REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Month: April 2021 (Page 2 of 11)

KING’S X – Dogman

When I reviewed Out Of The Silent Planet, I mentioned that the first 5 albums are all bonafide classics, well this is the 5th album. It was also the first without long time manager/svengali type figure – Sam Taylor. The sound is a lot heavier and the vibe is a lot darker. The album was also produced by hot producer of the time, Brendan O’Brien, and he worked his magic well as everything is louder, clearer, and fuller in the mix.

I will not ever hide my love for this band as there was a time when they were everything musically to me, and as I have already mentioned – the first 5 still do it for me. The opening track and title track is a statement of intent of the album as a whole – the huge sound just engulfs you. The trademark melodies and harmonies are still present – just surrounded by a new found heaviness. I think by this point they were also getting huge pressure from the record company to give them a hit single, and Let’s Pretend is this album’s attempt. It’s a great song, but by now I think everyone knew they were not a singles band. The melodies, vocal harmonies and the dirty groove of Shoes is just beautiful. The slow soulful blues of Flies And Blue Skies is just incredible. The vocals alone send shivers down your spine. It’s just a really moving song. The dirty drop D funk of Black The Sky follows, and jeez what a heavy sounding track. The guitar tone is off the charts. The laid back tones of Fool You are next, and shows just how versatile the band are. Fat, dirty, and heavy grooves return with Don’t Care – another epic tune. Harmonies, melody and big fat tone. This is what they want!

O’Brien’s production shines through on Sunshine Rain, everything is crisp and crystal clear. The short sharp blast of Complain is next, and if I were an A&R guy at the time – this would have been my choice of a single, simple and to the point. The supremely heavy, Human Behaviour, is next up. Nobody else do tunes like this…and I mean nobody. This is heavy in sound, not in speed or thrash. The tones and the groove are just huge…and the ever present harmonies. Jeez this is good!! Then with a flick of the switch the mood calms down with the beautiful Cigarettes. The 51 second short sharp punk rock blast of Go To Hell comes and goes, before penultimate track Pillow arrives with that deep bass rumble. The final track is a great cover of Hendrix’s Manic Depression – and we’re done.

Things were never the same after this album. Sure, they still made good records, and in places they were freaking awesome, but to me, this is the last great Kings X record.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

ALICE COOPER – Muscle Of Love

This was Alice Copper (the band’s) 7th and last release. After this, the band would end and Alice Cooper the solo artist was born with the release of Welcome To My Nightmare. There was something genuinely sinister about the band in the early seventies, before the solo performances turned into a Broadway type show performance.

The album is represented in a plain brown cardboard cover to mimic the censorship of the top shelf magazines of the time. The band were actually on a roll up until this point as Killer, Schools Out, and Billion Dollar Babies were all huge sellers. This album was not as commercially successful as the others, but it’s still a great album – even though it did not contain the hit singles. Only Teenage Lament ’74 was released with little chart success.

The album does have its moments, especially on Side 2 with the title track and Working Up A Sweat – a nod to more basic times before the record company wanted all the shock songs. There is still a loose concept lyrically to go with the cover art, of sex habits of the urban masses. Fun fact: The Man With The Golden Gun was supposed to be the soundtrack to the Bond film of the same name, but they handed the song in too late so Lulu did it instead.

Personally, I prefer the band version to the solo version of Alice Cooper. I guess it had more of an impact on me when I was a kid.

8/10 from The Grooveman.

FREE – Fire And Water

The band that launched a million other bands, and a style copied by many. Formed in ’68, they burned bright for 5 years and disbanded in ’73. Kossoff went on to form Back Street Crawler, and would die in ’76 due to complications from drug use. Paul Rodgers would go on to form Bad Company with mega stardom. This simple little blues combo was how they started, and this, their third album, was one of the best. Rodgers’ soulful vocals, and Kossoff’s guitar were the trademark of the band, but they also had a killer rhythm section in Andy Fraser and Simon Kirke.

It’s hard to believe this album is over 50 years old, it still sounds so fresh. Opening track, Fire And Water, is a tour de force of the band’s style – a true classic in every sense. Fantastic vocal from Rodgers – a blue print for the blues rock bands that followed. Oh I Wept is a slow blues groove tune, and again lifted by the great guitar playing and vocals. Remember follows and is carbon copy (style-wise) of the previous tune. The absolute awesomeness of Heavy Load closes out Side 1, and it has a superb almost gospel blues feel to it.

The often copied (but not bettered) Mr. Big opens up Side 2. Killer song, killer riff. It’s such a simple song – but what a delivery! Don’t Say You Love Me is next and slows the pace right down. This song is all about the feel – with a stunning vocal from Rodgers. The album closer (and everyone’s favourite) is All Right Now. What can you say about a track this iconic?! This sign of a great tune is that it sounds as good now than when it was recorded 50 years ago. Yet another one for the everyone should own one bin.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

PINK FLOYD – Animals

To me, this is the last great Pink Floyd album. It’s the last album where they were a band, and not a Roger Waters dictatorship. I was never a fan of The Wall as I thought it was overblown self obsessed nonsense from Waters. Sure, there were some good songs on subsequent records, but this is the last true Floyd album. This was released in ’77 and was the 10th Floyd studio album. It was a concept album based social and political unrest in Britain in the mid-seventies. Two of the songs were actually leftovers from Wish You Were Here and reworked/renamed: Sheep and Dogs – they just happen to be the best two tracks on the album. This is prime time Floyd – huge overblown songs that go on forever, deep lyrical content, and killer production.

There’s only two tracks on Side 1, the short intro piece Pigs On The Wing, and Dogs. Dogs is such a huge song that if you switch off in the middle, there are virtually no reference points to remind you what song it is. Again, beautifully written and played – lots of room for the music to breath.

Side 2 starts with Pigs (three different ones) a Floyd classic. Lyrically there are lots of veiled (and not so veiled) digs at establishment figures of the time. Also, some great guitar from Gilmour to lift the song to another level. The last full length track on the album is one of my favourite Floyd tracks ever, Sheep. It starts with a beautiful Fender Rhodes intro from Rick Wright, with a subdued bass line played underneath – very reminiscent of One Of These Days. One of the most up-tempo songs the band recorded, and again, some great playing from Gilmour. The album closes out with the bookend piece Pigs On The Wing (Part 2).

There’s no denying the genius of Pink Floyd as a band, but it all started to unravel when Waters thought he was the band. It’s a shame when band’s fall apart like this. At least we have the music.

9/10 from The Grooveman.

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