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The Last In Line

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (68 ratings)
The Last In Line album cover
01
We Rock
4:36
$0.99
02
The Last In Line
5:47
$1.29
03
Breathless
4:09
$0.99
04
I Speed At Night
3:23
$0.99
05
One Night In The City
5:16
$0.99
06
Evil Eyes
3:39
$0.99
07
Mystery
3:59
$0.99
08
Eat Your Heart Out
3:51
$0.99
09
Egypt [The Chains Are On]
6:58
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 41:38

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Dio Rules !!!!!!!

deathvalley1968

a perfect follow-up to a perfect debut (Holy Diver) This album is an absolute classic

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Classic Metal

evilshaw

Damn I love this!!!

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80's metal

FitnessPM

Even people who do not appreciate the dark side of 80's metal love the song The Last in Line. If you have never heard it download it. There was a day when a song was supposed to tell a story and these songs do. Every song is a story with Dio cranking out his classic vocals to jamming guitars. the music is dated but classic and paved the way for contemporary rock. If you like Last in :ine, you will certainly find the song Holy Diver fabulous as well.

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They Say All Music Guide

Following the extremely warm reception given his self-named band’s well-deserving debut album, Holy Diver, Ronnie James Dio figured there was no point in messing with a winning formula, and decided to play it safe with 1984′s sophomore effort, The Last in Line — with distinctly mixed results. Although technically cut from the same cloth as those first album nuggets, fist-pumping new songs like “We Rock,” and “I Speed at Night” curiously went from good to tiresome after just a few spins (a sign that the songwriting clichés were starting to pile up…read on); and the otherwise awesome, seven-minute epic, “Egypt (The Chains Are On),” inexplicably lost it’s strikingly sinister main riff halfway through, in what sounds like a mastering snafu of some kind. On the upside, more dramatic, mid-paced numbers such as the title track, “One Night in the City,” and “Eat Your Heart Out” — as well as the driving “Evil Eyes” — delivered enough compelling riffs and melodies to outweigh Ronnie’s once endearing, but now increasingly troublesome repetition of words like “rainbow,” “fire,” and “stone” in seemingly every song. Finally, the distinctly more commercial pairing of heavy rocker “Breathless” and the power ballad/single “Mystery” gave undisguised notice (along with the slightly sleeker production throughout and more generous keyboards from new member Claude Schnell) of Dio’s intention to broaden their audience by tapping into the rising tide of pop-metal. This would bring dire circumstances on their next album, Sacred Heart, but despite the telltale signs of decline cited above, anyone who loved Holy Diver will likely enjoy The Last in Line nearly as much. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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