RAINBOW — Stranger in Us All

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RAINBOW - Stranger in Us All cover
3.50 | 31 ratings | 2 reviews
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Album · 1995

Filed under Hard Rock
By RAINBOW

Tracklist

1. Wolf to the Moon (4:17)
2. Cold Hearted Woman (4:30)
3. Hunting Humans (Insatiable) (5:44)
4. Stand and Fight (5:21)
5. Ariel (5:39)
6. Too Late for Tears (4:54)
7. Black Masquerade (5:35)
8. Silence (4:04)
9. Hall of the Mountain King (5:31)
10. Still I'm Sad (5:24)

Total Time: 51:03

Line-up/Musicians

- Ritchie Blackmore / guitar
- Doogie White / vocals
- John O’Reilly / drums
- Greg Smith / bass
- Paul Morris / keyboards
with
- Mitch Weiss / harmonica
- Candice Night / background vocals

About this release

Full length, BMG, 1995.

Thanks to Pekka, adg211288 for the updates

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RAINBOW STRANGER IN US ALL reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

siLLy puPPy
The 1995 release STRANGER IN US ALL was intended to be guitarist Ritchie Blackmore’s first solo album after permanently retiring the RAINBOW brand name and rejoining / then again leaving the legendary Deep Purple in 1993. Apparently a demand from the BMG label which released the album, Blackmore was forced to resurrect the RAINBOW moniker and put together the umpteenth version of the band that absolutely nobody was expecting to see make a comeback especially in the alternative everything mid-1990s when the grunge scene had all but made 80s hard rockers obsolete.

Blackmore was always up to the challenge and instead of recruiting past members to form some sort of reunion album took on the bold decision to recruit completely unknown but promising musicians who could reinterpret the classic RAINBOW sounds of the past and take them somewhere new. Blackmore was wise to avoid jumping on the bandwagon that many an 80s band did by trying to adapt to the alternative 90s and instead simply looked to the past and picked up right where the last RAINBOW album “Bent Out Of Shape” left off in 1983 thus making it a 12 year gap between albums and going back further by using the moniker RITCHIE BLACKMORE’S RAINBOW which hadn’t donned an album cover since the 1975 debut.

The new lineup included American bassist Greg Smith, drummer John O’Reilly, keyboardist Paul Morris, Blackmore’s wife, backing vocalist and future partner in Blackmore’s Night, Candice Night and on lead vocals Scotland born Doogie White who was somewhat of a departure from all the other vocalists who came before with a grittier heavy blues rock style of singing. Despite the congregation of unseasoned newbies on board STRANGER IN US ALL was an amazingly great album of 70s and 80s sounding heavy metal and hard rock tracks that excelled in crafting catchy guitar driven hooks and strong melodic emotive lyrics which sort of mined RAINBOW’s past and included not only fantasy themes but more mainstream themes as well. The album was a true surprise in its consistency and although while not performing well in the English speaking world, did amazingly well in Europe and Japan where it was certified gold.

Little wonder the American scene completely ignored this RAINBOW release since it basically gave the middle finger to anything 90s and proudly looked back and delivered one of the strongest sets of tracks in the band’s eight album canon. The majority of the tracks were written by Blackmore and Doogie White. The opening “Wolf To The Moon” is by far the most metal on board and evoked the Dio years of RAINBOW along with more power metal intensity in the guitar riffs however the album cools down a bit in the energy department and remains in simple hard rock territory for the majority of the album’s near 52-minute run. “Cold Hearted Woman” sounds more like something off of a Whitesnake album from the 1980 timeline but the following “Hunting Humans (Insatiable)” provides one of the catchiest bass stomp driven grooves with the most instantly addictive hooks.

“Stand And Fight,” “Ariel” and “Too Late For Tears” also focus on heavy blues rock with strong hooks, dirty raw rhythms and despite being completely traditional are extremely well designed and performed. “Black Masquerade” reminds most of the Joe Lynn Turner years both compositionally and vocally. “Silence” is probably the track that sounds the most different from any other RAINBOW tracks despite a bluesy based riffing but still recognizable as a RAINBOW tune. The closing two tracks are the most different. “Hall Of The Mountain King” is a reinterpretation of an Edward Grieg piece from his most famous piece from “Peer Gynt” only arranged into a rockin’ the classic hard rock extravaganza with Doogie White adding power metal vocals. The closing “Still I’m Sad” is a Yardbirds cover and if you have the Japanese version, the bonus track “Emotional Crime” is included but nothing extraordinary different to get excited about as it’s just another blues rock song.

Very rarely do such comeback albums yield anything worthy of investigating but Blackmore hit a home run with this little gem. While nothing that would make anybody love the band if they weren’t already on board, STRANGER IN US ALL is nevertheless an extraordinarily strong album that takes RAINBOW to its next level and obvious conclusion that didn’t quite happen before Blackmore suddenly shut things down and jumped back on the Deep Purple bandwagon the decade prior. For anyone who stayed with RAINBOW after Dio jumped ship, this is definitely one that should not be missed as it is chock filled with instantly addictive hard rock hooks and excellent instrumental interplay that sounds like a band of well seasoned professionals but are in fact all brand new to the RAINBOW scene. This was Blackmore’s last album as a rock performer for 20 years before forming Blackmore’s Night with his wife Candice Night and then eventually reviving the RAINBOW brand once again in 2015. Will there be another album from this band? Who knows but if this is the last one ever made, it’s certainly not a bad way to go out.

Members reviews

SouthSideoftheSky
Blackmore's Masquerade

The sound of this album is closer to that of the Ronnie James Dio-era Rainbow albums than to the Joe Lynn Turner ones, or for that matter the sound of Ritchie's post-Rainbow Folk Pop project Blackmore's Night. But you could say that this album has traces of all three elements. This is Hard Rock with some AOR and also some slight Folk and Symphonic influences. Candice Night contributes some backing vocals at the end of the excellent Ariel (a song that was recently performed live by Blackmore's Night, see their Paris Moon DVD).

The album opens on a strong note with Wolf To The Moon and there are several good moments. The best tracks are the aforementioned Ariel and Black Masquerade. Also the Symphonic Metal version of the classic Hall Of The Mountain King I find quite enjoyable. The progressive moments of this album is largely confined to these three tracks. Black Masquerade has a somewhat folky instrumental section with great acoustic guitar play and a short (and somewhat subdued) harpsichord solo (or something that is supposed to sound like a harpsichord!). Apart from that the keyboards largely take a back seat on this album, unfortunately.

The bluesy rocker Stand And Fight is rather boring and generic and brings this album down a bit. The rest is pretty straightforward Hard Rock, not bad but not remarkable either.

Still I'm Sad is, of course, a classic Rainbow number that used to be an instrumental (originally from the debut album), but this version has vocals added.

Overall I think it is clear that Stranger In Us All was the best Rainbow album in a very long time; vastly superior to any of the Joe Lynn Turner-era albums and also far better than the recent (at the time) Deep Purple albums. Sadly, this was to be the last ever Rainbow album. Ritchie went on to create the Folk Pop band Blackmore's Night to the everlasting bafflement of his long time followers. As I hinted at above, if you listen very carefully to this album you might hear some traces of what was to come. Personally, I think that he went too far with the Blackmore's Night idea - something in between what can be heard on this album and what was to come in Blackmore's Night, would have been really interesting, I think. Building on the few folky elements of this album but still maintaing a Hard Rock base.

For Ritchie Blackmore fanatics and fans of classic Hard Rock in general, Stranger In Us All is an essential album. For other people this is still a good, but non-essential album.

Ratings only

  • Peacock Feather
  • SilentScream213
  • MagnusPrime
  • karolcia
  • GWLHM76
  • mrblond
  • Bosh66
  • Seven Moons
  • Beyonder
  • michelandrade
  • jahkhula
  • Pekka
  • IndianaJones
  • StargazerSlave
  • KatiLily
  • luanpedi
  • fisciletti
  • stefanbedna
  • Khabarov
  • Lynx33
  • miguellangell
  • pazkual
  • Colt
  • SecondTimeAround
  • Tlön
  • snowman1980
  • abdulbashur
  • slow man
  • Hagbard Celine

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