Rock City, Narita, Fire Down Under, Restless Breed, Born in America...
These are the pioneering, superlative heavy metal records that represent
the classic first decade of Brooklyn's Riot's, before the band would
break up, eventually storming back with Thundersteel and The Privilege
of Power, existing to this day as Riot V after the shocking death from
Crohn's disease of guitarist and leader Mark Reale. Riot's is a tale of
opportunities missed, of a band ahead of the curve, and of a band from
which both its classic era lead singers - Guy Speranza and Rhett
Forrester - are now dead, as is, of course, Mark Reale, a quiet man who,
fatefully, wanted to leave the business to others and just play his
heavy metal. But this book is not just about the '75 to '85 period of
the band that spawned one of the finest metal records of all time,
1981's Fire Down Under. Even if the classics framed by those ten years
get the full, dedicated chapter, track-by-track Popoff treatment, the
subsequent rich and substantial catalogue of the band is discussed as
well, right up to the present day where Riot shines on. But still, the
focus is on songs like `Warrior', `49er', `Road Racin'', `Outlaw',
`Don't Hold Back', `Altar of the King', `Violent Crimes', `Vigilante
Killer' and of course the insanely anthemic `Swords and Tequila', as we
celebrate a New York institution that is perhaps the shining example of
the term, "honorary New Wave of British Heavy Metal" band.