*** Welcome to piglix ***

Metal Heart

Metal Heart
Metal Heart.jpg
Studio album by Accept
Released March 4, 1985 (1985-03-04)
Recorded October–December 1984
Studio Dierks Studios, Stommeln, Cologne, Germany
Genre Heavy metal, hard rock
Length 39:38
Label RCA (Europe)
Portrait (US)
Producer Dieter Dierks
Accept chronology
Balls to the Wall
(1983)
Metal Heart
(1985)
Kaizoku-Ban
(1985)
Singles from Metal Heart
  1. "Midnight Mover" / "Wrong Is Right"
    Released: March 1985
  2. "Screaming for a Love-Bite" / "Wrong Is Right"
    Released: 1985
  3. "Midnight Mover" / "Screaming for a Love-Bite"
    Released: 1985 (promo)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4.5/5 stars
Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal 9/10

Metal Heart is the sixth studio album by German heavy metal band Accept, released in 1985. Although the group had recorded before at Dierks-Studios, this was the first album produced by Dieter Dierks himself. It marked the return of guitarist Jörg Fischer after a two year absence, with Herman Frank having been his replacement. This album was a cautious attempt to crack the lucrative American market with more accessible songcraft and emphasis on hooks and melodies. Although critically panned at the time, today Metal Heart is often considered by fans as one of the band's best records. It contains several of their classic songs such as "Metal Heart" and "Living for Tonite". The band also makes a detour into jazz metal territory with the unusual song "Teach Us to Survive".

Wolf Hoffmann explained the concept behind the album: "We had read an article that someone was working on an artificial heart and that one day everybody is going to have a computerized heart. It talked, in general terms, about how more and more of humanity gets sucked out of the daily life and more and more replaced by machine. It's not a new thing now, but then it was new. Humans versus machine, was the general vibe of the record." The original cover concept was for a hologram of a metal heart, until budget considerations resulted in a traditional cover. But fittingly for the futuristic theme of the album, Metal Heart was the first Accept album to be digitally mastered.

Hoffmann recalls Dieter Dierks as a very demanding producer: "We would do some pieces several dozen times trying to capture what he had in his mind for a specific section," adding: "Each song we tried different combinations of guitars, mic'ing and even strings!"

The song "Metal Heart" is well known for containing the cover of two famous classical themes: Tchaikovsky's "Slavonic March" (in the intro) and Beethoven's "Für Elise" in the main riff and solo. This song was covered in 1998 by Norwegian black metal band Dimmu Borgir for their album Godless Savage Garden. "I had no idea it would become as popular as it did," Hoffmann remembers of his contribution to the song.


...
Wikipedia

...