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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the overlooked Greats!, February 6, 2008
This album fully captures the sound and feel of early 1980's New Wave Of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM). The guitars are some of the most powerful to come from this scene, with only Iron Maiden and Saxon being of a higher octane level. Chris Bradley's vocals are spot on and his bass playing is right up their with Algy's from TANK; THUNDEROUS! The first 8 tracks were done with drummer Mark Brown, who was a bit more pop influenced, and this is the only area that SAVAGE appear to be lax (definately not weak though). Dave Lindley hit the skins for the last 3 tracks and is much more NWOBHM oriented.
The only flaw in the album is that the recording technology was not really up to par and some tracks have a "fuzzy" sound. I still listen to vinyl too, so this doesn't bother me at all.
There ain't a bad track on this disc, and if you don't find yourself fully enthralled by tracks like "White Hot" and "Ain't No Fit Place", you need to take off your leather jacket and find another genre.
"Loose 'N Lethal" is a quintessential part of any NWOBHM Collection and I advise strongly that any Metal Fan that is into this era of Metal purchase this disc immediately.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Metal, March 17, 2007
Savage's 1983 album Loose `n Lethal is so metal it hurts! If someone were looking for the perfect example of what the vaunted New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) sound was all about, this album does the job nicely. Savage's sound was not too far removed from bands like Iron Maiden and Saxon, though their guitars were a lot more distorted. The resulting sound is a little crunchier, a little dirtier, and all metal - fast, heavy, and aggressive. If hearing this album doesn't have you dusting off the leather jacket and studded wristbands, nothing will!
The 2001 Metal Blade reissue of Loose `n Lethal features digitally remastered sound and three bonus tracks (demo recordings from 1980). It's not quite as deluxe as some of the Sanctuary NWOBHM reissues, but it put a long out of print classic album back on the market, so I can hardly complain.
This is a must-have for all NWOBHM fans, and metal fans in general should own it as well.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Still One of my Faves, August 5, 2009
I haven't written a review in years and noticed this record only has 5 reviews. Shame cause of the 300 or so metal and heavy rock albums I own, it's in my Top 10, no joke. If you're reading this, then I assume you listen to metal and kinda know what you're looking for. Closest reference I can give would perhaps be Motorhead, but songs are less rock 'n' rollish and more guitar-driven. Just dirty, loud, and in-your-face for 8 tracks of NWOBHM madness. "Berlin" (monster riff)and "On the Rocks" (great groove) are my favorites, and tracks 3-6 comprise as good a run on any album I know of. The bonus tracks are pretty weak and watered down, with nowhere near the heaviness of Darryl Johnston's torrid production. Savage never amounted to anything like most NWOBHM bands, so give this record a spin and hoist a pint to some lost NWOBHM glory.
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