Mercyful Fate
The Beginning
[RoadRunner]
"The Beginning" is a compilation of rare early releases by Mercyful Fate,
and if you thought "Melissa" and "Don't Break the Oath" were great albums,
you NEED to get this. It consists of the band's first four-song EP
(released on Rave-On records in 1982), the three-song broadcast of MF live
on the BBC, and a B-side from the Melissa recording sessions (the 1998
re-issue of this disc also contains "Black Funeral" from the early
"Metallic Storm" compilation). Often, retrospective releases like this are
only interesting to collectors or die-hard fans wanting to see where the
'final' style came from, but this album rocks - is it because Mercyful Fate
were just that talented? Because they started off with a strongly-defined
style? Because they'd been really kicking around for quite a few years
before? Probably some of all three...
The four songs from the first EP are the highlight of the release, IMO.
King and Co. always apologize for the 'atrocious' sound quality and
production, but they shouldn't - the sound is gritty and raw, and helps
emphasize the aggressive riffing, but it's clear enough to pick everything
out. And the songs - talk about gems! Anyone familiar with the songs on
the albums knows the band's penchant for constant mood-feel changes, tempo
shifts, etc., and this EP has all of that in spades - "Doomed by the Living
Dead", "Devil Eyes", and "A Corpse Without Soul" are whirlwinds of metallic
fury with aggressive riffing, shredding solos, a bouncy, almost funky rhythm
section, and of course King's wonderfully blasphemous lyrics and OTT vocal
delivery. "Nuns Have No Fun" is the icing on the cake, though - the band
is in as fine a form as always, but the lyrics cross into the tackily
humorous category (something I'm a big fan of....). If the disc stopped
there it would be worth it.
Next are "Curse of the Pharaohs," "Evil", and "Satan's Fall" from a live
BBC broadcast in 1982. This was before the release of "Melissa", so some
of the arrangements are slightly altered from the final versions (most
notably "Evil", which loses one complete solo section). The performances
are tight and flawless, and the live energy and raw sound makes these
versions (IMO) better than what ended up on Melissa.
Speaking of Melissa, track 8 is "Black Masses", a B-side of the "Black
Funeral" single, which was cut at the same time as Melissa but left off of
the album. Personally I think this was a good move - the mood of the song
isn't quite as doomily oppressive as the rest of the songs on Melissa, and
the limp sound of that album is even worse on this track - the version on
"Return of the Vampire" (when it was still called "You Asked for It") is
much better.
Finally, on the reissue is the song "Black Funeral" taken from the
"Metallic Storm" compilation. This is not a version that appears on any
other compilations, and again since it was recorded early and quickly it's
much more raw (and IMO better) than the version that ended up on Melissa.
Overall this album is a VERY worthy purchase for any Mercyful Fate fan.
Not just a 'where did they start' album, I feel that it is an integral part
of their discography, as it shows all of the elements of their style honed
to perfection and performed with raw, youthful abandon.
© 1999 lord vic