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Album
Produced by Ian Gillan of Deep Purple, Jerusalem's sole, self-titled album is the kind of sub-Purple early metal you might expect from apprentices. It's still on the dividing line between early-'70s hard rock and more headbanging metal, perhaps. But it's still got that cock-in-my-pocket posturing, wedded to dark riffs and strained upper-register shout-singing. Even with the limitations of the genre, it's substandard stuff, performed crudely (particularly on the drums) and with a shortage of memorable songs or even licks. It eases up just a couple of times to get into slightly more folk-psych-influenced passages, particularly on "Primitive Man," but these soon get ploughed out of the way for the more customary nut-crunching. You wonder if a young Meat Loaf, however, took one of his ideas from one of the song titles, "She Came Like a Bat from Hell" (one of the more headbangy numbers, as it happens). It's something of a bummer to sit all the way through, and is only recommended to Deep Purple completists, though even Deep Purple fans can find more interesting derivative stuff than this. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Frustration
Jerusalem
Hooded Eagle
Jerusalem
I See The Light
Jerusalem
Murderer's Lament
Jerusalem
When The Wolf Sits
Jerusalem
Midnight Steamer
Jerusalem
Primitive Man
Jerusalem
Beyond The Grave
Jerusalem
She Came Like A Bat From Hell
Jerusalem
Kamakazi Moth
Jerusalem
Primitive Man (Demo Version)
Jerusalem
Beyond The Grave (Demo Version)
Jerusalem
Hooded Eagle (Single Version)
Jerusalem
I See The Light (Mono Version)
Jerusalem