i am surprised that alexinnyc does not honour the southern fried fire. also, why isn't zz top southern rock? or are they? or were they?
― m0stlyClean, Thursday, 1 May 2008 01:18 (eighteen years ago)
They absolutely are... who says otherwise? Nobody mentioned them previously on this thread because it is ridiculous.
― Kerm, Thursday, 1 May 2008 01:24 (eighteen years ago)
Southern rock rules-zz, blackfoot, skynryd, the new orleans metal groups. Kick ass stuff. And black oak slays.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 May 2008 13:51 (eighteen years ago)
Just played the first side of that Henry Paul Band LP (which I bought for $1 in Austin last week.) Pretty great -- how come all bands don't have three guitar players? (When has any extra guitar player ever made a rock band worse?)
That K-Tel Southern Fried Rock LP is pretty great; also swear by South's Greatest Hits, on Capricorn from 1977. Best CD compilation I know of is Volunteer Jam: Classic Live Performances Volume One, on Sony Music Special Products, 1999.
the new orleans metal groups
Not sure what these are, but most of the '00s extreme metal bands who supposedly sound Southern rock (Pantera, Corrosion of Conformity, Crowbar, Clutch) don't sound Southern rock at all to me. I mean, maybe they're Southern, and maybe they're rock, but so are R.E.M., right?
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 14:00 (eighteen years ago)
I actually think my favorite New Orleans metal group is Supagroup (who don't sound very Southern rock either, usually.) But maybe I've missed some.
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 14:07 (eighteen years ago)
'00s extreme metal bands
or '90s, for that matter.
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 14:10 (eighteen years ago)
Crowbar, Corrosion, Eyehategod, and their combo (Down) all have a distinctive southern feel under all the chaos, especially Down.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 May 2008 14:11 (eighteen years ago)
I have the luxury of seeing BOA reunite about once every year or so 'cause some whippersnapper thinks it would be totally WILD to get them on the bill. It is. Totally gangbusters. Dandy does look like he crawled out from under a bridge these days though.
― will, Thursday, 1 May 2008 14:17 (eighteen years ago)
REM=Southern Gothic* Rock
*in the literary sense (Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty), not the Marilyn Manson sense
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 15:19 (eighteen years ago)
You know, I've been hearing people say that about R.E.M. and various other bands for 25 or 30 years now, and I still really have no idea what it means (though maybe I would if I'd read more Southern Gothic literature than I have, who knows.)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 15:56 (eighteen years ago)
also, why isn't zz top southern rock? or are they? or were they?
I wouldn't say ZZ Top are an obvious southern rock band. Like any rock, blues or country group from Texas, they've maintained a certain independence from the South. At least, that's how I've always seen it.
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:14 (eighteen years ago)
Then again, maybe my definition of southern rock has been drawn a little too narrow. I'm no expert on the genre, by any means.
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:15 (eighteen years ago)
ZZ Top were considered southern rock in the seventies, but the tag kinda disappeared after they went new wave.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:17 (eighteen years ago)
That makes me wonder...did Southern rock fans still consider 38 Special Southern rock after they went powerpop (which wasn't too far into their career, really)?
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:20 (eighteen years ago)
[x-post]
Altough I do agree w/Texas groups being independent of the movement. The only other band I can think of that comes close is Point Blank, and even then the were closer to Bad Company or April Wine than Skynyrd or the Allmans.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:20 (eighteen years ago)
I think .38 Special slides by on account of the Van Zandt bloodline.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:21 (eighteen years ago)
xp: thirding that. texas is its own thing.
― GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:22 (eighteen years ago)
Well, the stereotypical Texan identity is too individualistic to be merely lumped in with "The South", isn't it? And was Texas even ever part of the Confederacy? (No real need to answer, I can look it up.)
Anyways, even though the guy's a racist paranoid humourless lunatic these days, Charlie Daniels used to be a cool redneck, of the whiskey-weed-&-wimmen variety. And I've got a real fondness for a big percentage of Charlie Daniels' '70s records, particularly Honey In The Rock/Uneasy Rider and the other long OOP ones.
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:44 (eighteen years ago)
(pls ignore now-redundant remarks re. Texas)
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:45 (eighteen years ago)
The thing about Texas is we had Outlaw Country happening at the same time.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:49 (eighteen years ago)
I'm of that generation. So yeah, I didn't know about the southern rock background when I was digging those funny dudes with beards on MTV.
I do think ZZ Top has always had more of a minimalist approach to grooving than most southern rock bands.
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:51 (eighteen years ago)
ZZ Top also seems less influenced by southern soul, Muscle Shoals, etc. (Again, all this stuff is new to me.)
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 1 May 2008 16:57 (eighteen years ago)
ZZ Top started out closer to Cream, James Gang, Johnny Winter. Stuff like that, power trios & what not.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:00 (eighteen years ago)
I do think they (ZZ Top) had a good grip on southern soul as well. It just wasn't their selling point.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:01 (eighteen years ago)
i really need some Barefoot Jerry records. i don't have any. how come i never see them anywhere?
i've been digging my elvin bishop records a lot lately. and my grinderswitch records. and the james montgomery band album on capricorn that i picked up.
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:03 (eighteen years ago)
been digging my fave cowboy rekkerds as well. i'm always in the mood for those:
IAN, WHEN WILL YOU KNOW THE JOYS OF CAPRICORN RECORDING ARTISTS *COWBOY*????
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:04 (eighteen years ago)
Point Blank reviewed
PB were definitely southern rock. They certainly seem to consider themselves so at pointblanksouthernrock.com. Their first album was ZZ Top as interpreted by angry drunks and biker-meth freaks. Heck, they were managed and produced by ZZ Top's manager who obviously wanted them to be even more dangerous. So it's their best. A long mellowing out followed.
Hydra had their moments, most of them on their first two CDs, the second with a classic photo of a copy blowing his nose with money. They were on Capricorn.
The trinity of southern rock has to be Skynyrd, the Allmans and Molly Hatchet. Besides music, they still have a lot in common. Many of them are dead. And by this they prove southern rock is something of a generic yet very distinct brand. As ringer bands, they still make records people buy and no one cares at the big country and ag fair fests that the guys onstage aren't the real guys anymore. In any case, some of the ringer guys have now been in the bands longer than the original dead guys were.
And Molly Hatchet's live CD from last year was decent. I put something on it somewhere on ILM but the search function doesn't work for shit so it's out of sight.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:10 (eighteen years ago)
And now there's Mudcrutch, definitely a southern rock band. Even the album art is classic southern rock hooey. Reviewed it in Rolling Hard Rock xposted to Rolling Country. It's an Outlaws record which means if you liked the Outlaws and have the Outlaws (or Henry Paul), then you don't actually need Mudcrutch.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:14 (eighteen years ago)
I need to borrow/steal my sister's Point Blank records.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:14 (eighteen years ago)
Yeah, that sounds awesome.
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:15 (eighteen years ago)
And when I say Mudcrutch is the Outlaws, it's Tom Petty and company doing something of a wan imitation of the Outlaws who often could be very wan themselves. Both bands were rooted in Gainesville, so maybe there's a reason for that.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:22 (eighteen years ago)
I passed on a couple of Black Oak records in the used dollar-bin last weekend. Not sure if I erred. I do like Skynyrd's first two pretty well and some of Little Feat is okay - not expecting these to be that good, but I suppose they might be worth a listen.
― o. nate, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:24 (eighteen years ago)
i don't even own any blackfoot albums anymore and that's a crime. i love blackfoot.
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:28 (eighteen years ago)
blackfoot strikes was one of my fave albums as a kid. i had no problem playing it alongside judas priest and krokus and whatever other filth i was listening to. now i wanna hear it!
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:30 (eighteen years ago)
Bugs Henderson and the Shuffle Kings! Now those were southern rock records. Of course, he was Texan -- flying in the same orbit as Bloodrock and Nitzinger, the latter who made very southern rock records. Great first album followed by gradual slide.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:31 (eighteen years ago)
i wonder if my dad still has all his doc holliday records. my dad LOVES molly hatchet. i gave him a promo of their last album. only the Germans and my dad listen to Molly Hatchet anymore. And Gorge.
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:32 (eighteen years ago)
No mention yet of Jerry Reed's "Eastbound and Down (Smokey and the Bandit Theme)"? Surely one of the classics of the genre.
― o. nate, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:34 (eighteen years ago)
"Lord Mr. Ford"!
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:38 (eighteen years ago)
my dad took me to see The Roundup in philly in, um, 1981? we stayed in a hotel and everything. marshall tucker, outlaws, 38 special, allmans, um, there were probably others. at jfk stadium.
my dad loved his rossington collins band albums as well. he wore those out. you must bear in mind, this is a person with a collection of a zillion jazz and R&B records, and, like, 50 southern rock records. he got the bug for those guitars. he didn't even own any regular rock records. i guess if you are an albert collins and lonnie mack and jazz guitar fan you have to got to southern rock to get that mix of blues/virtuoso-ism/volume. (oh and stevie ray was his god as well. he saw him play right before the crash.)
