One of the relatively more noteworthy also-rans of the '80s Los Angeles metal scene,
Malice released a pair of albums for Atlantic in 1985 and 1987, respectively, before guitarist
Jay Reynolds jumped ship to join pal
Dave Mustaine's band
Megadeth for a brief spell after
Chris Poland got the boot.
License to Kill is the second of the band's albums and is perhaps most noteworthy for its
Max Norman contribution.
Norman produced, engineered, and mixed the album, and that at least counts for something as he's quite the metal journeyman, best known for producing several
Ozzy albums during the '80s as well as
Megadeth's
Countdown to Extinction and albums of various other metal bands like
Y&T,
Dangerous Toys,
Loudness,
Armored Saint,
Savatage,
Lynch Mob, and
Ugly Kid Joe. His trademark "metal" production aside,
License to Kill isn't all that special.
Malice sound an awful lot like latter-day
Judas Priest -- a soaring vocalist preaching the metal gospel ("I'm a vigilante!"), a twin lead guitar attack that trades off solos -- and, frankly, you'd be better off just listening to one of your
Priest albums than
License to Kill. Then again, if you just can't get enough of that latter-day
Priest sound and have worn out your
Defenders of the Faith album, there's a good chance you'll enjoy what's in store here. Likewise, if you're a die-hard '80s metalhead and just can't get enough of that leather-and-hair sound, you certainly might want to add this one to your collection. It's certainly as good as anything, say,
Loudness ever recorded. Atlantic let it go out of print long ago, but Wounded Bird reissued it in 2004. Lastly, this is no doubt a trivial tidbit, but old-school
Megadeth fans will be tickled to discover that
Mustaine and
Dave Ellefson are credited with background vocals on two songs (i.e., they shout "license to kill!" à la
Mötley Crüe on the chorus of the title track). ~ Jason Birchmeier