Free Music Notes for Demons and Wizards

Uriah Heep - Demons and Wizards

Demons and Wizards List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $8.99
You Save: $0.99 (10%)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Used: from $4.48 (click here)
Category: Music CD
See more new music releases



(Click here)
Buy this Music CD at online store in your country
Canadian Music Store

Free Music Notes for Demons and Wizards

Free Music Review: Really two different halves
Hit: 4 Stars

Tracks 1-4 are very "primative" - very dated - you KNOW you are listening to an early 70s work.

Track 3. Easy Livin', sounds and feels like an Eagles pop work, catchy in an AM radio sortof way.

The album gets more interesting as you go into tracks 5 and beyond; the group is more PROG like in these tracks, longer more complex melodies and counter melodies.

I usually skip to track 5 and finish the album

Track 5. Circle of Hands is my favorite.
a great tune with good vocals, mixing, composition and clocks in at a quick 6 1/2 minutes.

6. Rainbow Demon is a very "dark" work, minor keys.

7. All My Life
interesting vocals, counter vocals.

8. Paradise/The Spell

9. Spell
a long work, 2nd best track.

Uriah Heep is not my favorite band but D & W is an interesting
work with some "Prog" - like tracks particuarly 5 & 9.

Free Music Review: Stunning
Hit: 5 Stars

Forget the band!!!! The production by Rob Michaels and chris griffin is stunning.

Free Music Review: Everybody Loves Demons and Wizards
Hit: 4 Stars

Heep was a very prolific band at first, having released five albums from 1970 through 1972. This was when Heep was at their peak. After one more decent release in 1973, when Heep got their first top twenty hit, "Stealin" they seem to have hit a brick wall. Whether musically the public's tastes changed or Heep had a creative block, they never again reached the peaks they had achieved in the early seventies.

Of course they had plenty of material from those first five years and continued to tour in one form or another, mostly on the strength of the material their first six albums, including the fourth and most Heep fans favorite, Demons and Wizards.

Demons and wizards is the album that secured Uriah Heep's reputation as a master of gothic-influenced heavy metal. From short, sharp rock songs to lengthy, musically dense epics. With Demons and Wizards, Uriah Heep appears to run the gamut, seemingly covering all the bases with style and power, from soft rock to hard rock to progressive rock, while embarking on a voyage into fantasy and mythology.

The lead off tune "The Wizard": sets the stage by starting as a simple acoustic tune, building into a melodic rocker that surges forth on a wall of sound built from thick guitar riffs, churchy organ, and operatic vocal harmonies, often giving chills along the way. "The Wizard" is a gentle semi-acoustic ballad that recounts a night-time meeting with "a wizard of a thousand kings... he told me tales and he drank my wine." It is only as the song progresses that we realize that the wizard is within us all, the wise "voices in our hearts" that so few people listen to, but which whisper the secrets of happiness and freedom regardless. This may be the most popular of all UH's music. It's just too bad it's not longer than three minutes.

Other highlights include "Traveller in Time," a fantasy-themed rocker built on thick wah-wah guitar riffs, UH's very first top forty single, "Easy Livin" peaking at #39 in July 1972, a punchy hard driving number that left fans breathless on their tours and "Circle of Hands," a noble sounding power ballad with a gospel-meets-heavy Hammond meets heavy metal feel to it, a six and a half minute masterpiece.

Some think However, the top highlight of the album is the closing medley of "Paradise" and "The Spell", the first part of the medley starts in an atmospheric, melancholy, acoustic mode and slowly adds layers of organ and electric guitar until it becomes a forceful slow-tempo rocker, eventually segueing into part two, a punchy, organ-led rocker that includes an instrumental midsection where choral-style harmonies fortify an exquisite, Floydian style guitar solo from Mick Box.

CONCLUSION
Demons and Wizards works well both as a showcase for Uriah Heep's instrumental prowess and a a primary display of their songwriting skills in a variety of rock styles. Demons and Wizards is considered by many fans to be their finest work and is definitely worth a spin for anyone with an interest in 1970s heavy metal with prog influences.

Although it was an immensely popular album among HEEP/Heads, Demons and Wizards is not, in my opinion, a particularly great album. It is, an average to good album with several average songs but happening to contain three of HEEP's all time best songs (some would say four or five with Easy Livin and Paradise)

Even so, the presence of three to five of Uriah Heep's best songs makes it a must have for HEEP fans or even Quasi-Heep fans.


Free Music Review: The definitive Uriah Heep's album!
Hit: 5 Stars

The peak moment for one of the most underrated bands in the whole world. Unfairly, Uriah Heep never got the credits they deserve. The british outfit includes talented musicians (Ken Hensley on keyboards, Lee Kerslake on drums and Gary Thain, the best bassist of all time). David Byron on vocals was a superb star, he got an incredible voice. The low point in Heep's line up was always Mick Box (his guitar playing was and still is very poor, but not poorly enough to bring the band's music down). "Demons & Wizards" represents the most inspired era for the band. Every single song is a masterpiece, from the dark "Rainbow demon" to the powerful "Easy livin'"... from the acoustic beauty of "The Wizard" to the strange "Paradise/The Spell"..... and so on. Close to "Demons & Wizards" are "Salisbury" and "Look at yourself", I think Uriah Heep's perfect trilogy. Uriah must be considered --like Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Grand Funk-- one of the angular stones of 70's hard rock.

Free Music Review: Uriah Heep's Best Studio Album
Hit: 5 Stars

DEMONS AND WIZARDS is Uriah Heep's best studio album ever. The hit single, "Easy Livin'", and "Circle Of Hands are the highlights here. However, most of the songs, with a couple of exceptions, are top-notch, and the keyboard and guitar playing are fiery and powerful. I must also mention that lead vocalist David Byron was at his best here, providing a framework for Freddie Mercury to base his style on. This should be the first Uriah Heep studio album you buy.
More Free Music Notes:
First Review 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles