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It’s all very well the three of us sitting in front of a screen every week and spending three or four hours shuffling up and down rock and metal’s Memory Lane in our carpet slippers, a cut loaf tucked under one arm, trying to remember where the hell we live and why we’re out after dusk, but sometimes it’s good to hear what really happened, from the people who were actually there.

So, occasionally we’re lucky enough to have the honour - and it really is an honour - of talking to some of our heroes (and presumably yours) who over the years have helped to define the music we love.

We publish these conversations as special editions of the Enter Sadmen podcast, but we also ask our guests to do two things for us. First, we ask them to share their 10 all-time favourite albums with us (not necessarily rock or metal, because we want to know what inspires them more than to confirm we like the same noise)

And then we ask them to decide which albums we’ll listen to for the next regular edition of the podcast.

The special editions are playable directly from your browser from within the pages below. You’ll have to listen to the interviews to get the lowdown on real life in a rock and roll band - and the link will be at the end of each Special Guest Top Ten as soon as it’s available, so keep checking back.

In Conversation Mark In Conversation Mark

John Verity - Guitarist & Producer

Image by Roy Cano

Image by Roy Cano

Here at Enter Sadmen HQ we don’t have many rules, but there are two that we’re pretty intransigent about: we don’t review Greatest Hits or compilation albums, and we generally only consider albums released between 1970 and 1995 (though between you and me, we’ll probably make an exception in the cases of both Zeppelin and Purple … ).

But that means we risk missing out on some of the legendary behaviour and music of the decade that ultimately gave birth to the entire heavy rock genre - the Swinging Sixties, where rock and roll was subversive and anarchic and loud and grubby. All the things, in fact, that drew us to it in the first place.

Luckily, we occasionally get to sit down and chat with people who fuelled that underground swell, riding in on the vapour trails of distortion created by BB King and Hendrix et al. And just as well, really, because it meant we had the chance to spend a couple of hours one evening with John Verity, front man for the John Verity Band who had some hilarious tales of derring-do to share from his early days on the scene during the mid- to late-Sixties all the way to the trials and tribulations of his transition to record producer during the Eighties.

Over the course of our chat John, who counts spells with Argent, Phoenix and The Dave Berry Band and an ill-tempered support slot for Jimi Hendrix on his CV, recounts the night a member of Hendrix’s road crew tried to sabotage their set, how their manager was dropped four floors from an apartment block by Miami cops in a drug bust, being ‘persuaded’ to leave the United States by the US immigration service, how record execs at Carrere managed to review Saxon’s debut album played at the wrong speed, and the moment he thought (wrongly) that Motorhead manager Doug Richards would fire him from a production job on an early 80s live album …

You can listen to the episode by clicking the player below (or find it in all the usual places, including Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Soundcliud, Tunein, Pandora and Iheartradio). You can also scroll down to discover the top 10 albums that have inspired John along the way, and tune in to the episode to hear him talk about why they’re his desert island picks.

John’s latest album, Passion, is available to buy, stream and download now and you can keep up to date with tour news and all things JV on Facebook at www.facebook.com/johnveritymusic


John’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. The Beatles - Rubber Soul (1965)

“This was the moment they moved away from beiing a pop band. The stuff on here has got some substance and I suppose it lit the songwriting flame in me - all of a sudden, things were changing.”

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9. BB King - Live At The Regal (1965)

“A lot of musicians say this is one of the things that started them off. The audience is going bananas all the way through it and it makes you think, Wow … this is what it could be like!

"The adulation is there and he’s just on fire. It leaps out of the speakers, you know? The guy had chops.”

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8. BB King - Indianola Mississippi Seeds (1970)

“One of the nicest things about this album is he’s working with a real rock producer - Bill Szymczyk - who did stuff with Joe Walsh and the James Gang, and he brought modern musicians in with BB - and it just really works.”

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7. Joe Walsh - The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get (1973)

“When I signed to ABC I got sent all their stuff and that turned me on to a load of different things. It was great! Anyway, I’d never heard of Joe Walsh and this album dropped through my door and I put it on … and it was fantastic. There’s some brilliant stuff on here.”

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6. John Mayall & The Blues Breakers - Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (1966)

“Most guitarists will own up that this changed their lives, really. maybe not at the younger end, but for us older guys this was the first time any of us had heard a Les Paul through a Marshall amp and what it could sound like. It was unbelievable.

“People are vey unkind about Eric Clapton, but he changed everything.”

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5. Jeff Beck- The Jeff Beck Group (1972)

“The first two Jeff Beck albums were really the template for Led Zeppelin. Beck must have been really pissed off when Jimmy Page put Zeppelin together because it was basicall The Jeff Beck Group with Robert Plant.

“Zeppelin even lifted a couple of songs off the first two Beck albums!”

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4. Terry Reid - Superlungs (1973)

“Terry Reid was supposed to be the singer in Led Zeppelin - he was offered the gig first. In the late 60s he was quite hot and he was probably the first rock artist to be produced by Mickie Most.

”He had this amazing voice. We opened for Terry when I was with the Dave Berry Band and he had the same high register as me - and it was then that I realised I could be a singer, too.”

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3. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin (1969)

“I don’t think people now can really appreciate what the first Zeppelin album did - it was really ground breaking.

“It was so powerful compared to how everything else sounded then. Everyrthing was really big - the way Bonham played, the big sound. Everything was ambient - nothing about the sound was dead.”

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2. The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Electric Ladyland (1968)

“Hendrix was in a typical production situation in that he was being forced to be a pop artist, and he wasn’t that. But his record company was trying to make him write 3 minute pop singles like The Wind Cries Mary.

“When he did this, he was let loose and as a result the album is amazing. I saw him on his first club tour of the UK and the place was full of other guitarists with their chins on the floor. It was just killer.”

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1. Jackson Browne - Anything by Jackson* Browne

“If you write songs for a living, listening to Jackson Browne can make you feel like giving up. His songs can either bring you down or inspire you.

“You find yourself listening to his work and thinking, Where did he get that from?

* John didn’t specify any one album, but Late For The Sky is widely seen as Jackson Browne’s best recorded work, and so we have chosen that album cover to reflect the scope of his output.

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In Conversation Mark Norman In Conversation Mark Norman

Doro Pesch - Warlock / Doro

When Warlock first hitched their wagon to hard rock’s runaway train back in ‘84 with their debut Burning The Witches there was only one person the journos from the world’s music press were interested in hearing from: the band’s then iconic siren, the 19-year-old Doro Pesch.

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When Warlock first hitched their wagon to hard rock’s runaway train back in ‘84 with their debut Burning The Witches there was only one person the journos from the world’s music press were interested in hearing from: the band’s iconic siren, the then 19-year-old Doro Pesch.

Burning The Witches was a cacophonous whirlwind of brute force riffery and superior melodies, delivered by an immediately and identifiably unique voice that managed to somehow balance raw power and beguiling lyricism. That Doro was backed by some kick-ass musicians was, at that time, perpetually in danger of becoming a sidebar to the main story: the emergence of a new powerhouse in German hard rock.

Warlock, as a brand at least, is now defunct, the innocent victim of a legal wrangle with the band’s previous management, but its legacy and principles live on with Doro the now long-time solo artist who is still backed by fabulously kick-ass musicians and who still brings that same seductive Jekyll and Hyde blend of the angelic and the defiant to her vocal performance.

In truth, the Doro of 2021, caged like all of us in a virtual world during lockdown, is not so very different to the young woman who found herself quite by accident to be the new darling of the rock music press all those years ago.

Older, yes - though her unfailing authenticity and undimmed enthusiasm for her music makes her ageless, somehow. Wiser? Certainly - life in a rock band has given her survival instincts and resilience a sharpness that is more than a match for the cut-throat politics of the music biz.

It’s also a Doro who has viewed the world through the lens of rock and roll and has found it wanting, igniting in her a compassion and kindness that have long informed the code by which she lives: a committed vegan whose vocal advocacy of ethical practice is as loud and compelling as the music that still drives and warms her soul - just as it ensures her leather stagewear is, in fact, not leather at all, but rather hand-tailored non-animal materials to look like the real deal.

There are many things that personify the Doro the boys meet over Zoom towards the end of lockdown. The first thing is that she smiles and laughs. A lot. Far from eroding her capacity for answering questions about her life, the passing years seem to have bequeathed her an indefatigable appetite for the opportunity to share her life and her passion.

And while the Sadmen may delude themselves - perhaps justifiably, perhaps not - that their questions were hardly from the same journalism buffet table at which Doro may have been forced to dine in the past, what ensued was a converrsation that was wonderfully candid, totally guileless and full of good humour.

In the interview, which you can listen to below, Doro talks about how her lack of English in the early days of Warlock's global success made her self-conscious and anxious; the wild excitement she felt at appearing on the Donington Monsters of Rock tour in 1986; how Lemmy, that been-there-seen-it-drank-the-tee-shirt scion of rock and roll royalty, took her under his wing and became one of her closest allies, confidantes and friends (and how she keeps a part of him close to her to this day … quite literally!); her love of Ronnie James Dio and the paralysing grief she felt upon hearing news of his death; and how W.A.S.P.’s Blackie Lawless temporarily slipped off his artistic cloak of misogyny and objectification to look after her when she fell ill before a show.

We also count down Doro’s top 10 albums of all time …

A remastered edition of Doro’s 1998 album Love Me In Black is now available in multiple formats


Doro’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. Saxon - Denim And Leather (1981)

“We did many, many festivals with Saxon, like Wacken, and we always invited each other to our shows when we were touring.

“We went to their anniversaries and they came to my anniversaries, so yeah - we’re great friends and Biff is a great inspiration to me, so we have a lot of history with Saxon, and I love this album.”

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9. Judas Priest - British Steel (1980)

“My favourite Judas Priest album. Man, they were heavy! This record is as good as they’ve ever been, I think. ”

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8. Metallica - Kill ‘Em All (1983)

“This was so fresh and so new when it came out. It wasn’t like anything else I had ever heard.”

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7. Whitesnake - Live … In The Heart Of The City (1980)

“The atmosphere on this album is incredible - about ten times better than a studio album. The vibe is awesome and I just love the energy.

“When Coverdale sings ‘There ain’t no love in the heart of the city…’ I’m, like, wow! I’m just melting away. And Mistreated … oh my God!!”

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6. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here (1975)

“The songwriting and playing on this album is unbelievable. It’s an album everyone should listen to at least once in their life.”

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5. Motorhead - Ace Of Spades (1982)

“Oh man - Lemmy! He was such a big influence on my life and my career. He was a great friend - I can’t really believe he’s gone.

“This is such a powerful album, with great songs and great production. An awesome album for me.”

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4. KISS - Alive II (1977)

“I love KISS. Their shows are such an event, so full of energy and I think this album has all of that.

“It’s got so many of their classic songs on it - it’s one of the great live rock albums.”

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3. Dio - The Last In Line (1984)

“I had the privilege of getting to know Ronnie and counted him as a friend. He was such an awesome singer - there was nothing he couldn’t sing, and he was such a lovely person, too.

“When he died, I cried for two weeks. I couldn’t do anything at all. This is my favourite Dio album of all.”

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2. Accept - Restless And Wild (1982)

“This album is just so mean and heavy, and full of energy.

“Judas Priest was the second concert I went to and I was the only one among my friends who had a licence, so I was driving everyone over to the Priest concert … only to find that they were already on!

“So, we stood at the back and it was great and I turned to my guitar player at the time and said, ‘Oh, man - I love Judas Priest! They’re even better live than on record!’

“And he turned and looked at me, and said, ‘That’s not Judas Priest - that’s the support band! And it was Accept. At that time, I didn’t even know Accept was a German band.”

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1. W.A.S.P. - The Crimson Idol (1992)

“It’s very close between this and The Last Command or the debut album, but this is such a great album. The Great Misconception of Me and Hold on My Heart are just awesome.

“Our first UK tour was as support to W.A.S.P. on the Inside The Electric Circus tour and he [Blackie] was so nice to me.”

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In Conversation Mark Norman In Conversation Mark Norman

David Croft - Sports Broadcaster

There are some sports that are just more heavy metal than most. American Football, for example. Boxing. Wrestling. And then there’s motorsport. Specifically, there’s F1. And it’s just as well that F1 is the sporting equivalent of a KISS show in full flight, because the man whose voice has become synonymous with the sport is at his happiest when the guitars are turned up loud.

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There are some sports that are just more heavy metal than most. American Football, for example. Boxing. Wrestling. And then there’s motorsport. Specifically, there’s F1. And it’s just as well that F1 is the sporting equivalent of a KISS show in full flight, because the man whose voice has become synonymous with the sport is at his happiest when the guitars are turned up loud.

David Croft - or Crofty as he’s been affectionately known by everyone who’s worked with him since he started his career as a PR for the Gordon Craig Theatre in Stevenage back in the 80s - is possibly one of the world’s biggest Bruce Springsteen fans, and over the years that devotion has grown rather than diminished, to the point where he’s a walking encyclopaedia of knowledge about all things Boss-related.

But co-habiting with Springsteen in his ears is also metal. And not just old skool metal either, though he’s a very definite fan of Metallica, Iron Maiden and The Black Crowes, among others. You’ll also find him listening to the likes of Parkway Drive (a firm favourite also of McLaren driver Daniel Ricciardo), The War On Drugs, and Guns N’ Roses. Oh, and he’s also an avid listener to - and champion of - independent metal station Primordial.

His tastes are so metal, in fact, that the rest of the Sky Sports commentary team (Martin Brundle aside) can’t bring themselves to listen to his pre-race playlist

Earlier this year, the Sadmen got the chance to spend an hour with the man himself and delve into his love affair with hard rock and heavy metal - an affair that started in earnest at Knebworth Park in 1985 and his first encounter with Deep Purple, Meat Loaf, UFO, the Scorpions and Blackfoot - among others - and has continued to his karaoke choices at the F1 constructors’ Christmas parties that he’s occasionally invited to.

Listen on the player below to discover how a eve-of-race Springsteen show in Barcelona almost rendered him literally speechless for the following day’s Spanish GP, his and the boys’ tribute to the simple pleasure of visiting a record shop, and how his journey with the music he loves - metal or not - has helped shape who he is today.

You can also scroll down further to find out his top 10 albums of all time.


Crofty’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. The War On Drugs - Lost In The Dream (2014)

“There are some tracks on here that are unbelievably good. Underneath all of this is a man who’s really suffering - a lot of these songs build into a climax and I love the way the album just builds and builds and builds. I absolutely adore this album and I put it on when I just need to sit down and let music wash over me.”

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9. Guns N’ Roses - Appetite For Destruction (1987)

Appetite For Destruction is in the top ten because it has to be in the top ten, and if Guns N’ Roses had stopped after this I don’t think I’d have been disappointed, because nothing they did afterwards was as good. This is their Never Mind The Bollocks.

This is just a sensational album. Twelve tracks by a band who were burning at their brightest and who weren’t going to burn for long.”

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8. Van Morrison - Astral Weeks (1968)

“I put this in because there are some albums that you have to listen to at a certain time of the day, and if you listen to Astral Weeks for heaven’s sake don’t listen to it before eleven o’clock at night because you just won’t get what Van Morrison was trying to achieve.

“It’s a stream of consciousness that doesn’t necessarily make much sense. It’s rock folk blues jazz, a jam session with a bunch of musicians who were absolutely in the right moment together. And it contains Sweet Thing, which I think is just one of the most gorgeous tunes ever written.”

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7. Jason Isbell - Southeastern (2014)

“This is not necessarily a happy album but it’s an album written by a man who is coming to terms with the way his life is, who doesn’t have the answers to how his life will pan out, but knows the answers will come eventually.

“No one is writing songs like Jason Isbell at the moment. I adore great lyricists, and he absolutely falls into that category.”

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6. Queen - A Night At The Opera (1975)

“This was the most expensive album album ever made at the time they recorded it and this was Queen showing what Queen could really do when they were let loose in a studio - A Night At The Opera is every bit of this band’s talents.

Bohemian Rhap[sody does tend to dominate most people’s view of this album, but The Prophet’s Song is an amazing piece of operatic rock, 39 is a wonderful folky tune that George Michael used to busk to, Love of My Life is a beautiful song. There are so many great tracks on this album.