― scott seward, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:39 (eighteen years ago)
Blackfooot Strikes is definitely a Southern-fried metal thing. Those dudes kicked some ass. I think Medlocke and Spires were in Skynrd in the prehistoric days.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 May 2008 18:19 (eighteen years ago)
Medlocke was. And he's been back in Skynyrd for some time. Spires, sadly, is dead. I interviewed him for a local newspaper I worked at and he was very gracious. He once had a spread in Pennsy when Blackfoot was at the top of their game. Spires indicated it started going downhill when the record company and management pushed them into making changes to accomodate a desire to look more hep and 80's-AOR. Management brought in Ken Hensley from Uriah Heep and they started doing "Easy Livin'" in concert. I seem to recall him telling me he had no idea why or what that was about. Hensley arrived for the album Siogo, which was an acronym for Suck It Or Get Out. It actually was not bad at all, even with Hensley, and had your standard Blackfoot-type song about poon, called "Going Down to Eat at the Y." The next album had a Blackfoot-like title, Vertical Smile and polaroid crotch shots of women in panties but was produced horribly by Eddie Offord. It was utter crap and didn't sound anything like a southern rock band.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 18:55 (eighteen years ago)
"She make it all worthwhile with her vertical smile." Still, amusing for a moment but total rubbish.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 18:57 (eighteen years ago)
I was just listening to Blackfoot Strikes! That is a totally rad album. "Train, Train" is one of the great lesser-known singles of the 70s.
― Jeff Treppel, Thursday, 1 May 2008 18:58 (eighteen years ago)
too bad about Spires. Blackfoot always had a following in western Jersey/PA. Thanks for the info, Gorge, as always.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 1 May 2008 19:03 (eighteen years ago)
Now I'm kicking myself for not buying the $4 Blackfoot Tomcattin' CD I saw at Princeton Record Exchange last month. Boy am I a cheapskate sometimes. (It's probably still there, if anybody plans to be in that neighborhood.) Not sure why I ever got rid of my old copy to begin with, but I did. Re-bought Strikes for $7.99 a couple years ago, and it's as great as everybody here says.
― xhuxk, Thursday, 1 May 2008 19:28 (eighteen years ago)
You would definitely like <I>Siogo</i> A lot. <I>Tomcattin'</i> was much in the vein of <I>Strikes</i>, their benchmark album. The latter includes a lot of killer tunes, two of which are great covers, Spirit's "I Got a Line On You" and Blues Image's "Pay My Dues." (Aussie biker band Buffalo also latched onto the worth of that.) "Left Turn on a Red Light" is also great and then there's the obligatory long guitar bash which starts slow and ends fast -- every suvvern band has to have one -- "Highway Song." I always thought it was the weakest piece on the record.
Then there was <I>Marauder</i>. Don't listen to it much. However, it does contain three very catchy hard tunes -- "Fly Away, "Dry County" and "Good Morning" -- which were put to even better use on their live album, <I>Highway Song</i>
<I>Highway Song</i> was never released domestically until a couple years ago as CD on Wounded Bird. It was a mistake on the part of the record company. Wound up as a Euro-import and its deletion in the US market, since all southern rock band live albums tend to do well with fans, is a mystery.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 20:50 (eighteen years ago)
i need to hear ZZ Top as interpreted by angry drunks and biker-meth freaks.... which reminds me, motorhead's cover of "beer drinkers and hellraisers" is fucking ace. are blackfoot any relation to jd blackfoot?
― m0stlyClean, Thursday, 1 May 2008 20:53 (eighteen years ago)
No, not even close. Although I can recommend JD Blackfoot's Yellowhand from a couple years back. The only southern rock record ever made in New Zealand, I bet. For only Corky Laing on drums and JD on acoustic guitar and vocals, the shit rocks. Actually, much more than the obscure full hard rock band stuff he did in the early Seventies.
― Gorge, Thursday, 1 May 2008 21:08 (eighteen years ago)
Southern (Hemisphere) Rock
― o. nate, Thursday, 1 May 2008 21:16 (eighteen years ago)
I've a boot CD of Blackfoot's debut "No Reservations" with two "bonus" tracks that sound like a totally different band - because they ARE! Another Blackfoot, this one from Frisco(?), late '60s.
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 1 May 2008 21:35 (eighteen years ago)
xp not since my childhood, which is when i mainly was subjected to "ramblin' man!"
― Western® with Bacon Flavor, Wednesday, 7 May 2025 06:54 (one year ago)
i knew the allman brothers were a massive blindspot in my music knowledge but i had no idea they were responsible for "rambin' man." i would've sworn until now that was a loggins & messina song!
― Western® with Bacon Flavor, Tuesday, May 6, 2025 11:28 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
sounds like maybe you haven’t heard much Loggins & Messina either lol
― werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, May 7, 2025 12:06 AM (six hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
Loggins & Messina's "Angry Eyes" could easily be an Allman Brothers song (and a good one!)
― Lee626, Wednesday, 7 May 2025 10:26 (one year ago)
The Brothers reunion shows had some pretty good stuff. Legacy band and all, but they did some cool arrangements.
― earlnash, Thursday, 8 May 2025 01:07 (one year ago)
love how 'green grass and high tides' ends on a real guitar (army) snarl
― mookieproof, Thursday, 8 May 2025 01:28 (one year ago)