J. Geils C/D

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>"musta got lost" was to boston radio what "stairway to heaven" and "free bird" were to radio on the rest of the planet.<

except for detroit, where seger's "turn the page" was. (and again, where the live "musta got lost" was not far behind at all.)

chuck, Monday, 24 May 2004 19:07 (nineteen years ago) link

I love J. Geils, both the bar band boogie blues stuff and trhe Freeze Frame, Love Stnks Centerfold years.

H (Heruy), Saturday, 29 May 2004 01:54 (nineteen years ago) link

H is back, is back!
We love H and H loves us,
he is a great man

Begs2Differ (Begs2Differ), Saturday, 29 May 2004 02:32 (nineteen years ago) link

hahaha

danke danke

H (Heruy), Saturday, 29 May 2004 03:03 (nineteen years ago) link

Classic for sure: the Bloodshot album on blood-red vinyl.

briania (briania), Saturday, 29 May 2004 03:57 (nineteen years ago) link

What about Hotline? Or, better yet, Ladies Invited, which sounds so different from Bloodshot you almost wouldn't think it was the same band. Except, of course, for the Woofa Goofa, blowing our face out on "The Lady Makes Demands"...

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Saturday, 29 May 2004 04:11 (nineteen years ago) link

BTW, prob. should be a special mention for "Concealed Weapons" from the ill-fated post-Wolf record, You're Gettin' Even While I'm Gettin' Odd..

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Saturday, 29 May 2004 04:20 (nineteen years ago) link

Oh, and looking at the sleeve to Bloodshot, I notice this chestnut: "On Don't Try To Hide It the saxophone solo is by Mike Hunt."

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Saturday, 29 May 2004 04:29 (nineteen years ago) link

"If it looks good out, leave it out!" -- Peter Wolf

There's a great story or two about Wolf's Boston DJ days in Fred Goodman's 'Mansion on the Hill.'

And "Flamethrower" was likewise big on WOWI, the superb black radio station where I grew up in Norfolk, Va.

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Saturday, 29 May 2004 07:53 (nineteen years ago) link

Freeze Frame was the first album I ever heard on a Walkman. Not that it matters...

shookout (shookout), Saturday, 29 May 2004 17:37 (nineteen years ago) link

two years pass...
Hold on
This song has a little introduction to it
It ain’t supposed to be sad though you might feel it that way
It's a song about desperation,
Every now and then we do get desperate

This is a song about L-O-V-E,
and if you abuse it yer goin to lose it
and if you lose it yer goin to abuse and
if you abuse it you aint going to be able to choose it
cuz you aint going to have it further on down the line
and things aint going to be so fine
and yer going to be sitting there on your little machine
tryin to look and keep it clean and
You’re going to be home playing bingo all night all alone
and that's why your sittin there by the telephone
and you know that she aint goin to call you!

So you put on the TV and you're watchin Johnny Carson
segueing right into the Tomorrow show
but that don't got the go so you turn it off ya turn on the radio,
the radio don’t' seem to get the click so you say
"Hey Man, I can't lickety split"
You start to open up a little book
and there's somethin there you got to overlook
and you say "BABY, you know there's somethin on my mind!
You say "Baby there's somethin on my mind -
I know that you're home and I know you aint all alone!"

So you start walking over to her house
and you get over to her house
and you walk over to her door and
you start poundin on her door and you say
"Open up the door bitch!”
This is the wooba gooba with the green teeth, let me in!!"

Well, she opens up the door
and then you just kinda walk up to her and say
"Baby", (say Baby!) you look up way up at her green mascara
and you say "Oh my darling,
you know her and me was at the party as friends -
do not believe what they say
that's only gossip that they tellin ya -
a wise crack of lies!
You say Darling!!!

Take your big curls and squeeze them down Rotumba -
What's the name of the chick with the long hair?
(Rapunzle!) Hey Rapunzle!
Hey Raputa! Raputa the Buta!
Hey Raputa the Buta flip me down your hair let me climb
up to the ladder of your love!!
Because this is the wooba gooba sayin to ya
"Love comes once and when it comes
you better grab it fast cuz sometimes the love
you grab aint going to last and
I believe I musta,
You know I think I musta,
You know baby I think I musta,
You know I think I musta,
I musta got lost!!!"

Emily B (Emily B), Monday, 7 August 2006 22:23 (seventeen years ago) link

are you ready to throw down

Sir Dr. Rev. PappaWheelie Jr. II of The Third Kind (PappaWheelie 2), Monday, 7 August 2006 23:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Make no mistake. One of the best live bands to ever hit the stage. The remnants still get together and play in the Worcester area.

jim wentworth (wench), Tuesday, 8 August 2006 02:22 (seventeen years ago) link

I love those first two albums with the stark black & white covers (THE J. GEILS BAND and THE MORNING AFTER). After that, their good moments got more and more sporadic. I bought FREEZE-FRAME in high school; I probably played the self-titled debut more. Sold FREEZE-FRAME long, long ago...

