Bonded By Blood – Christopher Thelen

Bonded By Blood
Combat Records, 1985
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Apr 1, 1999

Back when I was in college, while I was becoming enlightened
about all sorts of music, I was able to expand my knowledge of
heavy metal a little bit. I started listening to groups that I had
heard of while in high school, but had never really heard or gotten
into. One such band was San Francisco-based Exodus, a band who are
probably better known for the guitarist they lost to another band
than for their music.

Of the three big California thrash acts of the time – Metallica
(who acquired former Exodus guitarist Kirk Hammett), Megadeth and
Exodus – only Exodus never really made it into the big time,
through no apparent fault of their own. But all three bands came
out with debut albums that were heavy on crunch and speed, if not
on the best production values. This is probably the one limiting
factor for Exodus on their 1985 debut
Bonded By Blood. (Thanks to eBay auctioner Dallas Peters, I
was able to get my hands on the band’s first three albums.)

After several listens to this tape, I kept wanting to citicize
the singing of lead screamer Paul Baloff – namely, that he doesn’t
do a lot of singing on this album. However, if compared to the
other debut albums from the previously mentioned bands, they too
didn’t always sing, so it would be unfair to single Baloff out in
this regard. Still, it sometimes feels like Baloff is just reading
from the lyric sheet at times, turning tracks like “Bonded By
Blood” into rote exercises. But that’s not to say that Baloff is a
one-dimensional frontman; his work improves as
Bonded By Blood continues.

The musicianship of the rest of the band – guitarists Gary Holt
and Rick Hunolt, bassist Rob McKillop and drummer Tom Hunting – is
solid enough, and the songwriting is just as good as their
contemporaries. Tracks like “A Lesson In Violence,” “Metal Command”
and “Deliver Us To Evil” all show the promise that Exodus had, and
make one wonder why they didn’t reach the levels of success that
other groups in the same genre did.

However, the overall sound of
Bonded By Blood is something that could have used more work.
I don’t know if the sound was fixed in any remixes, but on my tape
copy, there’s room for improvement. I would have brought the treble
level up a bit, turned up the volume on McKillop’s bass lines, and
removed the echo effect from Baloff’s vocals. The band’s sound has
enough natural bass, so one wouldn’t need to mess with that.

Bonded By Blood is a decent first attempt that is undermined
by a less-than-stellar production effort, but is still an album
that is worth searching out and experiencing. Interestingly enough,
Baloff was brought back into the band not too long ago, and the
word I’ve heard is that they’ve recaptured the old magic from the
early albums. With metal primed to be the next big music genre
again, it could be a match made in heaven.

Rating: B-

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