ILM's Now For Something Completely Different... 70s Album Poll Results! Top 100 Countdown! (Part 2)

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Did you read those Rolling Stone reviews the first time around? I wouldn't peg you as that old!

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:14 (eleven years ago) link

No, the AMG ones -- I'm not THAT old.

and that sounds like a gong-concert (La Lechera), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:16 (eleven years ago) link

mention of unknown pleasures in the neu! review reminds me that that hasn't placed yet. ilx likes joy division right?

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:18 (eleven years ago) link

(Sometimes I would read old issues of RS when I was at the library, but I doubt any of that sunk in.)

and that sounds like a gong-concert (La Lechera), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:19 (eleven years ago) link

Horses & Fly were my #s 4 &5 respectively, lol @ the idea that voting for the latter is an "affirmative action" thing

― beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 14:46 (32 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I want an album called "Horses and Fly" !

Even if it's by Mxxmfxrd xnd Sxns...

Mark G, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:20 (eleven years ago) link

26. FUNKADELIC Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On (3639 Points, 23 Votes)
RYM: #34 for 1974, #1193 overall

http://hilobrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/frontgvgoin_front_transformer5.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/5bTN2jvYpoJW03IRIk4kuS
spotify:album:5bTN2jvYpoJW03IRIk4kuS

Although too often it lives up to its title, this is the solidest record this restless group has ever made (under its own name--cf. Parliament) and offers such goodies as Alvin Chipmunk saying "gross mutherfucker" and a stanza that takes on both Iggy Stooge and Frank Zappa with its tongue tied. It also offers this Inspirational Homily: "Good thoughts bring forth good fruit. Bullshit thoughts rot your needs. Think right and you can fly." B+ -- R. Christgau

Music does not always have to convey a profound and important message. Music, at times, works better with a sense of humor or just plain fun. Very few artists rival the ability to make music fun than George Clinton and his associated funk bands. Funk, in essence, is all about sleazy sexiness, started by none other than James Brown. Later in the 1970s, George Clinton, while running both powerhouses Parliament and Funkadelic, rose to the top of the funk scene, becoming inspiration for later artists such as the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Prince. Standing on the Verge of Getting It On is certainly one of Clinton’s albums dedicated to having fun rather than conveying his comments on society shown in albums like Maggot Brain.

While George Clinton is the head of Funkadelic, he is certainly not the standout musician or vocalist. He simply adds atmosphere and creates the funky orchestration, but the instrumentalists really make the grooves happen. Eddie Hazel, quite possibly the greatest funk guitarist of all time, stands out with his incredibly tasteful and virtuosic lead guitar lines. He takes stage as a prominent voice in the band melodically in just about every song while other guitarists accompany him. However, funk would be nothing without the bassline, and Boogie Mosson creates just the right bassline. He jumps all over the fretboard in an incredibly smooth manner, knowing when to play out and when to simply lay down an undercurrent. Along with the various percussionists, this instrument section may be the most locked-in rhythm section of Funkadelic history. Most songs on this album pulsate forward at faster tempos with some of the best riffs Funkadelic has ever busted out. However, most of these songs lack variety, sticking to one main riff and continuing throughout the song. Luckily, unlike most Clinton efforts, the songs are a normal 2-4 minute range. 

The messages on the album are quite simple with each song. The first 4 songs on the album are all about women. An entire range of emotions comes through, including Sexy Wayswhich is all about coaxing a woman to sleep with the singer (That singer being Garry Shider).Sexy Ways, musically, is one of the most fun songs on the album, with some of the best funk grooving going on in the rhythm section. Alice in My Fantasies is just the opposite, lyrically. The song tells of a woman who wants to sleep with the vocalist (George Clinton), but Clinton refuses her. Musically, the song is even more aggressive than Sexy Ways, sounding a bit more rock oriented than funk oriented. Hendrix influence is extremely obvious.I’ll Stay makes the variety musically--"a slow R&B groove. The song features piano comping while Hazel screams overtop of the rest of the band. 

The second half of the album steps out into different territory. In today’s world, people would sue Funkadelic for releasing a song like Jimmy’s Got A Little Bit of Bi*ch in Him. The song speaks of a friend that is gay. The vocals take The Parliaments and Garry Shider and they sing together, poking fun at Jimmy. Eddie Hazel plays along with the melody in an extremely bluesy tone. The drums and bass drive the song along, propelling the energy constantly forward. The song also makes references to erectile dysfunction with lines like “So why frown? Even the sun go down!” However, the album does not go without its important message, sent out in the closing song Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts. The song starts out sounding like another Maggot Brain. The song, musically, is just 12 minutes of guitar. However, spoken word conveys a message of empowerment and achievement throughout the song. While the lyrics are certainly uplifting, 12 minutes is just too much, making this the worst song on the album. Furthermore, it destroys the entire tone of the album. 

It’s unfortunate that the album closes on such a disappointing note. For the most part, the album is incredibly groovy and fun. However, as the rest of the songs are quite short albeitI’ll Stay, no song is really that memorable, giving me the final rating of 3. As an album, its great and maybe even excellent, but it lacks the standout classics of so many other Funkadelic albums. It sounds like one huge blend of stereotypical Funkadelic funk, which is not at all a bad thing. -- Tyler Fisher, Sputnik


review
[-] by Ned Raggett

Expanding back out to a more all-over-the-place lineup -- about 15 or so people this time out -- Funkadelic got a bit more back on track with Standing on the Verge. Admittedly, George Clinton repeats a trick from America Eats Its Young via another re-recording of an Osmium track, namely leadoff cut "Red Hot Mama." However, starting as it does with a hilarious double soliloquy (with the first voice sounding like the happier brother of Sir Nose d'Voidoffunk) and coming across with a fierce new take, it's a good omen for Standing on the Verge as a whole. Eddie Hazel's guitar work in particular is just plain bad-ass; after his absence from Cosmic Slop, it's good to hear him fully back in action with Bernie Worrell, Cordell Mosson, Gary Shider, and the rest. In general, compared to the sometimes too polite Cosmic Slop, Standing on the Verge is a full-bodied, crazy mess in the best possible way, with heavy funk jams that still smoke today while making a lot of supposedly loud and dangerous rock sound anemic. Check out "Alice in My Fantasies" if a good example is needed -- the whole thing is psychotic from the get-go, with vocals as much on the edge as the music -- or the wacky, wonderful title track. There are quieter moments as well, but this time around with a little more bite to them, like the woozy slow jam of "I'll Stay," which trips out along the edges just enough while the song makes its steady way along. In an unlikely but effective turn, meanwhile, "Jimmy's Got a Little Bit of Bitch in Him" is a friendly, humorous song about a gay friend; given the rote homophobia of so much later hip-hop, it's good to hear some founding fathers have a more open-minded view.

Track Listing:

Red Hot Mama
{B Worrell, G Clinton, E Hazel} 4:54 lyrics
Alice In My Fantasies
{G Clinton, Grace Cook} 2:26 lyrics
I'll Stay
{G Clinton, G Cook} 7:16 lyrics
Sexy Ways
{G Clinton, G Cook} 3:05 lyrics
Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On
{G Clinton, G Cook} 5:07 lyrics
Jimmy's Got A Little Bit Of Bitch In Him
{G Clinton, G Cook} 2:30 lyrics
Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts
{G Clinton, G Cook} 12:17 lyrics

Personnel:

Spaced Viking; Keyboards & Vocals: Bernard (Bernie) Worrell
Tenor Vocals, Congas and Suave Personality: Calvin Simon
A Prototype Werewolf; Berserker Octave Vocals: Clarence 'Fuzzy' Haskins
World's Only Black Leprechaun; Bass & Vocals: Cordell 'Boogie' Mosson
Maggoteer Lead/Solo Guitar & Vocals: Eddie 'Smedley Smorganoff' Hazel
Rhythm/Lead Guitar, Doowop Vocals, Sinister Grin: Gary Shider
Supreme Maggot Minister of Funkadelia; Vocals, Maniac Froth and Spit;
Behaviour Illegal In Several States: George Clinton
Percussion & Vocals; Equipped with stereo armpits: Ramon 'Tiki' Fulwood
Rhythm/Lead Guitar; polyester soul-powered token white devil: Ron Bykowski
Registered and Licensced Genie; Vocals: 'Shady' Grady Thomas
Subterranean Bass Vocals, Supercool and Stinky Fingers: Ray (Stingray) Davis

Additional Personnel:

Drums: Gary Bronson
Bass: Jimmy Calhoun
Piano: Leon Patillo
Percussion: Ty Lampkin


Song-Specific Personnel:

"Red Hot Mama"
Lead Vocals: George Clinton, Eddie Hazel
Guitars: Eddie Hazel, Ron Bykowski

"Alice In My Fantasies"
Lead Vocals: George Clinton

"Sexy Ways"
Lead Vocals: Garry Shider

"Standing On the Verge..."
Lead Vocals: Parliament, Gary Shider
Guitar: Eddie Hazel, Ron Bykowski

"Jimmy's Got A Little..."
Lead Vocals: George Clinton

"Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts"
Lead Vocals: George Clinton

Rating: GZ **** RC ***** MM *****

Comment:

RC: To be blunt, this album kicks ass from the get-go. The album forgets about meaningful lyrics (til the end) and concentrates on shakin' it. Perhaps the most consistent Funkadelic album, from beginning to end. The stylistic jumps that Funkadelic likes to make are less jarring on this album, with a much smoother flow from song to song.

It starts with a classic hard-rocker in "Red Hot Mama", yet another redone Parliament song. Superb guitar interplay and evocative lyrics make this one of their best songs. A slight shift over to a metal sound (in an MC5 sort of way, of course) is made with "Alice In My Fantasies", an Eddie workout where he plays these excellent swooping guitar licks.

After beating you senseless with the first two songs, it slows down with a remake of the Parliaments' "I'll Wait" called "I'll Stay." Sexy, sleazy, smooth and irresistable, with some great singing. A slight shift is made to the funky soul of "Sexy Ways", with a JB's-style guitar lick propelling the whole thing.

Then comes what I think is the ultimate Funkadelic song, "Standing On The Verge...", which combines hard rock with JB's funk, producing a stew that commands you to dance. Inspired by audience chants, it has a live feel to it but with a great deal of precision at the same time. It also features a number of different singers.

After that peak, the album explores some interesting areas. "Jimmy's Got A Little..." is a bizarre, almost Zappa-esque song about Jimmy and his sexual preferences. It concludes with a long Eddie instrumental and a 'sermon' in "Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts." 'Good thoughts bring forth good fruit/Bullshit thoughts rot your meat.' Grace Cook, the cowriter on most cuts, is Eddie Hazel's mother. He credited her either to ensure that she would get some record royalties, or to avoid his creditors. I've heard both.

MM: Standing... is excellent. Has similarities to Maggot Brain in that it moves from rock and soul and in between. It also maintains the big Eddie Hazel influence that Maggot Brain had.

MV: Standing on The Verge of Getting It On is an absolutely essential five star album. Next to Hendrix' Band of Gypsys, it is possibly the greatest black rock LP to date. Contains superlative songwriting by lead guitarist Eddie Hazel (this LP was his shining moment & he cowrote every cut) and great lyrical concepts. Contains many Funkadelic classics which the band still performs in concert to this day.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:21 (eleven years ago) link

ilx prefers new order to joy division sadly

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:22 (eleven years ago) link

"It's a gross motherfucker!"

xp Heh. I was bad, I ripped out a bunch of select reviews from my h.s.'s Rolling Stones mags, particularly those post-punk reviews of Gang Of Four, Wire, etc.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:22 (eleven years ago) link

My fave Funkadelic album tbh

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:33 (eleven years ago) link

Its the most Eddie Hazel album.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:33 (eleven years ago) link

or should I say "Grace Cook"

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:33 (eleven years ago) link

Wishing I'd dug this out and typed out some excerpts:

http://images.tcj.com/2011/12/Mbooty4front1989-650x901.jpg

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:35 (eleven years ago) link

Personnel:

Spaced Viking; Keyboards & Vocals: Bernard (Bernie) Worrell
Tenor Vocals, Congas and Suave Personality: Calvin Simon
A Prototype Werewolf; Berserker Octave Vocals: Clarence 'Fuzzy' Haskins
World's Only Black Leprechaun; Bass & Vocals: Cordell 'Boogie' Mosson
Maggoteer Lead/Solo Guitar & Vocals: Eddie 'Smedley Smorganoff' Hazel
Rhythm/Lead Guitar, Doowop Vocals, Sinister Grin: Gary Shider
Supreme Maggot Minister of Funkadelia; Vocals, Maniac Froth and Spit;
Behaviour Illegal In Several States: George Clinton
Percussion & Vocals; Equipped with stereo armpits: Ramon 'Tiki' Fulwood
Rhythm/Lead Guitar; polyester soul-powered token white devil: Ron Bykowski
Registered and Licensced Genie; Vocals: 'Shady' Grady Thomas
Subterranean Bass Vocals, Supercool and Stinky Fingers: Ray (Stingray) Davis

Best band details on an inner sleeve ever

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:37 (eleven years ago) link

That issue, from Summer 1989, is what got me deep into Funkadelic. Perfect timing, the Westbound CD reissues just started coming out, and I spent all my spare money on 'em.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:38 (eleven years ago) link

That could be a poll in itself

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:38 (eleven years ago) link

http://images.tcj.com/2011/12/MB-3-650x841.jpg

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:39 (eleven years ago) link

And the next album placing high unwittingly caused by hellhouse no doubt by voters determined to spite him!

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:40 (eleven years ago) link

My fave Funkadelic album tbh

Ditto. Though in some ways it's weird because a third of the running time is taken up with an utterly shameless retread of "Maggot Brain" (not that it isn't great anyway)

Step not on a loose unforgiving stone on a pyramid to paradise (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:40 (eleven years ago) link

25. CHROME Half Machine Lip Moves (3668 Points, 29 Votes)
RYM: #38 for 1979, #2007 overall

http://cps-static.rovicorp.com/3/JPG_500/MI0003/246/MI0003246681.jpg?partner=allrovi.com
http://open.spotify.com/album/0MinkKLxOwm97glvftpSO9
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A mighty industrial metal scraping noize devolves into a 1973 Stooges riff that sounds like it was recorded in a tin shack in 1957, cheapo drums start crashing away like The Trashmen. The only lyric you can make out is the sneered "I dunno whyyy!" at the end of every line. After 90 seconds a Faust-like dissolve through grinding, chattering zounds, creepy moog organ, analog tapes running backwards and flipping off the spindles . . . . the noise slowly fades as a chugging metal riff builds and BUILDS -- with acid lead guitar flourishes and a tambourine accompaniment! The jam that follows exists somewhere between NEU! and Judas Priest. Another abrubt edit, bells & scraping, then a new trashcan beat with hyper-distorted barely audible vocals buzzing like a bee and whining like a dog. An occasional spiral circus guitar riff, miscellaneous clanking and feedback. The beat changes again into yet another funky robot trashcan groove, with new squelchy guitar interjections, still many miscellaneous strands of noise burbling in & out of the brew whenever it feels right. The vocalist is actually singing words now, strangled drunken mumbling that makes the "recorded in a dumpster behind the Qwickie-Mart" sound of the Beastie Boys most fuzzed-out vocals sound crystal clear.

You've just made it through the first two tracks of Half Machine Lip Moves, entitled "TV As Eyes" (one of the best song titles ever I must say) and "Zombie Warfare". Welcome to the unique soundworld that is Chrome!

I can't imagine what people thought of this deeply mysterious band from San Francisco in the late 1970's, to the extent very many people were aware of them at all at the time (or even today.) But there are some artists who come along and are clearly "from another time" -- not necessarily "the future" but just "not from now", and though there is a "futuristic" vibe going on here I wouldn't say anyone else has copped the Chrome sound these past 25 years, nor ever will again in the future. I think one of the key things that makes them so unique is that they came along right at the end of the analog era, and in some sense took the analog audio tomfoolery of your VU's, Fausts and Zappas to the furthest extreme it would go. Then everyone went digital, so the kinds of blurry swiping tape-manipulated zounds found here are virtually unduplicatable today (unless one were to use the old analog equipment, but even then good luck figuring out what's going on here or how to recreate all thoze noizes!)

But equally important, they don't just fuck around with the tapes, they RAWK! Helios Creed lays down badass heavy metal rhythm guitar riffs and berzerker psychedelic leads (often backwards and/or played at the wrong speed.) Damon Edge's drumming is a perfect balance between kraut-motorik-funky and crazy-drunk-garage-band. 

So the vibe created is definitely very Sci-Fi, but no gleaming clean surfaces from Beyond The Year 2000 here. It's a bit like in the original "Alien" movie (also from 1979 coincidentally), where the technology is "advanced" but the space ships are dank & dirty and all the equipment keeps breaking down. Science will not only bring forth smiling nuclear families with robot maids flying around in hover cars, but also ever-more-crowded metropolitan slums and squalor and new designer chemicals to help stave off (or feed?) dread and paranoia. To borrow a term coined nearly a decade later, Chrome's is a "CYBER-PUNK" vision of the future.

And could a band possibly be more "underground"? You can't hardly make out a single word on the whole record. The tracks all blur together, and many of the "songs" are really just a series of random riffs and interludes spliced together. Someone is even credited with "data memory" in the musicians list, presumably a purely technical function like turning the tape machine on and off and manipulating it's speed. We may never know.

Chrome had released two LP's before this one, the ultrarare "The Visitation" (1977) where they don't quite have their sound together (Creed wasn't aboard yet) and "Alien Soundtracks" (1978) which is also a classic though to me sounds like a warm-up for the dense majesty and mystery of "Half Machine Lip Moves." The Edge-Creed team made several more obscure records through the early 1980's, eventually embracing drum machines, more intelligible lyrics and a generally less outlandish sound (sort of goth-industrial-dance rock with a hint of metal -- but still definitely mysterious and "underground.")

One of my Personal Top 25 albums of all time, this is certainly one of those records you can keep returning to and find new things buried in all those layers of ZOUND. 

All but one of the tracks from this album ("Critical Mass") are included on Cleopatra's excellent "Chrome Box" 3CD set which covers the years 1978 - 1983. -- Dog 3000, Head Heritage


review
[-] by Ned Raggett

With Lambdin out and Spain barely there at all, everything rapidly became an Edge/Creed show in the realm of Chrome by the time of Half Machine Lip Moves. The basic tropes having been established -- aggressive but cryptic performance and production, jump cuts between and in songs, judicious use of sampling and production craziness, and an overall air of looming science fiction apocalypse and doom -- all Edge and Creed had to do was perfect it. Starting with the fragmented assault of "TV as Eyes," which rapidly descends into heavily treated, conversational snippets from TV and deep, droning keyboards, Half Machine sounds like a weird broadcast from thousands of miles away where rock is treated as an exotic musical form. Creed fully gets to shine here, his pitched-up/pitched-down guitars as good an example of psychedelic assault as anything. Sprawled all over the beeps and murmurs of the songs, not to mention Edge's still self-created drumming and Iggy-ish vocal interjections, the guitars make everything sound utterly disturbed. If not as obsessed with tempo shifts and oddity as, say, Faust, Half Machine is still pretty close to that band's level of Krautrock playfulness and explosion. Two of the relative saner numbers are practically power pop, at least in Chrome terms. "March of the Chrome Police (A Cold Clamey Bombing)" has Edge sneering an actual vocal hook over a brisk beat, even while Creed gets progressively more fried on the guitar, and rumbling echoed laughter and barks erupt in the mix. "You've Been Duplicated," meanwhile, also has something of a vocal hook, only buried under so many levels of distortion that it might as well be a malfunctioning keyboard being played among the clattering percussion and other sounds. A suitably strange cover shot of a fully head-bandaged mannequin seemingly floating in space completes the package.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:43 (eleven years ago) link

Right, "Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts." The Sputnik review says it's over 12 minutes, but my version is 9:24. The remastered CD has "Vital Juices" and a single version of "Standing on the Verge...". I was pissed that I had to buy 'em all over again. Luckily I got a bunch of them cheap when Tower was closing down.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:46 (eleven years ago) link

I look forward to reading EIII and hellhouse on this album beating Alien Soundtracks

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:47 (eleven years ago) link

my version is 9:24

What?!?!?

Step not on a loose unforgiving stone on a pyramid to paradise (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:49 (eleven years ago) link

Looks like version available on itunes is 9:24 for some reason

gentle german fatherly voice (President Keyes), Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:54 (eleven years ago) link

Did they edit it down on the remaster?

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 15:58 (eleven years ago) link

24. DAVID BOWIE The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (3724 Points, 27 Votes)
RYM: #1 for 1972, #11 overall | Acclaimed: #16 | RS: #35 | Pitchfork: #81

http://photolancaster.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/1972-the-rise-and-fall-of-ziggy-stardust-and-the-spiders-from-mars-front.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0745mDdMqet9J5nO5x7IQS
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http://www.superseventies.com/oaaa/oaaa_bowiedavid.jpg

In its own way, this is audacious stuff right down to the stubborn wispiness of its sound, and Bowie's actorly intonations add humor and shades of meaning to the words. Which are often witty and rarely precious, offering an unusually candid and detailed vantage on the rock star's world. Admittedly, for a long time I wondered who cared, besides lost kids for whom such access feels like privilege. The answer is, someone like Bowie--a middlebrow fascinated by the power of a highbrow-lowbrow form. B+ -- R. Christgau

Bowie began his fey alien role-playing in earnest on Ziggy Stardust, a classic rock'n'roll album. He introduces this new persona via the pseudo-biographical title track; otherwise, songs paint a weird portrait of an androgynous (but sexy) world ahead. Armed with supercharged guitar rock and truly artistic production (Bowie and Ken Scott), and mixing rock'n'roll stardom imagery with a more general Clockwork Orange outlook, the peerless set (including "Suffragette City," "Hang on to Yourself," "Rock'n'Roll Suicide" and "Moonage Daydream") outlines some of the concerns that underpinned a lot of rock songwriting in the '70s and '80s. (The Ryko reissue — also available in a deluxe edition with a slipcase and book of liner notes — adds demos of the title track and "Lady Stardust," the otherwise unreleased "Sweet Head," a '71 B-side, "Velvet Goldmine," and a remix of the 1972 single "John, I'm Only Dancing." EMI's 2002 deluxe edition includes all of the Ryko bonuses on a second disc, along with three of the four bonus tracks from the Ryko edition of The Man Who Sold the World, covers of Chuck Berry's "Round and Round" and the Jacques Brel / Mort Shuman song "Port of Amsterdam" — which had previously been issued as a bonus on the Ryko edition of Pin Ups — and a 1998 remix of "Moonage Daydream" done for a TV commercial.) -- Trouser Press

Upon the release of David Bowie's most thematically ambitious, musically coherent album to date, the record in which he unites the major strengths of his previous work and comfortably reconciles himself to some apparently inevitable problems, we should all say a brief prayer that his fortunes are not made to rise and fall with the fate of the "drag-rock" syndrome -- that thing that's manifesting itself in the self-conscious quest for decadence which is all the rage at the moment in trendy Hollywood, in the more contrived area of Alice Cooper's presentation, and, way down in the pits, in such grotesqueries as Queen, St. Nicholas' trio of feathered, sequined Barbie dolls. And which is bound to get worse.

For although Lady Stardust himself has probably had more to do with androgony's current fashionableness in rock than any other individual, he has never made his sexuality anything more than a completely natural and integral part of his public self, refusing to lower it to the level of gimmick but never excluding it from his image and craft. To do either would involve an artistically fatal degree of compromise.

Which is not to say that he hasn't had a great time with it. Flamboyance and outrageousness are inseparable from that campy image of is, both in the Bacall and Garbo stages and in his new butch, street-crawler appearance that has him looking like something out of the darker pages of City of Night. It's all tied up with the one aspect of David Bowie that sets him apart from both the exploiters of transvestitism and writers/performers of comparable talent -- his theatricality.
The news here is that he's managed to get that sensibility down on vinyl, not with an attempt at pseudo-visualism (which, as Mr. Cooper has shown, just doesn't cut it), but through employment of broadly mannered styles and deliveries, a boggling variety of vocal nuances that provide the program with the necessary depth, a verbal acumen that is now more economic and no longer clouded by storms of psychotic, frenzied music, and, finally, a thorough command of the elements of rock & roll. It emerges as a series of concise vignettes designed strictly for the ear.

Side two is the soul of the album, a kind of psychological equivalent of Lola vs. Powerman that delves deep into a matter close to David's heart: What's it all about to be a rock & roll star? It begins with a slow, fluid "Lady Stardust," a song in which currents of frustration and triumph merge in an overriding desolation. For though "He was alright, the band was altogether" (sic), still "People stared at the makeup on his face/Laughed at his long black hair, his animal grace." The pervading bittersweet melancholy that wells out of the contradictions and that Bowie beautifully captures with one of the album's more direct vocals conjures the picture of a painted harlequin under the spotlight of a deserted theater in the darkest hour of the night.

"Star" springs along handsomely as he confidently tells us that "I could make it all worthwhile as a rock & roll star." Here Bowie outlines the dazzling side of the coin: "So inviting -- so enticing to play the part." His singing is a delight, full of mocking intonations and backed way down in the mix with excessive, marvelously designed "Ooooohh la la la"'s and such that are both a joy to listen to and part of the parodic undercurrent that runs through the entire album.

"Hang on to Yourself" is both a kind warning and an irresistible erotic rocker (especially the hand-clapping chorus), and apparently Bowie has decided that since he just can't avoid craming too many syllables into is lines, he'll simply master the rapid-fire, tongue-twisting phrasing that his failing requires. "Ziggy Stardust" has a faint ring of The Man Who Sold the World to it -- stately, measured, fuzzily electric. A tale of intra-group jealousies, it features some of Bowie's more adventuresome imagery, some of which is really the nazz: "So we bitched about his fans and should we crush his sweet hands?"

David Bowie's supreme moment as a rock & roller is "Suffragette City," a relentless, spirited Velvet Underground -- styled rushing of chomping guitars. When that second layer of guitar roars in on the second verse you're bound to be a goner, and that priceless little break at the end -- a sudden cut to silence from a mighty crescendo, Bowie's voice oozing out as a brittle, charged "Oooohh Wham Bam Thank You Ma'am!" followed hard by two raspy guitar bursts that suck you back in to the surging meat of the chorus -- will surely make your turn do somersaults. And as for our Star, well, now "There's only room for one and here she comes, here she comes."

But the price of playing the part must be paid, and we're precipitously tumbled into the quietly terrifying despair of "Rock & Roll Suicide." The broken singer drones: "Time takes a cigarette, puts it in your mouth/Then you pull on your finger, then another finger, then your cigarette." But there is a way out of the bleakness, and it's realized with Bowie's Lennon-like scream: "You're not alone, gimme your hands/You're wonderful, gimme your hands." It rolls on to a tumultuous, impassioned climax, and though the mood isn't exactly sunny, a desperate, possessed optimism asserts itself as genuine, and a new point from which to climb is firmly established.

Side one is certainly less challenging, but no less enjoyable from a musical standpoint. Bowie's favorite themes -- Mortality ("Five Years," "Soul Love"), the necessity of reconciling oneself to Pain (those two and "It Ain't Easy"), the New Order vs. the Old in sci-fi garments ("Starman") -- are presented with a consistency, a confidence, and a strength in both style and technique that were never fully realized in the lashing The Man Who Sold the World or the eneven and too often stringy Hunky Dory.

Bowie intitiates "Moonage Daydream" on side one with a riveting bellow of "I'm an alligator" that's delightful in itself but which also has a lot to do with what Ziggy Stardust is all about. Because in it there's the perfect touch of self-mockery, a lusty but forlorn bavado that is the first hint of the central duality and of the rather spine-tingling questions that rise from it: Just how big and tough is your rock & roll star? How much of his is bluff and how much inside is very frightened and helpless? And is this what comes of our happily dubbing someone as "bigger than life"?

David Bowie has pulled off his complex task with consummate style, with some great rock & roll (the Spiders are Mick Ronson on guitar and piano, Mick Woodmansy on drums and Trevor Bolder on bass; they're good), with all the wit and passion required to give it sufficient dimension and with a deep sense of humanity that regularly emerges from behind the Star facade. The important thing is that despite the formidable nature of the undertaking, he hasn't sacrificed a bit of entertainment value for the sake of message.

I'd give it at least a 99. -- Richard Cromelin, RS

With Ziggy... David Bowie abruptly redefined what being a male rock star was all about. The cover depicts Bowie as a skinny, crop-haired androgyne in a rainswept alley (though in the recording studio he was still wearing the fey long locks sported on his previous album, Hunky Dory). Clutching an electric guitar, he is an alien beamed down to the drab Earth to bring us rock 'n' roll. (Shot on Heddon Street, London, the photograph was originally black and white but later tinted, giving it an odd Fifties sci-fi quality.)

Ziggy... is the only glam rock album to have stood the test of time. Guitarist Mick Ronson's crunching guitar riffs and soaring solos -- heard to spine-tingling effect on "Moonage Daydream," "Suffragette City," and the title track -- helped to define the glam sound. Bowie's vocals change with every song -- by turns reflective, preening, desperate, and ecstatic. Ziggy... contains a wealth of sexual ambivalence and space-age imagery, but it is couched in solid songwriting and carefullly thought-out arrangements.