I did see Peter Wolf live about three years ago and it was pure fire - he still had it, telling stories and continually alluding to his ex-wife, Faye Dunaway (yes, that one)...

Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Tuesday, 8 August 2006 03:39 (seventeen years ago) link

Excellent transcription Emily! Another thread it would make a nice addition to:

100 excellent spoken intros

By the way: CLASSIC, although I find their LPs a bit spotty. (I always tune out the too-slow straight blues.) My favourite: Freeze Frame, a surprising choice, given my usual '70s leanings.

Monty Von Byonga (Monty Von Byonga), Tuesday, 8 August 2006 04:01 (seventeen years ago) link

Another thread it would make a nice addition to:
100 excellent spoken intros

Uh, apparntly it already DID make a nice addition - two yrs ago.

Monty Von Byonga (Monty Von Byonga), Tuesday, 8 August 2006 04:12 (seventeen years ago) link

I bought Anthology: Houseparty as soon as it came out, and I've never regretted it. Freeze-Frame was the first album I purchased with my own money. J. Geils Band rules.

J (Jay), Tuesday, 8 August 2006 16:54 (seventeen years ago) link

three years pass...

"Come Back" on Love Stinks rocks entire solar systems.

― Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, April 17, 2003 6:35 AM (6 years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RxPXrOr2SM

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 8 January 2010 10:12 (fourteen years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=el9epCgvEcE

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 8 January 2010 10:14 (fourteen years ago) link

Better version

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCINR2Nlep8

Wish there were some vintage clips out there...

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 8 January 2010 10:18 (fourteen years ago) link

I've started pulling out my old Geils LPs (as in, pre-Sanctuary) in the past month or so -- Monkey Island and Nightmares (And Other Tales From the Vinyl Jungle) so far. Liked them both, but I gotta say, not as much as I expected to -- maybe I just wish the band kicked harder or something? Still a little confused about why Monkey Island is (or at least used to be) considered their early classic. Guess just because it seems kind of dark, with the title track (which I suppose is supposed to sound reggae maybe?) and "Wreckage" and all. Liked that one more overall, I guess, for the overriding mood, though Nightmares has "Detroit Shakedown" and "Must Of Got Lost" (more replayable without the interminable live monologue intro mentioned above tbh) and the Shorty Long/Pigmeat Markham update "Funky Judge" and the I guess Screamin' Jay Hawkins update "Nightmares," which is mainly Wolf doing his old-school race-music DJ rap thing on Halloween. Maybe somebody should compile all his old "raps" on one record; give or take Steve Tyler (another Bostonian, wonder why) seems he was more ready than any other classic rock guys when hip-hop came along. Don't know if he ever did anything about it, though; "Flamethrower" maybe, and wasn't Lights Out supposed to be sort of hip-hoppy? Haven't heard it in decades. Pretty sure "Oo-Ee-Diddley-Bop!", one of the singles, was a sort of rap thing, albeit basically based on an Army marching cadence.

xhuxk, Friday, 8 January 2010 14:42 (fourteen years ago) link

Dave Marsh on Lights Out, 1985: "On a few of these tracks, Wolf and collaborator Michael Jonzun come closer to merging hard rock and the new street music than anything this side of 'Rock Box' itself."

No idea whether he's exaggerating; I remember thinking the LP sounded pretty compromised back then, though I'm not sure how much I actually listened to it. Still, he's with the Jonzun Crew guy, so who knows?

xhuxk, Friday, 8 January 2010 15:06 (fourteen years ago) link

Parke Puterbaugh: "Teaming up with Jonzun has allowed Wolf to bridge the gap between the good-time, juke-joint rock and soul of the '50s and '60s (where his own roots lie) with the street-smart inner-city techno-funk of the present."

Christgau said current Ashford & Simpson and Chaka Khan albums actually had funkier electro-beats, but he liked the Motown-like ballads anyway, and gave the album a B+. Guess now I'll buy it if I see a copy for $1.

xhuxk, Friday, 8 January 2010 15:24 (fourteen years ago) link

I've started pulling out my old Geils LPs (as in, pre-Sanctuary) in the past month or so -- Monkey Island and Nightmares (And Other Tales From the Vinyl Jungle) so far. Liked them both, but I gotta say, not as much as I expected to -- maybe I just wish the band kicked harder or something?

You're missing the better pieces.

