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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 52:52

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Still a class act

stglaw

Don't pay attention to Ed Rividada's review - this album doesn't sound "flat", it's got some great catchy tunes that, yet again, showcase what excellent songwriters UFO are and always have been. To say there are no classic tunes here is baloney - "Call Me", "When the Daylight Goes to Town" and "The Wild One" are all great memorable songs that have that essential "hook" that keeps the song stuck in your head. Not every song is amazing, but there are no weak songs at all. My only gripe is having Vinnie Moore in this band. Yeah, he's got amazing technique, but his solos will put you to sleep - they have no feeling or soul at all. I'd rather have a guitarist who is less technically accomplished, but can play memorable solos. Vinnie Moore aside, this album is great. "The Monkey Puzzle", on the other hand, now that's a "flat" album...

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A great return + shreddoman VMoore

Guitarrock

The return of UFO with a new guitarist, shreddophile extraordinaire VMoore. Though the follower Monkey Puzzle is more bluesy, better suited to the Vinnie's furious pentatonic fretwork structuring, You are Here works and remains one of the best recent classic hard rock releases (check out also Waysted here on emusic)

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They Say All Media Guide

Survival sans Michael Schenker will forever be the plight of English hard rock heavyweights UFO. Indeed, for many ardent fans, the validity of the group’s existence appears to hinge on the presence of the irascible German within its ranks. But with all due respect to the incomparable mad axeman, even his formidable talents have done little to elevate UFO’s performance during its reunions of the ’90s and 2000s, so it’s only fair that the enduring “classic” trio of vocalist Phil Mogg, bassist Pete Way, and rhythm guitarist/keyboardist Paul Raymond should be free to carry on with or without him. They do the latter on 2004′s You Are Here, a steady but very workmanlike album (recorded, ironically enough, in Germany) on which the lineup is rounded out by drummer Jason Bonham and American guitarist Vinnie Moore. Opening numbers like the AC/DC-riffed “When Daylight Goes to Town,” the rhythmically jumpy “Black Cold Coffee,” and the cool grooving “The Wild One” all throw off intermittent sparks, but leave no real lasting thunder in their wake. In a way, they are thus true to UFO tradition by prioritizing nuance over explosiveness, but this still can’t mask the fact that there’s no sign of a timeless tune among them, or the remaining material, for that matter. As for Moore — surely the man under the most scrutiny — from a purely technical perspective he is a more than capable replacement (his long resumé truly preceding him), but his input here (most evident on the muscular “Mr. Freeze”) can’t improve the final, mixed outcome, either. And except for a couple of fine, quasi-ballads in “Slipping Away” and “Sympathy,” and a final flash of anthemic strength in the closing “Swallow,” You Are Here reveals a decidedly flat band, perhaps still shell-shocked and getting back up to speed after Schenker’s latest soap opera. With that in mind, better days may well come again to these survivors, should some level of stability be allowed to set in. After all, one should never count out a class act like UFO. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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