Country of origin:
United States
Location:
New York, New York
Status:
Active
Formed in:
1984
Genre:
Heavy Metal (early); Hard Rock/Blues (later)
Themes:
N/A
Current label:
BraveWords Records
Years active:
1984, 1990-2008, 2011-present
Originally, this band was billed as Virgin Steele after Jack Starr and David DeFeis started going in different directions. At one point, Neil Turbin (Anthrax) was considered as a vocalist if Rhett Forrester couldn't make a certain festival in Paris. David DeFeis ended up keeping the Virgin Steele name.
Jack Starr is a guitarist and songwriter of French origin, who came to the rock and metal scene at the beginning of the '80s with the band Virgin Steele.
By 1984 Jack formed his own project, 'Jack Starr's Burning Starr', enjoying limited success in the USA during the explosion of hair metal in the second half of the eighties, principally with their Ratt / Dokken oriented '85 release 'No Turning Back', featuring in the line-up future Danger Danger members Frank Vestry and Bruno Ravel.
But at the end of the decade, Starr recorded one of the most unknown American hard rock albums of the era, the self-titled "Jack Starr's Burning Starr", named by the fans as "The Orange album".
This album set a departure from the band's hard 'n heavy style into a more commercial sound, full of keyboards and catchiness.
"Send Me An Angel", "Love Can't Wait", "Fool For Love" or "Hold Back The Night" could have been huge hits on the radio. Sadly, it was a little too late when the album came out (almost 1990) and the labels started to drop artists playing this kind of stuff.
The album only was released in Japan and Germany, but with no promotion and poor distribution it went unnoticed to the major audience.