Test Your Metal Records is proud to unleash the North American release of Reach For The Sky from Japanese heavy metallers Solitude. The release is the band’s third album that was issued in Japan in 2015 by Spiritual Beast and follows 2009’s Brave The Storm (Spiritual Beast) and 2001’s Virtual Image (Spiritual Beast). The album features eight fist pounding tracks mixed by Magnus “Mankan” Sedenberg, who has previously worked with Bullet and Crucified Barbara along with artwork by Velio Josto (Warlord, Medieval Steel, Ostrogoth etc). Fans of Motorhead, Saxon, Tank and Venom are sure to appreciate.

Solitude Track Listing:
Venom’s Angel (7:32)
Blow (4:51)
Reach For The Sky (5:30)
Don’t Need Mercy (3:59)
Escape For The Crime (3:47)
You Got My Mind (5:32)
On The Edge Of Sorrow (4:03)
December (8:41)

Read Scott Adams Review of Reach for the Sky HERE

Japan’s Solitude was formed in 1996, when two ex-members of Sacrifice (Japan)*, the founding member and main composer Akira Sugiuchi (vocals) and the bass player on two of their albums Toru Nishida, met ex-Rip Ride guys of Yasuo Koyano (drums) and Hiroki Nakamori (guitars). The guys kept on rehearsing for three years, composing songs and forging the foundation of the band. With heavy metal as its core, their sound has tastes of various genres as if to show that they have been influenced by various different styles of music, such as seventies hard rock, progressive rock, and most notably the NWoBHM, among others.

In 1998, they picked up Solitude as the name of the band, and they played live for the first time in March 1999. This debut live assault was reported through fanzines and the internet, with such praise as “the birth of the new defenders of heavy metal” or “the answer to what heavy metal is”. In September, Shingo Ida (ex-Bartolemmeo) replaced Nakamori, and his distinctive style of melodic guitar work brought a new blood into the band. In November, they recorded two songs, Virtual Image and Eagle Fly, the latter of which was dedicated to their favorite British HM band, Saxon. This recording was used for promotion as the Solitude Demo ’99.

In July 2000, the band started recording an album, and the recording carried on until December as the band aimed for the highest quality they could achieve. Their debut album Virtual Image was finally released in September, 2001 as the first-ever release of Spiritual Beast, who would later grow to one of the leading independent metal labels in Japan. The album got rave reviews from the underground press, not just in Japan but in the US and throughout Europe, and requests for interviews flooded in. The reaction was especially overwhelming in Germany, owing to the sampler CD called Metal Crusade from Heavy oder was!? magazine, which featured the title track Virtual Image.

Koyano left the band prior to the release of the album, but the band continued touring with the help from Suguru Kobayashi (ex-Casbah), sharing the stage with various bands such as Metalucifer, Defiled and Sigh. In July 2003, having added Tai Syouda (ex-Guardian’s Nail, now leading his own band, Seventh Son) as a permanent drummer, they flew to Germany to play at Headbangers Open Air, where they shared the stage with veterans like Blitzkrieg, Trespass, and Killer (Belgium) as well as youngsters like Stormwarrior, Cryonic Temple and Doomsword. Their performance was praised by various media, with Germany’s Rock Hard magazine describing them as “the highlight of the festival”.

In 2004, they started preparing for a new album, but first recorded Rainbow Theme – Frozen Rainbow for the Saxon tribute album Eagleution – A Tribute to Saxon, put together by Remedy Records in Germany. The recording continued while the band played selected gigs like Duryu Rock Festival in Korea (with Jurassic Jade from Japan, Mindflow from Brazil etc) but their uncompromising attitude and various personal issues of each member delayed the whole process more than they had expected.

The recording, carried out at various points, was finally over and while they were waiting the mixing to be done, at the end of 2008, Syouda decided to leave the band. In February 2009, the remaining 3 guys participated in the NWoBHM cover event Denim And Leather as Solitude with Mad Ohuchi, featuring none other than Takamasa “Mad” Ohuchi of Anthem fame on drums. This resulted in Ohuchi joining Solitude as a permanent member later that year.

In December 2009, over eight years from the release of the debut album, the long-awaited (literally!) new album Brave the Storm finally hit the stores. Like its predecessor, the album was produced by Fuyuhiko Inui, an ex-band mate of Ida, who has been involved in various recordings as engineer/producer from Buck-Tick or Chara to Maverick. The mastering duty was handled by Alan Douches at West West Side Music (The Agonist, Mastodon etc).

In January 2011, the band toured Korea and Japan with Swedish sensation Enforcer, with Mean Streak also added for the Japanese dates. In September, Brave the Storm was released in Europe on Fastball Music in Germany, proving their growing popularity in the mainland Europe. In July 2012, the band helped set up a Japan tour for Canada’s Skull Fist, and toured with them and Widow from the US. In 2013, they co-hosted the Japanese Assault Fest, sharing the stage with Girlschool, Vektor, Fastkill, Air Raid et cetera.

In April 2014, the band finally started recording a new album. Looking for the kind of sound production they grew up listening, they went into a closed movie theatre in Gotenba, Shizuoka, where they brought in the recording equipment, just like Deep Purple did in a hotel and Rainbow did in an old castle etc in the seventiess. With the great ambience and the environment to allow you to play as loud as you want, the place was later modified into a proper recording studio called Tapestry Recording Studio. The band appeared at the Japanese Assault Fest for the second time (with acts such as Satan, Heavy Tiger, Midnight Malice, Eternal Elysium et cetera) later that year.

*Sacrifice (Japan) was one of the leading bands in the Japanese thrash/underground scene from their formation in 1985 until disbanding in 1992, and they left a lot of impacts on young and upcoming bands then and even now. During their career, they released three studio albums, Crest of Black (1987), Total Steel (1990) and Tears (1992) and shared the stage with Sodom (Germany), Nuclear Assault (USA), Casbah, Outrage, United (all from Japan) among many others. They once featured Shinji “Samm” Tachi (ex-Sabbat) on drums, who later formed Magnesium and also joined his brother in Metalucifer. Sacrifice has recently reunited with the lineup of Sugiuchi (vocals), Nishida (bass), Tachi (drums) and Temis Osmond (guitar, also ex-Sabbat).