“It’s the first album I ever bought and I still play it to this day.”

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5. Iron Maiden - The Number Of The Beast (1982)

“I loved Number Of The Beast. This was just the dog’s, wasn’t it? Invaders could have been a better opening track, but it starts slow and builds to a cresecendo. Then there’s Children of the Damned - my god, you see the difference between DiAnno and Dickinson on a track like that!

“But it’s tracks 5 through 8 - Number of the Beast, Run to the Hills, Gangland and Hallowed Be Thy Name - that make the album. Commercial they may be, but they’re still staples in a Maiden set today.”

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4. Bruce Springsteen - Darkness On The Edge Of Town (1978)

“There are a lot of Springsteen fans out there who’ll be wondering why this isn’t in the top 3, and the simple reason is that I prefer the other one that is in my top 3.

“I’m a hopeless optimist. I dream of better days and there’s something in Born To Run that strikes a chord with me in every single track.

“Darkness On The Edge of Town is a great introduction to Springsteen, but it’s an album he wrote after a long protracted dispute with his former manager that stopped him recording any music for a couple of years.

This is a more grown up Springsteen. There’s a more guitar orientated sound than was on Born To Run. This is regarded by many of his fans as his best work.”

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3. Metallica - Ride The Lightning (1984)

“Who agrees with me that this is the best Metallica album of all time? Ride The Lightning is the album that introduced the proper Metallica to the world.

“The confidence this band had to put out an album with acoustic guitar in a thrash metal album showed they had the guts and belief that what they were doing would be appreciated by the majority of people.

“They could have continued doing what they were doing and we’d all have been very happy with that, but they experimented and there are just some intense tracks on this album as a result.”

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2. The Black Crowes - The Southern Harmony And Musical Companion (1992)

“The Black Crowes could have been the biggest band on the planet, but a mixture of greed, drug taking, the fight for control that wasa going on, and several bad decisions, they didn’t become the banmd they should have become.

“This album is The Black Crowes’ legacy - a great album that the world should appreciate and enjoy. It took eight days to record and I think it’s incredible.”

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1. Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run (1976)

“I think Thunder Road is the most beautiful song ever written. The whole album is full of images that Springsteen set to music. Lyrics like these only get written once, and for me this is an album of hope.

“The album is a band that’s finding its feet. The Vietnam War had just ended and Springsteen captures the mood of a nation with this.

“It’s also the album where the band is joined by Clarence Clemons and its a colelction of songs that celebrates Springsteen, the white rock star and Clemons, the Black horn guy, not just as friends but partners.

“Just a fabulous album.”

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In Conversation Mark Norman In Conversation Mark Norman

Jody & Julie Turner - Rock Goddess

Rock Goddess will need no introduction to most fans of the pod. But the hour we spent with the two thirds of the band who are related has been a high point in the life of the show so far. Find out what they had to say, and what 10 records would make it to each of their desert islands.

For four years at the start of the 80s the New Wave of British Heavy Metal juggernaut thundered down the hard rock highway flattening everything in its path and snowballing into something wondrously magical and joyously subversive.

We don’t mean to sound like your Dad here, kids, but it’s just impossible to adequately describe to someone who wasn’t there just how raw, dangerous and liberating it was to be into metal as Thatcher’s Britain waved a blue-rinsed farewell to the sneering musical anarchy of punk and prepared to greet the wild abandon of hard rock done the UK way.

And if you were there and you took more than a passing interest in this new breed of noisemakers, then the London borough of Wandsworth would have doubtless popped up on your radar as the childhood stamping ground of two of the NWOBHM movement’s more notable bands in Girlschool and Rock Goddess.

Now, listen up. We’re not here to get into the gender politics of heavy metal. Fuck that shit. There’s no doubt that any female heavy metal band starting out in the early 80s probably found it more difficult than it should have been to climb the ladder of success. But that had nothing to do with ability, and everything to do with being part of a society that still thought It Ain’t Half Hot Mum was edgy comedy.

Anyway, unreconstructed they may be, but like all genuine rock fans the Sadmen have always believed that if you could play, and if what you played was - in the words of former heavy metal parishioner Ian Kilmister - good ‘n’ loud, then most people didn’t really gave much of a fuck whether you were Arthur or Martha or something in between.

