Sunday, November 13, 2011

Maltese Falcon - Metal Rush (1984)


Band : Maltese Falcon
Country : Denmark
Release : Metal Rush
Year : 1984
Genre : Heavy Metal
File Info : MP3, 320 Kbps
Download : ][ Flashmirrors ][


Maltese Falcon on Metal Archives


Line Up:
Hasse "Hal" Patino Bass
Bruce Flemming     Drums
Carsten Schmidt Guitars
Martin Petersen Guitars
Søren Peter "Charlie" Jensen Vocals



1.     Alive     05:00    
2.     Rats     03:33    
3.     Mammas in Town     04:01    
4.     Heavy 'n' Loud     05:11      
5.     Rebellion     03:47    
6.     Headbanger     04:45      
7.     On Fire     04:50      
8.     Metal Rush     03:12

5 comments:

Lord Bones said...

Haaa, the band that once was deemed to be the worst metal band by Kerrang magazine. :) I do not see that, ok it is not the most enlighten band ever but to say the worst... hmm there are many other bands at that time who were stinking bad. This album has a certain charm to it.

Boring Oldfart said...

Who cares a fart what the Kerrang says! What we got here is red hot glowing solid piece of rather simple structured metal, delivered with breathtaking power and enthusiasm. The singer (or should I say screamer) is awesome, while screaming on the top of his lungs, he always delivers memorable melodies nonetheless (Dan Beehler Style).

AchiLLeS said...

Personally i dont give a damn what some "metal" magazines said to their critics. After all this is one mans opinion or many opinions who work on the magazine. I have an example about the Greek "Metal Hammer" magazine which ones said Manowar are posers LOL. After this, magazine lost their sales.

Gerry L. Black said...

Another glowing example of how little critics know of what they write about. This is a metal classic. Sure, it doesn't reinvent the wheel, but the tunes are catchy and heavy. Give me three of this over any Living Death anyday.

Lord Bones said...

Like Gerry said, it indeed did not revolutionized the Metal scene, but indeed it is a classic album. When I bought it when it came out, I played this slab 'till there was hardly any groove left. Even today I play it once in a while.

My main magazine back in the day was the Dutch "Aardschok", which I bought from the first issue onwards for a couple of years.