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Seething proto-metallics blended with organ-whipped psych and blues, Very 'Eavy Very 'Umble finds the infant
Uriah Heep still attempting to escape from the all-pervading influence of
Vanilla Fudge and early
Deep Purple. But
David Byron's vocals are already among the most distinctive around, and
Mick Box's guitar is already shredding eardrums. In other words, it was certainly very ‘eavy, but ‘umble was never a term that one would associate with
Uriah Heep, not even in early 1970, fresh out of the youth center where they used to rehearse alongside the young
Purple. Three songs opening side one of the band's debut album tell you everything you need to know about
Uriah Heep's ambition -- the still-staggering "Gypsy," the mighty "Walking in Your Shadow," and, changing the mood without altering the intensity, the balladic "Come Away Melinda" -- add in "Lucy Blues," included on U.K. pressings of the album (it was replaced by "Bird of Prey" in the U.S.), and
Heep stepped fully formed into being with this disc, and needed only to refine their vision to emerge triumphant. Unless, of course, you believed what you read in Rolling Stone. "If this group makes it," wrote Melissa Mills, "I'll have to commit suicide. From the first note you know you don't want to hear any more." AMG.
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A hard deliverary this week. Uriah Heep and Wishbone Ash were exciting groups at the beginning of the seventies. Nostalgia! Nostalgia!
ResponderEliminarThanks Carlos!
Yes all are nostalgia in a certain way, enjoy!
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