As soon as I could I tracked down the only other record by D&D available in local stores, their masterpiece Diabolical Advances. This album was heavier, more complex and darker than Back to Basics. You wouldn't believe the hours I wasted trying to figure out the lyrics. "Segment by Segment" and "Battle of the Psi Lords" still baffle me to this day. I've looked the lyrics up online but I'm just not convinced that Gygax is speaking English in these songs.
My buddy Dave was one of the first people I turned on to the Dungeons & Dragons sound. He somehow managed to track down a copy of 1983's Towards Immortality before I did. The sound was a lot like Back to Basics, but clearly it was lightened up for radio play. Even so, track three, "The Death of Aleena" anchored this album to the stuff we already knew. Dark, heady stuff for a kid. It was about this time that the first greatest hits album for the group appeared, Unearthed, which featured stuff from albums we hadn't even heard of and a great cover of Blue Oyster Cult's "Career of Evil".
The 1989 release Second Chances was the first time as a kid that I realized a band could change in ways that you didn't want them to. Me and my friends still bought and listened to this album, but we could hear the corporate-rock glitz screwing up the heavy sound we used to love. So we turned to other bands, mostly Van Halen and BattleTech, as I recall. The EP With Skill and Power only cemented my opinion that D&D was going in the wrong direction musically.
By 1999 I was old enough to feel nostalgia for the good ol' days, so the release of Third Time's the Charm was welcome. It wasn't the smack in the face of Diabolical Advances or Back to Basics, but it had an interesting sound of its own. The punkish "Behold the Icons" and the utterly inexplicable "Attack of Opportunity" were pretty grating, but I really enjoyed most of the rest of the songs on this one. I played this and the follow-up live album, Half A Loaf of Rock You more than any record I had bought in years. The new greatest hits album, the unimaginatively-titled Unearthed II, was also pretty great.
What's funny about the '77 D&D release, Surgeon of the Underworld, is that I owned it for years
, as I bought it during the gap between the With Skill and Power EP and Third Time's A Charm. But it wasn't until a couple years ago that I actually bothered to give it a listen. What a fool I was. Here in one disc was everything I loved about the entire D&D corpus. To this day I can't believe that both "The Wonderful Scrolls of Doctor Holmes" and "Melee Resolution" were omitted from both Unearthed volumes. They had room in Unearthed II for a cover of "Sunshine Superman" but for nothing from this album? WTF?
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