version there probably isn't much need to upgrade to this one. For those of us who missed it the first time around though, the Dogs of War reissue is ideal.
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