Night of the Demon: Remastered
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Full Moon
- Night Of The Demon
- Into The Nightmare
- Father Of Time
- Decisions
- Liar
- Big Love
- Ride The Wind
- Fool To Play The Hard Way
- One Helluva Night
- Wild Woman
- On The Road Again
- Liar
- Night Of The Demon
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #36958 in Music
- Released on: 2002-10-21
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
From the grave
The 1980s and beyond have spawned a legion of bands hoping to be the next Black Sabbath generation, taking their cue from all things horror. Demon seem to have been one of the first of those and, as someone whose teenage years were the 1970s, I like the fact that they had similar musical virtues. Demon may have be hard rockers, but they are more dynamic than most of the metal bands that followed. They had an awareness of melody and didn't power chord and down tune everything for the sake of it. Nor, judging by the 'Full Moon' preamble, did they take their chosen theme very seriously. The memorable title track sets the tone for a consistent set, which neatly complements the later, excellentThe Unexpected Guest: Remastered.
Demon under-rated
I am not going to go into as much detail as the first reviewer as it has already been written, and I agree.
The first half of this album is stanic in nature with Night of the Demon etc. and the second half is good heavy rock but not thrash, or even near.
This was Demon's first album and the first one I bought (aging rocker). I personally think the Unexpected Guest and The Plague are better but buy this as well as it is still a very good album.
An accomplished NWOBHM (New Wave of British Heavy Metal) debut album
Demon emerged amid the burgeoning British heavy metal scene of the early 1980s. While Iron Maiden, Saxon, and Def Leppard were making fairly large waves, both critically and commercially, Demon - mild-mannered musos from the Peak District - slipped this classic debut album under the radar of mainstream metal. It was well received critically, especially by the recently-launched Kerrang!, which sported Demon as front cover stars.
'Night of the Demon', the logical title for their debut album, kicks off with the eerie intro 'Full Moon', which blends into the longtime live favourite 'Night of the Demon'. Mal Spooner's guitar work is flawless, while Dave Hill's voice is as unique, powerful, and emotive as you'll ever hear. Dave sounds like a mixture of UFO's Phil Mogg and a rockier, rougher Joe Cocker.
'Liar' is a bouncy, energetic track which could almost be 'Lights Out'-era UFO - and that's no bad thing!
'Ride the Wind' isn't a million miles away from the Rolling Stones' 'Satisfaction' with overdriven guitars and stronger vocals.
'One Helluva Night' is the heaviest track on the album. Its anthemic, singalong chorus contrasts beautifully with the frenetic, driving guitar and tight rhythm section.
The remaster's first two bonus tracks, 'Wild Woman' and 'On the Road Again', see Demon treading the familiar stamping ground of AC/DC and Status Quo...and doing it well.
The third bonus track on the remaster is the original recording of 'Liar', which I prefer to the more polished and produced version, largely due to its gargantuan bass line (which is reminiscent of the classic 'Faith Healer' by the Sensational Alex Harvey Band), but also due to the raw, heavy guitar riffs of Mal Spooner.
The final bonus track is a remix of 'Night of the Demon' and it's a monster! Fluid guitar licks blend with heavy riffs and Dave Hill's awe-inspiring vocals.
The album in its original form was a classic. The remaster, with four such excellent bonus tracks, is an essential addition to any rock collection.
This is one of those rare debut albums that - like Van Halen's, AC/DC's, Metallica's, or Iron Maiden's - leave you feeling clean and fresh all over.
Buy it, play it loud...end enjoy!





