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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the finest hard rock albums ever!, January 11, 2002
By 
Just Bill (Grand Rapids, MI United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
Obsession is almost too good to be true.

I bought the remastered Japanese import from Amazon and I'm listening to it today for the first time. I'm blown away.

Not only is the production and digital remastering incredible, but the song selection is as mesmerizing and magical as you'll find anywhere. This is, without a doubt, one of the finest hard rock albums ever recorded!

Growing up, I was more familiar with Lights Out (1977), Force It (1975) and Phenomenon (1974). I listened to those albums on occasion, but lost track of UFO shortly after Lights Out.

For the record, Lights Out contains one of my all-time favorite tracks ("Love to Love") but no less than FIVE of UFO's best songs call Obsession home: "Only You Can Rock Me," "Lookin' Out For No. 1," "Hot 'n' Ready," "Cherry," and "Born to Lose" -- and not a single track of the other six is a dud. Virtually this entire CD could be called a "greatest hits" package!

Originally released in 1978, and featuring one of the most recognizable and bizarre Hipgnosis covers of all time, Obsession was arguably UFO's high-water mark. Guitarist Michael Schenker bailed after Obsession and second bannana guitarist Paul Raymond filled in for No Place to Run (1980), which was the beginning of the end of the classic UFO line-up and sound.

Obsession is a feast for the ears, with lots of blistering, squeaking guitar, classic Phil Mogg vocals, crisp drumming from Andy Parker, solid songwriting and bass playing from Pete Way and some great contributions from Paul Raymond.

Although this is undoubtedly a total band effort, it's probably Michael Schenker that shines brightest on Obsession -- which is something I hate to admit given his surly personality and widely reported dismal treatment of his band mates.

Schenker's playing runs the gamut, from pleasant, almost Medieval acoustic licks ("Arbory Hill") to take-no-prisoners riffing on "Pack It Up," "Ain't No Baby" and "Hot 'n' Ready."

"Ain't No Baby," another of my favorite tracks, is a rock-solid track that begins slowly and sweetly...then kicks into high gear with a growling, bottom-heavy riff and some truly remarkable and melodic background vocals on the chorus. Brilliant.

Obsession is UFO at their absolute best. No fan of melodic hard rock should be without this album. I can't believe I was without it for nearly 25 years!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars UFO's Finest Work!, October 28, 2004
This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
This album is good from start to finish. Not one bad apple in the bunch. Schenker's guitar tone is fantastic! My favorites are Only You Can Rock Me, Arbory Hill, Looking Out For No.1, Hot N Ready, You Don't Fool Me, and One More For The Rodeo. I like the lyric to I Ain't No Baby ("Stay Away, FOREVER"). Cool cover prompting Schenker to ask his bandmates "Why am I the only one without balls?". This would be Schenker's final studio album w/ UFO until the rocking Walk On Water in 1995. Lights Out is another classic UFO album you should get if you don't have it!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good rock for your head, April 21, 2005
This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
Michael Schenker is a master of electric guitar solo phraseology. He soars, he swoops, he glides, he crashes, then he blasts off from the ashes. Phil Mogg has a voice that'll stick it's finger in your face, Paul Raymond is The Man of a Thousand Noises, and Way and Parker are monstrous through the bass cones; but it's Schenker who makes you open all your windows and jump out on the lawn and air-guitar yourself into a frenzy. Rockers, ballads, and anthems, all killer, no filler.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Hot N Ready, August 26, 2008
This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
After the studio masterpiece Lights Out, UFO had crafted a sound that was all their own, the three albums before it built towards developing the classic sound found on Lights Out and it's follow up, 1978's Obsession. While Phenomenon, Force It, and No Heavy Petting are chockfull of lost 70's nuggets Lights Out was a massive musical acheivement and it's follow up, although shares much of the same light is almost just as good. The album opens with another powerful UFO anthem Only You Can Rock Me and goes into the Zeppelinish Pack It Up (And Go). Ron Nevison(Zeppelin, Bad Company) returned to the knobs to produce this album after Lights Outs and his experience with Zeppelin often takes a similar approach in the sound here as Andy Parker's drums are the heaviest they've ever been a la John Bonham. Arbory Hill as is several other tracks, shows a lot of ambition and experimenting with the bands sound...a short pretty acoustic piece driven by Michael Schenker on flute! Though it might be an oddity for some, it is the very fabric that provides the light and shade of UFO. Ain't No Baby keeps things rolling but the real key track here is Looking Out For No.1 This song is a monster of a power ballad and serves some the best emotion and depth UFO ever displayed. Next, the they lay it on the listener with two classics Hot N' Ready and Cherry. Though these original versons are barnburners in their own way, after hearing the live album, you'll recognize these studio cuts were outshined. Cherry, however finds Pete Way's bass leading the track into this intelligent start-stop rocker. You Don't Fool Me is another highly recommended moment complete with some amazing Schenker soloing. The LOFN1 melody is reprised for a flash in the pan of more progressive diversity. This kinda thing is usually only seen on Pink Floyd or Eagles albums. It feels experimental and commercial all at the same time, which all adds up to a very impressive mark point for the band. One More For The Rodeo kicks off without pause from the reprise moment to add another dose of melodic rock but the albums ending cut again leaves you blown away. While UFO sacrifice in your face rock for more mellow string arrangements (as in Looking Out For No.1 ), this song has some breathtaking Schenker guitar work and becomes quite a beautiful song in the process (both of heartfelt songwriting and axe man wizardry). Obsession has a very American feel, as the it was recorded in LA. But tracks like Only You Can Rock Me and Hot 'N Ready also come off as very 70's American hard rock (Kiss, Ted Nugent). UFO previously had a very British sound but on this album they seem to be aiming for a lot more. Lights Out had a top 30 chartplacing in America giving them the spotlight for a bit in all the rock trades and even gave them the oppurtunity to make headway into bigger venues and larger audiances. But even still UFO remained a cult band and sadly still do. This was the last album to feature Schenker on guitar and although some UFO fans will tell you some of their 80's work was worth hearing, their 70's work is by far the stuff to hear before you check that out. Obsession had a commercial sound, yet it experimented, it had a big sound, obviously with the impression of taking UFO to the next level. Had Schenker stayed with the band who knows what they could've done. He plays the best riffs of his tenture with UFO on this stellar package. But even as is, they remain one of the bare essentials to heavy metal, it's influences, great guitar rock, melodic rock anthems, and even just great groovy rock and roll. Obsession, while sounding commercial at times (especially when compared to their first three albums, withstanding Lights Out had hints) but it shows a band of great development. UFO fans consider this UFO's best album. It may be true. The last offical record with this truely impressive to no end group would be a live record...Strangers In The Night. That album would work its way into the top ten lists for best live records ever and would also become UFO's only real recognized album to anyone outside the seekers camp. With Obsession, UFO gave us some dazzling studio work, and while I'd say its just a notch below Lights Out, of course reigns as an essential rock album for all concerned.
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5.0 out of 5 stars My personal favorite UFO studio release, March 27, 2007
This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
Anyone who has read my reviews knows that I consider Strangers in the Night one of THE greatest hard rock albums ever recorded but this is my favorite UFO studio release. As much as I like the 4 before it (especially Force It and Lights Out) this one really moves me!! Schenker is simply ON FIRE on this album and I think the production is superior to the previous releases as well, though Lights Out comes really close. (I also apparently saw one of the few shows on this tour that Schenker bothered to show up for and he was on fire there too....even if a little "wobbly" on his feet :)

