Axel Rudi Pell
A power/speed metal band from Germany and formed in 1989. It was formed by German guitarist Axel Rudi Pell after his departure from Steeler in 1988. The current lineup consists of Johnny Gioeli on vocals, Axel Rudi Pell on guitars, Volker Krawczak on bass, Mike Terrana on drums and Ferdy Doernberg on keyboards.
They play a classic traditional melodic heavy metal, predictably guitar-heavy but less flashy than Yngwie Malmsteen, with an emphasis on softer ballads as evidenced by three separate ballad compilations over the years.
Discography
- Wild Obsession (1989)
- Nasty Reputation (1991)
- Eternal Prisoner (1992)
- Between the Walls (1994)
- Black Moon Pyramid (1996)
- Magic (1997)
- Oceans of Time (1998)
- The Masquerade Ball (2000)
- Shadow Zone (2002)
- Kings and Queens (2004)
- Mystica (2006)
- Diamonds Unlocked (2007)
- Tales of the Crown (2008)
- The Crest (2010)
- Circle of the Oath (2012)
Axel Rudi Pell provides examples of the following tropes:
- Air Guitar: Johnny Gioeli occasionally does this in concert.
- Album Filler: Most common on Oceans of Time and Black Moon Pyramid.
- Audience Participation Song: Not as frequently as other heavy metal bands, but still sometimes happens.
- Bolero Effect: "Take the Crown", "Ashes from the Oath", "The Curse of the Damned", their cover of "In the Air Tonight", and the list goes on.
- Concept Album: The band has released three ballad compilations, each taking songs from the band's last few albums.
- Continuity Nod: Very common, but most notable in the song "Mystica", which directly references the albums Kings and Queens and Oceans of Time, as well as a handful of songs from previous albums.
- Continuity Porn: The song "Mystica".
- Cover Version: "Wishing Well" by Free, "July Morning" by Uriah Heep, "Hey Joe" by Jimi Hendrix, and "The Temple of the King" by Rainbow. In 2007 they released a covers-only album called Diamonds Unlocked.
- Cover Album: Diamonds Unlocked.
- The Cover Changes the Meaning: Most songs covered by ARP develop heavier tones than the original versions, although some stick to the source material more closely. Examples of this are "July Morning" by Uriah Heep and "Beautiful Day" by U2. Ironically, "Love Gun" by KISS was covered as a ballad complete with acoustic guitars. But the most obvious change was made to Phil Collins's "In the Air Tonight". It's...well, compare them yourself.
- Epic Instrumental Opener: Every studio album since Between the Walls has contained a minute-long foreboding instrumental intro at the beginning, with the exception of Tales of the Crown.
- Epic Rocking: Many of the epic compositions have really long solos, especially "The Gates of the Seven Seals", "The Masquerade Ball", and "The Clown is Dead".
- Don't forget the song "Black Moon Pyramid".
- Everything Is an Instrument: "Casbah" has a realistic-sounding outro that sounded like somebody rowing a boat. Additionally, the jokingly-titled "Return of the Calyph from the Apocalypse of Babylon" contains a cow mooing.
- Four More Measures: "Night and Rain". It doesn't want to begin.
- Greatest Hits Album: The Wizard's Chosen Few, The Magic Fingers, and Best of Anniversary Edition.
- Green Aesop: Hole In The Sky, but it's far from being Anvilicious.
- Indecipherable Lyrics: The demonic interlude of "The Gates of the Seven Seals". It doesn't help that these particular lyrics weren't even included in the album booklet.
- Last Chorus Slow-Down: "The Curse of the Damned"
- Music for Courage: "I Believe in You"
- No-Hit Wonder
- Power Ballad
- Refrain From Assuming: On your first listen, you would swear that "Only the Strong Will Survive" was called "On the Run".
- Rock Me, Asmodeus: The pre-solo interlude from "The Gates of the Seven Seals".
- Sequel Song: "Dark Waves of the Sea" is the sequel to "Oceans of Time". It features the chorus as an interlude.
- "World of Confusion" is the same for "The Masquerade Ball".
- Stop and Go: Possibly "(Don't Trust The) Promised Dreams". The song fades into near silence for about a minute before picking right back up again.
- Triumphant Reprise: The interlude of "Dark Waves of the Sea", which is a reprise of the chorus from "Oceans of Time". Also "World of Confusion" for "The Masquerade Ball".
- Word Salad Title: "Return of the Calyph from the Apocalypse of Babylon"
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