[hand] [face]
The Original Deep Purple Web Pages
The Highway Star

Sign of the Wolf

Our better-late-than-never department presents you with the self-titled album of the studio project called Sign of the Wolf, released earlier this year. The project lists several members of the extended Purple family in their ranks: Doug Aldrich and Steve Morris on guitars, Tony Carey on keyboards, and Vinny Appice on drums. The lineup also includes Andrew Freeman (Last in Line) singing, Fredrik Folkare (Unleashed/Eclipse) on guitar, Josh Devine (One Direction/Lavera/Turkish Delight) and Johan Kullberg (Hammerfall) on drums, Chuck Wright (Quiet Riot, House of Lords) on bass, Marl Boals on bass & backing vocals, Steve Mann (MSG/Lionheart), and Mark Mangold on Hammond.

The project was created by Fireworks magazine’s Bruce Mee, who co-wrote most of the material together with Fredrik Folkare.

Here is the playlist of the album tracks:

Reviews: Get Ready to Rock, Metal Temple.

Thanks to Fla76 for the heads-up.



24 Comments to “Sign of the Wolf”:

  1. 1
    Karin Verndal says:

    First song:
    To you non-pop nerds, this song immediately made me think of a darker ‘What does the fox say’ 😄
    But – ohhh boy this is so much better 🤩

    Talks nicely to my inner rock-person…

    Very strong vocal 👍🏼
    Maybe it’s just me being an illiterate music-lover, but aren’t the drums a bit too weak? Or maybe Ian P has left an eternal mark in my brain drumwise ☺️

    Ohh love this!
    Sentimental in all its pure rock’n’roll

    ‘Arbeit macht frei’:
    Reminds me of several Danish rock bands, none mentioned – none forgotten, but man that vocal is spectacular (not Ian Gillan spectacular, but he sings in his own right this guy!)

    ‘Still me’:
    Blown away – what a very nice guitar to begin with (Steve Morse?)
    “I want you to die” – hey come on!

    ‘Silent killer’:
    Sadly no more time to dwell into this, but I’ll relisten later….

    ‘Rainbows end’:
    Thanks Fla76 👍🏼 have never heard this hadn’t I been in here 😊

  2. 2
    DeeperPurps says:

    I acquired the CD a few days ago and have taken it for a few spins. It’s very good. Hard/heavy melodic rock with obvious tips of the hat to the spirit and style of Ronnie James Dio.

  3. 3
    Fla76 says:

    #1 Karin:

    you’re welcome, I just captured the news for the community, I’m certainly never going to be the first to scoop about Purple!

    be careful it’s not Morse, it’s Morris (former guitar player of big Ian from naked thunder onwards).

    Personally, the songs by this supergroup don’t mean much to me, they’re all stuff I’ve heard a million times twenty years ago.

    but with the musical desolation that exists at the moment, at least it’s an anonymous heavy rock, but well done

  4. 4
    Karin Verndal says:

    @3

    Thanks, yeah, I misunderstood the ‘Steve Morris’ concept!
    Mainly because I could not in my wildest dreams imagine Steve Morris playing this kind of hard rock, and played that very very good!

    “musical desolation” – ohh I know exactly what you mean! But then again I live in a country where the most exquisite taste is listening to the schmaltz!

    When I highly praise Purple, a lot of people don’t believe me! So I often show them my collection of music (cds) and dvds, and then they say: but you’re a grown up…. Yeah! And I have a great taste, at least in music. 😄

    I can tell you that ABBA and that kind of music is still the most respected genre here🙄
    (No Uwe, I don’t mind ABBA! But I don’t find it to be the top of all genres! )

  5. 5
    DeeperPurps says:

    Hi Karen @4…..nothing wrong with ABBA! They’re the Dark Destroyer (a.k.a. Ritchie Blackmore)’s favourite band! He loves the melodic quality of their music.

  6. 6
    Karin Verndal says:

    @5

    Indeed there isn’t!

    But if that is all you hear, life tends to get a little, well not even two-dimensional but rater one-dimensional ☺️😉

  7. 7
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Karin, Steve Morris (not Morse) is a made-to-order songsmith, he writes as is required, hence he was also the guy who wrote the very heavy Toolbox album for Ian.

    Naked Thunder, the predecessor album, sounded so outrageously poppy because of the very glossy late 80s production job, it wasn’t necessarily just the songs Steve Morris had written for it, but the sound yanked everything into pop territory. Incidentally, the producer was Leif Mases – he of Polar Studios, Stockholm, fame – there you have your ABBA connection and why Naked Thunder sounds so absolutely squeaky-clean Scandinavian.

    Steve Morris could probably write a new Sabbath album if you asked him nicely. He’s versatile if a bit workmanlike and anodyne in what he turns out.

