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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/uriah_heep_1797.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:The classic line-up in the mid-1970s.]]
3
4->''"I'm sending roses,\
5I'm sending blood red roses,\
6This burning in my heart, is tearing me apart I'm sending roses,\
7I'm sending blood red roses,\
8You've got to understand,\
9That's my heart in your hand."''
10-->--"Blood Red Roses"
11
12Uriah Heep are a British ProgressiveRock band [[LongRunners whose debut was released in 1970]] and are still active as of 2023. They are considered one of the first HeavyMetal bands, with their initial albums released neck-to-neck with the foundational metal records of Music/LedZeppelin, Music/DeepPurple and Music/BlackSabbath. They stand out from their early 70s contemporaries by their deeper progressive stylings, a taste for the psychedelic and fantastical, and the very heavy presence of the Hammond organ (to an even greater extent than Deep Purple).
13
14The nucleus of the original group was David Byron, a singer with an operatic voice and multi-octave vocal range and lead guitarist Mick Box, both of whom had played in a psychedelic group called Spice in the sixties. The third member of the core of Uriah Heep was Ken Hensley, who contributed keyboards, some guitar and most of the songwriting. Bassist Gary Thain and drummer Lee Kerslake completed the "classic" line-up that played on the ''Demons and Wizards'' and ''The Magician's Birthday'' albums.
15
16Presently, [[IAmTheBand Box is the only member who has been in every line-up]].
17
18Not to be confused with the ''Literature/DavidCopperfield'' character for whom they're named.
19
20!!Studio discography:
21* ''...Very 'Eavy ...Very 'Umble'' (1970)[[note]]The US version was a SelfTitledAlbum with a different cover and a track substition ("Lucy Blues" was replaced by "Bird of Prey")[[/note]]
22* ''Salisbury'' (1971)[[note]]Once again, the US version had a different cover and a track substitution ("Bird of Prey" was replaced by "Simon the Bullet Freak")[[/note]]
23* ''Look at Yourself'' (1971)
24* ''Demons and Wizards'' (1972)
25* ''The Magician's Birthday'' (1972)
26* ''Sweet Freedom'' (1973)
27* ''Wonderworld'' (1974)
28* ''Return to Fantasy'' (1975)
29* ''High and Mighty'' (1976)
30* ''Firefly'' (1977)
31* ''Innocent Victim'' (1977)[[note]]Yet again, the US version had a different cover[[/note]]
32* ''Fallen Angel'' (1978)
33* ''Conquest'' (1980)
34* ''Abominog'' (1982)
35* ''Head First'' (1983)
36* ''Equator'' (1985)
37* ''Raging Silence'' (1989)
38* ''Different World'' (1991)
39* ''Sea of Light'' (1995)
40* ''Sonic Origami'' (1998)
41* ''Wake the Sleeper'' (2008)
42* ''Celebration'' (2009)[[note]]Mostly re-recordings of earlier hits, with two new songs[[/note]]
43* ''Into the Wild'' (2011)
44* ''Outsider'' (2014)
45* ''Totally Driven'' (2015)[[note]]More re-recordings of older songs[[/note]]
46* ''Living the Dream'' (2018)
47* ''Chaos & Colour'' (2023)
48
49----
50!!"Stealin' when I should have been tropin'":
51* AlbumTitleDrop: The ''Sea of Light'' album has no title track but this line is heard in the song "Love in Silence" - one of its centerpieces and the longest track on that record.
52----> "''Knowing in your heart what's right, you walk upon the sea of light...''"
53* AnAesop: "Lady In Black" ends with the message that evil cannot overcome evil.
54* AmbiguouslyHuman: It's not clear if the "lady in black" in the song of the same name is a human or some kind of divine being, though her wisdom and appearing to the narrator in his hour of greatest need would suggest the latter.
55* DarkIsNotEvil: The titular "Lady in Black", who gently warns the despairing protagonist that PayEvilUntoEvil only makes things worse.
56* DemotedToExtra: In spite of their popularity and influence, Uriah Heep is less well remembered than other early metal groups, though they probably have more recognition in prog rock circles.
