I've referenced this album many times, but never have featured it prior. I bought this album without knowing anything about the band or what they sounded like. It was on the wall of a local record store, and with a cover (and song titles) like that, I just presumed it had to be a killer metal album. I rarely would do that with new and costly albums, but I was drawn to the cover like a magnet. And my instincts proved me correct. Though at first I had some hesitancy. In retrospect, Crystal Logic is a transitional album for Manilla Road. And that unfolds through the album itself. 'Prologue' opens things up promisingly enough with a Rush-like 'Necromancer' narrative bit. This leads to the speed metalish 'Necropolis'. The guitar tone is raw and dry, and Mark Shelton sounds particularly nasal here, even more than usual. The song is almost showtooney to be honest. It's not the darkened heavy metal one would associate with the cover. This leads to the title track, and Manilla Road is inching closer to the sound they would be famous for. And then comes the infamous 'Feeling Free Again'. One last look back at their 70s heritage. With lyrics like "I got a feel for life girl, hey baay-bay I'm feeling free again... I'd never thought it's feel like this, now I'm in love with you". Some real heady stuff there. It's a good pop metal song actually. It just happens to be on the wrong album.
And then Manilla Road became Manilla Road.
From here on out, it's epic metal in all its glory. The birth of the sound as it were. 'The Riddle Master' is everything you want in an epic metal track. Heavy riffs, sinister vocals, and psychedelic guitar solos. The latter is something Shelton dragged along from the 70s, and never let go of fortunately. He wasn't a modern million-chromatic-scale-notes-per-second kind of soloist. He preferred expressive solos, as were more common in the decade prior. All of Side 2 is excellent, with the uptempo 'The Ram' followed by the dark and eerie 'The Veils of Negative Existence'. You'd almost think Shelton was from Europe with his unusual pronunciations. "Negaahteeve Exeestaahnse". And then comes the closer, the blueprint for epic metal to come. 'Dreams of Eschaton' is why you buy albums that have covers that look like Crystal Logic. It just pounds away with one helluva killer riff and Shelton's echoed and impassioned vocals are the icing on the cake. All this leads to one last awesome solo drifting into the mists of time. Groundbreaking - and the beginning of an era.
Ownership: LP: 1983 Roadster. Single sleeve. Acquired not long after release at Metamorphosis in Dallas, one of the best underground rock stores of its day. One of my most treasured albums.
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