REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: January 25, 2021

ZZ TOP – First Album

This is a million miles from what they would become after Eliminator. As The Rev Billy G would say himself “we are just a ‘lil ole blues band from Texas”, and ladies and germs that is exactly what we get here! A good, honest, no bells and whistles record. It has its high points and low points, namely Squank, but we’ll stick with the high ones.

First track is Somebody Else Been Shakin’ Your Tree, a great opener with a groovey blues swing, and some nice lead from Billy G. Then we get the really bluesy Brown Sugar, which starts with just guitar then grows into a cool boogie. Goin Down To Mexico is next another up-tempo groover, and then Side 1 closes with a blues/country ballad, Old Man.

Flip over to Neighbour Neighbour, a typical ZZ Top shuffle groove, and into Certified Blues again with that swinging groove and cool guitar. Next up the dirty boogie of Bedroom Thang, with a very suspect lyric and a killer close out instrumental break. Now onto the two close out tracks, Just Got Back From Baby’s, and Back Door Love Affair – both co-written by producer Bill Ham. Both of these tracks are traditional style blues, and have been covered by a variety of artists over the years – and both have some great guitar from Gibbons.

The band had only been together about six months before they went in and recorded this, so the songs were quickly put together. I’ve always loved three piece bands as there’s no hiding in the mix. You can hear everything super clear, and every instrument has its place in the sound – and this is a good recording! Not their best album, but a good representation of where they were at at the time.

7/10 from The Grooveman.

SUPERTRAMP – Breakfast in America

This is the sixth studio album by British band, Supertramp. They started out in 1970 as a full on Prog rock band. It wasn’t until they released their third album, Crime of The Century, and especially the single Dreamer, that they moved into a more commercial direction. Breakfast in America was probably the pinnacle of their careers as it spawned four Top 40 singles in America alone – where they toured endlessly. They first came onto my radar while at school with Dreamer. Even though this is not my favourite album by them, there is not a bad song on here.

Starting things off with Gone Hollywood, this sees them at their best with a trademark huge song that takes the listener everywhere across their musical spectrum – complete with a groovy breakdown. Next up is The Logical Song, which was a huge hit everywhere. It is followed by Goodbye Stranger – another typical song, and then into another huge hit with the title track, Breakfast in America. Last track on Side 1, Oh Darling, is probably the weakest on the album but still a good tune.

Side 2 kicks off with yet another classic Tramp tune, Take The Long Way Home. The two main protagonists Rodger Hodgson and Rick Davies vocally, although very different, compliment each other perfectly. Both of them are the main song writers, they sing their own songs, and they seem to have very different outlooks on life judging by the lyrical content of the songs. This would prove to be the down fall of the band at a later point. Last song of the album, Child Of Vision, starts off with that Wurlitzer organ sound first heard on Dreamer, that feels like an old friend, and builds into this huge closing piece with an almost jazz like piano section with a cool groove.

There is no other band like Supertramp. Nobody writes the way they do, and no matter what song is played, you instantly know who it is. It’s really hard to pin them down when someone asks you “what style of music do they play?”. My reply is “well, it’s Supertramp!”. Obviously this album sold squillions, and was 300 times platinum or something like that…so I guess somebody likes it.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.