Artist's albums
Don't Get Mad ... Get Even
1986 · album
Gods of Tomorrow
2021 · album
Love & Hate
2021 · single
Gods of Tomorrow
2021 · single
Cut to the Bone
2021 · single
Don't Talk Science
2011 · album
Fuel to the Fire
2006 · album
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Biography
During the 1980s, a handful of German hard rock acts managed to make a pretty remarkable impression on the American music market. While not all of them had the staying power and popularity of Scorpions, Hanover's Victory made an enduring impression. The group carved out an impressive swath of heavy metal real estate for themselves in the mid- to late '80s, turning heads both at home and abroad with chart-topping releases like Don't Get Mad, Get Even, Hungry Hearts, and Culture Killed the Native. After calling it quits in 1994, the band reconvened in 2003 with a retooled lineup and began a second chapter with the album Instinct, which saw them revisiting old material while adding new songs to the Victory canon. 2005's Fuel to the Fire: The Best of Victory followed. More lineup changes occurred on subsequent tours, and the band regrouped for 2011's Don't Talk Science, their final album for a decade. In 2021, behind guitarist Herman Frank, Victory re-formed and released Gods of Tomorrow on AFM. Signed to CBS records, Victory (circa their first release: Charlie Huhn, vocals; Tommy Newton, guitars; John Lockton, guitar; Peter Knorn, bass; and Bernie Van de Graaf, drums) released their first album -- a self-titled affair that was boosted sales-wise by a rather Spinal Tap-esque "sexist" cover -- in 1985. A U.S. tour was in the offing, and, first making a replacement on drums with Van de Graaf stepping down for Fritz Randow, the band made additional appearances at Oakland's Day on the Green Festival and the Texxas Jam festival. Lockton left the band after their journey westward, but once new guitarist Herman Frank was in the fold, Victory continued a steady stream of recording and releasing that would result in four more albums from 1987 to 1990. Although the band was dealt the unfortunate blow of losing frontman Charlie Huhn, replacement Fernando Garcia made a positive impression, and the Victory train kept rolling. By the early '90s, Victory had begun to achieve chart success in Germany, but it wasn't enough to guarantee roster stability, and over the years a number of members had come and gone. It also wasn't enough to guarantee the band a longer shelf-life, as Victory decided to call it a day after releasing the double-live album Liveline in 1994. In 1996, the band, presenting a very different lineup than in years past, tried to make a comeback, but it was short-lived, and once again the members of Victory went their separate ways. The members found success in other bands, including Foghat, Godiva, and Saxon, and working with solo artists such as Michael Schenker and Uli Jon Roth. But the dissolution of Victory was to see its own end in 2003, when the band (the lineup this time around being Huhn, Newton, Randow, Frank, and Knorn) issued the album Instinct. 2006 found the re-established Victory releasing another collection, a re-recorded best-of titled Fuel to the Fire. The band continued in the face of continued lineup changes (Jioti Parcharidis in for Huhn, Randow replaced by Achim Keller), and would land a touring spot opening up for Metal Church. In 2011 a lineup consisting of Frank, Parcharidis, Peter Pichl, Christos Mamalitsidis, and Michael Wolpers unleashed Don't Talk Science. Billed as their final album, the band toured Europe and the U.S. in support. A decade later, Frank re-formed the group as a quintet with vocalist Gianni Pontillo, guitarist Mike Pesin, bassist Malte Frederik Burkert, and drummer Michael Stein. In November 2021, they released Gods of Tomorrow on AFM. ~ Chris True, Rovi