Bugger Me! BRS have only gone and probably
come up with the best melodic rock album of 2015! More to follow, but first a
little intro…..
A long time ago, probably in a pub far, far
away, (the North West?), Blood Red Saints was formed around this time last year
by Pete Godfrey and Rob Naylor. Pete’s In Faith album took a few by surprise
last year and was one of the genres best in 2014. Pete, who is no spring
chicken, made his debut on this In Faith album, and boy was it a good way to
introduce yourself, but hungry to be in a band rather than a project so to
speak, he formed Blood red Saints with Rob from Angels Or King (another nugget
from 2014). So, do two nuggets make a diamond? Read on……
The search for a name came and ended with a
chance discovery of a semi legendary speedway team, ‘The Blood Red Saints’ who
were formed in Brooklyn in the late 1920s. Their leader was Freddie Rendetti
who was allegedly a fiery and colorful character who ultimately lived the fast
life a little too fast. It builds up a great background story, right?
Enlisted in as honorary mechanics are James
Martin (Vega) who was instrumental in getting the band signed to Frontiers and
along with his twin Tom, co-wrote 2 songs on the album. Chief mechanic comes in
the form of Harry Hess (Harem Scarem) who mastered the album
The band is completed by another former In
Faith member, drummer Pete Newdeck, and on guitar, Lee Revill.
Kicking Up Dust offers up a very lively
start. Revill goes all George Lynch on us and it’s a more melodic and
‘sing-ier’ version of Dokken. It offers up more kick and punch than a school
full of kick boxers. Throw in Godfrey’s melodic vocals and it makes this one of
the tracks of the album, and the year.
Mercy is just an extension of ‘KUD’
instantly hummable and with more than enough bite and hooks to keep the melodic
rock fan pulling windmills on his air guitar for days. ‘Best Of Me’ takes its
lead from the likes of Foreigner and once again, is under your skin in double
quick time. The BVs are so simple and so bloody effective. ‘Dangerous’ fades in
and out, subtle one moment, then prowling and pulsating the next. ‘Love Set Me
Up Again’ Is BRS Ronseal agreement for a power ballad. Godfrey even sounds like
Jon Bon, only when JBJ was good! ‘Better Days’ honestly wouldn’t go amiss on
the recent Def Leppard album, as the vocals mirror Leppard at their trademarked
best. Should we still live in an era where MTV was king, and made bands
millions and household names, then ‘The Best Thing’ could have done the same
had it been performed 30 years ago. Thankfully songs of this quality are still
being written. ‘Unbreakable’ and ‘Wrapped Up In These Arms are VERY FM–like,
and what’s not to like? For my liking, there’s probably one to many ballads,
that’s just a small gripe on my part.
It’s hard to sound original nowadays as so
many have trodden the path before them. BRS will be likened to the likes of
Giant, FM, and Dare etc, and rightly so. These are bands that were (still are)
masters of their trade, and BRS deserve to be likened with such.
There’s been a fair bit of ‘average’ pushed
onto the melodic rock fan on 2015, and ‘Speedway’ is anything but average. It
isn’t perfect, (its no Night of The Crime) but there’s not a dodgy song or
filler in sight, and that makes it one of the best, if not the best melodic rock albums of 2015.
Bands like Blood Red Saints deserve to be
huge, HUGE!
BRS have an album launch on 4th
Dec at the Railway, Bolton, then HRH AOR 2016, in which I predict they will
level Pwllheli!
Score 95/100
Tracklisting
Kicking Up Dust
Mercy
Best Of Me
Dangerous
Love Set Me Up Again
Better Days
The Best Thing
Unbreakable
Wrapped Up In These Arms
CGRNR
Feels A Lot Like Love
Faith
BLOOD RED SAINTS
Pete Godfrey – Vocals
Lee Revill – Guitars
Rob Naylor – Bass
Pete Newdeck – Drums
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