REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: October 26, 2022

LIVING COLOUR – Vivid

There was a huge burst around this band and album – mainly due to them supporting the Rolling Stones and Mick Jagger getting behind them. For me, it was the lead off track, Cult Of Personality, that dragged me in. Everything about this track I loved. The riff, the groove, Corey’s vocals, and Vernon’s crazy solo just dragged me in. 

I caught them a couple of times on this tour, and they were killer. The bringing together of all these musical styles was a sure fire winner, with only Fishbone doing anything similar. I Wanna Know is basically an RnB vocal with a rock groove and vibe on top. Middle Man, which today is my favourite track, has a killer riff a ripping funky groove and man this just smokes. Desperate People brings together a punky main riff with a funky under groove. Open Letter To A Landlord is Corey’s finest hour, a superb vocal with a topic close to his heart – and that main riff!

Funny Vibe kicks off Side 2 with a very metal riff before the most funky of grooves takes over. Memories Can Wait follows, and man what a tune. It begins again with a heavy funk groove with Vernon seriously wailing, then a very delicate and beautiful middle eight that drops into a fast punky riff. Broken Hearts has a very hip hop main beat with a country guitar over the top – it shouldn’t work, but it does – plus there is a beautiful solo from Vernon. Glamour Boys, which was produced by Mick Jagger, is funk mixed with calypso until the main hook. The band’s theme song follows with What’s Your Favourite Colour? – a seriously groovy funky vibe with the title just repeating. The album closes out with Which Way To America, another social commentary piece. A killer heavy funk groove and vibe with a very metal main riff. A great band  and superb album.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

P.I.L LTD – Album

Johnny is one of those guys you either love or hate. He seems to bring out the best and worst when his name is even mentioned. I have met him on a couple of occasions and found him to be very knowledgeable. Now, this album was a bit of a departure as he was given the opportunity to have killer backing band by bringing in some hired guns – namely Ginger Baker, Steve Vai, and Ryuchi Sakamoto. The end product is fantastic.

I came to this album through the involvement of Steve Vai. His contribution on key songs lifts the album to epic proportions. Opening track, FFF, has a great groove courtesy of Ginger – and Vai adds the sprinkles on top. Rise actually charted and was a good choice for a lead off single, but Bags was the track that made everyone sit up – that’s my favourite tune on the album. Awesome contribution from Vai, and Ginger’s drums are simple but effective. If you are only interested in Vai’s guitar noodling, then fade out track, Ease, should have you drooling – his solo is very dramatic and makes the whole album.

9/10 from The Grooveman.