TRAPEZE — Medusa

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

TRAPEZE - Medusa cover
3.72 | 10 ratings | 2 reviews
Buy this album from MMA partners

Album · 1970

Filed under Proto-Metal
By TRAPEZE

Tracklist

1."Black Cloud" (Galley; Galley) 6:13
2."Jury" (Hughes) 8:10
3."Your Love Is Alright" (Galley; Hughes; Holland) 4:54
4."Touch My Life" (Galley; Galley) 4:06
5."Seafull" (Hughes) 6:34
6."Makes You Wanna Cry" (Galley; Galley) 4:41
7."Medusa" (Hughes) 5:40

Line-up/Musicians

- Glenn Hughs / vocals, bass, piano
- Mel Galley / guitars, vocals
- Dave Holland / drums

About this release

1970 - Threshold(UK)(US)
1994 - Threshold(UK) CD
2006 - Universal(Japan) CD: CD sized album replica, gatefold, remastered, limited edition

Thanks to Certif1ed for the addition and cannon for the updates

Buy TRAPEZE - MEDUSA music

More places to buy metal & TRAPEZE music

TRAPEZE MEDUSA reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

voila_la_scorie
A band whose line-up sounds like a supergroup, Trapeze was home to vocals / bass Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple, Gary More, Iommi, solo, and more), guitar / vocals Mel Galley (Whitesnake, Phenomena), and drums / percussion Dan Holland (Judas Priest). The band formed as a five-piece and cut their self-titled debut in 1969. Shortly after, two members left, and Trapeze recorded two albums with this line-up until Hughes left in ’73 to join Deep Purple. Despite the short life span of this line-up, Hughes / Galley / Holland remains the best-known incarnation of Trapeze.

I first picked up this album several years ago while exploring bands that featured members who had been or were in Deep Purple. I had heard the name Trapeze two decades earlier when reading about the Judas Priest story and Dan Holland’s former band was mentioned. At the time I bought this album, I also bought “You’re the Music… We’re Just the Band” (the follow-up to “Medusa”) shortly after. This third album much better captured what I had expected from a Glenn Hughes band. The guitar sound was punchier and rocked out more, the vocals were more soulful, and the music had more swagger. Initially I was disappointed with “Medusa” and for a few years it remained untouched.

Jump to 2015 and there’s me putting together a six-CD playlist of proto-metal songs and scrounging around in my CD collection, and then Trapeze turns up. I only ever liked one track from this album, “Makes You Wanna Cry”, because it had a cool groove, some sweet power chords, Galley’s sincere guitar solo workout which was good enough to feel, and some great simple but funky bass, not to mention Holland’s solid drumming. Strangely enough, as I only ever gave this song so many repeat listens, I had the impression that Hughes’ vocals were really different from how he would sing on future recordings. I thought he sounded closer to the likes of Ozzy Osbourne on this song. Listening to the whole album through for the first time in years, I can now easily hear the power, the rough edge, and the soul in Hughes’ singing on all the other songs. A bit raw mind you, but it is unmistakably Glenn Hughes. Here, however, I am puzzled. I had to suspect that Mel Galley might have had the lead vocal duties. He wrote the song. Did he sing it? I searched around the Net but only found that he had taken over lead vocal duties after Hughes left. Could he have been the lead vocalist on this one track? The annals of Internet rock history are not speaking.

But this album, I have discovered at last, is more than just one good song and it rocks harder and heavier than I first gave it credit for. This time I am hearing “Medusa” not from a background of Deep Purple but from recent proto-metal explorations and this album is quite a fine taster of early heavy rock. Many have cited the Free similarities; however, most of Free’s work did not reach this level of hard hitting. And though there are moments when Hughes may sound a bit like Paul Rogers, Hughes puts much more power into his vocal deliver. The instrumental side of the band can really slam at times, even in songs like “Black Cloud” and “Touch My Life” which do start out sounding more like Free.

Trapeze went beyond simple blues-based and laid back or funky hard rock on “Medusa”. The title track and “Jury” start off with acoustic guitar but break into a heavy and grave atmosphere that is not far off from some of the proto-doom metal sounds that were on vinyl at the time.

The sound on this album is simple and clear. Vocals, guitar, bass, and drums with some bongos added on a track or two and acoustic and clean electric playing simultaneously on another track or two. “You’re the Music…” has a denser sound with more of a whump, whump feel. “Medusa” sounds more like a smack, crack that really works to bring out the impact of the music.

I am glad that I came back to this album. Now when I read how it is one of the greatest underrated and most overlooked albums of its time, I can understand why others feel that way. Out of so many proto-metal albums I have reviewed, this is one of the few to really deliver a steady, solid round of hard rocking and heavy hitting numbers, with a few touches of delicate acoustic in the mix for seasoning but without spoiling the flavour.
Stephen
TRAPEZE is a very unique band. Some called it a LED ZEPPELIN pier. I don't argue with that as I've heard the Zep touch indeed, but Glenn Hughes brought his funky groove too and I heard some doom/bluesy element of BLACK SABBATH. 'Medusa' is my introductory record to the band, recommended by a close friend who really dug classic rock and he said this is a must try. After couple of spins, I must say, it's a good album but not sure whether it can match any of the first four LED ZEPPELIN albums.

'Black Cloud' is a massive opener, I can safely say this is the best song they made here and good choice of putting it as the first track. 'Jury' is slow and very BLACK SABBATH to these ears. However, I found it a bit repetitive with the 8-minutes duration, but the song itself is dynamic and lively, I like it too. 'Your Love Is Alright' puts Hughes groove into life, a good one and better than the next track, 'Touch My Life'.

'Seafull' is a beautiful bluesy ballad and I was told that this song is quite famous in Indonesia back in the 70s. It was featured in a slow rock compilation and many older folks knew this band from this song. The last two songs are okay but don't have the appeal like the first two. All in all, a good record, I gave this 75%, and maybe this don't reflect the true score as I'm only a casual fan of classic rock, but yeah good record.

Members reviews

No TRAPEZE MEDUSA reviews posted by members yet.

Ratings only

  • sploosh
  • Tupan
  • Unitron
  • MetalArea
  • Nightfly
  • luanpedi
  • acefrehleylead
  • cannon

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· 9 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