First three albums, s/t, The Morning After and Live -- Full House, the latter of which is the hardest most high energy thing in the catalog. On the first album and for the live one, they turned "Serves You Right to Suffer" into a metal dirge.

Nightmares was pretty iffy, House Party has its moment, mostly for the title cut.

Blow Your Face Out is one from the early period that you still see a lot in stores. It was a double live that was good, but not quite the wallop of Full House.

I was a big J. Geils fan. Even covered "Floyd's Hotel," which was from The Morning After on my blog late last year. You can Google it.

Gorge, Friday, 8 January 2010 16:48 (fourteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Picked up a couple LPs relevant to this thread in the past month from dollar bins, and finally got around to listening to them this week.

J. Geils Band Showtime! -- "historic live album" (the cover says) from 1982. Post-Love Stinks/Freeze Frame, I'm thinking they were basically a studio band by this point, just a lot slicker than in the '70s, and it shows -- way more horns than guitars even in previously fairly heavy-ish songs, my ears tell me, and only in non-hit "Stoop Down #39" (from Nightmares) and maybe the closing cover of "Land Of A Thousand Dances" (which goes into a sort of James Brown vamp) do you hear much musicianly interplay or possible spontaneity going on. Still, the slickness doesn't bother me much; selection makes for a very playable album. "Love Rap" at the end of Side One is 5:14 of Peter Wolf standup comedy jive-talk about Adam and Eve, embarrassingly minstrel-like in its attempts at blackness; he works in Rapudah the Beyoodah stuff, No Anchovies stuff, lame Cheech & Chong style pot jokes about getting the munchies, etc. Odd thing is how Side One ends with the word "love," and then "Love Stinks" on Side Two starts with the word "stinks" -- weird that they split it up like that.

Lights Out, Wolf solo LP from '84 -- yeah, not nearly as loaded with Michael Jonzun electrofreakazoid beats as often claimed (by people other than Christgau) at the time: Only "Mars Need Women" (how many bands have done songs with that title? There's even one on the new Rob Zombie album!) and maybe "Oo-ee-diddley-bop!" come anywhere near Jonzun Crew levels, though closer "Billy Big Time" is the biggest funky surprise -- a sequel to Electrifyin' Mojo hit "Flamethrower," sounds like, possibly with a decent rebel story attached. The rest is mainly reasonably crafty Prince-age crossover pop, ballads (not as Motowny as Xgau suggested, but still nice) and more upbeat trifles like the title-track hit and "Crazy" (sort of Wolf's version of Billy Joel's "You May Be Right" in that he keeps telling some girl how crazy he is but you never buy it at all.) He also covers Billie Holiday's suicidal show blues "Gloomy Sunday," for some reason; maybe he was inspired by the Lydia Lunch version from a few years before. Still, overall, another real good example of how spirited so much mainstream pop sounded in '84.

Need to pull out the black self-titled one from 1970 next, I promise.

xhuxk, Saturday, 30 January 2010 18:47 (fourteen years ago) link

Never gave half a thought to JGB until someone gave me a copy of Full House Live. Sweet Georgia Brown! Who'da thunk the best bar band in the world would get a chance to lay down a slab o' glory at the top of their game like that? It's one of those things that's so unexpectedly wicked-awesome that I don't actually even want to hear anything else by them lest it break the spell.

Did you say you were going to mangle the light? (staggerlee), Saturday, 30 January 2010 19:40 (fourteen years ago) link

Put on the self-titled debut during muted pre-Obama-interview pre-game festivities, and yeah, George is right -- it pretty much kicks the butt of every other Geils (and Wolf) album I've pulled out this year. Just a real solid album, and never much winds up seeming stodgy or sluggish no matter how bar-band blues it gets. Six covers out of 11 tracks (assuming Jukejoint Jimmy, who wrote "Cruisin' For A Love," is not connected with the band), but I think my favorite cut might be an original -- namely "Hard Drivin' Man," which is some truly hard drivin' music actually. (Also pretty sure it used to get played on rock stations in Detroit.) After that, I'd probably pick "Homework" (from Otis Rush) or the hilarious "First I Look At The Purse" (from Smokey Robinson), though there's lots to choose from. Album really gives you a better idea why the band was named after their guitar player in the first place, though I love those funky tribal-glam Burundi drums in the closing Albert Collins instrumental, "Sno Cone." Band looks really bad ass on the LP cover, too -- Wolf's picture actually makes me wonder whether Steve Tyler might have learned a pose or two from him in Boston.

