Reviews list for Heavens Gate - Livin' in Hysteria (1991)
I've been meaning to get around to Germany's Heavens Gate for some time now as they seem to have built up a pretty reasonable following over the years, particularly off the back of their 1991 sophomore album "Livin' In Hysteria" which is widely known as their finest work. I think the links to power metal & the God-awful cover artwork have put me off a bit but given my recent re-exploration of so many of my musical passions from the period I thought it might be as good a time as any to see what Heavens Gate are all about.
I didn't have any expectations going into my first listen as I hadn't done much prior research but my first impressions would tell me everything I needed to know with Heavens Gate sitting on the cheesier & more cliche-ridden end of metal. Heavens Gate's sound sits right at the mid-point between heavy metal & power metal with "Livin' In Hysteria" including a number of tracks from each genre without opting to blend the two all that often. "The Neverending Fire" is probably the only track that represents a hybrid of the two & is also one of the better tracks on the album. The inclusion of the progressive/neoclassical instrumental piece "Fredless" was most welcome while the other highlights strangely coming in the form of a couple of the cheesier & more chiche-filled heavy metal numbers in "Can't Stop Rockin'" & "Best Days Of My Life". I don't think it'll shock too many people to discover that none of the pure German power metal numbers appeal to me much but neither does the one-off speed metal track "Flashes". Front man Thomas Rettke's vocal histrionics can be grating at times but I feel that he's probably one the main drawcards for fans of the band so it really comes down to your musical preferences. I struggle with him a bit to be honest but he's not a deal breaker as such. The power metal material has clearly been influenced by Helloween which was never gonna be a positive thing for someone like me. I greatly prefer the Judas Priest-inspired heavy metal numbers, even when they take the "arena anthem" format that saw so many fans fall off the Priest train during the 1980's.
Overall, I'd suggest that "Livin' In Hysteria" will offer the most appeal to those with a penchant for bands like Scanner, Rage or Artch that play somewhat of an each-way bet between the heavy metal & power metal sounds but I can't say that it does much for me personally. Records like this one often baffle me as to why people would want to rate them so highly when they're so clearly a representation of the band's influences only not executed with the class of their idols. I guess I'll just have to accept that a record like "Livin' In Hysteria" is simply none of my business as I'm clearly not the target audience.
Heaven's Gate aren't exactly a new thing. They take so much from earlier bands like Iron Maiden and Judas Priest that I can imagine more purist metalheads getting tired of them pretty quickly. Still, in the case of their sophomore album, Livin' in Hysteria, there's a lot of energy coming from them, probably more than Judas had done up to that point. That title track there is an excellent example of why heavy metal is so damn good: it's all about the badassery, which comes in many forms: independence, strength, anger at society, desire to rampage, etc. Of course, even the title track has a surprise hard rock midtro lightly reminiscent of the Southern rock of Allman Brothers while singing melodic vocals similar to early Kansas. Despite feeling out of place, the go right back on track with some great power metal solos. Another thing to point out is that they carry the fantasy edge of symphonic acts without being symphonic, and switch it with the speed metal sound of Running Wild when necessary. There's even a fairly neoclassical two-minute piece in the middle of the album, "Fredless," which, despite such a crappy title, does its just as an intermission piece very well and has some of the better riffs on the album. The riffs carry the very essence of metal badassery, and the vocalist does an excellent job amplifying that power. If the band didn't sound so much like Iron Maiden in spirit and tone, this would be a five-star release.