Obscure/Underated/Unknown Albums

Mosh

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I thought I'd make a thread for Obscure Underated albums. Those albums that you mention and people say what????????? I believe that the most underated album of all time is III Sides to Every Story by Extreme. It is an awesome album and is definitely in my all time top 20. Maybe even top 5. I recomend that everyone on this forum listens to it cause it's downright awesome. Another one is The Elder by KISS.
 
Re: Obscure/Underated/Unknown Albums!!!!!!!!!

Well, I finally got around to listening to Blaze's third effort. It's pretty good, but I think that the previous two were better.
 
Re: Obscure/Underated/Unknown Albums!!!!!!!!!

I think Icarus Witch's first effort, "Capture the Magic" was phenomenal, but highly under appreciated.
 
I'm having trouble considering Extreme "obscure". Perhaps hardly anybody remembers them now, but they were pretty big back in the day and in the early nineties, there was hardly a major rock event without them.

The thing is, by those standards, most of what I listen to is obscure. Most of my non-metal friends have not even heard of Megadeth. On the other hand, most of my listenings are rather well-known in my metal circles. The album I'm listening to right now, Agent Orange by Sodom, is considered a thrash metal staple. Hardly any metal party goes without a spinning of Ausgebombt off that album. But there is a fat chance anybody who is not a metalhead will be aware of its existence.

But anyway, there is some stuff that is definitely obscure, such as one of my favourite albums from the recent years,Galeere bei Geïst (due to legal issues, they are now called Eïs). A black metal band that is, however, fairly different from most of their genre counterparts. For the most part, they are slower, heavier and more, dare I say, elegic. Very melodic stuff with wonderful guitar work and poetic lyrics (albeit in German). Everything is more laid back, and the atmosphere on this album is unique.

Here's a track off that album, but I have to warn you: It is black metal, and it is very dark.
 
Perun said:
Hardly any metal party goes without a spinning of Ausgebombt off that album. But there is a fat chance anybody who is not a metalhead will be aware of its existence.

Metal parties?
  You have awesome friends.  And the black metal song was solid too, though I'm not much into the genre.

As for obscure albums, I can mention a few that don't get discussed much in these forums, though I know one or two people who like them:
Primordial - To the Nameless Dead
Moonsorrow - Voimasta ja Kunniasta
Kiuas - The Spirit of Ukko
God Dethroned - Passiondale
Amon Amarth - With Oden on Our Side

Not sure if they're "obscure" enough, but I don't listen to more obscure stuff than these.
 
Invader said:
Primordial - To the Nameless Dead

One of the very best albums of the last ten years, hands down.

God Dethroned - Passiondale

Another one that really gripped me and still gets a regular spin. God Dethroned continued the First World War theme with their recent release, Under the Sign of the Iron Cross which was released last October. I think it's about as good, though less accessable. I felt like I was beaten up after it finished. My favourite of theirs remains The Lair of the White Worm, though.

Amon Amarth - With Oden on Our Side

Amon Amarth really didn't do very much wrong with their last four releases, but if I have to pick a favourite, it would be Twilight of the Thunder God - just mindblowing, from start to finish, and another one of my favourites.
 
Perun said:
Amon Amarth really didn't do very much wrong with their last four releases, but if I have to pick a favourite, it would be Twilight of the Thunder God - just mindblowing, from start to finish, and another one of my favourites.

Twilight of the Thunder God is excellent, but it took a lot longer to grow on me than Oden.  And, there's just not a single song on the album that can match Asator or Valhall Awaits Me.  Oden is the perfect balance between heaviness and melodies for the band.
 
bearfan said:
Check out Tod Howarth -- Opposite Gods, very good album.  The title track is a free download on his site.

http://www.todhowarth.com/

Very good and a pretyt heavy album.
downloading right now. I'm guessing he is a bassist. IIRC, the only member of Cheap Trick besides the original lineup was Tod Howarth who replaced Tom Peterson on bass. (great bassist)
awesome song. Guy kind of sounds like Geoff Tate. Love the lyrics. Thanks for the recomendation Bearfan.
 
Mega said:
Oh, Angel Witch's debut is really underrated.

Definitely. One of the greatest albums ever. I can't imagine where I would be without it.
 
The Knife Master said:
downloading right now. I'm guessing he is a bassist. IIRC, the only member of Cheap Trick besides the original lineup was Tod Howarth who replaced Tom Peterson on bass. (great bassist)
awesome song. Guy kind of sounds like Geoff Tate. Love the lyrics. Thanks for the recomendation Bearfan.


On this album he plays everything (vocals, bass, keyboards, guitar, and drums), he did Keyboards with Cheap Trick.
 
Invader said:
Twilight of the Thunder God is excellent, but it took a lot longer to grow on me than Oden.   And, there's just not a single song on the album that can match Asator or Valhall Awaits Me.  Oden is the perfect balance between heaviness and melodies for the band.

