Episode #23 - Rock by Numbers
In the good old days, when we didn’t know very much and were happy for it, we had to rely on old fashioned methods of gaining knowledge. ‘Internet’ wasn’t even a word and if you were a rock fan then you were pretty much reliant on either Sounds, Kerrang! or your best mate’s older brother to learn what was hot and what was not.
Episode #19 - Siblings
Now, we all know that by and large, when you’re a kid, siblings are a total pain in the arse. And it doesn’t matter which sibling you are, either - older, younger or middle, it’s all the same. in this episode of the pod, the boys manage to find three rare creatures indeed: three sets of siblings who got on so well as kids that they decided to form a band together and spend even more time in each other’s company. How mad is that?
Episode #18 - Donington 1987
In the shadow of East Midlands International Airport, Blackie Lawless sharpened the blades of his chainsaw codpiece.
Ronnie James Dio stood on tippy-toe to meet the venue’s minimum height restrictions. James Hetfield practised his trademark woof! in front of the hotel mirror while, in the room next door, Jon Bon Jovi practised not tripping on the Stars and Stripes flag-turned-cape around his shoulders.
It was August 22, 1987 and the Monsters were back. All was right with the world.
Episode #17 - 1981
Back in the old days, when the only way for your mummies and daddies to own the music they really loved was to go out and buy records by their favourite bands from a record shop, the album cover was an essential part of the marketing mix that sold a band and its music - at a time when mainstream radio played very little rock music, many people bought records based solely on the cover alone.
Episode 17 of the pod saw the boys get to grips with three albums with covers that were nothing if not striking. But was what occupied the 0.28 miles of groove on the 2mm-thick disc inside those covers any good?
Episode #16 - The Albums That Changed Our Lives
All those years on, the albums we buy still have stories to tell, so the Sadmen went through their record collections and picked out three that, in their words, changed their lives. And yes, we thought one of them would be Stakk Attakk as well, but their addled minds somehow overlooked the obvious.
Episode #15 - Sheer Art Attack
We’ve all been there. Loitering in the record shop, pretending to be browsing whilst gawping at the cover to the Scorpions’ Lovedrive and nursing a boner. It’s an unwritten rites of passage for male rock fans of a certain age (and in fact, the Scorpions were serial purveyors of controversial album covers in the late 70s and early 80s - as evidenced by the original album art for both Animal Magnetism and Virgin Killer).
Episode #14 - Metallica, Motley or Maiden?
When the boys were asked who they preferred - Metallica, Motley Crüe or Iron Maiden, they all gave the same answer: Metallica. Then someone had the bright idea of putting those answers to the test.
Episode #12 - The Brian Tatler Challenge
As part of the Enter Sadmen special with Diamond Head founder Brian Tatler, the boys asked the legendary guitarist to nominate the three albums they would review in their next show. Which track did Mark ironically describe as a plodding dirge? When is a prelude not as prelude? And which album was a glorious ‘fuck you’ to the record label?
Episode #11 - 1980
The Sadmen weren’t so much sad as they entered the studio (er, their three respective bedrooms) for Episode 11, more perplexed by what had happened in Episode 10, about as bizarre an affirmation as is possible of quite what a broad church we metalheads worship in.
Episode #9 - Broxit
After a week in which we celebrated the work of Ronnie James Dio in his spells with British outfits Rainbow and Black Sabbath and the best of his work with the eponymously-titled (and largely American) Dio, the boys decided the ninth instalment of the podcast should have its roots in continental Europe.
Episode #8 - The Little Wizard
In the space of 7 years between 1976 and 1983, Ronnie James Dio recorded three classic albums with three different bands. First came Rainbow’s Rising; then, 4 years later, Heaven and Hell , the first of two he would record with Black Sabbath; and finally, in 1983, Holy Diver, from the band that bore his name. Which of the three would give the Little Wizard his highest spot in the Hall of Fame?
Episode #6 - Caught in a Mosh
So far the sad men of the Enter Sadmen podcast had neatly side-stepped the charging elephant in the room - 15 albums down and no sign of a thrash band. That all changed for the sixth instalment - though the boys placed an embargo on the Big Four and instead dived into deeper, darker and far, far choppier waters.
Episode #3: The Godfathers of Rock (Part 1)
The Enter Sadmen podcast rolls into its third week and Steve, Mark and Richard have set off in search of the holy riff. They’ve narrowed the locations to three: industrial Birmingham in 1970, swinging London in 1971 and the sleepy - but really fucking loud - county town of Hertfordshire. (That would be Hertford, to save you heading to Google Maps). Let the arguments commence.