U.D.O.
Mean Machine: Anniversary Edition
AFM Records
All Access Review: A-
U.D.O.
Man and Machine: Anniversary Edition
AFM Records
All Access Review: B+
U.D.O. - Mean Machine Anniversary Edition 2013 |
Cutting the cord with Accept proved to be more difficult
than Udo Dirkschneider imagined. In 1987, this short, stocky, powder keg of a singer
announced his separation from a metal band that’s always been “balls to the wall.” Intending to go
solo, he assembled a band of mercenary gunslingers to make his new project, U.D.O., the scourge of true German heavy metal.
Parting ways on the friendliest of terms, the two parties
divorced. Only Udo wasn’t quite prepared to go it alone right away with his new
playmates, seeing as how his former Accept songwriting partners created and
crafted the content for U.D.O.’s debut LP, Animal
House, which sounded a lot like classic Accept – intense, aggressive, engorged
with testosterone and defiant, with just a hint of melody to sweeten the deal and hooks galore.
Interestingly, by the time U.D.O. set about recording their
sophomore outing, Mean Machine,
Dirkschneider had sent packing three-fourths of the original U.D.O., leaving
only guitarist Mathias Dieth to forge ahead with Dirkschneider and newcomers
Andy Susemihl on guitar, Stefan Schwarzmann on drums and Thomas Smuszynski on
bass. This time, the remaining members of Accept stayed out of it. With fresh
troops having arrived, U.D.O. was ready was battle.
U.D.O. - Man and Machine Anniversary Edition 2013 |
Forging straight ahead, with the emphasis on power, violence
and excitement, Mean Machine practically
spits nails, offering a series of vicious, bloody-knuckled traditional metal
attacks like the electrifying “Don’t Look Back,” “Dirty Boys” and “Break the
Rules” – these brawls of blistering hard rock, where lead pipes and chains are perfectly
acceptable weapons and Udo is orchestrating the fighting with his feral utterances and ferocious delivery. Simmering with tension, “Streets of Fire” explodes into
thunderous choruses, while “We’re History” goes on a curb-stomping spree of metal
riffage that effectively, and in no uncertain terms, ends a relationship built
on lies. A dark, melancholic ballad, “Sweet Little Child” floats in on tendrils
of piano and makes for wonderful, almost Gothic drama, but it’s only a short layover of
tenderness and mercy before the sonic crunch of “Catch My Fall” bites down
hard.
Like the rest of them, Mean
Machine gets a graphic makeover
and comes with a bit of bonus material. In this case, it is packaged with a
live version of “Break the Rules” that is meaner and nastier than the original,
plus the video for the song of the same title. Meanwhile, Man and Machine, initially put out in 2002, is not nearly as
raw as Mean Machine, but it is a more
polished, if less consistent, piece of work. Augmented by a punishing concert
version of the title track and a remix of Udo’s original duet with Doro Pesch
on the dream-like “Dancing with an Angel,” this cringe-inducing astral projection of softly melodic
incandescence, Man and Machine begins
with the pummeling, dystopian industrial nightmare of a title track and and its
high points are more glorious than those of Mean
Machine.
Sweeping epics “Like a Lion,” “Animal Instinct” and the
exotic “Unknown Traveller” build on the instrumental grandeur of Led Zeppelin and the
roaring emotions of power metal, while a churning, meaty “The Dawn of the Gods”
growls and snarls with primal, animalistic fervor. Along with Solid, No Limits, and Holy, the
re-released Man and Machine arrived
in late January in the first batch of reissues, representing U.D.O.’s later
period. Why some of these anniversary editions feature more bonus tracks than
others is puzzling, and you wish each album would include liner notes that might shed additional
light on the inner workings and history of U.D.O., although at least Man and Machine has a plethora of
behind-the-scenes, studio photos of bassist Fitty Weinhold, drummer Lorenzo Milani,
and guitarists Igor Gianola and Stefan Kaufmann, both of whom recently announced their departures from U.D.O.
Some of these records have been out of print for a while now,
and while U.D.O. hasn’t really distinguished itself from Accept over the years
in any meaningful way, it’s nice to have them back. Still, had more thought
been put into the packaging of each reissue, the word “essential” might apply
here. (www.afm-records.de)
– Peter Lindblad
– Peter Lindblad
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