What had gone in "Master of the Rings" with relative ease across the stage, presented himself more difficult the second time around. Because the ousted Roland Grapow and Uli Kusch had a breeze with master plan a new band at the start, which also failed to present a fantastic debut on which to make matters worse, even guested the hated ex-singer Michael Kiske. To find a new drummer turned out to be not all that easy, and the uncertainty you can hear the album unquestionably on. It seems as if the band wants to return with all his might to the sound of the successful "Master of the Rings", but everything seems forced something, and the songs are simply not of the usual quality. Clear, "Open your Life" is a typical, knorke Helloween anthem and "Sun 4 the World" projects also clearly out, but already "Just A Little Sign" is Tralala-standard even for Helloween relationships with. The same is true for "The Tune", whose chorus überkandidelter could pass for a parody of Rhapsody's operas Fetish smooth - but probably rather unintentionally funny. The thrashy "Liar" pops into stanzas purely just fine, but one has the feeling that the band was a no appropriate chorus, which is why the motto "the disk knows anyway no bad" simply the "Push" ("Better Than Raw) 1; 1 pure copied.
Over the years you have the disk indeed "good part" as a fan, but the fact remains that Helloween had arrived with "Rabbit" in the most severe form deep in their careers.