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| | Uriah Heep: The Best Of - The Millennium Collection - PopMatters Music Review |
 | | Their inclusion comes much to the chagrin of those early critics who are still alive and kicking, while RPM meters are appropriately being installed on the boxes of their deceased detractors, who are undoubtedly spinning in their graves at breakneck speed. |
 | | Though Uriah Heep would start to gain momentum stateside with the release of Look at Yourself (1971), it wouldn't be until 1972 that the band could finally claim to have a stable lineup, one that included David Byron (vocals), Mick Box (guitar), Ken Hensley (keyboards), Lee Kerslake (drums) and Gary Thain (bass). |
 | | Underrated, unfairly maligned and grossly underappreciated, Uriah Heep were absolute originals, despite the mean-spirited efforts of their critics to persuade otherwise. |
| www.popmatters.com /music/reviews/u/uriahheep-best.shtml (719 words) |
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