Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Legend Revisited - bringing a 1979 album to the present day

Legend Revisited
From the Lord
Sonic Age Records / Cult Rock Classics
21. June 2024 (CD / LP); 6. Sep. 2024 (Digital)
If you have an interest in the history of metal music, Legend (a trio from New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.) may spark your curiosity due to the 1979 album Fröm the Fjörds. Said work has drawn interest from a small group of devoted listeners searching for more music than just whatever the official media promotes. Over the course of decades, some audiences have learned that there are bands and albums that may never get an abundance of coverage by the popular writers, reviewers or websites. That is certainly the case with Legend. So, what is Legend Revisited and what is the new album then? To put it simply, the 2024 album is a re-recording of the 1979 album by a new line-up and with new lyrics.
The new recording features the original drummer Raymond E. Frigon, without the bass player Fred Melillo and without the vocalist/guitarist Kevin Nugent, who died in 1983. Raymond enlisted Swedish bassist Janne Stark (Constancia, Overdrive, Locomotive Breath, ex-Overheat, ex-Planet Alliance) and Danish guitarist Martin Jepsen Andersen (Anchorite, Chalice of Sin, Meridian, ex-Legend (live), ex-David Reece). According to the information on Metal Archives, Raymond takes care of the drums and also the vocals on this re-recording. The idea of the new recording is to give the old album a better production while following rather closely the music. Another important objective of the new recording is to give the album new lyrics, given that Raymond has been dis-satisfied with the old lyrics for a long time.
Musically, it is pretty much the same but with a better sound quality. The music sounds like 1970s heavy and prog rock. The original album was released in 1979, but the music in a way looked towards the early and mid 1970s, and not so much to the fashions at the end of the 1970s like low-skill, low-IQ punk rock or the influence of disco. Thus, the music has the general heaviness of Led Zeppelin or Black Sabbath while also incorporating the influence of prog rock from the 1970s, making the album seem to be in the same family as Rush or Uriah Heep in some ways. The singing is not super loud, like, say Led Zeppelin or Deep Purple, but rather a bit more like earlier heavy rock, perhaps closer to Cream, Blue Cheer or Iron Butterfly: it’s not wailing, air-raid siren, full-on Led Zeppelin singing-screaming. The rhythm section is very important because the music is not totally controlled by the guitar. The guitar does its job, but it is not trying to steal the thunder from the songs. Interestingly, the album is a drumming tour de force. There is no doubt that the drummer is overplaying, including segments that seem like mini solos on drums and an actual drum solo in the middle of the song.
It is an excellent re-recording that gives new life to an old recording and a new chance for audiences to hear the music of Legend. Lyrically, the old album referenced Norse mythology in various ways, whereas the new version features Biblical themes and stories. The drummer Raymond has explained in various interviews that he was a vehement atheist by the age of 13, but by the time the album came out he was 24 years old and he was no longer attracted to the atheist, hippy, drug-addict and alcoholic way of life that he saw around the band. The atheist way of life seemed empty to him, so by time the album came out he had one foot out the door and he wanted to live his life in a more meaningful, purposeful way, and for him, it meant living life as a practicing Christian. Below is a list of the songs from the original album and the new version. The music is mostly the same, although there are some changes, like for the old song “R.A.R.Z.,” and the song in its place (“Gideon”) sounds nothing like the old song. Whereas there used to be two instrumentals, there are now no instrumentals. Anyway, take a look at this list below to get a glimpse of the lyrical changes.
1.The Destroyer 05:15 1.The Creator 05:04
2.The Wizard's Vengeance 03:21 2.The Lord's Vengeance 03:25
3.The Golden Bell 07:10 3.The Golden Crown 07:15
4.The Confrontation 03:23 instrumental 4.Confrontation 03:31
5.R.A.R.Z. 05:12 5.Gideon 04:42
6.Against the Gods 03:43 6.Against the Beast 03:46
7.The Iron Horse 06:29 instrumental 7.The Gospel Train 06:16
8.From the Fjords 08:01 8.Armageddon 08:01
total time 42:34 total time 42:00
By the way, in 2019 there was a 40th anniversary edition of the original album released, a project that the drummer Raymond supported, approved and collaborated with. That version is the original album, the original recording (plus some demo songs), whereas the re-recording represents a new, updated version of the music with lyrics that are not a glorification of pagan and heathen themes. Raymond has stated that they did not think of themselves as a “heavy metal band” because they were too much into jazz, fusion and prog, even though the album did come out sounding pretty heavy. Raymond has been surprised that it is metal fans that have taken an interest in Legend. At the same time, Raymond has explained in interviews that he is not a fan of what he sees as metal music’s promotion of drugs, alcoholism, promiscuity, violence, sexual assault, murder, war and all the things that he sees as metal music’s repertoire and toolbox of lyrical topics. Regardless of how a person may feel about the lyrics, at this point, audiences can listen to the original album and/or the new version! Legend clearly is an interesting story for students of metal music history that are curious about bands that seem to have been forgotten. Legend is one of the those that is almost to-tally forgotten, but certain audiences simply refuse to let the name die. Maybe there is a good reason for the interest in the band decades after they released their one and only album.
LEGEND REVISITED "Gideon" taken from "From the Lord" LP/CD
Legend - From The Fjords 1979 (FULL ALBUM)
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