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Difficult to Cure
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Difficult to Cure
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Difficult to Cure
Current price: $17.99
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Rainbow
ditched vocalist
Graham Bonnet
after
Down to Earth
, hiring former
Fandango
singer
Joe Lynn Turner
as their frontman. As it turns out,
Turner
is less hyperbolic than his predecessor, which fits the focused polish of
Difficult to Cure
. Where
was a streamlined version of early
,
is a shot at crossover. Problem is, the band never comes up with the right crossover songs.
Russ Ballard
's
"I Surrender"
comes close, but much of the record is fairly undistinguished, riding on strident melodies and big riffs that are never quite memorable. It's all given a contemporary sheen, with plenty of studio gloss that now instantly evokes the early '80s. On that level, it's somewhat of an entertaining artifact -- anyone pining for an example of what album-oriented radio sounded like in the pre-
MTV
years should check this out -- but it's never more than that, since the bids at chart success are only occasionally memorable (
"I Surrender,"
"Magic"
). Perhaps
Ritchie Blackmore
felt stifled by the exacting nature of
's attempt at crossover -- witness how
"Spotlight Kid"
veers from a dexterous
Blackmore
solo to a ridiculous keyboard run, then just verges on collapse -- and that's the reason why each side ends with a pretentious pseudo-
classical
instrumental that functions as nothing more than a guitar showcase. Certainly, his playing is impeccable, but both numbers are really awkward (particularly the title track, based on
Beethoven
Ninth Symphony
and with a weirdly synthesized pulse as a rhythmic underpinning) and just highlight the fact that
would have been better if
had channeled that energy into the rest of the album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
ditched vocalist
Graham Bonnet
after
Down to Earth
, hiring former
Fandango
singer
Joe Lynn Turner
as their frontman. As it turns out,
Turner
is less hyperbolic than his predecessor, which fits the focused polish of
Difficult to Cure
. Where
was a streamlined version of early
,
is a shot at crossover. Problem is, the band never comes up with the right crossover songs.
Russ Ballard
's
"I Surrender"
comes close, but much of the record is fairly undistinguished, riding on strident melodies and big riffs that are never quite memorable. It's all given a contemporary sheen, with plenty of studio gloss that now instantly evokes the early '80s. On that level, it's somewhat of an entertaining artifact -- anyone pining for an example of what album-oriented radio sounded like in the pre-
MTV
years should check this out -- but it's never more than that, since the bids at chart success are only occasionally memorable (
"I Surrender,"
"Magic"
). Perhaps
Ritchie Blackmore
felt stifled by the exacting nature of
's attempt at crossover -- witness how
"Spotlight Kid"
veers from a dexterous
Blackmore
solo to a ridiculous keyboard run, then just verges on collapse -- and that's the reason why each side ends with a pretentious pseudo-
classical
instrumental that functions as nothing more than a guitar showcase. Certainly, his playing is impeccable, but both numbers are really awkward (particularly the title track, based on
Beethoven
Ninth Symphony
and with a weirdly synthesized pulse as a rhythmic underpinning) and just highlight the fact that
would have been better if
had channeled that energy into the rest of the album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine