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Walls of Jericho
Barnes and Noble
Walls of Jericho
Current price: $39.99
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Barnes and Noble
Walls of Jericho
Current price: $39.99
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Helloween
followed up their very popular self-titled mini-LP with 1986's even more accomplished
Walls of Jericho
, a disc that saw the quartet from Hamburg, Germany, outperforming expectations and quickly defining their sonic identity. The instrumental title track soon gives way to amazingly mature and complex compositions like
"Ride the Sky,"
"Phantoms of Death,"
and the awesome
"How Many Tears"
(even more ambitious 13-minute epics would soon follow). And although these were heavily reliant on
Iron Maiden
for inspiration, it was
's
speed metal
innovations that clearly helped make the songs so special and influential for future bands. Even the album's lyrically challenged, somewhat one-dimensional moments (
"Warrior,"
"Metal Invaders"
) usually succeed, thanks to the group's uncontainable energy. On the downside, the album continued to expose
Kai Hansen
's limitations as a singer, but the band would soon remedy this disadvantage by bringing on teenage phenom
Michael Kiske
as lead vocalist. [The CD reissue of
offers a complete recap of
's first incarnation by combining it with their eponymous mini-LP and the
Judas
EP in chronological order.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
followed up their very popular self-titled mini-LP with 1986's even more accomplished
Walls of Jericho
, a disc that saw the quartet from Hamburg, Germany, outperforming expectations and quickly defining their sonic identity. The instrumental title track soon gives way to amazingly mature and complex compositions like
"Ride the Sky,"
"Phantoms of Death,"
and the awesome
"How Many Tears"
(even more ambitious 13-minute epics would soon follow). And although these were heavily reliant on
Iron Maiden
for inspiration, it was
's
speed metal
innovations that clearly helped make the songs so special and influential for future bands. Even the album's lyrically challenged, somewhat one-dimensional moments (
"Warrior,"
"Metal Invaders"
) usually succeed, thanks to the group's uncontainable energy. On the downside, the album continued to expose
Kai Hansen
's limitations as a singer, but the band would soon remedy this disadvantage by bringing on teenage phenom
Michael Kiske
as lead vocalist. [The CD reissue of
offers a complete recap of
's first incarnation by combining it with their eponymous mini-LP and the
Judas
EP in chronological order.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia