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White Spirit
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White Spirit
Current price: $12.99
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Barnes and Noble
White Spirit
Current price: $12.99
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Guitarist
Janick Gers
fit in quite well when he joined
Iron Maiden
in the late '80s. For one thing, the members of
Maiden
and of
Gers
' first professional band,
White Spirit
, were both products of the famed
New Wave of British Heavy Metal
. Unlike most of their contemporaries, however,
avoided the predominant
Sabbath
,
Priest
, and
Motoerhead
tendencies that dominated the genre, and instead looked almost exclusively to
Deep Purple
for its influence. In fact, this singular source of inspiration helped
's self-titled debut stand out as one of the
NWOBHM
's biggest anomalies, since it also lacked any connection whatsoever to the
punk
movement, which had indirectly galvanized most of the band's peers to action. Opener
"Midnight Chaser,"
for instance, is an obvious stepchild of
Purple
's
"Highway Star"
(from the clinically precise rhythm guitar chugging to the animated tradeoff solos between guitar and organ), and at a weighty ten minutes, the seriously melodramatic
"Fool for the Gods"
could very well pass for
's stab at
"Child in Time"
(and not without its fair share of good bits either). With these similarities in mind, jaded listeners could very well preoccupy themselves with playing the "name that
tune" game, but this is hardly fair, considering that
's style is really no more derivative than the style of the band's competition. Plus, outstanding songs like
"Way of the Kings"
and
"Don't Be Fooled"
far exceed mere forgery, and will positively delight committed
enthusiasts. [The very rare 1997 Japanese reissue adds three pre-album singles:
"Suffragettes,"
"Back to the Grind,"
"Cheetah,"
and while very difficult to come by, qualifies as the ultimate and nearly complete historical wrap-up for this underrated band.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Janick Gers
fit in quite well when he joined
Iron Maiden
in the late '80s. For one thing, the members of
Maiden
and of
Gers
' first professional band,
White Spirit
, were both products of the famed
New Wave of British Heavy Metal
. Unlike most of their contemporaries, however,
avoided the predominant
Sabbath
,
Priest
, and
Motoerhead
tendencies that dominated the genre, and instead looked almost exclusively to
Deep Purple
for its influence. In fact, this singular source of inspiration helped
's self-titled debut stand out as one of the
NWOBHM
's biggest anomalies, since it also lacked any connection whatsoever to the
punk
movement, which had indirectly galvanized most of the band's peers to action. Opener
"Midnight Chaser,"
for instance, is an obvious stepchild of
Purple
's
"Highway Star"
(from the clinically precise rhythm guitar chugging to the animated tradeoff solos between guitar and organ), and at a weighty ten minutes, the seriously melodramatic
"Fool for the Gods"
could very well pass for
's stab at
"Child in Time"
(and not without its fair share of good bits either). With these similarities in mind, jaded listeners could very well preoccupy themselves with playing the "name that
tune" game, but this is hardly fair, considering that
's style is really no more derivative than the style of the band's competition. Plus, outstanding songs like
"Way of the Kings"
and
"Don't Be Fooled"
far exceed mere forgery, and will positively delight committed
enthusiasts. [The very rare 1997 Japanese reissue adds three pre-album singles:
"Suffragettes,"
"Back to the Grind,"
"Cheetah,"
and while very difficult to come by, qualifies as the ultimate and nearly complete historical wrap-up for this underrated band.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia