HAVANNA HEAT CLUB – Specially Made For Your Satisfaction

HAVANNA HEAT CLUB - Specially Made For Your Satisfaction
  • 6/10
    HAVANNA HEAT CLUB - Specially Made For Your Satisfaction - 6/10
6/10

Summary

Nice Boyz / SAOL
Release date: November 4, 2008

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From the Capitol of Germany come Havanna Heat Club who took their name from an obscure seventies porn movie. Since the guys are still young, the question is… how do they know that flick?

Anyway, their music is also anything but old fashioned. Specially Made For Your Satisfaction is, after their self titled 2005 release, the second album to deliver an entertaining mixture of Punk, Stoner and Rock ‘n’ Roll full of sweat and action, which regularly is accompanied by a laid back Desert Rock attitude. What sounds difficult to combine at first glance, turns into a winning combination several times over the course of the next 36 minutes.

The album offers variety from fast, straight rockers and a hand full of  great and catchy melodies. After a few spins the melodic strength becomes obvious, when one just cannot get “Dance In The Darkness” or the extremely catchy “Mr. Paul” out of one’s head. One of the reasons is the average length of the songs that make it easy to listen to the album more than once without becoming bored. Only the song “Welcome To The World” is the exception and with its over four minutes one of the weakest songs on Specially Made For Your Satisfaction.

This kind of rock which the band performed as support act for Australian Rock legend Rose Tattoo works best when the motto is “pedal to the Metal”. The fast “Get Up!” and “Unleashed” are definitely highlights of the album, but one would do them no justice to reduce the band to that kind of songs. Mostly, the compositions are slower, mellower, and often only Johannes Gotaut’s voice which is reminiscent of Lemmy Kilmister at times, saves the tracks from becoming only “normal” Alternative Rock. Except for “Disillusioned With An Easy Mind”, where that failed and which makes this song and the jazzy “Question Of Dose” expendable. The instrumental side is inconspicuous as it is usually the case with bands like this, and the riff lovers will hardly find much to enjoy. It seems the Berlin quartet tried to mix all influences into their sound they could lay their hands on. That makes for a fresh and interesting album, but also means that almost everybody will have a few songs which he will rather skip, and highlights may vary from person to person.

So: The next big thing? Hardly. Worth checking out? Definitely.

Listen to: Get Up!, Dance In The Darkness, Unleashed, Mr. Paul

Author

  • Frank Jaeger

    Frank was a reviewer here at Metal Express Radio, based out of Bavaria, Germany. He has worked in the games industry for more than 20 years, now on the manufacturing side, before on the publishing end. Before this, he edited and handled the layout for a city mag in northern Germany ... maybe that is why he love being part of anything published. Frank got hooked on Metal at the age of 14 when a friend introduced him to AC/DC. They were listening to The Beatles, Madness, and The Police, and he decided they should move on. Well, they did, Back in Black became Frank's first Metal album, and since Germany is reasonably close to England, they had some small New Waves Of British Heavy Metal washing up on their shores: Tygers Of Pan Tang, Samson, Gillan, Iron Maiden, Saxon, Sweet Savage, Diamond Head, etc. If he had to pick his favorite styles, Prog and Power Metal would be at the top of the list.

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