xhuxk, Sunday, 7 February 2010 22:00 (fourteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Third studio album, Bloodshot, from 1973 -- their only top 10 Billboard album before Freeze-Frame, strangely enough (even Love Stinks only got to #18) -- turns out to be consistently at least fair but almost never great. Only great great great cut would be probably the closer "Give In To Me," not so much for its shorter Top 30 single version (still probably their best reggae ever) but for the multidirectional rhythm workout it turns in to in the six-and-a-half- minute mix that closes the album -- Magic Dick harp solo into fluid almost proto-disco funk into a sort Mardi Gras parade drum thing, all really seamless. After that I'd take side-openers "(Ain't Nothin' But A) House Party" and maybe "Southside Shuffle," but I think I could take or leave the rest. "Don't Try To Hide It" at the end of Side One seems to be trying to do some kind of second-line New Orleans funeral wake rhythm, too, but comes out pretty weak -- its groove winds up sounding like a diet version of Melanie's "Brand New Key," of all things. And they clearly tried to hide all the filler in the middle of both sides.

xhuxk, Saturday, 27 February 2010 01:48 (fourteen years ago) link

Oops, "Give IT To Me," not "Give In..." (Geils were nice guys!)

xhuxk, Saturday, 27 February 2010 02:12 (fourteen years ago) link

I HAD "BLOODSHOT" ON 8 TRACK STOP ARE YOU ALL JEALOUS OF ME OR WHAT STOP

T Bone Streep (Cave17Matt), Saturday, 27 February 2010 03:19 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Ha ha, I got both the new Peter Wolf (on Verve -- too "mature" for my tastes I'm pretty sure) and Peter Wolf Crier (on Jagjaguwar -- nope, never heard of them before) CDs in the mail today. What a coincidence!

xhuxk, Tuesday, 30 March 2010 00:50 (fourteen years ago) link

So I've pretty much decided (albeit with maybe more research pending) that Sanctuary from 1978 is my favorite album by them. The debut and Freeze-Frame (two very different records obviously) come close, but this one somehow splits the diference between what's great about those two -- Geils's toughest, meatiest, most sinewy no-nonsense blues-rock sound since their first couple, but they're already figuring out the smart ingratiating pop-craft skills that'd get them into the Top 10 in the early '80s. Everything credited to Wolf et.al.; no cover versions (though "I Don't Hang Around Much Anymore," one of two cuts in the middle of side two that I'd call merely good but not quite great, comes close), and probably as consistent an album as they ever made. Heavy, but not so much guitar-heavy, funky but rarely fast and never frivolous -- guess the sound is just dense, and there are plenty of minor keys or something, but the songwriting is so good (best: #32 pop hit "One Last Kiss," sax-crazed dance-rocker "Wild Man," AOR hit at least in Detroit "Just Can't Stop Me," very menacing title track) that the darkness and even dirgeness never get dull (like I think they did on the previous Monkey Island from '77 to an extent.) A lot of it seems to be a breakup record (when exactly was Wolf with Faye Dunaway? No idea, probably not near this, but it'd be cool if she'd just dumped him), and I dunno what Wolf's religious upbringing was but Boston's got plenty of Catholics, and the "Sanctuary"/"Teresa" pairing at the end of Side One is total Catholic Rock (look at the titles --"Teresa" is basically a prayer, pleading for help from the Saint, complete with high-mass piano.) Played the thing back to back with Darkness At The Edge Of Town yesterday -- another depressive, bar-band blues-rock LP by a catechism-obsessed upper East Coaster from the same year -- and maybe Bruce had higher high points but Geils still won the contest easy, with way less let-up and fewer dead spots.

Also, here is my Rhapsody review of the new Peter Wolf album (which I don't recommend, but does have at least a couple songs worth hearing):

http://www.rhapsody.com/peter-wolf/midnight-souvenirs#albumreview

xhuxk, Friday, 9 April 2010 14:19 (fourteen years ago) link

Ha! Looks like Dunaway and Wolf were married 1974 - 1979, which means their marriage was winding down when Sanctuary came out. Just saying.

xhuxk, Friday, 9 April 2010 14:21 (fourteen years ago) link

Oh yeah, opener "I Could Hurt You" (about how Wolf won't hurt her or seek revenge, even though he could, but he still wants out) is another great song; "One Last Kiss" (related theme) comes next.

xhuxk, Friday, 9 April 2010 14:27 (fourteen years ago) link

Xgau calls them a "Jewish R&B band from Boston," fwiw; I assume that applies at least to Wolf. (Gives B+'s to the debut, Monkey Island, and Freeze-Frame; no A-'s. Sanctuary gets a B-):

http://robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=j.+geils+band

xhuxk, Friday, 9 April 2010 14:33 (fourteen years ago) link

With Monkey Island they were just calling themselves Geils. Seemed to be an attempt to break with the past as they were floundering. The hits a couple years later changed that. Had Monkey Island and don't recall enjoying it very much. Memory says it was brooding and 'mature,' but not in good ways.

