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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect Instrumental Guitar Rock, August 31, 2001
I first became aware of Steve Vai during his stint as a hired guitar pyrotechnic with David Lee Roth (hey, I was too young for Zappa!) Anyway, I bought this on tape when it first came out some 10 years ago and I still have yet to get bored by it. The collection of songs represents the full range of Vai's prodigious talent. "Liberty" serves as an intro to the album with big, sweeping guitar line that is repeated throughout. "I Would Love To", "Erotic Nightmares" and "Greasy Kid's Stuff" are straight-out rockers that exhibit his agility on the fret board. "Answers" and "The Riddle" flow logically into each other, and are progressive mid-tempo numbers. These two showcase what's great about Vai, he throws in seemingly every kind of distortion and effect that was available to him at the time, runs his guitar through it, and sees what comes out, but never does it sound forced or grating to the ears; it flows perfectly in the songs. "The Audience is Listening" is perhaps the most well known song. He made a video for it (the only Vai video I've seen), and has the trademark Vai humor with the dialogue of a cranky old elementary school teacher calling a young Vai crazy. Oh yeah, the music is great, too. The two standout tracks for me, though, are two ballads, "For the Love of God" and "Blue Powder". Wow. It's hard for me to put into words how great these two songs are. Even if the other 12 tracks were horrible, these two would more than make up for it. Everything is perfect, the tempo, the guitar tone, the main melody, the solos, just perfect. If ever anyone accuses Vai of being a "shredder" - someone who plays fast just for the sake of playing fast with no emotion - just point him/her to these two songs. I've always seen Vai as someone who has always embraced new effects as ways to express the emotions in his head. He is a musical genius (check out his theory teachings on his web site), and is able to communicate his emotions with his guitar. This is (so far) the pinnacle of his communication.
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