It may have sounded like a lightning bolt from the future, but in assuming the role of a troubled rock 'n' roll outsider Bowie immediately clicked with teenagers and critics alike (Rolling Stone gave it "at least 99/100"). Britain, and America's East and West coasts, fell deliriously for Ziggy (though he was just too weird for the Midwest) -- as did punks and New Romantics later, with whom the character's sexual ambiguity and outrageous appearance struck a chord. -- Robert Dimery, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Borrowing heavily from Marc Bolan's glam rock and the future shock of A Clockwork Orange, David Bowie reached back to the heavy rock of The Man Who Sold the World for The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Constructed as a loose concept album about an androgynous alien rock star named Ziggy Stardust, the story falls apart quickly, yet Bowie's fractured, paranoid lyrics are evocative of a decadent, decaying future, and the music echoes an apocalyptic, nuclear dread. Fleshing out the off-kilter metallic mix with fatter guitars, genuine pop songs, string sections, keyboards, and a cinematic flourish, Ziggy Stardust is a glitzy array of riffs, hooks, melodrama, and style and the logical culmination of glam. Mick Ronson plays with a maverick flair that invigorates rockers like "Suffragette City," "Moonage Daydream," and "Hang Onto Yourself," while "Lady Stardust," "Five Years," and "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" have a grand sense of staged drama previously unheard of in rock & roll. And that self-conscious sense of theater is part of the reason why Ziggy Stardust sounds so foreign. Bowie succeeds not in spite of his pretensions but because of them, and Ziggy Stardust -- familiar in structure, but alien in performance -- is the first time his vision and execution met in such a grand, sweeping fashion.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:00 (eleven years ago) link

Oooooooh how could anyone not love this album!?! My friend and I used to raid her brother's records and listen to this over and over after school in 8th-9th grade. Freak out! Far out!

and that sounds like a gong-concert (La Lechera), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:04 (eleven years ago) link

It took me years to get into the album for some reason. That ad makes it seem more cosmic space-rockin' than it is. Too bad it isn't more like that!

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:06 (eleven years ago) link

eh? It's an amazing album. I think Diamond Dogs is better tho.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:08 (eleven years ago) link

It's just 100% Bowie, which is its own thing imo.

and that sounds like a gong-concert (La Lechera), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:11 (eleven years ago) link

Zigg Stardust probably isn't even Top 5 Bowie for me but it's still a classic, shows how strong his '71-'80 run was (bar Pin Ups).

Gavin, Leeds, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:12 (eleven years ago) link

23. AC/DC Highway To Hell (3848 Points, 27 Votes)
RYM: #15 for 1979, #700 overall | Acclaimed: #278 | RS: #199

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The signature title track, no less than a religion to a whole generation of jean jackets, stands as one of the premiere hard rock anthems of all time, augmenting the sweet music of hurling on many a high shool excursion, while "Girls Got Rhythm," "Shot Down In Flames," and "Night Prowler" would also register as snot-nosed, good-fer-nuthin' "deep album" hits with the disgruntled and generally shiftless of the unkempt, high school set. Highway To Hell forever takes a lofty position in history as an exceedingly rousing, cuffs-to-the-head, guitar classic with some of the best brain-banging grooves of AC/DC's career...Without a doubt, more alcohol has been consumed and subsequently returned orally to the earth to the distorted strains of this record (usually from homemade car speakers propped on trunk lids of '75 Dodge Darts) than any other release in history, save perhaps for Back In Black. It is in my opinion, the party album from the party band, one of the largest expressions of electric jubilation ever harnessed. Smells like teen freedom. Note: the record title put AC/DC squarely in the middle of the religious backlash against metal at the time, the band's explanation that it merely referred to tough slogging tours across the US, falling on deaf dimwit ears. 8/10 -- M. Popoff

Whilst AC/DC's music could be criticized for its technical simplicity, to this day they remain one of the most influential groups in rock 'n' roll. Their rough, ballsy style epitomizes the very essence of rock. Combined with blues influenced chord structures and a perfect balance of power and restraint in equal measures, few heavy rock fans can resist their basic, working-class appeal. Based around the strong guitar riffs of brothers Malcolm and Angus Young (the man who earned the respect of the metal fraternity worldwide wearing a school uniform and tie on stage), simplistic drum rhythms, and the tough vocal styling of Bon Scott, AC/DC's music is infectious.

Although the band had moderate success through the Seventies, Highway To Hell is heralded as their "breakthrough." Recorded at Roadhouse Studios in London, producer "Mutt" Lange manages to control their brute force with eloquence. Highway To Hell, whilst being their first release to achieve platinum status also became Scott's swansong following his death in 1980.

Living up to its title, the album serves as a celebration of sin (Angus even sports devil horns and a tail on the cover art). Lyrically it is an ode to sex, songs such as "Girl's Got Rhythm" and "Touch Too Much" being particularly frank about the topic. However the title track and "If You Want Blood" move slightly off the subject. Similarly, "Walk All Over" and "Night Prowler" ease the pace slightly, providing an element of space within the ten tracks. It is not often that every track on an album could stand up as a single, but AC/DC have come pretty close to it on Highway To Hell. -- Claire Stuchbery, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Of course, Highway to Hell is the final album AC/DC recorded with Bon Scott, the lead singer who provided the group with a fair share of its signature sleaze. Just months after its release, Scott literally partied himself to death (the official cause cited as acute alcohol poisoning) after a night of drinking, a rock & roll fatality that took no imagination to predict. In light of his passing, it's hard not to see Highway to Hell as a last testament of sorts, being that it was his last work and all, and if Scott was going to go out in a blaze of glory, this certainly was the way to do it. This is a veritable rogue's gallery of deviance, from cheerfully clumsy sex talk and drinking anthems to general outlandish behavior. It's tempting to say that Scott might have been prescient about his end -- or to see the title track as ominous in the wake of his death -- trying to spill it all out on paper, but it's more accurate to say that the ride had just gotten very fast and very wild for AC/DC, and he was simply flying high. After all, it wasn't just Scott who reached a new peak on Highway to Hell; so did the Young brothers, crafting their monster riffs into full-fledged, undeniable songs. This is their best set of songs yet, from the incessant, intoxicating boogie of "Girls Got Rhythm" to "If You Want Blood (You've Got It)." Some of the credit should also go to Robert John "Mutt" Lange, who gives the album a precision and magnitude that the Vanda & Young LPs lacked in their grimy charm. Filtered through Mutt's mixing board, AC/DC has never sounded so enormous, and they've never had such great songs, and they had never delivered an album as singularly bone-crunching or classic as this until now.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:21 (eleven years ago) link

