Practice What You Preach | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | August 8, 1989 [1] | |||
Recorded | February–March 1989 [2] [3] | |||
Studio | Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California | |||
Genre | Thrash metal | |||
Length | 46:06 | |||
Label | ||||
Producer | Alex Perialas | |||
Testament chronology | ||||
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Singles from Practice What You Preach | ||||
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Practice What You Preach is the third studio album by American thrash metal band Testament, released on August 8, 1989 via Atlantic/Megaforce. Propelled by the singles "Greenhouse Effect", "The Ballad" and the title track "Practice What You Preach", this album was a major breakthrough for Testament, achieving near gold status [4] and becoming the band's first album to enter the Top 100 on the Billboard 200 chart. [5]
While retaining the thrash metal sound of its predecessors, Practice What You Preach saw Testament draw influences from numerous genres such as traditional heavy metal, jazz fusion and progressive/technical metal, and its lyrical themes are more about politics and society than the occult themes of the band's previous two albums—these changes had alienated some early fans of Testament. [6] [7] [8] Songs like the title track and "Blessed in Contempt" relate to religion, while "Greenhouse Effect" is a political song about an "environmental holocaust", "Sins of Omission" deals with suicide prevention, and "The Ballad" is about a break up and recovery.
Reportedly recorded live in the studio, this was the band's last album to be produced by Alex Perialas, and the production values can be loosely compared to Flotsam and Jetsam's 1990 album When the Storm Comes Down , which was also produced by Perialas and recorded shortly after the release of Practice What You Preach. [9]
Besides the title track, which has been a staple of the band's concert setlists for more than three decades, Testament rarely plays any songs from Practice What You Preach anymore. Out of the album's ten songs, "Confusion Fusion" is the only one that has never been performed in concert. "Envy Life" and "Sins of Omission" had been played live again occasionally in the 2000s and 2010s. The others however, including "Perilous Nation" (save for one show in New York in 2008), "Time Is Coming", "Blessed in Contempt", "Greenhouse Effect", "The Ballad" and "Nightmare (Coming Back to You)", have not been included in performances since the early 1990s. [10]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [11] |
Reviews for Practice What You Preach have generally been favorable. Allmusic's Alex Henderson awards it three stars out of five, and about the album, he says that Testament placed "more emphasis on subjects like freedom of choice, political corruption, hypocrisy, and the effects of greed and avarice" and that "its musical approach is much the same -- under the direction of metal producer Alex Perialas." [11]
Practice What You Preach was Testament's first record to enter the Top 100 on the Billboard 200 album charts, [12] peaking at number 77 and staying on the chart for twelve weeks. [13] The title track of Practice What You Preach was a moderate mainstream rock hit, as were "The Ballad" and "Greenhouse Effect". These songs received considerable airplay from album-oriented rock radio stations, [14] [15] while its music videos found significant rotation on MTV's Headbangers Ball . [16] [17] By June 1992, Practice What You Preach had sold over 450,000 copies in the United States. [4]
The album has been included in various best-of lists in the years since its release, including Guitar World 's "The Top 10 Shred Albums of the Eighties" in 1999; the magazine's editor Mordechai Kleidermacher wrote, "With their fast-and-chunky riffs and scorched-earth solos, Testament's Alex Skolnick and Eric Peterson show the world what true thrash-and-burn guitar terror is all about. Combining the sophistication of a progressive guy with the ferocity of a metal guy, Skolnick's guitar weeps, wails, sings, roars and rocks." [18]
Testament toured for less than a year to promote Practice What You Preach. They embarked on a two-month U.S. tour from October to December 1989 with Annihilator and Wrathchild America (both of whom had just released their respective debut albums Alice in Hell and Climbin' the Walls ), and wrapped the year up with two shows in California with Nuclear Assault and Voivod. [19] The second leg of the Practice What You Preach tour began in January 1990, when Testament was touring Europe with Mortal Sin and Xentrix. [19] Following their first visit to Japan that February, Testament embarked on a two-month U.S. tour with Savatage which featured support from Nuclear Assault, Dead Horse, and Dark Angel. [19] After the Practice What You Preach tour came to an end in May 1990, Testament began work on their fourth studio album Souls of Black .
All music is composed by Chuck Billy, Alex Skolnick, Eric Peterson, Greg Christian and Louie Clemente
No. | Title | Lyrics | Length |
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1. | "Practice What You Preach" | Billy, Peterson, Skolnick | 4:54 |
2. | "Perilous Nation" | Skolnick | 5:50 |
3. | "Envy Life" | Peterson | 4:16 |
4. | "Time Is Coming" | Billy | 5:26 |
5. | "Blessed in Contempt" | Billy, Skolnick, Peterson | 4:12 |
6. | "Greenhouse Effect" | Skolnick | 4:52 |
7. | "Sins of Omission" | Billy, Peterson, Skolnick | 5:00 |
8. | "The Ballad" | Skolnick, Billy | 6:09 |
9. | "Nightmare (Coming Back to You)" | Skolnick | 2:20 |
10. | "Confusion Fusion" | Instrumental | 3:07 |
Total length: | 46:06 |
Chart (1989) | Peak position |
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Dutch Albums (Album Top 100) [20] | 57 |
Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts) [21] | 10 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100) [22] | 29 |
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista) [23] | 20 |
UK Albums (OCC) [24] | 40 |
US Billboard 200 [25] | 77 |
Overkill is an American thrash metal band, formed in 1980 in New Jersey. They have gone through many lineup changes, leaving bassist D.D. Verni and lead vocalist Bobby "Blitz" Ellsworth as the only constant members. The band's current lineup includes Verni, Ellsworth, Dave Linsk on lead guitar, Derek Tailer on rhythm guitar and Jason Bittner on drums. Along with Nuclear Assault and Anthrax, the latter of whom would feature one-time Overkill lead guitarist Dan Spitz, the band is one of the most successful East Coast thrash metal bands, and they are often called "the Motörhead of thrash metal", based on their unique playing style, which was influenced by punk rock and the new wave of British heavy metal (NWOBHM). The band has a notable mascot named "Chaly" who has appeared on many of their album covers.
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Testament is an American heavy metal band from Berkeley, California. Formed in 1983 under the name Legacy, the band's current lineup comprises rhythm guitarist Eric Peterson, lead vocalist Chuck Billy, lead guitarist Alex Skolnick, bassist Steve Di Giorgio and drummer Chris Dovas. Testament has experienced many lineup changes over the years, with Peterson being the only remaining original member, though they have since reunited with Skolnick, who had been out of the band from 1992 to 2005. Billy has been a member of Testament since 1986, when he replaced original singer Steve "Zetro" Souza, who had left to replace Paul Baloff in Exodus. Peterson and Billy are the only members to appear on all of Testament's studio albums. The band has released thirteen studio albums, four live albums, five compilation albums, thirteen singles and three DVDs. They are estimated to have sold over 1.4 million albums in the United States since the beginning of the SoundScan era, and over 14 million copies worldwide as of 2016.
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"Practice What You Preach" is a song by American thrash metal band Testament, taken from their 1989 album Practice What You Preach. It was released as a promotional single to support the album. Due to being one of the band's most famous and popular songs, and for being one of the most frequently played songs at live concerts, "Practice What You Preach" can be considered to be Testament's signature song.
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Whether the tour and album will finally push Testament over the gold-record mark (500,000 copies sold) remains to be seen. We almost hit it with `Practice What You Preach,` says Skolnick, referring the 1989 album that sold 450,000 copies.