grandbazaar wrote:
MetalStorm wrote:
Stratovarius jumped the shark with their S/T album.
I'd say they jumped the shark with Elements 1 & 2, 2 mostly.
I'd go as far back as Infinite. Technically they've gone downhill since Episode, but Visions and Destiny were almost at that level at least, whereas Infinite marked a much more severe drop in overall quality (nevermind Hunting High and Low is actually my favorite song of theirs).
One I think most of us can agree on: Iced Earth after Burnt Offerings. No further comment necessary and it's a far too common discussion on metal forums anyway.
Testament after the debut if you ask me - New Order had too many interludes, Practice was just plain weak-sounding, Souls of Black uninspired and inconsistent, Ritual slow and boring, Low and Demonic completely different in style and just awkward for Testament and The Gathering, while possibly their first ever step in a positive direction, just damn inconsistent and utterly overrated. Also add Exodus and Flotsam and Jetsam to the list of bands that went severely downhill after the debut.
Annihilator have actually jumped the shark several times in their career, but by far the worst instance of it is when "they" (Jeff Waters) recruited Dave Padden of vocals.
Def Leppard after Pyromania - I don't know if Ken's around to tear me to shreds for saying this, but Hysteria is just too damn overproduced, stiff and poppy for its own good and dear God don't even make me think about their albums after that one.
Running Wild: either the Masquerade album or even as soon as when they started singing about pirates; opinions vary on the subject but those are the two most common ones I think.