57* {{Determinator}}: When your band disintegrates and everyone except you throws the towel in, what do you do? Grit your teeth, call friends and ex-colleagues, gather a new lineup and soldier on. This is what Mick Box did after the great implosion of 1981: he was the only common link between the lineups that recorded ''Conquest'' and ''Abominog'', but he got the band back in shape and steered it in a new direction. Admittedly Box did drink for a few days wallowing in misery, then thought of going solo, then... just snapped back into the combat state of mind, and pulled everything together.
58** On a lesser scale, he (plus Trevor Bolder and Lee Kerslake) repeated it five years later, when Peter Goalby and John Sinclair left, and the first of the replacement singers turned out inadequate. They found new people and created a lineup that lasted 21 years, spawning the best of their latterday albums in the process.
59** By now (2024) Box is not just the only one of the "classic" lineup, or any of the 70s lineups, still in the band, he's the only member of the "classic" lineup still alive, and yet he soldiers on, and the band has released a string of albums as successful as anyone can realistically expect of a group hailing from the dawn of hard rock, 55 years away from inception.
60* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: Their debut album is a grab-bag of various sub-genres of rock, mostly because Ken Hensley joined the band after the material was written. Once Hensley took on main songwriting duties, the following string of albums have a much more coherent sound. The album is also mixed very differently from their later work (see GratuitousPanning below).
61* EpicRocking: The second side of ''Salisbury'' is occupied by a 16-minute long suite featuring a twenty-six piece orchestra. One of their most popular songs, "July Morning", is another good example.
62* ForDoomTheBellTolls: The ominous opening to "Rainbow Demon".
63* GlassShatteringSound: The late, great David Byron had an incredibly powerful falsetto, as heard among other places on "Sunrise" from ''The Magician's Birthday''.
64* GratuitousPanning: The mixing on ''Very 'Eavy'' pans all instruments to either the left or right channel in most songs.
65* HeavyMithril: Their early 70s' catalogue has plenty of this. Generally their most explicitly fantastical songs ("The Wizard", "Lady in Black") were softer, folksier ones. They did have their share of fantastical metal songs too, though ("Rainbow Demon", "Pilgrim", "Magician's Birthday").
66* IAmTheBand: A bizarre example. Ken Hensley was undoubtedly the leader through the 70s, but then he left the band. Mick Box, the lead guitarist, is the only original member still in the band to this day. For a time, they were a simple RevolvingDoorBand after all of the original members left, with Box as the only constant member. However, the line-up that he formed in 1986 lasted 21 years and would still be together today, had ill-health not forced a change in drummers; then, Trevor Bolder who had been the longest running bass player (from 1976 to 2013, minus a short sabbatical between 1981 and 1983), died.
67* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: As mentioned above under AmbiguouslyHuman, it's unclear if the "lady in black" from the song of the same name is a goddess who appears in people's hour of need and counsels them or just a woman with good advice who appeared at a good time.
68* NightmareDreams: "Too Scared to Run", which seems to be about sleep paralysis.
69* ProgressiveMetal: Their hard rock-inspired take on progressive rock could be considered to be an UrExample of this.
70* ShortRunners: The band's lineup with bassists Mark Clarke lasted about two to three months, but Clarke helped write, played on, and sang in "The Wizard", so he appears in the final ''Demons and Wizards'' album.
71* SomethingBlues: "Lucy Blues" from ''...Very 'Eavy ...Very 'Umble''.
72* StepUpToTheMicrophone: Ken Hensley took the lead vocal on some of their most popular songs, including "Lady in Black" and "Look at Yourself". According to Hensley, David Byron refused to sing "Lady" due to disliking the song, and was unavailable with throat issues for "Look".
73* SurprisinglyGentleSong: "Rain" from ''Magician's Birthday'' is a soft piano ballad in the middle of a hard/prog rock record. It was originally intended to involve no other instruments than the piano, but the band's manager insisted on a bit more oomph to not stand out too much on the album. A more stripped-down rendition can be found on Ken Hensley's first solo album.
74* VocalTagTeam: David Byron and Ken Hensley sometimes sang in duet with each other, such as on "I Wanna Be Free", where their harmonies sound like a tiny choir. In "Paradise", they alternate lines with each other, panned to the right and left channels, respectively, for a back-and-forth.

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