BLUE MURDER — Blue Murder

MetalMusicArchives.com — the ultimate metal music online community, from the creators of progarchives.com

BLUE MURDER - Blue Murder cover
3.87 | 9 ratings | 2 reviews
Buy this album from MMA partners

Album · 1989

Filed under Hard Rock
By BLUE MURDER

Tracklist

1. Riot (6:22)
2. Sex Child (5:59)
3. Valley of the Kings (7:51)
4. Jelly Roll (4:44)
5. Blue Murder (4:55)
6. Out of Love (6:44)
7. Billy (4:11)
8. Ptolemy (6:29)
9. Black-Hearted Woman (4:47)

Total Time: 52:05

Line-up/Musicians

Information missing - contribute to MMA, by filling this information using the left menu member zone link "Edit album infos". This function is only available to MMA Collabs.

About this release

Information missing - contribute to MMA, by filling this information using the left menu member zone link "Edit album infos". This function is only available to MMA Collabs.

Buy BLUE MURDER - BLUE MURDER music

More places to buy metal & BLUE MURDER music

BLUE MURDER BLUE MURDER reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

Stephen
Blue Murder brought back the superior work of John Sykes after his time with Coverdale in Whitesnake flew away. Teaming up with Carmine Appice and Tony Franklin, I surely don’t have any doubt behind the musicianship of the band, and another thing that struck my nerve is how great Sykes’ voice is. The soul, the character, the emotion, he got em all in one piece, and much better than what I expect at first listen. When everything almost sounded perfect, what makes this album a bit let down for me is the unbalanced songwriting and many tracks are left with holes that supposed to be filled with something huge. Musically, Blue Murder mixed up the bluesy part of Whitesnake with a slight commercial feel of "1987", and I can also sense a trace of darker edge here and there.

Take a look at those three starting tunes, “Riot” and “Sex Child” are completely decent to my ears. Some good solos I must admit, but nothing’s really spectacular. That also goes for the next song, “Valley of The Kings”, half of it is awesome, but the other half sounded weak. The balladic “Jelly Roll” is my first fave track from this album, and “Out of Love” is even better. This song could have been a Whitesnake hit, such a great composition and a stunning vocal delivery. The title track and “Black Hearted Woman” have a strong heavy metal element and the latter is another fave of mine. “Billy” is a fun track with some punchy chorus, “Ptolemy” sounded like a musical exploration of the band, the skill is admirable, but as a song, unfortunately it kinda bores me.

If you like Whitesnake's "1987", some part of you might like this, but I think you tend to agree with me that the songwriting still have a lot of room of improvement. If only several songs are much better, I guess this one can be a blast, but with many 5 stars around for this quality, that’s just way too overrated.
Negoba
That Other Guy Makes a Statement

Whitesnake 1987 was one of the biggest metal albums of all time, the high point of a collaboration of two egomaniacs. The first of course was Tawny Kitaen's ex David Coverdale, but the second was one of hard rock / heavy metal's best guitarists ever, John Sykes (previously with Thin Lizzy and Tygers of Pan Tang.) The two parted ways long before Whitesnake 87 was even released, and though Sykes' monumental guitar is what made that album the monster it was, his face was in no videos or posters. (I think he got a fine share of royalties though).

Before Coverdale could get Steve Vai to do all the work for the Whitesnake followup, Sykes had enlisted veterans Carmine Appice and Tony Franklin for this album, Blue Murder. And it is this album, not Slip of the Tongue that was the proper follow-up to the hit. Sykes guitar tone is if anything more enormous than before, with some of the most beautiful speed soloing and some monster riffs. And the guy's voice was not only passable but GOOD.

The heaviest songs on the album "Ptolemy" and "Valley of the Kings" benefit from a middle eastern tonality that adds a darkness that really gives this album an identity. Even the balladish "Jelly Roll" has plenty of soul. The whole album oozes with Sykes' enormous personality. The biggest drawback is the lyrics which are pretty superficial, but that's no difference than the Whitesnake record.

Bottom Line: Another chance to take in John Sykes' monster guitars.

Members reviews

No BLUE MURDER BLUE MURDER reviews posted by members yet.

Ratings only

  • The Leveller
  • Unitron
  • theaterd
  • jsorigar
  • Khabarov
  • jose carlos
  • arch75

Write/edit review

You must be logged in to write or edit review

MMA TOP 5 Metal ALBUMS

Rating by members, ranked by custom algorithm
Albums with 30 ratings and more
Master of Puppets Thrash Metal
METALLICA
Buy this album from our partners
Paranoid Heavy Metal
BLACK SABBATH
Buy this album from our partners
Moving Pictures Hard Rock
RUSH
Buy this album from our partners
Powerslave NWoBHM
IRON MAIDEN
Buy this album from our partners
Rising Heavy Metal
RAINBOW
Buy this album from our partners

New Metal Artists

New Metal Releases

Le bannissement Atmospheric Black Metal
CANTIQUE LÉPREUX
Buy this album from MMA partners
Tarantula Heart Sludge Metal
MELVINS
Buy this album from MMA partners
God Damned You To Hell Traditional Doom Metal
FRIENDS OF HELL
Buy this album from MMA partners
The Absence Melodic Death Metal
THE ABSENCE
Buy this album from MMA partners
More new releases

New Metal Online Videos

EXISTENTIAL DEAD - Cold Hands
EXISTENTIAL DEAD
Bosh66· 8 days ago
More videos

New MMA Metal Forum Topics

More in the forums

New Site interactions

More...

Latest Metal News

members-submitted

More in the forums

Social Media

Follow us