  8. 8
    Karin Verndal says:

    @7

    “why Naked Thunder sounds so absolutely squeaky-clean Scandinavian.“

    – you’re not the first commenting on Scandinavian cleanliness!
    And I thank you for that: because then I will take a nap instead of cleaning up in here…. A little dirt has never hurt anyone, I’m told.

    I just have to express my surprise, because Steve Morris didn’t strike me as a more heavy-based guitarist!
    I love the way he play here:
    https://youtu.be/3EX7OL9__e8?si=Sefi4zZs9QcbnD94

    But from that to this:
    https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=LgQf2dUrtAI&si=fvGft1n_tw7k1uGK&feature=xapp_share

    Demands some stretch of the imagination, at least in my head.

    I’m thrilled about the album though 😊 well it’s certainly not Purple-quality (the highest quality there exists if you ask me (which you don’t, but for argument’s sake) and I have a tendency to compare all bands and vocalist to Purple and Ian) but it has a right to be here anyway 🤩

    Btw: am I the only one who sense a bit DAD in ‘Sign of the wolf’? DAD when they were younger, that is 😊

    Another BTW: I have never liked Slade! But thanks to the ‘Cuz I luv you’, and that is quite annoying really 😄 I find myself searching for other songs of the band with the guitarist with the ridiculous bangs!
    https://youtube.com/shorts/HGc81WXDisI?si=YzxXwIN6Fn8Z4lF5

    Well, as a kidney stone, I hope this will pass (and I promise you, it’s almost as hurtful as I’ve witnessed men passing kidney stones earlier in my life 😁)

  9. 9
    Karin Verndal says:

    @7

    “Steve Morris could probably write a new Sabbath album if you asked him nicely. He’s versatile if a bit workmanlike and anodyne in what he turns out.”

    – when I ask anyone anything, I always do it nicely, but I have no desire of another BS album!

    I didn’t know the word ‘anodyne’, painkiller…. Well! 😃 live and learn!

  10. 10
    Uwe Hornung says:

    I meant “not likely to cause offense” as the definition of anodyne!

    Steve Morris sounds to me like that.

  11. 11
    Max says:

    @9 🤣 Mafe my day.

  12. 12
    Karin Verndal says:

    @10

    Yeah, got that…!

    I like Steve Morris!
    Where would the world of music be without the likes of him ?

    He can, and will, take anything upon him to make music happen 😊

  13. 13
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Karin doesn’t know this Black Sabbath song – if she did, she’d of course like it.

    https://youtu.be/Tr-puXiUMvE

    And as a Jeff Lynne nut, she must appreciate this here as well:

    https://youtu.be/pYomVbcJKhI

  14. 14
    MacGregor says:

    @ 13 – one of the only good songs on that very ordinary Sabbath album. Bill had a good voice. Moving to now days and he should have kept his shirt on at that Sabbath farewell circus event. He is 77, oh well. At least he was there and playing and it was good for him to sign off after all that negative rubbish he had laid on him 13 years ago. Poor Ozzy, he looked terrible, to be expected considering his current health issues. Goodnight Black Sabbath and thanks ever so much for the glorious ride. Cheers

  15. 15
    Karin Verndal says:

    @13

    You got me there:
    “if she did, she’d of course like it.”

    – I do have to admit it is Ozzy O’s voice that rubs me the very wrong way!
    But I do adore Tony Iommi’s guitar-playing. This gentleman singing is doing a good job.
    And when Ian joined them for that glorious year, everything was lifted to a higher level! Just sayin’ 😊🥰

    “And as a Jeff Lynne nut”

    – well Uwe, please explain to me what that tune (with Ozzy O as the vocalist 😳) has anything to do with the formidable Jeff Lynne?

  16. 16
    Uwr Hornung says:

    “So Tired” was at the time of its release generally perceived as an ELO pastiche with its overbearing violins and Beatlish harmonies.

    Never forget that Ozzy and your Jeff L are from the same neck of the woods, Brummies both of them. I mean the Move and ELO drummer Bev Bevan even played with Black Sabbath during IG’s tenure, Bill Ward didn’t tour at the time. The Birmingham music scene is pretty closely knit.

  17. 17
    Karin Verndal says:

    @16

    “overbearing violins”

    – 🤣🤣🤣

    Ohh yes the excellent ELO drummer Bev Bevan indeed did play for BS, but he looked so wrong there. He has always been dieser reine und tugendhafte Junge 😄

    I don’t even know if Jeff Lynne was particularly impressed with Bev!

    Well, thank you for another herablassender Kommentar re Jeff Lynne! Always amuses me so much 😂

  18. 18
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Where was I herablassend/dismissive about Jeff Lynne, he‘s a sound magician, albeit one with a limited variety of spells!

    I have everything from ELO and I‘ve seen him live, he has his own sound (to the exclusion of pretty much anything else). It‘s a recipe bordering on the gimmicky, but I don‘t think ELO ever were The Beatles or Queen as regards creating a variety of styles of music nor is Jeff Lynne David Bowie when it comes to reinventing himself and staying cutting edge. I don‘t believe that Herr Lynne would put himself into that league either. He‘s a very artful one-trick-pony.

