ALASKA: The Pack LP 1985 MFN Music For Nations. Great album by the ex -Whitesnake guitarist. Check AUDIO samples

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ALASKA The Pack [Great album by the ex -Whitesnake guitarists]
Alaska  The Pack
Label: MFN   Music For Nations   MFN 41
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: UK
Released: 1985
Genre: Rock
Style: Hard Rock

Tracklist
A1 I Really Want To Know 6:12
A2 The Thing 5:00
A3 Where Did You Go (Bonneville Blues) 4:39
A4 Help Yourself 4:22
A5 Run With The Pack 3:48

B1 Miss You Tonight 4:15
B2 Woman Like You 3:34
B3 School Girl 5:05
B4 S.O.S. 5:24

[ ex -Whitesnake guitarist, the best Whitesnake guitarist by a long shot, Bernie Marsden, criminally underrated]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sI5q8XsZ26k

My reason for buying this was simply to check out just what guitarist Bernie Marsden did next after his departure from Whitesnake. This album was actually the second and final studio release from the four piece band but there’s enough here to tell he still had some prime blues-rock music within him although it does sound on occasions that the band were looking for a hit single too. The over-polished, smooth cover of Kim Carnes’ ballad Miss You Tonight  is the most obvious hit-hunt.
Positively though, there are four or five very decent blues-rockers on here, all of which you feel could have been candidates for inclusion on a Whitesnake album if Coverdale had decided to stick with the British flavoured sound rather than look for wider spread acceptance.  The Thing  has the nice soft acoustic start before building into a Zeppelin tinged rocker and its side one companion  Help Yourself  could also, with a bit of work on the chorus perhaps, have graced any early ‘Snake album. The final three offerings of side two are also in the classic blues-rock vein. Bass guitarist/piano player Brian Badhams solo composition  Woman Like You offers a couple of all too brief solo spots reminding of why Marsden is a respected if un-celebrated guitarist whilst the punchy Schoolgirl and the excellent Love Man reminiscent S.O.S. both improve on that, the final track at last offering space for Marsden to really stretch out a bit and shine.

A different direction is taken with the other tracks. Where Did They Go has a more American flavoured AOR feel due in a large way to guest saxophonist Billy Paul taking the lead solo. More surprisingly, although perhaps not given the mid-eighties release, a couple of tracks have more in common with the pomp rockers Magnum. Run With The Pack is more like a Bryan Adams number, whilst the synthesiser and big chorus opener I Really Want To Know is pure Clarkin/Catley country.

 


5.0 out of 5 stars Debut album from an ex-Whitesnake guitarist AOR project
Originally released in 1983, The Pack was the debut album from Alaska, a UK-based AOR/melodic rock band featured former Whitesnake guitarist Bernie Marsden. Alaska music was a far cry from the bluesy Whitesnake material, instead having more in common with bands like Touch, Balance and Aldo Nova.

The Pack is a really enjoyable melodic rock album, that thankfully doesn’t sound dated all these years later. Marsden delivers some great guitar work, there a nice (but not over the top) blues backbone running through the songs, and Robert Hawthorn has a unique voice that ideal for AOR. Songs like “”SOS,”” “”Run With the Pack”” and “”I Really Want to Know”” stand out, but the whole album – brief as it is – is quite solid.

If you’re a fan of the early `80s AOR sound, or just want to hear what a less blues-oriented Whitesnake might have sounded like, Alaska is a band that well worth checking out, and The Pack is the ideal starting point.


 

you remember Alaska, dont you? They were a Bernie Marsden band and existed in 1984 and 1985, famously playing the wettest Knebworth in history.

Alaska were a good band who had some good songs but ran out of energy after two albums, of which this is the second.

Singer Rob Hawthorne was a great sort of bluesy rock guy and I have no idea where he came from but research suggests at some point subsequently he made a rust being a Rod Stewart impersonator, which probably makes him more money than being in Alaska did.

They didn’t chart at all and despite good exposure on the back of Bernie’s stint in Whitesnake just couldn’t get a commercial foothold.

Additional information

Weight 0.25 kg

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