And whether Girtlschool or Rock Goddess could play was never in doubt. The opening chords of their respective debut albums put that beyond any doubt.

Rock Goddess will need no introduction to most fans of the pod, but for those of more tender years than the Sadmen or those who managed to miss pretty much every copy of Sounds or Kerrang! magazines between 1982 and 1985, you have the unquestionable pleasure of being able to discover a band that was never happier than when in front of a Marshall stack.

And for the two thirds of the Enter Sadmen podcast who got to spend an hour or so chatting to two thirds of the band about their career - and, as importantly - to have them reveal their top 10 albums of all time, it was a chance to be just a little starstruck in the presence of two sisters who they had first seen 37 years previously at the London Dominion theatre on a co-headlining tour with Y&T.

How did we end up talking about Jody’s pipes? Why is Julie the queen of the click track? And what drink did the boys have to promise to bring with them when they catch up with the band on next year’s tour with Diamond Head?

You can listen to the interview in full using the player below and scroll down to discover the girls’ top 10 albums of all time!

You can also hear our review of Rock Goddess’ 1983 debut below - and find out where it ended up in the hallowed Hall of Fame


If you haven’t yet caught up with the latest latest album This Time, where the hell have you been? It’s not as though you’ve been going out anywhere. Do yourself a massive favour and check it out NOW on Spotify (it took us about four years to get past Two Wrongs Don’t Make a Right ‘cos Mark kept it on repeat)


Julie’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. The Runaways - Live In Japan (1977)

“The Runaways were such an important part of how and why we started, and this shows that they were an amazing live band as well as a great studio band.”

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9. ABBA - The Album (1977)

“Bjorn and Benny are fantastic songwriters. I watched Mamma Mia 2 the other day and there’s a song at the end called My Love, My Life, and I absolutely sobbed.

“I could have picked Arrival - I could have picked any of them - but I got my vinyl out and I was 12 years old again. I know every inch of the cover, every song.”

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8. Y&T - Black Tiger (1982)

“I love this record. One of two by Y&T in my top 10 albums of all time.”

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7. Y&T - Earthshaker (1981)

“Another band we toured with and got to know really well. Everything about this album is perfect.”

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6. Def Leppard - Pyromania (1983)

“This is a double whammy for me because it’s a great album but it also brings back memories of being on the Rock Til We Drop tour with them when they were touring this album.”

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5. AC/DC - Back In Black (1980)

“Just an awesome album. Brian Johnson’s voice on this is amazing.”

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4. AC/DC - If You Want Blood … You’ve Got It (1978)

“This is obviously their live album. The first time we saw AC/DC was on Rock Goes to College*. Dad was there and he just said, ‘Watch this’ … and it was just instant love.”

(*Rock Goes to College - a TV show broadcast on BBC2 in the UK between 1978 and 1981 featuring live performances from bands playing university gigs. This episode, filmed at Essex Uni, aired on November 10, 1978.)

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3. The Runaways - Waitin’ For The Night (1977)

“This was a massive influence for us. Our father took us to see a soundcheck by The Runaways back in the day, in the Seventies. We were at the back just listening and it made such an impression on us.”

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2. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin (1969)

“Every tune on this album is just excellent.”

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1. Black Sabbath - Never Say Die (1979)

“I basically picked all the albums that I still listen to now and that take me back to when I was a kid, and I put this on and just went ‘Oh my god, I love this so much!’ .”


Jody’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. Slipknot - All Hope Is Gone (2008)

“I love them. I remember the first time I saw them live and the guy with the spiked head got me with his headbanging, and I thought, yeah, there’s a little bit of me in there.

“It’s a great album, but all of Slipknot’s albums are fantastic. The thing I love about them is that they’re really fucking heavy, and there’s grunting and whatever - but then there are wonderful melodies as well.”

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9. Thunder - Behind Closed Doors (1995)

“Danny’s [Bowes] voice is one of my favourite voices. The feel and emotion in it. And of course the songwriting of Luke [Morley]. Just brilliant songs with a brilliant vocal.”