The stuff I see in stores now mostly, besides greatest hits packs, is Blow Your Face Out, the second live album that served as a collection of the high points of their first four or five studio albums, except with more stage rap and not as tough a sound as Full House.

The only album I know have past Full House is Hot Line from '75, only for "Love-itis."

I even had Bloodshot on original red vinyl, that's how big a fan I was. However, once you got past "House Party[/i], the opener, it was a pretty duff record including their highest charting single to that point, "Give It To Me."

Gorge, Friday, 9 April 2010 16:35 (fourteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Interesting that -- how many bands can you say this about? -- their most blatantly pop album, Freeze-Frame, is also probably their most blatantly experimental album. (Well, besides Monkey Island maybe, but I still haven't figured out what experiments they were conducting on that one.) Anyway, I'm mainly thinking of three non-hit tracks that nobody ever talks about -- "Rage In A Cage," "Insane, Insane Again," and "River Blindness" -- where it sounds like they were listening to, maybe, the Contortions or James "Blood" Ulmer or harmelodic-era Ornette Coleman or the Gang Of Four. Frequently frantic funk-via-free-jazz stuff, in other words, yet given a rock push that usually helps to keep it catchy. Also love the album-closer, "Piss On The Wall," which sounds like '60s frat rock (those post-doo-wop bah-buh-buh-bah parts) sung in an ironic snotty '70s punk voice. No doubt that the new wave move was intentional, either; that's clear from the LP cover alone. And of course there's also "Centerfold," "Freeze Frame" (kinda weirdly angled itself), "Angel In Blue" (one of their most moving ballads) and especially "Flamethrower" -- the last their best rhythmic experiment ever, which is why it got played so much on funk stations (well, at least WGPR in Detroit, Electrifyin' Mojo's show) when this came out. Can't think of many other early '80s rock tracks that had a better idea of where black pop was heading: "Voices Inside My Head" by the Police, maybe? Either way, "Flamethrower" is way up there. So actually, I might prefer this to Sanctuary after all, even if their hard-rock tendencies were mostly left behind in the '70s.

xhuxk, Thursday, 6 May 2010 13:47 (thirteen years ago) link

"Rage In A Cage" would make a good metal song.

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 6 May 2010 13:52 (thirteen years ago) link

"Rage in the Cage" was one of those tracks that really blew my mind - I was 12 when it came out and I was all pumped up about "Freeze Frame" and "Centerfold. Sandwiching "Rage" right between those two right at the front of the album was a really messed up--and AWESOME--move. In retrospect it's probably one of the things that shifted me away from wholeheartedly loving everything that appeared on Top 40 radio and towards looking for some of the things on the margins.

Sean Carruthers, Thursday, 6 May 2010 13:56 (thirteen years ago) link

Classic, mostly. I feel a bit foolish here, but I'm sorta all about the early J. Geils records & didn't care too much for the like of Freeze Frame. Not BAD, mind you, just not as raw & swingin' as earlier discs. I feel that these folks put out two of the best live records in da rawk canon: Full House and the under-rated Blow Your Face Out! steamroller, which has a riveting version of "Chimes" among other gems.

ImprovSpirit, Thursday, 6 May 2010 16:21 (thirteen years ago) link

Include me. Uninteresting stuff after deciding to pack away the iron-fisted R&B and hard charging boogie post 1976.

Gorge, Friday, 7 May 2010 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

four months pass...

Gave Monkey Island ('77) another listen; still stumped why '70s critics considered it their high point, when really it was just their most pretentious record. Only actual "reggae" I noticed (with stabs at dub and instrumental ska, never really pulled off), was in the intro of the nine-minute title track, which from there turns into an even less realized answer to Springsteen's "Jungleland" or something. (Guessing the "island" is more likely Manhattan than, say, Martha's Vineyard, but it's not like Wolf says anything about it either way, except you get stuck there; also, too bad the title chorus begs the racism question.) "Wreckage," another long dark mood track with an almost-metal guitar climax ending the album, is better but still pretty vague; to me, these seem more like unfinished versions of Geils' just as dark but way meatier and less half-baked stuff on Sanctuary a year later. Same goes for "Somebody," a sort of paranoid one about being chased or followed. Opening cut "Surrender" starts out as the kind of post-Santana percussion-rock experiment that got Barrabas and Babe Ruth tracks into discos; backup vocal (either Luther Vandross or one of three women named in the liner notes) could even pass for Babe Ruth's Jenny Haan, but it's still not a real great song. "I Do" is the radio hit (#24 pop) and really, the most memorable thing on the album. "I'm Not Rough" is a pretty decent Louis Armstrong cover. And there's a couple ballads.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 7 September 2010 20:59 (thirteen years ago) link

My favorite is 'The Morning After,' which seems to be the most roundly ignored on this thread. Besides being enormously enjoyable throughout, it has a great album cover.

