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Videos Album: Seventh Star1986

Seventh Star
Studio album by
Released28 January 1986 (1986-01-28)[1]
RecordedJune–August 1985[2]
Studio
  • Cherokee (Los Angeles)
  • Cheshire Sound (Atlanta)
Genre
Length35:00
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerJeff Glixman
Black Sabbath chronology
Born Again
(1983)
Seventh Star
(1986)
The Eternal Idol
(1987)
Singles from Seventh Star
  1. "No Stranger to Love"
    Released: 1986 (EU)

No videos available

Seventh Star

Black Sabbath

1986 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 28 Enero 1986 · Fecha Grabación: Junio 1985 - Agosto 1985
    Discográfica: Warner Bros. · Estudio de grabación: Cherokee (Los Angeles); Cheshire Sound (Atlanta) · Productor: Jeff Glixman

    Seventh Star is the twelfth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released on 28 January 1986 in the United States and on 21 February 1986 in the United Kingdom,[5] it features founding guitarist Tony Iommi alongside musicians Geoff Nicholls, Eric Singer, and Dave Spitz, playing keyboards, drums, and bass, respectively, and Glenn Hughes, ex-Deep Purple and ex-Trapeze vocalist, as lead singer. The album was the group`s first release without bassist and primary lyricist Geezer Butler, who left the band in 1984 after the Born Again tour. It was originally written, recorded, and intended to be the first solo album by Iommi. Because of the pressures from Warner Bros. Records and the prompting of band manager Don Arden, the record was billed as Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi. Despite the issues behind the release`s production, it earned moderate commercial success, reaching #27 in the UK and #78 on the Billboard 200 chart.[6]

    Album information

    Leer más

    Review

    Seventh Star is the twelfth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released on 28 January 1986 in the United States and on 21 February 1986 in the United Kingdom,[5] it features founding guitarist Tony Iommi alongside musicians Geoff Nicholls, Eric Singer, and Dave Spitz, playing keyboards, drums, and bass, respectively, and Glenn Hughes, ex-Deep Purple and ex-Trapeze vocalist, as lead singer. The album was the group`s first release without bassist and primary lyricist Geezer Butler, who left the band in 1984 after the Born Again tour. It was originally written, recorded, and intended to be the first solo album by Iommi. Because of the pressures from Warner Bros. Records and the prompting of band manager Don Arden, the record was billed as Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi. Despite the issues behind the release`s production, it earned moderate commercial success, reaching #27 in the UK and #78 on the Billboard 200 chart.[6]

    Album information

    Leer más

    As was the case with its predecessor, Born Again, this album was not intended to be a Black Sabbath record. Last-minute pressure from Warner Bros. stemmed from the belief that it was likely to sell more with the famous name. Its sound is a drastic (and intentional) departure from the trademark Sabbath sound. Many of the songs have a very hard rock sound, while some contain a bluesy feel (especially "Heart Like a Wheel"). Seventh Star was the first album to feature long-time keyboardist Geoff Nicholls as an official band member.[7]

    "It seemed to me like the band was on its last legs and my heart just went out to Tony," recalled former drummer Bill Ward. "I thought, `God, how much more can he take?` or `How much more does he want?`… What I saw was a great band I just felt was diminishing."[8]

    The promo-single and video version of "No Stranger to Love" had additional harmony vocals added by Hughes to make it more "radio-friendly". Actress Denise Crosby, who would later portray Tasha Yar in Star Trek: The Next Generation, was featured in the video.

    A tour for the album featured Hughes only at the first few shows. He was fired five dates into the tour, and replaced by Ray Gillen, who completed the North American and European legs of the tour, though several dates in the US were cancelled. W.A.S.P. and Anthrax were opening acts on the North American tour.[citation needed]

    Hughes has performed "No Stranger to Love", "Seventh Star" and "Heart Like a Wheel" at some of his live concerts.[citation needed] "I really like Seventh Star," Tony Martin told Sabbath fanzine Southern Cross, "mainly because I admire Glenn Hughes` voice."[9]

    Seventh Star was rereleased in Europe on 1 November 2010, as a two-disc special edition. Disc 2 includes a concert recorded in 1986, with Gillen on vocals. The single version of No Stranger to Love is a bonus track on disc 1.[10]

    Reviews and reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Classic Rock5/10[12]
    Martin Popoff7/10[13]
    (The New) Rolling Stone Album Guide[11]

    The album peaked at #78 on the Billboard 200 chart.[6] Some retrospective critical assessments of the album have been negative; for example, The New Rolling Stone Album Guide rated the release only two out of five stars.[11]

    However, critic Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic gave Seventh Star a mixed to positive review, praising what he saw as the "fiery tunefulness" that makes "aggressive hard rockers like "In for the Kill," "Turn to Stone," and "Danger Zone" uncommonly catchy". However, he argued that the songwriting and vocal work fell flat on songs such as the album`s title track. He stated generally that he found the release an "often misunderstood and underrated album".[6]

    Reviews from the period were more positive. A reviewer for the magazine Kerrang! gave Seventh Star a perfect score of five out of five.[14]

    Track listing

    Standard Edition

    Music by Tony Iommi; lyrics by Tony Iommi, Glenn Hughes, Geoff Nicholls and Jeff Glixman.

