"Master Seven" is the sixth album Kingdom Come released. There is more variety on this album than other Kingdom Come albums. There are the heavy songs with driving rhythms but there are also a couple "Can't Let Go" and "Gonna Try" that are a bit more mellow but still with a distinctive Kingdom Come sound…
Victor Peraino's Kingdom Come evolved out of the dissolution of the legendary Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come in 1974. Peraino was the keyboard player in the album and upon returning to his homeland in Detroit, USA he somehow kept the rights to use the name for a new band he was about to set up. He recruited two bassists, two guitarists, two drummers, a flutist and with him on keyboards, lead voices and production the album "No man's Land" was recorded and released privately in 1975.
"No man's Land'" is a strange album. However its quality is undenieable, even if the leading force is Hard/Psych Rock, not unlike Peraino's experience next to Arthur Brown on "Journey", along with some powerful doses of US-styled Pomp Rock. But this is some very dense, rich, passionate and 100% progressive music…
Years after any remaining U.S. interest in Lenny Wolf and his Robert Plant sound-alike voice had vanished, the singer and his "band" Kingdom Come (really just a solo vehicle for Wolf) continued to release material marketed mostly in the frontman's German homeland…
Kingdom Come's third studio recording, Hands of Time, is essentially a Lenny Wolf solo effort. Released in 1991 by Polygram Records, the disc starts strong with a pair of gripping cuts, the emotional "I've Been Trying", and the Led Zep inspired (big surprise) five-minute "Should I"…