When it was finally released in 1983 by (very) independent
Ebony Records,
Savage's
Loose'n'Lethal was a walking, breathing musical anachronism. Containing a batch of songs which had been stewing for years as the band slogged unknown through local pubs and clubs, desperately looking for a break, it was a direct throwback to 1980, when the
New Wave of British Heavy Metal (which had spawned the group) was in full-flight and dominating the U.K.'s music weeklies. But by the time of its belated release, musical tastes had evolved considerably and the original onslaught of
NWOBHM bands had been decimated by time and failed returns, leaving only a few major players like the unstoppable
Iron Maiden, the fast-rising
Def Leppard, and the quickly fading
Saxon still prospering in its wake. There was therefore little hope for a rough and tumble group like
Savage to make any serious headway, no matter how energetic and exciting their sound. Proudly wearing their humongous debt to
Judas Priest on their sleeves, the quartet were hardly reinventing the wheel here either, but despite their vaguely familiar riffs, solid
heavy metal anthems like
"Let it Loose," "Cry Wolf" (
AC/DC),
"The China Run" (
Thin Lizzy), and
"Back on the Road" (
Saxon) still manage to entertain. They still couldn't rescue
Savage from historical oblivion, and the band soon became just a small footnote in
heavy metal lore. [Note: Audiophiles take heed, the
Metal Blade CD reissue of
Loose'n'Lethal sounds very sketchy, with much of the album plagued by tape noise and fuzz -- especially when played at high volumes.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia