Another month, another Anniversary Article! 1989 is an interesting year, as rock was in the middle of a lot of transition. Grunge and alternative rock was slowly growing, pop metal was as big as ever, thrash and death metal were finding their audiences, and other genres were bubbling up. Here's how this year went!
The year starts of with a number of big hits, as Skid Row and Warrant release their debut albums. The former provided "18 to Life," "Youth Gone Wild," and the big ballad "I Remember You," while Warrant was about the "Down Boys" and "Heaven." Great White would soon follow with ...Twice Shy, and the sort of title track cover song "Once Bitten Twice Shy."However, the beginning of the year, saw other iconic releases, such as Doro's Force Majeure, her first album on her own, Metal Church picking up Mike Howe for Blessing in Disguise, and Dream Theater released their debut with When Dream and Day Unite, carving a small niche for progressive metal that they would widen later. Meanwhile, Seattle was getting a taste of the future with Nirvana's debut Bleach and Soundgarden's Louder than Love. In the midst of all this, Jon Anderson would leave Yes and form a group with former Yes members called Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe. Their self-titled album would be a unique prog rock highlight for the year.
As the year goes on, we get more epic hits, with Mötley Crüe's Dr. Feelgood being a massive single factory, including the title track, "Kickstart My Heart," and "Same Ol' Situation." Alice Cooper would comeback with his own take on the genre with "Poison," John Sykes would form Blue Murder and record their debut album, while his former bandmates Whitesnake would carry on with Slip of the Tongue, featuring "Judgment Day."
However, in my opinion, the winner of the year is Candlemass. Their fourth album Tales of Creation is peak doom metal, in my opinion. I know I don't talk much about the genre on the blog, but this album is my standard for what a good doom metal album sounds like. From the epic riff on "Under the Oak," to the atmospheric plodding on "Dark Revelations" and "The Edge of Heaven," and even the sudden high-speed instrumental "In the Unfathomed Tower" are all highlights. A favorite album of mine, from any year.
Wrapping things up, we see Blind Guardian's follow up Follow the Blind, featuring their classic closer "Valhalla" with Kai Hansen showing up with some vocals of his own. Stratovarius released their debut Fright Night, being more of a speed metal group before they became power metal titans. Guitar legend Michael Schenker teamed up with Robin McAuley and release Save Yourself, a unique team up that probably should have lasted longer. Finally, Savatage would really lean into a Queen-like theatrical style with Gutter Ballet, definitely showing signs of where they would end up, to say nothing of their Christmas-themed spin-off.
So that's another year wrapped up again. Once again, check out the playlist below for more, and let me know in the comments what else stands out to you from this year. In the meantime, I've got some more albums to listen to, so keep an eye out for more reviews. Until then, rock on! \m/