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No Heavy Petting
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Barnes and Noble
No Heavy Petting
Current price: $46.99
Barnes and Noble
No Heavy Petting
Current price: $46.99
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Following the breakout success of
Phenomenon
and
Force It
,
UFO
had finally ascended to the first division of British hard rock. And after hiring a second guitarist and keyboard player in
Danny Peyronnel
Schenker
Mogg
led the group back into the studio to record their fifth album,
No Heavy Petting
. A noticeably cautious effort,
Petting
stuck so close to the rules laid down by
that all the excitement of the band's performance wound up slipping through the cracks. Gutsy opener
"Natural Thing"
was competent enough to become a concert regular, but lukewarm material like
"Can You Roll Her"
"Reasons Love"
simply added nothing new. And bass player
Pete Way
didn't help things any with his only contribution, the plodding, amazingly dull
"On with the Action."
Even the album's best moment, the beautifully executed
"I'm a Loser"
(which unleashes
for one of his most jaw-dropping solos ever), mimics
's
"Out in the Street"
before closing with a piano pattern straight out of progressive rockers
Kansas
'
"No One Together."
The overly dramatic
"Belladonna"
(complete with synthesizer-simulated harpsichord), on the other hand, is mostly a casualty of time; the kind of ballad that was effective enough in its time, but simply hasn't aged well. Thankfully,
would rebound in spades the following year, delivering their best all-around studio effort,
Lights Out
. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Phenomenon
and
Force It
,
UFO
had finally ascended to the first division of British hard rock. And after hiring a second guitarist and keyboard player in
Danny Peyronnel
Schenker
Mogg
led the group back into the studio to record their fifth album,
No Heavy Petting
. A noticeably cautious effort,
Petting
stuck so close to the rules laid down by
that all the excitement of the band's performance wound up slipping through the cracks. Gutsy opener
"Natural Thing"
was competent enough to become a concert regular, but lukewarm material like
"Can You Roll Her"
"Reasons Love"
simply added nothing new. And bass player
Pete Way
didn't help things any with his only contribution, the plodding, amazingly dull
"On with the Action."
Even the album's best moment, the beautifully executed
"I'm a Loser"
(which unleashes
for one of his most jaw-dropping solos ever), mimics
's
"Out in the Street"
before closing with a piano pattern straight out of progressive rockers
Kansas
'
"No One Together."
The overly dramatic
"Belladonna"
(complete with synthesizer-simulated harpsichord), on the other hand, is mostly a casualty of time; the kind of ballad that was effective enough in its time, but simply hasn't aged well. Thankfully,
would rebound in spades the following year, delivering their best all-around studio effort,
Lights Out
. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia