Heart Full Of Fire
Brother Firetribe
- Style
- Melodic Hard Rock/AOR
- Label
- Spinefarm Records
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Chris:
Killing songs: Who Will You Run To Now, Wildest Dreams, Runaways, Heart Full Of Fire, Heard It On My Radio, Going Out Of My Head, Chasing The Angels & I Am Rock
Finland's Brother Firetribe keeps the parties hot and rocking
with their second release, Heart Full Of Fire. The production has gotten
meatier since False Metal, which is only a good thing. The debut wasn’t
bad at all sound-wise, but the drums lacked that certain shotgun-quality that
makes the 80s rock-feel complete. That has been taken care of as the skins bang
with huge power. The guitars churn riffs like the Sunset Strip never lost any
of the Aquanet-covered peacocks that littered it 20 years ago. The keyboards bring
that warm, analog yummyness and vocalist Pekka Heino still delivers the best while
combining Jon Bon Jovi and Steve Perry in an appropriately honey-drenched fashion.
Who Will You Run To Now gives a great speedy opener and the gasoline
is poured strongly into the forest fire with Wildest Dreams, a song
that could easily be one of the biggest jewels Sammy Hagar-era Van Halen
never released. Runaways takes you off even further with a riff that is very
much reminiscent of The Who’s classic Baba O’
Riley, but it soon returns 10 years back with a monstrous chorus that should
take live crowds by storm. Game They Call Love and the sappier-than-thou
ballad Play It From The Heart are the only tracks that haven’t
gotten my head spinning uncontrollably so far, but the slight slump is soon
corrected by the hard rocking title track, where Anette Olzon of Nightwish
pulls off a nice vocal cameo.
Heard It On My Radio is probably my favourite tune on the record.
Those synthesizer chords in the intro are pure bliss, straight-up awesomness
from the likes of 1984-era Van Halen (a year that
is mentioned in the song’s lyrics, coincidentally). A super glue-chorus,
heavenly harmony vocals and a vintage guitar solo by Emppu Vuorinen seal the
deal. Going Out With A Bang and Out Of My Head are very good
mid-tempo rockers to lead into a devastating final duo of festivity. A spiffy
cover-version of Loverboy-vocalist Mike Reno’s Chasing
The Angels brings back the memories of the inhuman mullets and unforgiving
patriotism that embodied the fighter pilot-movies of the 1980s (The original
tune was on the Iron Eagle II-soundtrack, after all). I Am Rock
closes the album with a thunderous anthem worthy of any stadium this planet
could throw under it.
Like their debut in 2006, Heart Full Of Fire is craftily released
just before the summer heat rises even in northern spots like Finland. I can’t
really imagine an album released in the 21st century that would be better suited
for a day at the beach or cruising down the highway at brutally unsafe speeds
– well, except for maybe the band’s own False Metal. Brother
Firetribe is a band for airheaded partying and a good time –
and there is nothing degrading or sarcastic in that statement when the music
is as brilliant as on Heart Full Of Fire.