What can we say about Grave Digger? The band has been around for 
decades, and seemingly done it all. They've entered that air of 
seniority, where every time they make a record, it's an event both 
because we know what we're getting, and because they're an institution.
 Even when they aren't reaching their old heights, they are always 
welcome to bring along some new music. It's the same boat that Motorhead
 reached before their ultimate conclusion, and it's a better boat than 
the one Judas Priest is in, which is the one where
 we cover our eyes and hope they don't embarrass themselves again.
Or at least that's what we want to think. "Healed By Metal" starts off 
in a way that has me questioning everything. I have a long-standing 
dislike of songs that talk about metal as a subject, and the title track
 opens the album by reaffirming everything I've
 ever said on the subject. It's cheesy, ugly, and makes me certain that I
 don't want to be part of the metal culture if it sounds like that. It's
 a song that wants to be an anthem, but you can't force those things to 
happen. They just do.
Case in point: "Free Forever". That is a song that does everything 
"Healed By Metal" wants to, but it actually succeeds. There's a bit of 
swagger in the riff, the vocals are appropriately gruff, but then the 
chorus has that Running Wild style shanty melody
 that works exceedingly well. In fact, the few tracks in a row that 
follow the opener make me wonder how the band thought not only that it 
was good enough to make the album, but to lead it off and serve as the 
title. It was a horrible decision, and almost made
 me neglect the record entirely.
I don't consider it a coincidence that the other track that drags the 
record down is "Ten Commandments Of Metal", which falls into the same 
quagmire. Perhaps there should be an eleventh commandment; thou shalt 
not write metal about metal.
But those two tracks don't define the whole of the album. The rest of 
the tracks are Grave Digger's enjoyable blend of traditional and power 
metal, and they offer up enough to make the record worth its while. 
Veteran bands usually know how to deliver a solid
 record, and that's what Grave Digger has done here. It's solid, which 
is the good and the bad. But hey, it could always be worse.
 
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