It's good. It's not as good as Pride, but it's worth the admission fee. Vito Bratta's matured as a player and Mike Tramp as a songwriter and Lomenzo and D'Angelo are reliably tight. The lilting opening to Goin' Home Tonight stands as a good comparison to the heavy statement-of-intent opening to Hungry on Pride. They've clearly gone for a slightly lighter sound and incorporated a wider array of themes into the songwriting. Yes, hair metal bands do have a social conscience! Little Fighter's ostensibly about the Greenpeace ship, but it stands up as a generic `stay strong' anthem and as such is inspiring, moving and thought provoking. Broken Home is a case study in familial breakdown and the solo is quite simply heartbreaking. The best track here is the biographical Living On The Edge: the tale of one man's fight against the world - simply brilliant. White Lion can still do the party anthems (Dirty Woman and Let's Get Crazy), but the slight change in sound should be applauded: you only record one record like Pride in a career. This loses points for being a bit too long - two six-minute tracks is not a good note on which to close the album especially given that in If My Mind Is Evil they had the perfect sign-off. Of course the guitar playing is first class and there's still more than enough here to keep you coming back; just don't expect another Pride, give it chance to breathe, and enjoy.