Thursday, April 11, 2013

Gamma Ray - Land of the Free (1995)

After their previous album, Gamma Ray lost vocalist Ralf Scheepers to Primal Fear, a decent band on all accounts, and Kai Hansen took over vocalising duties. This album is very much like a follow-up to his last Helloween album (Keeper part two) with a strong fantasy flavour. It also marks the return of "Fangface", the deformed pumpkin-like creature from the Walls of Jericho album. From here on, Fangface become unofficial mascot to Gamma Ray and featured on many of their albums. Musically it is a lot more metal than the previous GR stuff, with the lyrics being somewhat more imaginative and fantastical. It is their first genuine Power Metal album.

This is one album that I was extremely excited by when it was released. Helloween had just dumped Kiske and Ingo; releasing the pretty good "Master of the Rings" album, but I was mourning the departure of my favourite vocalist. Not to mention that their previous album ("Chameleon", see next review) marked a dramatic musical shift for Helloween. I ordered it and eagerly awaited its arrival, opening the package with trembling fingers and stroking my fingers over the plastic box. You might say music was my life, when I was a teenager. I did not have too many friends and books and music were my escape from the trials and tribulations of a teenage reality.

The cover depicts Fangface like a cloaked comet, rising from a dreary, moonlit desert (looks a bit like the US SW) and encircling a more scenic, majestic land through which a river cuts. Two hands hold a crackling yingyang and an eagle soars beneath them. The cover unfolds with lyrics on one side and photographs on the other, including snapshots of all of the band members.

There is a Very Special Guest star on this album too, but we'll get to that when we get to his song. Actually, there's two, because Hansi Kusch of Blind Guardian is here too, singing the choirs.

The album starts with a gentle guitar and haunting vocals:
"Voices are calling from somewhere below..."
As we surge into the dramatic "Rebellion in Dreamland". This is epic power metal at its least pretentious - the lyrics are pretty cheesy (of course) but the music is complex whilst still feeling fresh and thrilling. Hansen switches from screaming to snarling and concludes with chanting.
"Have no fear.... rebellion is here!"
"Man on a Mission" rips right on in, energy and passion and pounding drums and raging guitars. Towards the end we fall into a nifty little sing-a-long bit, before roaring into the guitar duels of the pretty epic solo. Hansen is a good vocalist, but he's also an awesome guitarist. This song combines the quirk and fun of GR with the majesty and power of Helloween*. It merges seemlessly with the short and swift "Fairytale" before fading out.

The lower, epic rhythms bring on "All of the Damned" before we rampage into the guitar and Hansen's voices rasp out. The chorus is proud and loud. There are nicely changeable melodies and rhythms to keep it interesting, and a suitably rip-roaring guitar solo.
"I never thought I'd catch the rainbow, but in the end I had a dream..."
 This is followed by the stirring instrumental, "Rising of the Damned".

"Gods of Deliverance" is another epic power metal piece with suitably rousing spirit and jolly good rifts.

"Farewell" provides us with a slower moment. Kai's voice is a little raw and raspy for the ballads, but it does add an emotional edge of loss and longing. As the warrior sets off on his quest, it is with a certain amount of hope but also trepidation:
"Don't you try to stop me, all I know is I have to try. They'd be no sense in my life at all, if I stay."
Returning to the roots of speed metal, "Salvation's Calling" is like a blast from the past. Fast verses, catchy, sing-a-long bridges, a chorus that just makes you want to mosh.

Dramatic, racing; we gallop into "Land of the Free", before settling into a slower, haunting, spectral feel and rising in pace and spirit. The changeable nature of this song transports you to another time and place. The chorus is pure anthemic power, stirring and triumphant.

Light, haunting guitar turns to hymnal rifts as "The Saviour" makes his triumphant return. This blends into "Abyss of the Void". Hansen's voice does well in the slow bits now, as it drops an octave and loses the rasping edge.  It rises again for the chorus, celebrating the Saviour's victory:
"We fall to the ground and pray, cos he's the One. No demons left in this world, since he has won."
Now for the song that excited me most as a teenager, "Time to Break Free". Whilst Hansen's voice suits the music well - the savage, slightly snarling edge; this features the beautiful, clear voice of... you guessed it, Michael Kiske. Okay, so I was a little obsessed with him at the time. As pure and powerful as ever, I must have listened to this track a LOT. I can still remember all the words. The lyrics are great too - inspirational, making the spirit rise and soar - a great remedy for Teen Angst.

We conclude with the absolutely beautiful "Afterlife" a tribute to Ingo Schwinchtenberg. Here Hansen proves that he can do ballads. His voice, so raw and emotional, sends a shiver down the spine, complemented by the instrumentation structures. Haunting. A fitting finale to a damned fine album.
"Life's a dream that you will forget in the endless space. And the scars you got on planet Earth will be erased."

This is probably Gamma Ray's finest album, and one of the best true Power Metal albums. Forget about layers of complex symphonics, overbloated keyboards and the overly complicated structures that this genre is now famed for - this is pure, enthusiastic energy; raw and powerful and with some damned fast, fine guitars. True to the Heavy Metal sound, but with the passion and the intricities of Power Metal. It should be in every Power Metal fan's collection.

A highly deserved 10/10.

* Who, tbh, also had the "quirk"

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