Street Ready
Leatherwolf
- Style
- 80's Hair Metal
- Label
- Island Records
- Year
- 1989
- Reviewed by
- Danny
/ 100
Mike:
Killing songs: Thunder, The Way I Feel, Wicked Ways, Lonely Road
In the rush for novelty, new releases, new bands, new genres (difficult these
days to a find a new metal style), many albums are left behind because the media
want to be the first to talk of the new "big thing". Labels drop behind
many good albums, not to say many great bands. No my friends, this is not an
editorial, it just my way to present you one of my all time favorite album,
Street Ready. We all have ups and downs in our life and some albums
help us to stand up and fight :). Street Ready is one of them.
The line up on Street Ready was: Michael Olivieri (vocals / guitar),
Carey Howe (guitar), Geoffrey Gayer (guitar), Paul Carman (bass), Dean Roberts
(drums). This Los Angeles heavy/power metal act was founded back in 1981. They
tour at that time with Poison, Mötley Crüe, Great White, WASP.
Leatherwolf was following Queensrÿche's
path. If you possess the first Queensrÿche EP - my favorite
Queensrÿche album with Operation Mindcrime - and The Warning,
you already have an idea of Street Ready. After the first mini-album
in 1984 (demo ?), they released they second album in 1987 easily called
Leatherwolf. The influence of Queensrÿche and Fates
Warning is crystal clear on 1987 self-titled album (produced by Kevin
Beamish). Street Ready was also produced by Beamish but this third
album was mixed by Michael Wagener, which makes all the difference. Leatherwolf
combine three guitars and keyboards that sets them apart from other bands. Unlike
their previous two self-titled albums, Street Ready sounds like an
heavy/rock arena, a kind of studio album of Alive I (Kiss).
With its enormous sound (for that time) and its enormous production (especially
the vocals & the guitars), Street Ready was the new heavy-metal
sound, the kind of album that would put shade on Iron Maiden.
Who said three guitars ;)
I am amazed until these days to see how this ten tracks melodic heavy metal
album passed like a ghost. Bombastic tracks like Wicked Ways, Street Ready,
Too Much and Thunder justify alone the money spend for the record.
Mi-tempo track like Hideaway or The Way I Feel rules long
time before Iced Earth wrote Melancholy. Lonely
Road is another track highlighting Leatherwolf's fantastic
song-writing. At that time, I was sure Leatherwolf would dethroned
the best heavy metal bands out there (Iron Maiden, Judas Priest,
Queensrÿche) within the next few months. I remember taping this
album to all my friends, as nobody knew that band. I was sure they would do
a killing. It wasn't the case.
The non-success of Street Ready - and Leatherwolf -
remains an enigma for me. This album is perfect from the first note until the
last one. Micheal Olivieri was at that time my favorite heavy metal singer (just
after Paul Stanley of course) and Leatherwolf's song-writing is still much better
compare to Queensrÿche latest albums. Luck plays always
a big role. I like to say luck was not on Leatherwolf side.
As said above, this "ghost-album" had poor sales in 1989 and Leatherwolf
was dropped from Island Records. We never heard again of this band ... until
the release of the live album Wide Open in 1999.
If you are a collector of the 80's, your collection will never be complete
if you do not possess Street Ready.
Simply one of my favorite album ;)