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1 Overview  





2 Critical and commercial reception  





3 Touring and promotion  





4 Track listing  





5 Personnel  





6 References  














Blessing in Disguise (Metal Church album)






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Blessing in Disguise
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 7, 1989
RecordedAugust 29 – October 4, 1988
StudioKajem/Victory Recording, Gladwyne, Pennsylvania
Genre
  • power metal
  • progressive metal
  • Length54:34
    LabelElektra/Asylum
    ProducerTerry Date
    Metal Church chronology
    The Dark
    (1986)
    Blessing in Disguise
    (1989)
    The Human Factor
    (1991)
    Singles from Blessing in Disguise

    1. "Fake Healer"
      Released: 1989
    2. "Badlands"
      Released: 1989

    Blessing in Disguise is the third studio album by American heavy metal band Metal Church, released on February 7, 1989.

    Overview[edit]

    Blessing in Disguise was Metal Church's final release on Elektra Records, and the first album not to feature the vocals of David Wayne, due to his departure to form the band Reverend. This album marked the band's debut with vocalist Mike Howe (formerly of Heretic) and guitarist John Marshall, replacing Wayne and Kurdt Vanderhoof respectively. Vanderhoof had produced Heretic's final album Breaking Point previously. It seems that this is how Howe came to the attention of Metal Church. Wayne's new project was made up of the remaining members of Heretic.

    Blessing in Disguise also marked the second and last time Metal Church had worked with Terry Date, who also produced the band's 1984 self-titled debut album. Although Vanderhoof was technically no longer an official member of the band at this point, he composed the music and lyrics for seven of the album's nine songs and appears as a guest musician. Vanderhoof would continue to compose music and lyrics for Metal Church on their next two albums before he returned to the band as an official member in 1998.

    Blessing in Disguise has been seen as one of Metal Church's most diverse works, minimizing most of the thrash and speed metal elements of their first two albums and developing an experimentation with a more progressive tone, similar to those of Metallica and Queensrÿche. The album's style has also been described as power metal or simply heavy metal,[1][2][3][4][5] and it includes the band's 2nd longest track to date "Anthem to the Estranged".

    Critical and commercial reception[edit]

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal9/10[7]
    Kerrang![8]
    Rock Hard8.5/10[9]

    Contemporary reviews were mixed. Don Kaye of Kerrang! judged Blessing in Disguise "a hit-and-miss affair" that does not "live up to the standards set on (Metal Church) 1984 debut", lamenting "a lack of direction, an absence of focus that causes the record to fluctuate between greatness and mere mediocrity". He cited "Anthem to the Estranged" and "Badlands" as the best songs, "providing a real showcase for new singer Mike Howe, who elsewhere on the album comes across as a dime-a-dozen screamer."[8] Rock Hard reviewer considered the album "better than the predecessor The Dark", but "still light years away from the landmark Metal Church"; he wrote that Blessing in Disguise is largely missing "the ultimate kick, the esprit, the special", despite being one of "the best-produced albums of recent times", thanks to Terry Date's hard work.[9]

    Modern reviews for Blessing in Disguise have been more positive. AllMusic's Jason Anderson considered the album "perhaps the finest Metal Church release", offering "some of the best material in the group's long career" and praised Howe for "bringing a burst of energy that the group used to create some of the best American underground metal of the decade."[6] Martin Popoff in his Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal praised Howe's performance and Date's production, which turned "the band into an updated, renovated tower of strength, a guitar-driven machine set to stun."[7] Adam McCann of Metal Digest referred to Blessing in Disguise as both "a real classic album released in 1989" and a "late 80's classic that often gets overlooked", and noted that, "This was the album which marked the debut of the late, great Mike Howe on vocals as the band moved away from the heavy metal of their first two albums and into territory more akin with the burgeoning movements of progressive and power metal, particularly the former with the band bringing in fans from both Metallica, Fates Warning and Queensrÿche with this album riding the coattails of Operation: Mindcrime, ...And Justice for All and Awaken the Guardian."[5]

    Blessing in Disguise entered the Billboard 200 chart on April 8, 1989, two months after its release. The album itself peaked at number 75 (the band's second-highest chart position to date, a record broken only 27 years later by XI, which peaked at number 57), and remained on the chart for 15 weeks.[10]

    Touring and promotion[edit]

    Metal Church spent most of 1989 and 1990 touring behind Blessing in Disguise.[11] They embarked a U.S. tour in the spring of 1989 with Meliah Rage, and supported W.A.S.P. on their Headless Children tour. Metal Church played one show in Germany in October 1989 with Fates Warning and Toranaga, and opened for Saxon in Europe in April 1990. They were also a "surprise guest" for Metallica's May 11, 1990 show at The Marquee in London.[11]

    Track listing[edit]

    No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
    1."Fake Healer"Kurdt VanderhoofCraig Wells, Vanderhoof5:55
    2."Rest in Pieces (April 15, 1912)"VanderhoofWells, Vanderhoof6:38
    3."Of Unsound Mind" (based on Edgar Allan Poe's "Tell-Tale Heart")John MarshallWells4:44
    4."Anthem to the Estranged"VanderhoofWells, Vanderhoof9:31
    5."Badlands"Vanderhoof, Mike HoweWells, Vanderhoof7:21
    6."The Spell Can't Be Broken"VanderhoofWells, Vanderhoof, Marshall6:46
    7."It's a Secret"InstrumentalWells3:47
    8."Cannot Tell a Lie"VanderhoofWells, Vanderhoof, Marshall4:17
    9."The Powers That Be"VanderhoofWells, Vanderhoof5:22

    Personnel[edit]

    Metal Church
    Additional musicians
    Production

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "No Life Til Metal - CD Gallery - Metal Church".
  • ^ "Classic review: Metal Church "Blessing in Disguise" [Elektra Records]".
  • ^ "6 Under-Appreciated Classics of 80's American Heavy Metal (Part 2) - Page 6 of 6". June 4, 2018.
  • ^ "METAL CHURCH: Blessing in Disguise (HEAVY METAL,Thrash) : Avis / Chronique à lire sur Music Waves".
  • ^ a b "Metal Church – 'Blessing in Disguise' – Metal Digest – The Normless Magazine". metal-digest.com. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  • ^ a b Anderson, Jason. "Metal Church - Blessing in Disguise review". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved October 23, 2011.
  • ^ a b Popoff, Martin (November 1, 2005). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 2: The Eighties. Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Collector's Guide Publishing. p. 222. ISBN 978-1894959315.
  • ^ a b Kaye, Don (January 14, 1989). "Devils in Disguise". Kerrang!. No. 221. p. 22.
  • ^ a b Trojan, Frank (1989). "Review Album: Metal Church - Blessing in Disguise". Rock Hard (in German). No. 31. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  • ^ "Metal Church Album & Song Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
  • ^ a b "Metal Church Tour Dates". metallipromo.com. Retrieved June 15, 2014.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blessing_in_Disguise_(Metal_Church_album)&oldid=1099029598"

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    This page was last edited on 18 July 2022, at 17:24 (UTC).

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