May Blitz

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May Blitz album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 40:25

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Strange Brew, indeed

UncleFox

I first heard May Blitz in 1972. Yes,they were "another power band" and yes, the quality of the vocals were hardly in a league with Cream or Hendrix, and yes, the lyrics were far short of brilliant, BUT ! The DENSITY of their sound, the depth, the 3 dimensionality had a quality that left me feeling somewhere between the choir loft at St. Patrick's Cathedral and the Gates of Hell - an ominous almost classical quality and tone on "Smoking the Day Away" and "Dreaming" are sounds I can simply not compare to anything else, rock, electronic, choral or classical I've ever heard in my 55 years of serious music listening and playing. Those two tracks are utterly unique - a very rare quality in a world where we're told "There's nothing new under the sun." Give a Listen. If nothing else, those 2 tracks alone may be the best buck you ever invest.

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They Say All Music Guide

May Blitz (alongside Rory Gallagher’s Taste) were among the first of the newly formed hard rock power trios to take up the challenge of Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience; that is, making the biggest possible noise with the smallest available lineup, but never losing sight of melody and finesse while they did so. Certainly anyone catching their early live show was guaranteed to leave with their ears ringing but their brainbox humming, and the band’s debut album was a seamless reiteration of their in-concert impact, all the way down to the extended riffing and miniature solos. May Blitz’s strongest point, in terms of audience recognition, was drummer Tony Newman, and fans of the jazz-inflected style that he injected into the Jeff Beck Group certainly won’t be disappointed by what they find here — indeed, with guitarist James Black beside him, it’s not difficult to compare May Blitz to the Beck band’s Beck-Ola, and find the better-known disc come up wanting every time. The epic “Smoking the Day Away” kicks things off in dynamic form, laying down the grinding, almost proto-metallic assault that was May Blitz’s raison d’etre; later in the set, “Dreaming,” “Virgin Waters,” and “Squeet” all howl with a vengeance that might sound a little old-fashioned today, but was breathtakingly fresh at the time. Even better is “Fire Queen,” which essentially blueprints the best parts of every metal act from Judas Priest to the Cult, except it doesn’t hang around long enough to spoil the effect. Rather like May Blitz themselves, in fact. – Dave Thompson

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