Fruitless and Pansy Free (Dr. Joseph A. Ofalt), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 21:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Freeze-Frame was the first album I purchased with my own money.

― J (Jay), Tuesday, August 8, 2006 9:54 AM (4 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 September 2010 22:42 (thirteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Hadn't realized how much of the rest of Love Stinks (outside the obvious instant classic title cut, which I only ever owned as a 45 until I picked up the LP for $1 a couple weeks ago) got rock radio airplay, but listening to it, I'm almost positive I remember hearing four other tracks (so, in total, 5 out of 9) on the radio in Detroit at the time: "Just Can't Wait" (#78 pop single, sorta Carsy new wave move); "Come Back" (#32 pop hit -- technically higher than the title track's #38 oddly enough -- with a great stretched-out rhythm break at least in the 5:09 LP version, not sure if the 45 was shorter or not); "Night Time" (bluesy bar band cover of 1966 hit by quasi garage band the Strangeloves of "I Want Candy" fame); "Till The Walls Come Down" (which I would've guessed had come off one of Geils' late '70s albums -- sounds less slick than most of the rest of what's here.) (Actually, I could be wrong about "Night Time"'s airplay -- never hit me before that George Thorogood covered it in 1980 too; maybe his version got played instead? Or maybe even both did, the same year??) Anyway, these are all catchy enough, and add up a pretty good LP -- sort of a transition between Sanctuary and Freeze-Frame, though not as good as either of those. Plus "Takin' You Down" and "Tryin' Not To Think About It" have moderately heavy guitar bits -- riff in the latter reminds me a little of "Buick MacKane" by T. Rex, though the song wanders otherwise. Which leaves "Desire" (a mess of a ballad which Christgau pretty accurately called "endless at 3:35"), and the spoken-word sorta old-time radio serial parody "No Anchovies Please," which I'd remembered as being really short, but actually lasts a pointless and punchline-free 2:39. Album made Dave Marsh's Top 10 that year (above Second Edition and London Calling) regardless.

xhuxk, Sunday, 26 September 2010 19:00 (thirteen years ago) link

Had actually forgotten that The Morning After from '71 was on my shelf until Fruitless and Pansy Free mentioned above. Will say this -- it sounds really consistent. But maybe the reason nobody's mentioned it here much is because nothing much really seems great on it. Pretty sure "I Don't Need You No More", "Looking For A Love" (Bobby Womack/Valentinos soul cover and Geils' first top 40 single, though just barely), and "Wammer Jammer" (which must be the most popular harmonica instrumental in rock'n'roll history, unless there's something obvious I'm not thinking of) used to get played on the radio in Detroit; possibly one or both of the interchangeable ballads (one a Don Covay cover apparently), too. Am proud of myself for thinking "So Sharp" on Side One sounded a lot like "Funky Broadway" before noticing the cover says it's "in memory of 'Dyke' Arlester Christian," who wrote it. "Floyd's Hotel" is an okay Wolf jive rap, and the band stretches out somewhat in the side closers "Gotta Have Your Love" and "It Aint' What You Do (It's How You Do It)" -- okay, maybe that last one is great, I dunno, but you have to sit through the whole album to get there. And albumwide the guitars never seem to get beefed up like they did on the debut. Do agree that the LP cover totally kicks butt, though.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 5 October 2010 04:08 (thirteen years ago) link

Chuck, love the reviews -- if I had time, I'd love to do a counterpoint, tho I think we're in agreement for the most part, esp. insofar as believing Sanctuary and Freeze Frame are the high points (tho I enjoy Monkey Island more, I think).

Re. Freeze Frame, recently, I was trying to figure out how they had changed direction so drastically, but upon further review it's pretty clear Seth Justman was behind it -- he became increasingly influential in the band around the time of Monkey Island and starts taking control with Love Stinks. And if you read interviews with them, the band always thought of him as some kind of whiz kid. By the time you get to Freeze Frame, Justman's writing almost everything by himself -- I never realized but Wolf isn't even credited on "Centerfold"!

But that record holds up mightily -- and yes, it's really strange and experimental. I said upthread that Magic Dick is a secret weapon for the band -- you'd imagine that most bands that evolve away from blues to new wave would have pretty much stuck the harmonica player in the back, but on Freeze Frame, he's the guy honking out virtually all of the riffs: Centerfold, Flamethrower, Rage in the Cage, River Blindness. Again, this has to be a credit to Justman, who somehow makes it all work.