    Side A
    No.TitleLength
    1."In for the Kill"3:42
    2."No Stranger to Love"4:29
    3."Turn to Stone"3:30
    4."Sphinx (The Guardian)"1:11
    5."Seventh Star"5:21

    Side B
    No.TitleLength
    6."Danger Zone"4:25
    7."Heart Like a Wheel"6:38
    8."Angry Heart"3:06
    9."In Memory..."2:35

    2010 Deluxe Edition Disc 1 Bonus Track
    No.TitleLength
    10."No Stranger to Love" (Single remix)4:00

    2010 Deluxe Edition disc 2

    Recorded at Hammersmith Odeon in London, England on 2 June 1986, featuring Ray Gillen performing vocals

    No.TitleLength
    1."The Mob Rules"2:59
    2."Danger Zone"4:44
    3."War Pigs"8:10
    4."Seventh Star"5:01
    5."Die Young"3:58
    6."Black Sabbath"9:33
    7."N.I.B."1:37
    8."Neon Knights"4:36
    9."Paranoid"3:17

    A contemporary South Korean release sported a much reduced and reordered track listing.

    Side A
    No.TitleLength
    1."Sphinx (The Guardian)"1:21
    2."Turn to Stone"3:27
    3."No Stranger to Love"4:28

    Side B
    No.TitleLength
    4."Heart Like a Wheel"6:35
    5."Angry Heart"3:06
    6."In Memory..."2:34

    Personnel

    Black Sabbath

    • Tony Iommi – guitars
    • Glenn Hughes – vocals
    • Eric Singer – drums
    • Dave "The Beast" Spitz – bass
    • Geoff Nicholls – keyboards

    Additional musician

    • Gordon Copley – bass (on "No Stranger to Love")

    Release history

    Region

    Date

    Label

    United States

    January 1986

    Warner Bros. Records

    Canada

    January 1986

    Warner Bros. Records

    Europe

    February 1986

    Vertigo Records

    Japan

    March 1986

    Nippon Phonogram

    South Korea

    May 1986

    Vertigo Records

    United Kingdom

    1996

    Castle Communications

    United Kingdom

    2004

    Sanctuary Records

    United Kingdom

    2010

    Sanctuary Records/Universal Music Group

    Charts

    Chart (1986)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[15]

    88

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[16]

    66

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[17]

    10

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[18]

    51

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[19]

    17

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[20]

    11

    UK Albums (OCC)[21]

    27

    US Billboard 200[22]

    78

    Seventh Star is the twelfth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath. Released on 28 January 1986 in the United States and on 21 February 1986 in the United Kingdom,[5] it features founding guitarist Tony Iommi alongside musicians Geoff Nicholls, Eric Singer, and Dave Spitz, playing keyboards, drums, and bass, respectively, and Glenn Hughes, ex-Deep Purple and ex-Trapeze vocalist, as lead singer. The album was the group`s first release without bassist and primary lyricist Geezer Butler, who left the band in 1984 after the Born Again tour. It was originally written, recorded, and intended to be the first solo album by Iommi. Because of the pressures from Warner Bros. Records and the prompting of band manager Don Arden, the record was billed as Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi. Despite the issues behind the release`s production, it earned moderate commercial success, reaching #27 in the UK and #78 on the Billboard 200 chart.[6]

    Album information

    As was the case with its predecessor, Born Again, this album was not intended to be a Black Sabbath record. Last-minute pressure from Warner Bros. stemmed from the belief that it was likely to sell more with the famous name. Its sound is a drastic (and intentional) departure from the trademark Sabbath sound. Many of the songs have a very hard rock sound, while some contain a bluesy feel (especially "Heart Like a Wheel"). Seventh Star was the first album to feature long-time keyboardist Geoff Nicholls as an official band member.[7]

    "It seemed to me like the band was on its last legs and my heart just went out to Tony," recalled former drummer Bill Ward. "I thought, `God, how much more can he take?` or `How much more does he want?`… What I saw was a great band I just felt was diminishing."[8]

    The promo-single and video version of "No Stranger to Love" had additional harmony vocals added by Hughes to make it more "radio-friendly". Actress Denise Crosby, who would later portray Tasha Yar in Star Trek: The Next Generation, was featured in the video.

