Create account Log in

The Privilege of Power

[Edit]

Download links and information about The Privilege of Power by The Riot. This album was released in 1990 and it belongs to Rock, Metal genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 57:45 minutes.

Artist: The Riot
Release date: 1990
Genre: Rock, Metal
Tracks: 10
Duration: 57:45
Buy on iTunes $9.90
Buy on Amazon $9.90
Buy on Songswave €1.63

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. On Your Knees 6:36
2. Metal Soldiers 6:40
3. Runaway 5:11
4. Killer 4:52
5. Dance of Death 7:17
6. Storming the Gates of Hell 3:42
7. Maryanne 4:55
8. Little Miss Death 4:10
9. Black Leather and Glittering Steel 7:06
10. Racing With the Devil On a Spanish Highway (Revisited) 7:16

Details

[Edit]

Like Queensrÿche's 1988 prog metal masterpiece Operation: Mindcrime, Riot's Privilege of Power works off of fear, paranoia, and conspiracy, employing ten complex tracks that work as a single unit. Where Mindcrime stuck to a straight narrative, working every Pink Floyd-ism it could into its disillusioned protagonist, Power takes a broader, less specific approach to its subject. The atmospheric snippets that tuck-point each song into place help maintain a general air of unease, eventually giving way to an ambiguous but entertaining revolution that lacks Queensrÿche's self-importance. Lyrically, the group does little to deviate from obvious metaphor and "Viking" simplicity — in "metalspeak" something as mundane as an airplane ride ("Metal Soldiers") is described by shouting "We climb aboard the eagle made of steel" followed by a four-octave scream — but "true blue" fans of heavy metal know the genre's scholarly limitations, and revel in its face-value descriptions of rebellion and honor. The bizarre use of a horn section (keyboards?) on tracks like "On Your Knees" and "Killer" actually works, adding a swaggering charm to the already hook-laden tunes. The ferocious "Dance of Death" brings to mind classic Judas Priest and features brutal guitar work by guitarist/songwriter Mark Reale — he really is remarkable — and elements of Iron Maiden run rampant throughout the rousing "Storming the Gates of Hell." The record loses its flow — not its focus, as it never really has any — with the dreadful "Little Miss Death" — a study in "horned-hand" mediocrity — and the obvious single "Maryanne," which — although the vocals are outstanding and the slight melodic variation (mixed with car horns and other sonic oddities) is infectious — is virtually a carbon copy of Boston's "More Than a Feeling."