The thing I can't figure out is how all the other guys went along with it -- Wolf definitely made the record work for his persona, though I imagine it wasn't easy reconciling the Woofa Goofa with lyrics like "Correlations Disintegrations/Cessation - of life expectancy." But the rest of the guys are, like, blues dudes -- if the influences are The Contortions and the like, I can't imagine anyone but Justman listening to them.

Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 9 October 2010 18:39 (thirteen years ago) link

I now own every single one of their releases on LP (even the Wolfless one), and I still swear by 'Monkey Island' (if not 'Full House', where the early band just smokes so hard, but I hate voting for live albums...)

I don't think Magic Dick's on "Centerfold" ?? "Flamethrower" for sure, tho..

Stormy Davis, Saturday, 9 October 2010 18:42 (thirteen years ago) link

The opening riff is Magic Dick and something else -- guitar? Organ? I can't remember w/o hearing. But harmonica is definitely a big part of it...

Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 9 October 2010 18:55 (thirteen years ago) link

hmm .. ok, that might be MD echoing the riff on the intro (my tinnitus is sadly too bad to tell these days), but I don't hear him throughout the track ... BTW apparently, J. Geils is doing once-a-year reunion shows in Detroit and Boston (the two cities where they were most popular.) I totally slept on the announcement of the Detroit show this summmer -- at Pine Knob -- or I totally would driven back for it. Apparently in Boston, they were as openers for Aerosmith at Fenway Park (a Boston legends showcase), online reviews indicate that Aerosmith totally sucked, as to be expected

Stormy Davis, Saturday, 9 October 2010 19:18 (thirteen years ago) link

Was it a RED copy?

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 11 October 2020 00:56 (three years ago) link

No, but it was a buck, and it’s pretty clean for the price.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 11 October 2020 01:12 (three years ago) link

Also picked up Foghat’s Energized and Richard Betts’ Highway Call, all high school faves, about seven bucks all told. Rockin’ out tonight!

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 11 October 2020 01:20 (three years ago) link

That's a good haul. Energized bangs.

I've been curious about the red Bloodshot. I lucked into what looks like a clean black German audiophile press copy awhile back from somebody that didn't realize what it was for like $5.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 11 October 2020 01:32 (three years ago) link

I had the red one when it was new, but sold it when I went new wave. When I brought mine to the counter today the clerk said “is it red?” and I’m like “for a dollar?” I don’t think they’re particularly rare/valuable these days though.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 11 October 2020 01:44 (three years ago) link

Was listening to the extended Blow Your Face Out a couple days ago - man I wish I could have seen them live in the 70s.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 11 October 2020 04:01 (three years ago) link

Only saw them once, on that tour, as noted above. Memories are fuzzy but they totally brought the goods. I wish I had been as into them then as I am now.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 11 October 2020 04:23 (three years ago) link

That Live Houseparty Rockplast DVD Eagle Vision put out awhile back is terrific. An abridged Sanctuary-era performance.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 11 October 2020 04:28 (three years ago) link

Was interesting to read in the Replacements book Trouble Boys that Seth Justman was brought in to produce (I wanna say Pleased To Meet Me?) but got fed up after a single day and bolted the studio, the band chucking empty vodka bottles at him as he fled.

henry s, Sunday, 11 October 2020 14:38 (three years ago) link

two years pass...

so here was a band that worked hard, a huge live act in several big markets, and ten years after it was signed to a major label had three indelible hits that everyone (maybe just white folks) under 70 and over 40 knows, and instead of producing a follow up with more hits, promptly broke up.

1. I picked up the Houseparty anthology from '93: it does not include "Come back," which am I or am I not correct in asserting is the fourth most famous cut they did? On one hand, I would think that since it's a Rhino comp, licensing cuts from their stint with Capitol is somewhat prohibitive, and they absolutely had to get the major shit from Freeze Frame and Love Stinks. On the other, it was a big single, played on MTV early on? alternately, maybe the band didn't like it, being that it is transparently a DOR bid for "Miss you/Do you think I'm sexy" $$$, and in the early 90s, that kinda shit was unfashionable.

2. But goddamn that song and "Flamethrower" and some other cuts from the late 70s GET DOWN, whereas the early 70s shit sounds too studious, too concerned with sounding exactly like, I dunno, Hank Ballard & the Midniters… not coincidentally Jon Landau repped hard for this band in RS and other spots, his agenda being artists should sound as much like Hank Ballard as possible: he approved of this band because they sounded like 50 R&B, the authentic essence of real rock and roll, notably moreso than the mainstream rock music he considered to have strayed too far from the verities of, again, real rock and roll… then of course his meal ticket entered his life…but he must have been real tight with the Geils guys, right? he certainly made it his business to buddy up to musicians who could be useful in advancing his interests.

