Yup, time for another anniversary article. 1986 is definitely a peculiar year, as rock and metal were evolving in a lot of directions by now. Still, plenty of great songs and albums came out, so let's take a look.
Starting off, we have Ozzy himself, carrying on his solo career with The Ultimate Sin. Featuring the big hit "Shot in the Dark" (not to be confused with the Great White album of the same name that also came out this year), it would also be the last Ozzy album to feature the fretwork of Jake E. Lee. Another big name featuring some lineup changes was Van Halen, giving us 5150 and new singer Sammy Hagar, dividing the fans for many years to come.However, the big metal shift came with the advent of thrash metal. After kicking around for a few years, bands starting coming out with monster records that would expand the fanbase as well as metal's diversity of sound. While I generally don't cover a lot of thrash on this blog, I can't deny the melodic chops of Metallica's Master of Puppets and Megedeth's Peace Sells...But Who's Buying. These two albums would become thrash classics for the genre, and it's easy to see why. Proggy elements mixed with fierce riffing and shredding, and some iconic vocal hooks, ensured that these bands meant business.
Of course, pop metal was only getting bigger. Europe would finally crack the US with their third album The Final Countdown, Poison's debut Look What the Cat Dragged In also did well with the singles "I Want Action" and "Talk Dirty to Me," Ratt followed up their second album Dancing Undercover, Cinderella gave us Night Songs, and Bon Jovi's Slippery When Wet would go to #1 thanks to their three massive singles. Even Judas Priest started to glam it up with Turbo, putting a little color in their classic black leather look.
Metal certainly dominated things by this point of the 80s, but rock was still going strong, in it's own way. AC/DC found success with the single "Who Made Who," Journey was able to work with Steve Perry's health to release Raised on Radio, Genesis continued their pop success with Invisible Touch, and Queen mixed up their sound even more with A Kind of Magic. Even Boston was finally able to work out their legal troubles and released Third Stage, featuring the big track "Amanda."
Rock was certainly in a lot of different places by 1986, leading to greater diversification later on, and you can find more of that in the playlist I've provided below. As always, let me know if I've missed something. Until then, rock on! \m/
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