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Uriah Heep

Look at Yourself

  • AMG Review of Look at Yourself

    Amg
    Donald A. Guarisco
    All Music Guide

    The third time proved to be the charm for Uriah Heep: on Look at Yourself, the group perfects its fusion of heavy metal power and prog rock majesty, and the result is one of the best albums in the Heep catalog. The gauntlet is thrown down on the title track, a powerful rocker that layers its relentless hard rock attack with ornate vocal harmonies and quicksilver organ runs before climaxing with a tribal-sounding drum jam. The remainder of Look at Yourself presents an effective blend of gutsy guitar rock and organ-fueled prog excursions. In the ock arena, the gems are "Tears in My Eyes," a powerful rocker driven by an almost ockabilly-style riff that stops midway for a surprising vocal harmony break supported by smooth wah-wah guitar, and "Love Machine," a short, punchy slice of hard rock built on an infectious, stomping rhythm. However, the best track on the album is one of the more prog-oriented ones: "July Morning" starts with a pastoral organ riff, then builds into a heavy yet symphonic ock tune that divides its time between gentle acoustic verses and emotional, organ-fueled choruses before climaxing in a monstrous jam dominated by a swirling Moog synthesizer lead. Special note should also be taken of David Byron's vocal performance; his multi-octave, operatic style was no doubt an influence on later metal vocalists like Rob Halford. All in all, Look at Yourself is both one of Uriah Heep's finest, most cohesive albums and a high point of 1970s heavy metal.

Damn Earworms!
about 1 year ago
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ipod played this for me this morning, and the damn thing morphed into an earworm.I hate it when that happens.Anyway, **Uriah Heep**. What can I say? They are one of my (many) guilty pleasures.Lumpen rock n roll. Plodding blissfully onward. Manfred Mann's synthesizer almost saves the whole damn thing.I think I've posted this before, but.....

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1976 - Then Everything Changed... SOML Post 5
over 2 years ago
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In 1976 my brothers exposed me to the dark side of rock n roll. No more harmless cowboy ballads or quaint country songs. Now I was listening to the dark stuff - the songs steeped in mystical images of demons and wizards and dragons. That's right - my brothers picked up 1976's "The Best of Uriah Heep", and it remained on the turntable for many years to come. It all seemed so wrong, so secret...

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Music Video: Uriah Heep - July Morning
11 months ago

Album: Look At Yourself Label: Mercury Records Year: 1971

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