To admit to liking the German heavy metal band Accept
requires an understanding that you’ll always end up defending the sheer
ridiculous of the video to the band’s biggest stateside song, 1983’s “Balls To
The Wall.” If the image of a short, chubby vocalist with short-cropped blonde
hair and a penchant for camouflage isn’t enough to put your infatuation through
easy ridicule, then the image of a dummy version of Udo Dirkschneider actually
riding a wrecking ball as it slams into a fake wall of bricks should surely do
the trick.
I make no effort to defend that video, only offering that
the riff on “Balls To The Wall” is so awesome that most guitarists would gladly
give their left testicle to come up with a guitar part as spectacular. I’d also
add that Sebastian Bach was spot on when he declared “Udo Dirkschneider” as the
most metal name in rock music.
Accept circa 2012 is not the same band as it was thirty
years ago during the heyday when they could afford things like Styrofoam
bricks, stuffed Udos and videos recorded in bullet time. Hell, Udo isn’t even
in the band anymore and only two of the band’s original line up remains active:
guitarist Wolf Hoffman and bassist Peter Baltes.
To put it bluntly, why should you even give a shit about
Accept circa 2012? For most of you, you probably shouldn’t, but for anyone else
who can appreciate the beauty of metal’s adhesion to the riff itself and admire
the sheer power of a male chorus chanting in an ominous Wagnerian manner such
phrases as “Hellfire!” “Hung, Drawn and Quartered!” and “Stalingrad !”
then Accept’s 13th offering is worth considering.
That’s fine for when the band makes a go of all the Accept
songs that most fans will end up wanting during the subsequent tour, but it
does nothing for the sake of the band’s relevance, seemingly two decades beyond
their welcome.
Remarkably, guitarist Wolf Hoffman has put together a
line-up and a set of songs that defy the perception of Accept beating a dead
horse, making Stalingrad
a legitimate contender in the metal community and a source of inspiration to
anyone who isn’t quite ready to let their dreams die.
Hoffman unleashes 11 tracks of uncompromising Flying V
action, and he does it with such ferocity that it sounds too good to be a
second wind. He also catches everyone off guard with an entire concept album
about the battle of Stalingrad that’s as heavy
as the subject matter.
Utilizing the same epic approach found in many Power Metal
bands, Accept is distinctively European even with Tornillo’s New Jersey heritage as the voice of their
recent insurgence.
Much of the Stalingrad ’s success comes at the hands of producer
Andy Sneap, who presents each member with stunning clarity. He leant the same
skills to Testament’s The Formation of
Damnation and Megadeth’s recent releases, proving that he’s clearly adept
at bringing old metal bands into the sonic landscape of the twenty-first
century while retaining certain highlights of their catalog.
With Stalingrad , he’s helped renew Accept’s good fortunes,
streamlining all of their talents into one tight package that suggests the
band’s metal heart transplant is an overwhelming success.
This review originally appeared in Glorious Noise.
Frankly, I'm surprised to see any coherent review of Accept on the web, & to find your tasteful dissection of the group remains extraordinary to me.
ReplyDeleteTo my opinion, you nailed the issue with this band on the head in one of your posts. The path they should have taken would have resembled Motorhead's, meaning slowly gaining critical mass over many years and many albums until their under-appreciated genius became undeniable.
Accept should be barred by law from using American lead singers. That the current one can wail over several octaves impresses me not; I view him as being present mainly to prance about with his shirt off. Homoerotic, indeed.
The cool concept that 'Stalingrad' represents makes my disappointment more acute. I reckon I've managed to extra maybe only 4 tunes for my iPod from this last album & 'Blood of Nations', combined. RIght now, they seem content to sound pretty much like most other thrash bands. I'd still give 'Stalingrad' a 3/5 (grading on a general scale).
And regarding Udo, & their overall stereotypical German goofiness…..I think you're right on. I've never read before about the standard apology for the Balls to the Wall video, but my god, it is spot on.
My needless malicious quibbling aside, I put this group easily in my all-time top 10, maybe the top 5. When they were hitting on all cylinders, it was like a panzer tank rolling over infantry at full speed,…..while playing Bach..Nnothing else really like them, ever, that I am aware of.