• @Rolando
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    28 months ago

    Oh man… when I was a kid I really wanted to like Quiet Riot but they only had like a couple good songs (this, Metal Health, Condition Critical. maybe “Don’t Wanna Let You Go”.) But those good songs were pretty good.

    • southsamurai
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      58 months ago

      Yeah, they’re such a great band that can’t write songs for shit. Everyone in the band can play/sing very well, and that’s it.

      You’d think that a band forming would figure out they need a serious songwriter in the mix to last.

      • @Rolando
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        28 months ago

        Good point. I just read that Quiet Riot had a rivalry with Van Halen before they each got record deals. Funny to compare them: Eddie Van Halen was a great songwriter as well as an amazing guitar player, but Quiet Riot didn’t have the equivalent (especially after Randy Rhoads left pre-Metal Health.)

    • @BrimstoneOP
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      28 months ago

      Sure… but to be honest, I rarely enjoy the entire output of most metal bands. Finding one which had consistently composed great songs is a bit of a challenge, despite the very talented interpreters and shredders from the genre. What you describe could be sort of a common disease.

      Much of Black Sabbath I find hard to stomach, for instance. On the other hand, I really like a couple of their albums.

      • @Rolando
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        38 months ago

        consistently composed great songs

        Iron Maiden is the obvious example. But agreed that it is difficult to consistently write great songs.

        • @BrimstoneOP
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          8 months ago

          I rather find that Iron Maiden is probably one of the more consistent bands with its output, actually. You either like them or you don’t, and that’s a good thing by itself because it shows that, regardless of musical taste, they know their trade. Its not an easy thing to be consistent.

          With Black Sabbath, I have a lot more problems because they have entire albums which are, for me, quite terrible from a song writing perspective. I don’t mean a couple of songs, I mean from start to finish. If I pick one record I haven’t listened to yet, I just have no idea if I’m going to like it or not.

          With Quiet Riot I agree. They have records which honestly kind of suck.

        • metaStatic
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          18 months ago

          Never understood the love for Iron Maiden until I saw a live concert on late night community television once.

          I honestly wouldn’t take a dump on any of their studio work; but live? it’s a totally different beast.

          • @Rolando
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            28 months ago

            I personally think Iron Maiden peaked around Number of the Beast (1982) and Piece of Mind (1983). One of the reasons I liked them was because their lyrics were about interesting things. But even the albums after I stopped listening to them, I can appreciate that they involve some good songwriting. (ofc YMMV)