3. Anybody who was around Boston or New England in the 70s: was there a Springsteen--ish hometown pride in the Geils band? They were big in Detroit and other midwestern markets, but were they a particularly big live draw in Boston, or like, Providence? It is often said that Aerosmith were disdained by many aesthetes for imitating the Stones too baldly (apparently Mick Jagger cannot fucking stand the fawning Steven Tyler) but is there something to Aerosmith ripping off the Geils band?

veronica moser, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 19:03 (eleven months ago) link

There was a lot of hometown pride for J. Giles around New England in the early 80s, moreso than Aerosmith who were clearly losing steam, as Joe Perry was off doing his solo stuff at Club Casino in Hampton Beach like every weekend if the ads I remember on AOR radio are to be believed. Hometown pride for The Cars and Billy Squire, too, but even less 'cause they didn't stick around. We were quite excited in my high school that J. Giles himself and one Asmith (was it Whitford?) had homes in the affluent town next door. We never saw them. Someone I knew tiled one of their bathrooms though. Encounters with greatness.

Terrycoth Baphomet (bendy), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 19:28 (eleven months ago) link

Peter Wolf lives in my neighborhood, and even though he's in his late 70's, you would never mistake for not being a rock star.

I've actually run into him in the local record store flipping through the new releases, and I got a bit self-conscious because J. Geils Band records are pretty plentiful and usually priced at like $2, but I imagine he's pretty used to clogging up the dollar bins.

enochroot, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 19:30 (eleven months ago) link

Like true journeymen, they were lapped by an unbelievable range of their opening acts: Yes, Van Morrison, Billy Joel, Tom Petty, U2

https://www.concertarchives.org/bands/the-j-geils-band?page=7#concert-table

Terrycoth Baphomet (bendy), Wednesday, 17 May 2023 19:35 (eleven months ago) link

I heard that the J. Geils draw in Boston was big enough to fill large halls, just as Bob Seger was popular enough to fill big places in Detroit, and each would often ask the other to open up in their respective hometown to throw them some quick cash.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 20:11 (eleven months ago) link

xxxp used to see Peter Wolf (and Tom Hamilton as well) on the reg at Newbury Comics in Harvard Square.

henry s, Wednesday, 17 May 2023 20:44 (eleven months ago) link

J. Geils were a huge point of pride in the Boston area. The classic “(Ain’t Nothin’ But A) Houseparty” riff was played all the time on TV as an ad for the preeminent classic rock station, WBCN. Wolf had been a famous DJ for them (before Geils, I believe). And after having been one of the biggest American live draws in the 70s, they had one of the more unlikely #1 records.

I think mention upthread but my 8th grade math teacher and basketball coach was super into them – he’s the one who got me into them and he had all their records. So I had to as well. They are def. my first “I’m obsessed with them” band.

30+ years later, I can still sing 85% of the lyrics to their songs (including the really oddball ones on Freeze Frame) and yet I’m still kind of routinely surprised at what a broad fucking career they had. In addition to a sneakily enormous stylistic range (yes, Stones and New Wave but also disco and prog), they have a ton of killer ballads and some very tasty playing, mostly from Magic Dick, Justman and Geils.

Perhaps most surprising is what a complete frontman Wolf turned out to be. There are definitely moments where the Woofa Goofa in the mid-70s can be a little too much to take, but the guy could move from macho Jagger-y growl to convincing white soul revue leader to sensitive balladeer pretty effortlessly.

If I thought we’d get more than 10 people, I’d run an artist poll on them on ILM. They really do deserve one.

Naive Teen Idol, Thursday, 18 May 2023 17:32 (eleven months ago) link

seven months pass...

Elvis T. was asking about vintage live clips upthread...I didn't know they did The Test in '73.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmSB2CZuDjI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S755FSgGEo0

"Looking For A Love" & "Floyd's Hotel"

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 11 January 2024 19:47 (three months ago) link

Feel I should also add that as a tall, thin geriatric millennial who started having knee/leg problems in his late '30s, this is insanely painful music video to watch:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwOzeaL08Gg

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 11 January 2024 19:57 (three months ago) link

Wow thanks for those live clips. Impossible to not move after that

Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 11 January 2024 23:38 (three months ago) link

30+ years later, I can still sing 85% of the lyrics to their songs (including the really oddball ones on Freeze Frame)

Yeah this bit from “Insane Insane Again” just popped into my head, as it does about once a week: open fire, shell shock, knee jerk, lock step, shrink wrap, clap trap, mind bend, echo send, chicken coop, drug soup, nerve food, solitude, back track, meat rack, cardiac yakety yak

orifex, Wednesday, 17 January 2024 19:47 (three months ago) link


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