LIST OF 1986 HEAVY METAL ALBUMS MAC
CD2 kicks off with Blitzkrieg’s ‘Inferno’ followed by a solo outing from Venom’s Mantas on the Fleetwood Mac classic, ‘The Green Manalishi’.The highly influential Venom are represented here by 1981 classic, ‘Live Like An Angel, Die Like A Devil’. The North East of England was a stronghold for heavy metal, spurred by Neat Records, who brought us Tygers Of Pan Tang, Raven, and Venom, among many others. An important band at the vanguard of the NWOBHM was London’s Iron Maiden, and original singer Paul Di’Anno appears here with his band Battlezone. Next up is London’s all-girl power trio, Rock Goddess, with ‘Satisfied Then Crucified’, a track from their debut album which was also the B-Side of their debut 45, ‘Heavy Metal Rock ‘N’ Roll’. Championed in Sounds as leading lights of the NWOBHM scene, Saxon kick off this 3CD set in grand style with their self-explanatory ‘Heavy Metal Thunder’ from their second album of 1980, “Strong Arm Of the Law”.Those lesser known rockers include the likes of Siege, Midas, Demon Pact and Tarot. As well as better known acts that stood at the vanguard of this very British movement, including Girlschool, Samson, Venom and Iron Maiden’s ex-frontman Paul Di’Anno, this set mines even deeper for those precious heavy metal nuggets, including many rarities and obscurities. This 3CD collection contains 44 tracks from the golden age of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal, from 1978 – 1986. As a sequel and companion piece to 2018’s “NWOBHM: WINDS OF TIME” anthology, we now unleash “NWOBHM THUNDER”.Often independently released, some of the bands in this set never made more than one now highly prized and collectible 45 or one-off EP. Punk exploded in 1977, and the DIY approach that sprang up in its wake soon influenced the grassroots metalheads who had yet to leave their local pubs and clubs. By the end of the 1970s, the original trio of British hard rock heroes Zeppelin, Purple and Sabbath had either graduated to the arenas of the world, or split up, whilst the second wave of British heavy rockers, including UFO, Motörhead and Judas Priest were beginning to fill major venues across the UK.Spearheaded by the likes of Diamond Head, Saxon and the Tygers Of Pan Tang, as this set illuminates, this underground scene was fertile and highly influential, producing many future rock legends. Although its roots and influences would stretch much farther, the bands that are loosely bound together under the banner the “New Wave Of British Heavy Metal” (or NWOBHM), flourished across the UK from the late 1970s and well into the 1980s.