Frost and Fire (album) explained

Frost and Fire
Type:studio
Artist:Cirith Ungol
Cover:FrostAndFire.jpg
Caption:Cover art by Michael Whelan
Released:January 1, 1981
Recorded:April 1980
Studio:Gold Mine Studios, Ventura, California
Label:Liquid Flames Records
Producer:Cirith Ungol
Prev Title:Cirith Ungol
(demo)
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:King of the Dead
Next Year:1984

Frost and Fire is the debut album by the American heavy metal band Cirith Ungol. Its music is generally faster and more simplistic than that of King of the Dead, which saw the band begin to adopt a doom metal style influenced heavily by power metal.

Album information

Frost and Fire was produced by Cirith Ungol and originally self-released through the band's own record label—Liquid Flames Productions—in 1981. The album was re-released in 1984 by Enigma Records, re-released again along with King of the Dead on one CD by One Way Records in 1995, and finally re-released again in September 1999 on Metal Blade Records. A bootleg picture disc version of this LP, limited to 500 hand-numbered copies, also exists. While Michael "Flint" Vujejia is credited as the bass player on this album, it has been confirmed in several interviews that Greg Lindstrom was actually the bassist on this album.[1] In Brazil the lp Frost and Fire was released with the cover of the King of the Dead. (1985).

Critical reception

In 2005, Frost and Fire was ranked number 362 in Rock Hard magazine's book of The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.[2]

Track listing

All songs written by Greg Lindstrom. The seventh track, "Maybe That's Why", is an instrumental; however, lyrics were included for the song on the inner sleeve of the original vinyl release.

Personnel

Cirith Ungol
Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cirith Ungol interview . November 26, 2011 . Lefevre . Patrick . April 2002 . Iron Wolf webzine . Angelfire.
  2. Book: Best of Rock & Metal - Die 500 stärksten Scheiben aller Zeiten. 2005. Rock Hard. de. 3-89880-517-4. 65.