It was back in 1989 during my college years at the campus radio station when
I received a four song sampler of Badlands. This cassette was only a
small piece of what would become a much bigger pie. The Badlands debut
was an album that caused more talk, hope and excitement at that time than any
other album in recent years among the Atlantic Records industry, fans and band
members themselves.
This album features Jake E.Lee. Although the guitar style is more blues-rock
oriented, Jake's rhythm and lead playing smokes all over the album. Ex Black
Sabbath vocalist Ray Gillan fits in perfectly with the rhythm section of
bassist Greg Chaisson and drummer Eric Singer (Kiss).
Badlands sounds like a mix of seventies bands like Whitesnake,
Free, Bad Company and Led Zeppelin but still
play distinctly and originally enough to stand out among the crowded world of
hard rock and heavy metal.
The strongest tracks on the album are "Winter's Call", "Dreams In
The Dark", "Highwire" and "Hard Driver", all of which were
included on the four song advanced cassette sampler. All of these tracks are
up-beat, rocking tunes meant to be played on ten! Gillen hits notes like I've
never heard him sing before and Chaisson's bass playing along with Singer's
drum beating gives the album much power and energy on the bottom end. But these
four tracks were only a taste of what was to come. There's a pretty acoustic
piece called "Jade's Song" and a slow bluesy ballad called "Season",
very similar to Zeppelin's "Ten Years Gone".
"Badlands" was a very fine debut for a promising band in the following
years that would come. The production is excellent with a good mix. I would
recommend this album to anyone who loves Guns N' Roses, L.A. Guns,
Aerosmith and any of the aforementioned bands. I also recommend checking
out there second release, Voodo Highway, a good follow up that concentrated
even more on the bluesy rock sounds.