Ronnie
James Dio’s 1987 album Dream Evil stands
as a demarcation point of sorts for anyone interested in the legendary
singer/songwriter’s career. His first solo release without guitarist Vivian
Campbell features Craig Goldy’s first stint as Dio’s guitar player surrounded
by the remnants of Dio Mark I – drummer Vinny Appice, keyboardist Claude Schnell,
and bassist Jimmy Bain. Dio’s waning commercial peak took a hit with this
relatively middle of the road album – he needed a firm hit to reconsolidate his
appeal in the late 80’s and with Campbell’s departure, but Dream Evil ultimately produced middling returns and led Dio to
configure his lineup yet again before 1990’s Lock Up the Wolves.
“Night
People” teeters between predictability and something truly distinctive thanks
to Dio’s contributions or would otherwise sound solidly pedestrian. It’s
competent enough; no one can ever claim there’s a lack of polish in this
performance, but genuine inspiration is scarce. The title song is a conscious
attempt at another “Holy Diver” like moment. It fails, however, because there’s
no real spark – instead of having a melody listeners can sink their teeth into,
everything is built around the chorus payoff which is really nothing else but synthesizer
flourishes amplifying the moment. “Sunset Superman” is one of the album’s more
effective songs because it foregoes any sort of frills in favor of marching
straight ahead and as an unambiguous hard rock track. Goldy excels here playing
the song’s compact, tightly wound riff with crisp aggression.
Songs
like “All the Fools Sailed Away” became mainstays on Dio’s solo releases for
some time – pseudo poetic missives anchored by broad stroked depictions of
unity and a faux profound chorus. This is one of the more hamfisted examples
but achieves, to its credit, an impressive theatrical effect despite itself and
the obviously tacked on instrumental breaks are, nonetheless, memorable. “Overlove”
is a stripped back bruiser, much like the earlier “Sunset Superman”, and
another underrated gem from Dream Evil.
Goldy really works best on these straight forward rockers. The single “I Could
Have Been a Dreamer” generated next to no attention for the album on release
and it’s easy to hear why; much like the earlier title track, there is no real
melody to speak of, only a keyboard laden chorus.
“Faces
in the Window” has some unexpected vocal elements, but the arrangement has a
largely rote feel oddly distinguished, however, by one of Goldy’s finest solos
on the album. The release closes with the swinging drums behind “When a Woman
Cries”. Keyboards exert a much stronger presence in this song than earlier
tracks and we’re snapped out of the moment by the awkward presentation of the
chorus on a couple occasions/ It’s a fine track, one of the album’s more
interesting moments, but not entirely successful. Dream Evil definitely has historical significance over Dio’s solo
career, in hindsight, it is a solid though unremarkable transitional release.