Reviews list for Riot - Narita (1979)
Riot is another band in which I hear more metal in the least metal material than other listeners could. Their earlier riffs sound quite metal to me. However, I can't say for the album cover. It's a little strange for me. The baby-seal-faced warrior is dressed up like a sumo wrestler, which I guess makes sense for this album being called Narita.
Odd cover aside, the music is quite interesting. The members of the band continue to impress fans of their sound. The vibrant energy shows their motivation. They continue their hard rock/heavy metal sound with slightly more metal emphasis. There are even songs that hint at the speedier sound that would appear in their next album Fire Down Under. Yep, Narita already has some songs heading there...
Right there is the wicked "Waiting for the Taking", which actually maintains the Rock City tone in the guitars and bass, almost like an outtake from that album. These easy tones fit well with the riffing that's bad-a** as h*ll. You can expect great sass from the soloing of Mark Reale and the vocals of Guy Speranza. RIP those two awesome musicians along with original guitarist L.A. Kouvaris who wrote some lyrics for Narita but passed guitar duties to Rick Ventura who's also quite great. Jimmy Iommi (brother of legendary Tony Iommi) keeps up the bass pumps, while Peter Bitelli stays steady behind the drum kit. One track, "49er" isn't as catchy as the rest. Sounding cool once again is "Kick Down the Wall" which has more of the bluesy hard rock of Foghat. Iommi's bass pumps displays his booming talent.
The band's cover of "Born to Be Wild", the Steppenwolf hit that popularized the phrase "heavy metal" in rock music. Nice execution, but the sh*tty production sounds like it was a last-minute addition. The rapid title instrumental has upbeat riffing and drumming. An explosive piece of early speed metal! It would've been better with Speranza's vocal power, but the track can still do fine without it. And there's more of his expressive singing to come in other catchy tunes. "Here We Come Again" has some casual rock to expect from early Riot. "Do It Up" is respectable while a bit humble compared to the band's more top-notch material.
The constructive "Hot for Love" has a memorable chorus with melodic emotion that's worth radio play. The short rebellious "White Rock" continues the heavy energy the band could present at ease. The soloing is in strong diversity as always. But it doesn't beat "Road Racin'". This one is more remarkable in the vocals and heavy riffing, yet another hint at the more metal direction of their next album.
Riot was a band who wanted to make money. But they weren't doing it for the business, they were doing it for the joy. The American heavy metal scene was starting to form, and Riot was ready to enter it. So if you're up for the challenge in Narita, buckle up! It's gonna be a heavy flight....
Favorites: "Waiting for the Taking", "Kick Down the Wall", "Narita", "Hot for Love", "Road Racin'"