Neither album took long to grow on me, but just like you, those two incredible songs you mention are what tip With Oden on Our Side as my favourite Amon Amarth album.

Invader said:
As for obscure albums, I can mention a few that don't get discussed much in these forums, though I know one or two people who like them:
Primordial - To the Nameless Dead
Great album. I nominated it for the next Greatest Metal Album game, so it might get some more discussion time soon.
 
The Knife Master said:
downloading right now. I'm guessing he is a bassist. IIRC, the only member of Cheap Trick besides the original lineup was Tod Howarth who replaced Tom Peterson on bass. (great bassist)
awesome song. Guy kind of sounds like Geoff Tate. Love the lyrics. Thanks for the recomendation Bearfan.

Glad you liked it, the whole album is pretty similar in quality, I would put that as the 3rd best song on it, IMO.  There is only one somg (The Artist), that I do not care for, the rest is good to really good.
 
Who's familiar with Imaginos, by Blue Oyster Cult?
It's got a bizarre history. It was a concept album conceived in the early '70s by the band and its manager Sandy Pearlman. Pieces of it showed up on Secret Treaties, but the group was never able to pull it together and the idea was abandoned.
Drummer and founding member Albert Bouchard picked it up again in the '80s after being kicked out of the band. He worked on it for several years and eventually managed to get most of it recorded with the help of Pearlman and a heap of guest musicians, including Aldo Nova and Joe Satriani.
But in the early heyday of hair metal, the record company didn't see much of a market for a bizarre album from the aging fired drummer from a has-been band. Especially one about other-wordly beings manipulating a supernatural child into altering the course of history, containing song titles like Magna of Illusion and The Siege and Investiture of Baron Von Frankenstein's Castle At Weisseria.
They essentially took the album out of Bouchard's hands, had the remaining members of Blue Oyster Cult re-record parts of it, then released it in 1988 as an official BOC album.
Predictably, it disappeared in a hurry.
But for people who like progressive, metallic, imaginative music — full of creative arrangements, interesting melodies and strange, provocative lyrics — it's well worth checking out.
It's hardly perfect — it's dense and obscure, with '80s production values.
But I have to say I'm a fan.
 
that sounds very intresting. Gonna check that out tommorow. BOC doesn't get the attention they deserve.
 
In the late 60s/early 70s a band called (The) Wicked Lady recorded some demos that wouldn't see the light of day until 1993.

This is a 22 minute track called Ship of Ghosts from their second CD Psychotic Overkill: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpPYysCNUBM

True metal from '72, ahead of its time.


Wicked Lady exemplifies the "record collector" bands that gain new life through reissues: in this case, Kissing Spell's albums The Axeman Cometh and Psychotic Overkill. Their appearance marked some belated recognition for the power trio, which Northampton singer-guitarist Martin Weaver formed in 1968 with drummer "Mad" Dick Smith and bassist Bob Jeffries. However, Wicked Lady never came within a whisper of the stratospheric status attained by Cream, or the Jimi Hendrix Experience. The band's liberal use of feedback — and large biker following — kept them relegated to clubs, even during the twilight hours of the psychedelic era. Awash in drink and drugs, Wicked Lady split up in 1970, but Smith and Weaver soon regrouped with new bassist, Del "German Head" Morley. The new lineup duly set about documenting its existence, as captured on Psychotic Overkill — whose feel is looser than Axeman Cometh. The effect is a shotgun marriage of Black Sabbath-style rifferama, supported by a less risk-taking rhythm section. Weaver's vocal style lacks charisma, but his wah-wah and fuzz-driven guitar style carries the day. The highlights include a bluesy cover of Hendrix's "Voodoo Child," the sex 'n' drugs snapshot of "Sin City," and the howling, 21-minute epic, "Ship Of Ghosts." But Wicked Lady's erratic ways proved too difficult for clubowners, who eventually refused to let them play. (At one gig, the band reportedly played the same song over and over until an irritated management pulled the plug on them.) Wicked Lady imploded in 1972, but Weaver rebounded that same year by joining the Dark, a more psychedelic- and progressive-outfit. Their Round The Edges album became a Holy Grail for collectors — because only a handful of copies were made for band members and their associates. (Kissing Spell reissued the album in 1991.) Weaver next teamed with classically-trained keyboardist Dave "Doc" Wadley — who'd worked with a pre-Sabbath Tony Iommi — in the Mind Doctors. Kissing Spell also reissued On The Threshold Of Reality, an album of laidback instrumental "head" music.Weaver most recently surfaced on the re-formed Dark's Anonymous Days (1996), which featured material written in the 1970s and 1990s. ~ Ralph Heibutzki, All Music Guide
 
Not totally obscure on this board since Maiden covered King od Twilight, but Nektar .. Tab in the Ocean is a really goos album.
 
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Iron Maiden ~ Falling: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujRRU_bZNUE
 
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