The Courts of Chaos by Manilla Road (CD, 1990)

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Artist: Mark Shelton. Title: Courts of Chaos. Record Label: Iron Glory. Format: CD. No Of Discs: 1. Further Details.

About this product

Product Identifiers

Record LabelGestrichen
UPC4042133010224
eBay Product ID (ePID)16050147330

Product Key Features

FormatCD
Release Year1990
GenreHeavy Metal
Run Time58 Mins 7 Seconds
ArtistManilla Road
Release TitleThe Courts of Chaos

Additional Product Features

Number of Discs1
Additional informationManilla Road's final album prior to the disintegration of their "classic" lineup, 1990s The Courts of Chaos found vocalist, guitarist and guiding force Mark Shelton also playing the role of diplomat between his two estranged bandmates, bassist Scott Parks and drummer Randy Foxe, who were reportedly no longer on speaking terms. Needless to say, such tensions were hardly conducive to a healthy and productive recording environment, and so The Courts of Chaos would, not surprisingly, fall well short of Manilla Road's best efforts from the mid-'80s. Then again, it was no more flawed than its direct predecessor, the production-challenged Out of the Abyss, with representative tracks like "Dig Me No Grave," "From the Grave," and "A Touch of Madness" clearly begging for more liveliness and passion in their performances, while frequently recycling old ideas with dispiritingly inferior, at times seemingly atonal results. Overall, though, most of these songs are simply too damn long; with "D.O.A." probably qualifying as the biggest offender for hanging onto a repetitive Randy Foxe synthesizer figure for what seems like ages, then finally bursting into thrash-action with what sounds like a drum machine -- odd. At least amends are partly made with the similarly synth-addled "The Prophecy," which, along with a generally engaging fantasy epic called "The Book of Skelos," and the quite memorable title track, deliver rare positive exceptions to the album's mostly negative rule. More than anything, The Courts of Chaos sounds like a failed, last-gasp attempt on Manilla Road's part to recover the magic of their early years just as its last wisps were burning out; a mournful occasion to be sure, and the beginning of a long darkness for their fans, which would only be lifted a decade later. Better late than never, though. [Iron Glory's 2001 reissue of The Courts of Chaos tacks on a live rendition of Manilla Road's early-days favorite "Far Side of the Sun."] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
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