For tens of thousands of his dedicated fans, David Byron remains THE voice of Uriah Heep. Born David John Garrick in Epping on 29th January 1947, Byron rose to prominence with Heep in the early Seventies, having previously served out an apprenticeship with Heep precursors the Stalkers as well as singing on sessions with such luminaries as Elton John. Byron presided vocally over all of UHs early triumphs, including landmark albums such as Salisbury, Look At Yourself, Demons & Wizards and Return To Fantasy. However, in '76 (after recording ten LPs with the band), Byron was sacked after a bout of internal feuding and was replaced by Lucifer's Friend vocalist, John Lawton. However, at the height of his power and popularity and whilst still a member of Uriah Heep, Byron recorded his debut solo album, Take No Prisoners during the Winter of '75. Contributions from individual Heep members, guitarist Mick Box, drummer Lee Kerslake and keyboardist/guitarist Ken Hensley all grace the albums original 10 tracks. For this long-overdue re-mastered edition three bonus tracks are featured including an edited version of the single, 'Steamin' Along' which makes for a welcome and worthy inclusion to the album. Byron's solo career would never reach the heights he enjoyed with Heep and his inability to come to terms with his more humble status was eroding his health and abilities irrevocably. During Christmas of '84 he was given just six months to live due to serious liver deterioration, the result of years of notorious alcohol abuse. Within two months David Byron would be found dead at his home in Maidenhead, Berkshire on February 28th 1985.
01 Man full of yesterdays 02 Sweet rock 'n' roll 03 Steamin' along 04 Silver white man 05 Love song 06 Midnight flyer 07 Saturday night 08 Roller coaster 09 Stop (think what you're doing) 10 Hit me with a white one 11 Steamin' along (single edit) 12 What's goin' on (studio outtake)