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8. Mötley Crüe - Shout At The Devil (1983)

“Again, I think Ray Palmer gave me this album as well [as Bon Jovi, see below] and I was struck by the cover alone. I was like, wow - this looks cool. Really very different to anything I’d seen up to that point - I don’t know, maybe I was a bit behind the trends - and it was just full of great pop metal songs.”

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7. Bon Jovi - Bon Jovi (1984)

“Ray Palmer [celebrated Karrang! photographer who died in 2002] gave me this album and he just said: Listen to this. So I did, and oh my god … a fantastic album. Poppy, metal, great songs and obviously a really hot singer!”

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6. The Runaways - Waitin’ For The Night (1977)

“As Julie said, we could have chosen any of The Runaways’ albums, but I just remember sitting there as a teenager looking at the album cover of this one and thinking how much I loved them as a band. And Joan Jett was a particular influence for me, obviously.”

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5. KISS - Alive II (1977)

“I’m a massive KISS fan. I was a member of their fan club, although they always got my name wrong - I was always Judy.

“I had a mother who was so cool she let me put up a poster in the front room of Gene Simmons with blood just cascading down his face - which I found really attractive! I was quite young … [laughs]”

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4. Def Leppard - On Through The Night (1980)

“For On Through The Night and Iron Maiden I went down to the record shop every day to ask if it was in yet. There were no big record stores then, just little independents and you never knew exactly what day any album would actually be delivered to them.”

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3. Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden (1980)

“Ditto On Through The Night. I couldn’t wait to get to get my hands on this album. It was a massively big deal at the time.”

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2. Y&T - Earthshaker (1981)

“I saw Y&T at The Marquee and just fell in love with them. I bought this album and … I mean, his [Dave Meniketti’s] guitar playing has the power to make you cry. An awesome man.”

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1. Hughes/Thrall - Hughes/Thrall (1982)

“Hughes and Thrall was introduced to me by Kevin Riddles from Tytan and Angelwitch. I used to hang with Tytan in my late teens and early 20s and Kevin played it to me. I played it again last week and I had it on for five days straight. It’s a work of art. His voice …”

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Mark Norman Mark Norman

Brian Tatler - Diamond Head

All of us have one or two bands that perfectly capture the moment when we lost ourselves to the majesty of this crazy music we all love so much. For all the Sadmen - but particularly for Mark, who is resolutely myopic when it comes to this once-upon-a-time four-piece from the West Midlands - one of those bands is Diamond Head.

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All of us have one or two bands that perfectly capture the moment when we lost ourselves to the majesty of this crazy music we all love so much. For all the Sadmen - but particularly for Mark, who is resolutely myopic when it comes to this once-upon-a-time four-piece from the West Midlands - one of those bands is Diamond Head.

Legendary is a term that’s bandied about too liberally to describe some rock bands. Sometimes it’s because of their behaviour. Sometimes it’s because of their members’ very public love lives. In the case of Diamond Head, the legend lies in their music. Don’t get us wrong - the Head could tear it up on- and off-stage with the best of them back in the day (who knows, maybe even in this day) - but those of us who’ve been there since the start will always come back to the music.

So, believe us when we say it was a real privilege and honour to have founding member, songwriter and lead guitarist Brian Tatler agree to be our very first guest.

Brian’s Top 10 albums of all time, together with his words about each, are listed in true Alan ‘Fluff’ Freeman countdown style further down the page.

You can listen to the interview in full by clicking the player below.

You also can hear what we had to say about Lightning To The Nations when we reviewed it, along with Whitesnake’s Ready An’ Willing and Motörhead’s Ace Of Spades in our first visit back to 1980.


Brian’s Top 10 Albums of All Time

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10. Judas Priest - Sad Wings Of Destiny (1975)

“An absolutely brilliant album. One of Judas Priest’s early ones and I love it.

“It’s so varied and it was such an original sound. I never really tire of playing this album. They just kept getting better and better, but for me this is where it all started.

“I grew up listening to Judas Priest, Sabbath, Purple and Zeppelin, obviously, so this is one I always come back to.”

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9. AC/DC - Let There Be Rock (1977)

“My favourite AC/DC album. I first saw them in ‘77. Incredible.

