SATAN - INTO THE FUTURE + SUSPENDED SENTENCE (1987)
Among the immense wave of bands emerged in Britain during the glorious decade of the 80 twentieth century, Satan was one of the most remarkable. His debut, 'Court In The Act' , 1983, was one of the most acclaimed by audiences and critics, becoming one of the disks imprencisdibles in every good collection. However, in 1984 changed its name to 'Blind Fury' and edit an album, 'Out Of Reach ', in 1985 it passed rather unnoticed, to reappear as' Satan' in 1987 published two papers, presented here as a '2 in 1 ': the EP' Into the Future 'and the LP' Suspended Sentence ', in which his music takes on a much more developed sound and aggressive, and away from the simplicity and' naivete 'of those early activists of the NWOBHM. His style here is approaching even a technically flawless thrash metal, perhaps a little ahead of its time, a circumstance which, together with the comings and goings of names, occurrences and solutions, to fool the fans, not just give the necessary support to a band that deserved it too well. After this, the core formed by Graeme indissoluble Inglés (bass), Steve Ramsey and Russ Tippins (guitars) and drummer Sean Taylor changed the name back to the group (not to be blamed on a curse), to be renamed 'Pariah '. With this new nickname brought to market three decent albums, until they decide to separate, with Inglés and Martin Ramsey joining Walk to found the wonderful 'Skyclad' and Russ Tippins enjoying like a pig on a dunghill with his cover band Led Zeppelin. In short, Satan was one of those bands 'special', with great talent who left us a legacy worthy of being appreciated as it deserves. SATAN RULES!.
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