Rage - Reign of Fear (Deluxe Version) (2020)

  • 08 Sep, 15:01
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Artist:
Title: Reign of Fear (Deluxe Version)
Year Of Release: 1986/2020
Label: Dr. Bones
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 02:32:29
Total Size: 350 mb | 1 gb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Scared to Death (Remastered 2015)
02. Deceiver (Remastered 2015)
03. Reign of Fear (Remastered 2015)
04. Hand of Glory (Remastered 2015)
05. Raw Energy (Remastered 2015)
06. Echoes of Evil (Remastered 2015)
07. Chaste Flesh (Remastered 2015)
08. Suicide (Remastered 2015)
09. Machinery (Remastered 2015)
10. The Scaffold (Remastered 2015)
11. Scared to Death
12. Deceiver
13. Reign of Fear
14. Hand of Glory
15. Raw Energy
16. Echoes of Evil
17. Chaste Flesh
18. Suicide
19. Machinery
20. The Scaffold
21. Echoes of Evil (Demo 1985)
22. Scared to Death (Demo 1985)
23. Raw Energy (Demo 1985)
24. Suicide (Demo 1985)
25. Tough Like Leather (Demo 1985)
26. Hand of Glory (Demo 1985)
27. Reign of Fear (Demo 1985)
28. Chaste Flesh (Demo 1985)
29. Stay Wild (Demo 1985)
30. Mirror (Demo 1985)
31. The Scaffold (Demo 1985)
32. Down to the Bone (Demo 1985)
33. Depraved to Black (Demo 1985)

Although vocalist/bassist Peter "Peavey" Wagner and his crew had already waxed both an album and EP the year before (when they were still known as Avenger), 1986's Reign of Fear represented their proper debut with the Rage name. In fact, even at such an early stage, the German outfit's sparsely melodic, high-precision take on speed metal is already fully intact, and it's interesting to note that, for all their attempts to improve and refine this formula throughout their career, it's arguable that with the exception of 1988's career-best Perfect Man they hardly ever topped this release. Some bands are simply not meant to evolve, and the proof is certainly in the pudding here given the clear superiority of no-fuss thrashers like "Scared to Death," "Deceiver," and "Echoes of Evil" over their more elaborate but ultimately less satisfying counterparts, which include the plodding trad metal workout "Chaste Flesh" and the excessively belabored, nine-minute misfire that is "The Scaffold." Besides exposing Wagner's still limited range as a songwriter, these ill-advised asides also place too much emphasis on his hit-and-miss abilities to carry a proper tune, as opposed to his perfectly adequate work when simply shouting his way through. And as would become a strange habit, Rage inauspiciously sneak what is possibly the album's best track, the fan-favorite "Suicide," into the album's second half. Such questionable decisions would indeed plague Rage's entire career, which was given to more abrupt creative ups and downs than most any heavy metal band and resulted in their appeal becoming both very selective and divisive thereafter. But for now, Reign of Fear qualifies as a worthy midlevel entry into the era's strong sampling of Teutonic thrash.