STEVE GRIMMETT'S GRIM REAPER (Live at Liquid Joe's, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, September 6, 2019)
Live Reviews

STEVE GRIMMETT’S GRIM REAPER (Live)

Steve Grimmett’s Grim Reaper rocked Salt Lake City’s Liquid Joe’s on September 6th. If you didn’t get there early as warned, you missed a great show. NWOBHM legends Grim Reaper with long standing member Steve Grimmett at the helm, are back with a vengeance. Backed by Guitarist Ian Nash, Bass player Chaz Grimaldi and Drummer Mark Pullin, the fired up crowd was treated to a fantastic 16 song setlist. They kicked things off with the song “Venom”, from their new album At the Gates which many were hearing for the first time and loving it. The band followed up with “Rock You To Hell”, “Night of the Vampire” and “Lust for Freedom” from the 1987 album Rock You To Hell, released 32 years ago to the day. The show continued with “Dead on Arrival” and “Wrath of the Ripper”, a couple of my favorites from the 1983 album See you in Hell. The night continued with more music from the previous mentioned albums, as well as a couple from their 2016 album Walking in the Shadows and from their 1984 album Fear No Evil. One of the highlights of the night was the bands performance of “Don’t Talk to Strangers” a tribute to Ronnie James Dio, which showed Steve still had the vocals and the passion to take Grim Reaper even further.

LIONSHEART - Abyss
Album Reviews

LIONSHEART – Abyss

After an extended cooling off period, the British rockers, Lionsheart, are back with their new CD entitled Abyss; supported by a new multi-album contract with Frontiers Records. Steve Grimmett bellows out the vocals and wrote the lyrics to each of the songs on the album, Ian Nash handles the guitar duties, Eddie Marsh, the bass guitar, and Steve Hales pounds on the drum kit and provides the fairly sparsely used keyboard fills. Abyss is comprised of 12 tracks, 2 of which are ballads. WHAT’S GOOD Steve Grimmett essentially slipped out of musical sight some time after the release of Lionsheart’s prior album, Under Fire, and evidently had numerous unfortunate personal issues to deal with and resolve. In writing the lyrics for Abyss, he reenters his own personal abyss and essentially spills his guts and emotions into every song. This isn’t an album to listen to, as a result, if you’re looking to obtain a “warm, fuzzy feeling all over,” however; Grimmett did a good job of making the lyrics of each song count for something. The first 4 tracks are all solid songs: “Screaming,” “Nightmare,” “All I Got,” and the first ballad, “I Need Love” all show the band performing on all cylinders. Grimmett shows, when he wants to, that he indeed has ample vocal talent to offer the listener, sounding (when he’s at his best) like a cross between Don Dokken, Jack Russell of Great White, and Biff Byford of Saxon. WHAT’S LESS THAN GOOD Musically, Abyss becomes incredibly average beginning with the 5th track, “How Can I Tell You.” It appears Ian Nash and the rest of the band likely had a difficult time pairing up suitable riffs and musical patterns to Grimmett’s reflective and emotional lyrics, making this an album that is hugely vocally weighted. Vocal dominance …READ MORE