Bottom line....if you like UFO and/or Michael Schenker...WHY DON'T YOU ALREADY HAVE IT??....BUY IT...BUY IT NOW!!!!

(And now, thanks to the re-release of Strangers in the Night and the Live in Wolverhampton CD, we finally get live versions of more than just one song!!!)

But, in the existing reviews, I didn't see any comments on the quality of the remastering. I bought my copy WAY back in the late 1980s (when I 1st laid eyes on it!!) and that copy sounds just fine. I also didn't see any bonus tracks listed, which is the case with many remastered releases. Someone let me know if this version is worth it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a lost great classic album, December 26, 2006
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This review is from: Obsessions (Mlps) (Audio CD)
UFO has its legions of fans particularly in England and Europe, which is good because outside the larger U.S. cities, they never quite broke into the big time, which is a shame because this band was far better than Bad Company, Foghat, or (gag) Styx, to name a few mid-'70's outfits that stole the thunder undeservedly.
UFO has the last laugh right now; at least they're still together, playing and recording new material while the others have withered away.
"Obsession" is one reason why this hard rocking outfit still survives. The focal point has always been the street smart Phil Mogg on vocals, whose lyrics are intelligent and do not pander to anybody. It's heavy music for people who demand some sophistication in their rock. Mogg's vocals are slightly raspy at times, but his tone is great, and should have been in the same pantheon as Robert Plant or Paul Rodgers.
Add to Mogg's sensibilities Michael Schenker's five alarm lead guitar work that wails all over the disc and you have a band that maybe was too hot for its own good.
Cuts like "One More For The Rodeo" and "Hot And Ready" were as pyrotechnic as guitar gymnastics got before some hotshot from LA debuted with his "Eruption" solo soon thereafter. UFO also excelled in ballads that actually meant something and weren't just tossed in for filler. "Lookin' Out For Number One" and "Born To Lose" are wistful, Schenker's guitar frantic but surprisingly melodic and show a song writing skill very uncommon for heavy rock acts of the mid-'70's.
"Obession" is worth the import price, and goes very well with its predecessor, the semi-classic "Lights Out". Lovers of Scorpions and Saxon will dig this fer sure.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Muy recomendable, November 8, 2003
This review is from: Obsession (Audio CD)
Este disco es un pequeño paso atras respecto al tremendo "Lights out". Aqui la produccion es un poco mas cruda y algunas canciones podrian haber sido mejores. Pero gana muchos puntos con otras como "Only you can rock me","One more for the rodeo" y sobre todo "Hot n' ready".
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Obsession
Obsession by UFO (Audio CD - 2000)
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