The year was 1979, and a brash new breed of heavy metal-maker was busy
shovelling dirt over the death of punk, while simultaneously mourning
the waning energies - or outright demises - of hard rock's earlier
heroes, namely Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath and Uriah Heep.
In Wheels of Steel: The Explosive Early Years of the NWOBHM, Martin
Popoff charts the long ramp-up to this detonation of headbanging mania
through the late `70s, arriving at the penultimate first years of this
flash phenomenon - namely 1979 and 1980. Utilising his celebrated oral
history method - rich with detailed chronological entries to frame the
story, Popoff blasts through all of the reasons the NWOBHM had to
happen, and then drops down on all the singles, albums, live events and
conceptual trends studding those remarkable two years, an era that
essentially marks a coming-out party for heavy metal. Come join Martin,
along with dozens of his old school headbanging buddies, as they
together tell the tale of this ersatz genre's birth and mischievous,
defiant adolescence - heavy metal would forever be transformed, and
Wheels of Steel celebrates plainly and yet powerfully, all the reasons
why.