eMusic Review
Apocalyptic visions and catchy pop melodies, easy-on-the-ear harmonies and hard rock riffs: Cheap Trick's whole bag of tricks is on display on Heaven Tonight. The title track is downright trippy, the sludgy metal riffs and electronically distorted vocals depicting the deadly allure of heroin. Taken in tandem with "High Roller," a sarcastic portrait of a Wisconsin drug dealer, you have to wonder if the band's relentless five years of touring and recording was becoming unsettling.
Through most of the album, though, Cheap Trick wears a smiling face. They're never more cheerful than they sound on opener "Surrender," a rock-radio classic and one of the first tunes to notice that baby boomer parents could be a lot weirder than their teenage progeny. "On the Radio" was, even at the time, a slightly nostalgic tribute to a music fan's "best friend." In fact, the entire album is full of toasts to other acts, from the now-familiar McCartney moves of "Takin 'Me Back," the lyric quote from Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower" in "Auf Wiedersehen" and the robust version of British critic's fave the Move's "California Man." Heaven Tonight synthesizes years of music history to make a bona fide power-pop classic.