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Perpetual Burn
 
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Perpetual Burn

Jason Becker, Jason BeckerAudio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (90 customer reviews)

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Perpetual Burn + Speed Metal Symphony + Go Off!
Price For All Three: $44.97

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 25, 1990)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Shrapnel
  • ASIN: B00000106M
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (90 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #29,430 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Altitudes
2. Perpetual Burn
3. Mabel's Fatal Fable
4. Air
5. Temple of the Absurd
6. Eleven Blue Egyptians
7. Dweller in the Cellar
8. Opus Pocus

 

Customer Reviews

90 Reviews
5 star:
 (77)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (90 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hype or not?, June 20, 2002
This review is from: Perpetual Burn (Audio CD)
I read a review by someone who was apparently unimpressed with Jason Becker's playing on Perpetual burn, and would like to add a few comments of my own.

Yes, it is true that there are other wunderkind guitarists out there who can play as well as Jason Becker did at age 17. One thing that needs to be mentioned though is that Jason didn't just plug in and start shredding arpeggios and scalar runs with no attention to what he was really doing. He defined his own STYLE at age 17. Jason displayed a very precocious grasp of acid jazz, speed metal (shredding), classical, and blues.

At first listen, Jason's imaginative style and songwriting are almost abrasive because they are so different from all the neoclassical speed metal "clones". But once you have listened to this album a few times, you begin to feel Jason's personality. You begin to understand that he shouldn't only be lauded for his talent at such a young age, but you begin to realize that his musical imagination is far beyond Yngwie Malmsteen, Vinnie Moore, and others. Jason didn't just take his melodies and harmonize them by replaying everything a 3rd higher. He instead showed true musicianship, and incredible songwriting ability by blending 3 or sometimes 4 completely different melodies. The result is what at first seems to be a (excuse the pun) cacophony, but as you begin to pick out each individual melody and feel how they all come together to form a larger cohesive composition, you can't help but marvel at the brilliant musicianship of Jason. To say "Oh wow! He did all this when he was 17!" is somewhat of an insult to Jason. In my opinion, having listened to hours upon hours of different neoclassical metal, Jason's album "Perpetual Burn" would have been an incredible achievement no matter his age.

Just listen to "Altitudes", and you'll understand why Jason Becker was so far beyond all his contemporaries at the time. Personally I don't care that people can "copycat" Jason's playing. What I would like to know is if these same people can show as much style, songwriting ability, musicianship, originality, humor, emotion, aggression, and talent as Jason. I'm sure I've missed some great guitarists over the years, but back when Perpetual Burn first came out, Jason stood apart from all the other guitarists who were basically saying "look how fast I can play! whee!", and said "I can do that too, but hey, check this out, I can do more than copy Bach and Mozart, I can be original."

There are very few people who have as broad a variation of styles that Jason has shown in his tragically short career. Some names that come to mind are Joe Satriani and Steve Vai. And their careers have spanned several times the number of years that Jason's did. Listen to Perpetual Burn and Jason's other recordings, and like me you will most likely longingly and regretfully wonder what he would be doing nowadays. I for one believe that he would have been in the upper eschelon of guitarists with Mr Vai and Mr Satriani.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best of the shred albums without doubt!, July 9, 2000
This review is from: Perpetual Burn (Audio CD)
4-1/2 stars. Ahh...Shrapnel. Growing up as a Shrapneldevotee, I know the names...Howe, Kotzen, Gilbert, Friedman,MacAlpine. The bands - Cacophony, Racer X, Apocrypha, Vicious Rumors. And then there's the mighty Jason Becker. Cacophony's two albums introduced the guitar world to Friedman and Becker, and then _Perpetual Burn_ and _Dragon's Kiss_. It was a pretty unique time in rock/metal music, being as there were as many shredders as there were stars in the sky, so its possible that you might be tempted to relegate this to quaint historic niche. But if you feel the need for speed, or perhaps a little Bach-and-Roll, this album won't disappoint. Becker is similar to Friedman in his use of odd modes, off-kilter time signatures and his general uber-shred capability, but thats about where the similarity ends. The composition is strange, Jason makes odd musical choices and some of them work, some don't. Whereas _Dragon's Kiss_ by Friedman reminds me more of tame heavy metal with thrash leanings, this album, as heavy as it is, reminds me more of what might happen if Al DiMeola might have made an all-shred heavy metal album in the middle of his tenure with Return To Forever. His tone is very sharp, wide and agressive, with definite overtones of Vai. His playing is very dramatic yet abstract, with heavy whammy and loads of bending, all piling on-top of a hyper-blues afficianado-type style. That makes it a bit more of a dynamic listen than some of his counterparts, which is fortunate, being as the trademark awful in-house Shrapnel production tends to be muddy and dark (pity, for Atma Anur is a fine drummer and deserves better treatment than this). This disc begs for a re-master, because the playing is impassioned and without equal in the shred community. His extreme melodic sensibility is very evident, even through some of the sillier wanking passages, and although Cacophony's _Go Off_ is a protoype demonstration of the pinnacle of metal-shred technique that quite possibly will never be equaled, Jason on his own manages technique galore, with plenty of real music, too. Love the undistorted, meditative "Air", which is a pleasant respite from the intensity of the album itself. Its a tragedy that first David Lee Roth, then ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease) took away this young genius before his true voice could be heard. Like Jeff Buckley's _Grace_ this album is immensley satisfying and mind-blowing, but you have to wonder what could have been.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Soulful shred though self-indulgent at times, February 23, 2005
This review is from: Perpetual Burn (Audio CD)
I heard this album six years ago, and I still think it's a very cool CD. The technique in this CD is really spectacular, although other parts sound straight out of an exercise manual. Even John Petrucci sounds like this at times, so it's no wonder Marty Friedman once said Petrucci reminded him of Jason Becker. But anyway, even without knowing that this CD was composed and played by a 17-year-old (not 18 as said below), the musicality is very impressive, albeit still raw and even juvenile to a small degree.
My favorite track here is a tearjerker, not out of sentimentality, but simply because it sounds so powerful; I am talking about the first track, 'Altitudes.' There's even some counterpoint with the keyboards that really adds to the musicality of it. The interlude in the middle isn't very hard technically, but that's beside the point, because it's just plain beautiful and heightens the moment. Very emotional sounding playing, especially right before the last part.
Another favorite, and the most impressive compositionally, is 'Air.' Unlike the intro of 'Images' of Jason's former band Cacophony, the chord changes and the melodies over it fit quite well. I have no idea how Jason composed this, if he actually wrote the thing down, or just added guitar part after guitar part in a more-or-less arranged fashion. The baroque-ness of it really comes across, while still sounding 'Jason-y.'
'Dweller in the Cellar' is another favorite of mine, although I really wish that the slow dragging riff was completely obliterated, it is an unnecessary one minute and a half of the piece.
I love Marty's guest solos here; in a way, Marty's 'slower' style maintains the musical aspect, preventing Jason from wanking the whole thing overboard.
All tracks have their moments, and even if you don't play guitar or care about guitar, there are some melodies that you'd appreciate.
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