    A tour for the album featured Hughes only at the first few shows. He was fired five dates into the tour, and replaced by Ray Gillen, who completed the North American and European legs of the tour, though several dates in the US were cancelled. W.A.S.P. and Anthrax were opening acts on the North American tour.[citation needed]

    Hughes has performed "No Stranger to Love", "Seventh Star" and "Heart Like a Wheel" at some of his live concerts.[citation needed] "I really like Seventh Star," Tony Martin told Sabbath fanzine Southern Cross, "mainly because I admire Glenn Hughes` voice."[9]

    Seventh Star was rereleased in Europe on 1 November 2010, as a two-disc special edition. Disc 2 includes a concert recorded in 1986, with Gillen on vocals. The single version of No Stranger to Love is a bonus track on disc 1.[10]

    Reviews and reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Classic Rock5/10[12]
    Martin Popoff7/10[13]
    (The New) Rolling Stone Album Guide[11]

    The album peaked at #78 on the Billboard 200 chart.[6] Some retrospective critical assessments of the album have been negative; for example, The New Rolling Stone Album Guide rated the release only two out of five stars.[11]

    However, critic Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic gave Seventh Star a mixed to positive review, praising what he saw as the "fiery tunefulness" that makes "aggressive hard rockers like "In for the Kill," "Turn to Stone," and "Danger Zone" uncommonly catchy". However, he argued that the songwriting and vocal work fell flat on songs such as the album`s title track. He stated generally that he found the release an "often misunderstood and underrated album".[6]

    Reviews from the period were more positive. A reviewer for the magazine Kerrang! gave Seventh Star a perfect score of five out of five.[14]

    Track listing

    Standard Edition

    Music by Tony Iommi; lyrics by Tony Iommi, Glenn Hughes, Geoff Nicholls and Jeff Glixman.

    Side A
    No.TitleLength
    1."In for the Kill"3:42
    2."No Stranger to Love"4:29
    3."Turn to Stone"3:30
    4."Sphinx (The Guardian)"1:11
    5."Seventh Star"5:21

    Side B
    No.TitleLength
    6."Danger Zone"4:25
    7."Heart Like a Wheel"6:38
    8."Angry Heart"3:06
    9."In Memory..."2:35

    2010 Deluxe Edition Disc 1 Bonus Track
    No.TitleLength
    10."No Stranger to Love" (Single remix)4:00

    2010 Deluxe Edition disc 2

    Recorded at Hammersmith Odeon in London, England on 2 June 1986, featuring Ray Gillen performing vocals

    No.TitleLength
    1."The Mob Rules"2:59
    2."Danger Zone"4:44
    3."War Pigs"8:10
    4."Seventh Star"5:01
    5."Die Young"3:58
    6."Black Sabbath"9:33
    7."N.I.B."1:37
    8."Neon Knights"4:36
    9."Paranoid"3:17

    A contemporary South Korean release sported a much reduced and reordered track listing.

    Side A
    No.TitleLength
    1."Sphinx (The Guardian)"1:21
    2."Turn to Stone"3:27
    3."No Stranger to Love"4:28

    Side B
    No.TitleLength
    4."Heart Like a Wheel"6:35
    5."Angry Heart"3:06
    6."In Memory..."2:34

    Personnel

    Black Sabbath

    • Tony Iommi – guitars
    • Glenn Hughes – vocals
    • Eric Singer – drums
    • Dave "The Beast" Spitz – bass
    • Geoff Nicholls – keyboards

    Additional musician

    • Gordon Copley – bass (on "No Stranger to Love")

    Release history

    Region

    Date

    Label

    United States

    January 1986

    Warner Bros. Records

    Canada

    January 1986

    Warner Bros. Records

    Europe

    February 1986

    Vertigo Records

    Japan

    March 1986

    Nippon Phonogram

    South Korea

    May 1986

    Vertigo Records

    United Kingdom

    1996

    Castle Communications

    United Kingdom

    2004

    Sanctuary Records

    United Kingdom

    2010

    Sanctuary Records/Universal Music Group

    Charts

    Chart (1986)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[15]

    88

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[16]

    66

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[17]

    10

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[18]

    51

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[19]

    17

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[20]

    11

    UK Albums (OCC)[21]

    27

    US Billboard 200[22]

    78