Coinciding with the departure of long-term guitarist Adrian Smith and the recruitment of his replacement Janick Gers, (who had played on Bruce Dickinson’s solo work, as well as stints with Gillan and Fish), No Prayer For The Dying sought to expand an already extensive following by toning up a bit of instrumental flab via shorter tunes suited-up in some radio-friendly threads. The chief culprit is the title track which mixes ''Kayleigh'' with Van Halen’s spandex lope.
And where do you go when you’ve got to the top? Why, over the top of course, and they do just that big time with “Bring Your Daughter…To The Slaughter.” A soundtrack tie-in to the devalued Nightmare On Elm Street franchise, this is a dumbed-down romp that’s as camp as a row of tents. Remarkably enough, it got to number one when released as a single helped along no doubt by a credibility-restoring BBC ban.
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Coinciding with the departure of long-term guitarist Adrian Smith and the recruitment of his replacement Janick Gers, (who had played on Bruce Dickinson’s solo work, as well as stints with Gillan and Fish), No Prayer For The Dying sought to expand an already extensive following by toning up a bit of instrumental flab via shorter tunes suited-up in some radio-friendly threads. The chief culprit is the title track which mixes ''Kayleigh'' with Van Halen’s spandex lope.
And where do you go when you’ve got to the top? Why, over the top of course, and they do just that big time with “Bring Your Daughter…To The Slaughter.” A soundtrack tie-in to the devalued Nightmare On Elm Street franchise, this is a dumbed-down romp that’s as camp as a row of tents. Remarkably enough, it got to number one when released as a single helped along no doubt by a credibility-restoring BBC ban.
SIDE A:
A1Tailgunner
A2Holy Smoke
A3No Prayer For The Dying
A4Public Enema Number One
A5Fates Warning
SIDE B:
B1The Assassin
B2Run Silent Run Deep
B3Hooks In You
B4Bring Your Daughter...To The Slaughter
B5Mother Russia
- Mike Davey
It is a very cool and unique vibe that the band gives off here - it's like the groovier and more driven side of late-70s/early 80s classic rock, mixed with the darkness and epicness of more traditional Maiden like "Piece of Mind" and "Powerslave." I would consider "Holy Smoke" on the far end of the groove/classic-rock side, and "Mother Russia" on the opposite side of this spectrum of Groovy/ClassicRock -to- Dark/Epic.
Great songs all around, give 'em a listen.."
-George Ash