    Jeff Lynne‘s treatment of other musicians in ELO was pretty much abysmal, Richard Tandy being the one exception, but then he is not alone in that.

  19. 19
    Karin Verndal says:

    @18

    Well, I do agree!

    He is doing his “farewell” tour these days(that’s not what he calls it, maybe it the “over and done”-tour) and hopefully he is not doing it like Sinatra 😄

    He looks really ‘over-and-done’ with.
    Haven’t seen him this time, but I saw pics. Ohhh man 🫣

    I loved a lot of his music when I was young, but more the early stuff, because when he got extra ‘electrified’ I couldn’t hear if it was real instruments or Richard Tandy that went bananas at the keyboard.

    No doubt he is a genius! And his fans have been multiplying over the last 15 years or so.
    As a 15 yo it was not acceptable to be liking ELO, some people snorted ‘Beatles-copies’, but I didn’t care! I was very happy with ‘On the third day’, ‘No Answer’ (btw: do you know how the album got that title: No Answer?), ‘A new world record’ and ‘Face the Music’ – actually I loved that albums. ‘Out of the blue’ was Wohlklang, but there was missing some nerve!

    When Jeff was cooperating with Roy Wood, he could do his magic, but Roy kept it down-to-earth, rocking, well almost sensual.
    But when Roy left, some of the original disappeared, and with ‘Discovery’ Jeff lost all the authentic sound and it felt like concentrated at what would sell records, and then he made music after that.
    A very big disappointment!

    As a producer he is very well-liked. But it’s easy to hear when he has been producing.
    At bit like Mutt Lange I guess…

    Are you going to see Oasis?
    As far as I know they only do concerts in GB for now, but oh I hope they will come to the continent! Preferably Denmark, but I dont mind going to Germany, Norway, well even Sweden (😉😄) to get to see Noel and Liam getting along, oh I mean playing and singing.

  20. 20
    Skippy O'Nasica says:

    Re: Sabbath / ELO – would be amazed if Ozzy’s vocal style wasn’t heavily influenced by that of Move leader / ELO co-founder Roy Wood.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEad6hWxKhE

  21. 21
    Uwe Hornung says:

    I saw Oasis twice back in the Noughties, Karin, one gig was good the other one was listless with Liam not speaking a word throughout the whole performance (his shtick, I know), I don’t feel pressed to see them again. Besides, I’m more a fan of their later work, I prefer Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants and Heathen Chemistry to all their other albums, and I believe the only song they currently play from that era is (the brilliant) Little By Little.

    https://youtu.be/tM1RS_5IAiE

    *************************************************************

    Skippy, yes the Roy Wood influence is audible – people often miss that Sabbath through all their heaviness retained a commercial edge because Ozzy was with his naive straightforward little melodies more of a pop singer than either Robert Plant or Ian Gillan (or even DC and GH for that matter) who all wrote their vocal lines in a more complex, less childlike way. It’s also something that explains his solo career success, Ozzy might not have always hit every note and had a tendency to sing flat live, but he always tried to be tuneful. He once commented to a very raw metal act opening for him (and featuring standard barked, bellowed, belched & grunted vocals) that they “would be so much better if they sang a little”. Ozzy liked to hear a melody, the ole Beatles buff:

    https://youtu.be/yOfl1Oqe_DA

    I’m happy for him that his recent goodbye gig with Sabbath turned out to be such an emotional & worthy/dignified send-off, there has always been something sincere and touching (as well as endearingly helpless) about him that even Sharon’s over-protective hard-ass and Machiavellian business practices could not fully obscure.

  22. 22
    Karin Verndal says:

    @21

    ‘Little by little’ is one of my favourites too! I really dig Noel’s voice ☺️

    The Cardiff concert (5th of July) was spectacular! Both brothers in good mood, Lian cracking some jokes, and an overall nice concert.

    The tabloids in GB doomed the brothers to be over before they have started, but I sincerely hope they can behave and start making beautiful and meaningful music again!

  23. 23
    Fla76 says:

    Oasis are good, but I’ve always considered them ultra-commercial and ultra-overrated.

    Of course, compared to the musical rubbish that’s out there today, they’re pure gold.

  24. 24
    Karin Verndal says:

    @23

    Ohh 🤣🤣🤣

    I simply love to hear people contradict themselves in one post 😂😆
    Normally only Uwe does this 😄😂

    Sorry Fla76

Add a comment:

Preview no longer available -- once you press Post, that's it. All comments are subject to moderation policy.

||||Unauthorized copying, while sometimes necessary, is never as good as the real thing
© 1993-2025 The Highway Star and contributors
Posts, Calendar and Comments RSS feeds for The Highway Star