“There was nothing like them and when they first appeared it felt almost like a bar band had come over from Australia

“It’s just so raw and exciting. The riffs, the guitar sound, the simple drums and bass, the tongue in cheek lyrics.

“Malcolm (Young) had an iron fist, telling people to stay in position. Let Angus be the star. That takes a lot of discipline.”

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8. Steely Dan - Aja (1977)

“This is probably their biggest selling album. I've been a fan since the mid to late Seventies.

“I'm a rocker and everybody I mix with goes on about Motörhead and Slayer and Iron Maiden and all that, and I’m probably not supposed to like Steely Dan. But I think it's like a guilty pleasure and I've always liked them.

“I think it's like some of the most crafted music on the planet and I think, ‘Why not? Why shouldn't I like it?’”

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7. Rush - Moving Pictures (1981)

“This is their best album for me. I think it was all growing to that point. I bought A Farewell To Kings and then I just thought that Moving Pictures was just brilliant.

Tom Sawyer, Red Barchetta … there’s really nothing on this album I don’t like. And what a great sound as well. So clean and tidy.

“Just three guys. What a great combination of players. A very rare thing. And for them to last so long as a three piece … it's almost unique, you know? Ultimate respect.”

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6. Deep Purple - Machine Head (1972)

Machine Head is the Purple classic. Ritchie Blackmore is one of the main reasons I learned to play the guitar, why I actually studied and took it seriously. Once I heard the solo in Highway Star, I just thought, ‘Okay, I'm going to have to practice ...’

“So, yes - Blackmore is one of the main influences on my career and my style and why I took it up seriously. And I think this is a brilliant album.

“Again, every track on a Machine Head is fantastic, but for me Pictures of Home is the one. Not everybody knows that track, but whenever it comes on, I always think, Wow! Just magnificent.”

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5. David Bowie - The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars (1972)

“Another brilliant album. I've had this album maybe 40 years and I never get tired of it. I've listened to it over and over again.

“I love albums where you can put them on and there isn't a track on there that annoys you. It all seems to flow.

“Ziggy's a rock album. And I think that's why it really appeals to me. It's quite simple - guitars, bass, drums, piano - and it’s made a lasting impression on me. Bowie was just an incredible talent.”

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4. U2 - The Joshua Tree (1987)

“I saw U2 in ‘83 and I was blown away and I've been a fan ever since. And when this album came out in 87, I just thought it was easily their best album up to that point.

With Or Without You, Where The Streets Have No Name and I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For were obviously the hits, but I liked every track a lot.

“I went to see them three times on the Joshua Tree tour and they were fantastic - one of the best live bands I've ever seen.

“So, yeah … it's a great album and Bono is a great singer. He's one of my favorite singers, actually.”

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3. Donald Fagen - The Nightfly (1982)

“I like albums that I can relax to, as much as rock out to.

“This isn’t an album that influenced me in any way, but it's an album I can listen to, to chill or relax to, and I can just fall into the quality of the production and the playing and the grooves.

“I always recommend when I meet somebody who hasn't heard it. I'm quite shocked at that. And I talk them to death until they go and listen to it, and if they don't like it, I'm bewildered … lost!”

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2. Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973)

Dark Side Of The Moon is the most perfect album from start to finish. The track links, the quality of the writing, the lyrics and the performances … just a gorgeous mood. I never get tired of it.

“As a young man trying to impress, I favoured Michael Schenker, Ritchie Blackmore and Eddie Van Halen. They were showy, and Gilmour’s understated.

“The older I get, the more and more I appreciate people like Eric Clapton and Mark Knopfler. But when I was 18, 19, I probably still thought I could be the fastest gun in the West.”

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1. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti (1975)

“I think a lot of people know that I’m a Led Zeppelin fan, and my favorite song of all time is Kashmir, which is on Physical Graffiti. So, that's an incredible album to me, with loads of brilliant songs.

“It’s amazing how many different styles Zeppelin were able to touch upon in their career and bands don't seem to do that nowadays. Now they're a lot more stylized, you know? They’ve got their style, and they stick to it.

“They don't do an acoustic or reggae song, or something. It was okay to do that in the Seventies, but not anymore. And it’s sort of a shame.”

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