Eat the Heat explained

Eat the Heat
Type:studio
Artist:Accept
Cover:Eat the Heat.jpg
Released:11 May 1989
Recorded:September 1988–January 1989
Studio:Dierks Studios, Stommeln, Cologne, Germany
Genre:
Length:53:11
Label:RCA/BMG Ariola (Europe)
Epic (US)
Producer:Dieter Dierks
Prev Title:Russian Roulette
Prev Year:1986
Next Title:Staying a Life
Next Year:1990

Eat the Heat is the eighth studio album by German heavy metal band Accept, released in 1989. It was recorded at Dierks Studios in Cologne from September 1988 to January 1989. Although Jim Stacey is presented as rhythm guitar player in the album line-up, the album credits also state that all guitar work on the album was played by Wolf Hoffmann. Stacey did perform second guitar live with the band.Until 2010's Blood of the Nations, this was Accept's only album without Udo Dirkschneider as lead vocalist. U.D.O. contributes with crowd vocals on "Turn the Wheel". U.D.O. has also covered the song "X-T-C" on the 2001 compilation A Tribute to Accept II. Accept later recorded "Generation Clash II" based on "Generation Clash" with Udo Dirkschneider on vocals for their 1994 album Death Row. U.D.O. will still regularly perform tracks from this album, including "X-T-C".

Critical reception

The Rolling Stone Album Guide wrote that "though the album delivers much of the punch of its predecessors, the songs seem flat by comparison."

Track listings

All lyrics and music written by Accept and Deaffy.

European version, L. P.

U.S. version

2014 remastered version

Personnel

Band members

Additional Musicians

Production

Supporting tour

The Eat the Heat tour consisted of David Reece on vocals, Wolf Hoffmann on lead guitar, Peter Baltes on bass, Stefan Kaufmann on drums, and Jim Stacey (ex-Break Point) on rhythm guitar. The first leg of the tour consisted of the band headlining at small clubs around the U.S. for about two months. Kaufmann sustained a back injury during this period, and was replaced by House of Lords drummer Ken Mary. Accept then began a North American act with W.A.S.P. and Metal Church. The tour overall was a disappointment, plagued with poor attendance numbers and a failure to draw the American crowds that the band had hoped to appeal to with this new lineup. A rumored behind-stage fight at the Vic Theater in Chicago between Reece and Baltes led to the band splitting up, and the tour was subsequently cancelled.[2]

Charts

Chart (1989)Peak
position
Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[3] 25
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[4] 87

Notes and References

  1. Book: Popoff, Martin . Martin Popoff . The Big Book of Hair Metal: The Illustrated Oral History of Heavy Metal's Debauched Decade . 2014 . 170 . Voyageur Press . 978-0-76034-546-7.
  2. Web site: ACCEPT's WOLF HOFFMANN Looks Back on 'Eat the Heat' Album: 'It Was a Dark Time in Our History'. 10 January 2021.
  3. Book: Pennanen, Timo. Sisältää hitin – levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972. 1st. Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava. Helsinki. 2006. 978-951-1-21053-5 . fi.
  4. Web site: http://www.oricon.co.jp/prof/artist/32971/ranking/cd_album/ . ja:アクセプト - アクセプトのアルバム売り上げランキング . 10 June 2014 . . ja.