I think I was initially turned off because when I first saw the "Ziggy Stardust" documentary, it was so mind-numbingly boring. 25 yrs later, maybe I should try the movie again now that the album is a favorite.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:21 (eleven years ago) link

no xgau review?

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:22 (eleven years ago) link

Nope, he didn't review that one. He gave Back In Black a B-.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:25 (eleven years ago) link

Couldn't find an original RS review either. Their index is spotty, it might exist. Here's one of the 2003 reissue:

When Bon Scott leered, "Lock up your daughter, lock up your wife, lock up your back door," on AC/DC's North American debut album, High Voltage (1976), he wasn't so much issuing a threat as celebrating his inalienable right to be crass. AC/DC showed how much fun true tastelessness could be and how liberating it could sound. These Australian delinquents played their bloodshot blues rock with the venom of punk rockers and the swagger of drunken lechers.The first batch of remastered reissues from AC/DC's catalog captures the band at its politically incorrect peak.

High Voltage and Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap (1976) find the quintet already sure of its strengths: The guitars of brothers Angus and Malcolm Young bark at each other, Phil Rudd swings the beat even as he's pulverizing his kick drum, and Scott brings the raunch 'n' wail. The subject matter is standard-issue rock rebellion; Scott pauses only once to briefly contemplate the consequences of his night stalking in "Ride On."

The boys graduate from the back of the bar to the front of the arena on Highway to Hell (1979), with a cleaner sound courtesy of Shania Twain's future husband, producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange. The songs are more compact, the choruses fattened by rugby-team harmonies. The prize moment: Scott closes the hip-grinding "Shot Down in Flames" with a cackle worthy of the Wicked Witch of the West.

A year later, Scott drank himself to death. Yet the band went on to make its 1980 landmark album, Back in Black, in which his iron-lunged replacement, Brian Johnson, bellows, "Have a drink on me" without a shred of shame. From the ominous "Hell's Bells" to the bawdy "You Shook Me All Night Long," AC/DC flipped off the Reaper and gave Scott and his fans the best tribute they ever could have desired. -- Greg Kot, RS

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:27 (eleven years ago) link

ziggy's become weirdly underrated (after being overrated for so long)(same thing happened w/ sgt pepper), glad to see it place so high, enough to not vent there's no way it should be that much higher than aladdin sane.

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:32 (eleven years ago) link

22. IGGY & THE STOOGES Raw Power (3879 Points, 28 Votes)
RYM: #3 for 1973, #105 overall | Acclaimed: #90 | RS: #125 | Pitchfork: #83

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In which David Bowie remembers "the world's forgotten boy" long enough to sponsor an album--and mixes it down till it's thin as an epicure's wrist. The side-openers, "Search and Destroy" and "Raw Power," voice the Iggy Pop ethos more insanely (and aggressively) than "I Wanna Be Your Dog." But despite James Williamson's guitar, the rest disperses in their wake. B+ -- R. Christgau

David Bowie took an interest in his American soul mate and (in some mixture of worship and pity) brought a drug-damaged Iggy to London where he could midwife Raw Power, the one album Ziggy couldn't simply create by himself. (Years later, without prejudice, Iggy essentially took Bowie out of the mix, ending longstanding complaints about the album's thin, bottom-free sound — the result of a disastrous battle of the wills between artist, producer and management — by remixing the master tapes and releasing a completely new-sounding version of it. Is it better? No.) A gravitational accommodation of sorts with the state of music in the British-led glam era, Raw Power is another masterpiece, featuring the stinging lead guitar of James Williamson in a reorganized Stooges. (Ron Asheton had switched to bass to replace Dave Alexander.) With Williamson as co-author, Iggy's songs are more musical (i.e., a sense of structure emerged) in their sex-and-death conflation ("Gimme Danger," "Death Trip"). The title track and "Search and Destroy" are only two of the tunes here to achieve classic status for staring into the abyss, guitar in hand. Heavy metal in every sense, the album marked the end of the Stooges as a band concept — Iggy hereafter received solo billing — and, effectively, the first stage of Iggy's career. -- Trouser Press

The Ig. Nobody dies it better, nobody does it worse, nobody does it, period. Others tiptoe around the edges, make little running stars and half-hearted passes, but when you're talking about the O mind, the very central eye of the universe that opens up like a huge, gaping, suckling maw, step aside for the Stooges.

They haven't appeared on record since the Funhouse of two plus years ago. For awhile, it didn't look as if they were ever going to get close again. The band shuffled personnel like a deck of cards, their record company exhibited a classic loss of faith, drugs and depression took inevitable tolls. At their last performance in New York, the nightly highlight centered around Iggy chocking and throwing up onstage, only to encore quoting Renfield from Dracula: "Flies," and whose mad orbs could say it any better, "big juicy flies...and spiders..."

Well, we all have our little lapses, don't we? With Raw Power, the Stooges return with a vengeance, exhibiting all the ferocity that characterized them at their livid best, offering a taste of the TV eye to anyone with nerve enough to put their money where their lower jaw flaps. There are no compromises, no attempts to soothe or play games into a fable wider audience. Raw Power is the pot of quicksand at the end of the rainbow, and if that doesn't sound attractive, then you've been living on borrowed time for far too long.

It's not an easy album, by any means. Hovering around the same kind of rough, unfinished quality reminiscent of the Velvet's White Light/White Heat, the record seems caught in jagged pinpoints, at times harsh, at others abrupt. Even the "love" songs here, Iggy crooning in a voice achingly close to Jim Morrison's seem somehow perverse, covered with spittle and leer: "Gimme Danger, little stranger," preferably with the lights turned low, so "I can feeeel your disease."

The band is a motherhumper. Ron Asheton has switched over to bass, joining brother Scott in the rhythm section, while James Williamson has taken charge of lead; the power trio that this brings off has to be heard to be believed. For the first time, the Stooges have used the recording studio as more than a recapturing of their live show,and with David Bowie helping out in the mix, there is an ongoing swirl of sound that virtually drags you into the speakers, guitars rising and falling, drums edging forward and then toppling back into the morass. Iggy similarly benefits, double and even triple-tracked, his voice covering a range of frequencies only an (I wanna be your) dog could properly appreciate, arch-punk over tattling sniveler over chewed microphone.

Given material, it's the only way. The record opens with "Search and Destroy," Vietnamese images ricocheting off the hollow explosions of Scott's snare, Iggy secure in his role of GI pawn as "the world's most forgotten boy," looking for "love in the middle of a fire fight." Meaning you're handed a job and you do it, right? Yes, but then "Gimme Danger" slithers along, letting you know through its obsequiously mellow acoustic guitar and slippery violin-like lead that maybe he actually likes walking that tightrope between heaven and the snakepit below, where the false step can't be recalled and the only satisfaction lies in calling your opponent's bluff and watching him fold from there. Soundtrack music for a chicken run, and will it be your sleeve that gets caught on the door handle? Hmmmm...
Cut to "Your Pretty Face Is Going to Hell," first called "Hard to Beat" and the original title ditched in favor of Funhouse's "1970." If it didn't seem like such a relic of the past, the Grande Ballroom would have to be resurrected for this one, high-tailing it all the way from Iggy's opening Awright! through James' hot-wired guitar to a lavish, lovingly extended coda which'll probably be Iggy's cue to trot around the audience when they ultimately bring it onstage. "Penetration" closes off the side, the Stooges at their most sensual, lapping at the old in-out in a hypnotic manner than might even hae a crack at the singles games. Clive and Columbia's promotion men willing.

"Raw Power" flips the record over, and the title track is a sure sign that things aren't about to cool down. "Row Power is a boilin' soul/Got a son called rock 'n' roll," and when was the last time you heard anything like that? "I Need Somebody" builds from a vague St. James Infirmary" resemblance to neatly counterpoint "Gimme Danger," Iggy on his best behavior here, while "Shake Appeal" is the throwaway, basically a half-developed riff boosted by a nice performance, great guitar break, and some on-the-beam handclaps. Leaving the remains for "Death Trip" to finish it off, the only logical follow-up to "L.A. Blues" and all that came after, crawl on your belly down the long line of bespattered history as the world shudders to its final apocryphal release.

I never drink...wine. -- Lenny Kaye, RS

The image of a defiant, staring Iggy Pop on Raw Power's cover perfectly encapsulates his response to the trials and tribulations he went through before this album took shape. After an unhappy relationship with their label Elektra, who had mismarketed the band's first two albums and ditched them before their third took shape, Pop had disbanded the Stooges and escaped Detroit to hook up with David Bowie in New York.

At Bowie's suggestion, Iggy and guitarist James Williamson decamped to London to record Raw Power. There, Pop re-recruited Ron and Scotty Asheton, the brothers who made up The Stooges' primal rhythm section. The genteel surroundings of "Merrie Olde (England)," as Pop put it, in no way tempered the raucous machismo of Raw Power; indeed, the record could not be further from the sexual ambiguity of the glam rock that Bowie and others were touting at the time. Pop's vision for the record was ambitious -- initial mixes of "Search and Destroy" featured the sound of a sword fight, while "Penetration" utilized that rock 'n' roll staple, the celeste (a keyboard of orchestral bells) -- but the driving guitar of Williamson and the raw stomp of the Ashetons keep the album simple and centered firmly in the belly and the balls.

Columbia hated the album, viewing it as even less accessible than the band's material for Elektra, and charged Bowie with salvaging what he could from the mess. Thankfully, Bowie paid heed to Iggy's vision, and delivered eight tracks that influenced the proto-punks of New York and London and secured Pop's legacy as the movement's godfather. - Seth Jacobson, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Mark Deming

In 1972, the Stooges were near the point of collapse when David Bowie's management team, MainMan, took a chance on the band at Bowie's behest. By this point, guitarist Ron Asheton and bassist Dave Alexander had been edged out of the picture, and James Williamson had signed on as Iggy's new guitar mangler; Asheton rejoined the band shortly before recording commenced on Raw Power, but was forced to play second fiddle to Williamson as bassist. By most accounts, tensions were high during the recording of Raw Power, and the album sounds like the work of a band on its last legs -- though rather than grinding to a halt, Iggy & the Stooges appeared ready to explode like an ammunition dump. From a technical standpoint, Williamson was a more gifted guitar player than Asheton (not that that was ever the point), but his sheets of metallic fuzz were still more basic (and punishing) than what anyone was used to in 1973, while Ron Asheton played his bass like a weapon of revenge, and his brother Scott Asheton remained a powerhouse behind the drums. But the most remarkable change came from the singer; Raw Power revealed Iggy as a howling, smirking, lunatic genius. Whether quietly brooding ("Gimme Danger") or inviting the apocalypse ("Search and Destroy"), Iggy had never sounded quite so focused as he did here, and his lyrics displayed an intensity that was more than a bit disquieting. In many ways, almost all Raw Power has in common with the two Stooges albums that preceded it is its primal sound, but while the Stooges once sounded like the wildest (and weirdest) gang in town, Raw Power found them heavily armed and ready to destroy the world -- that is, if they didn't destroy themselves first. [After its release, Iggy was known to complain that David Bowie's mix neutered the ferocity of the original recordings. In time it became conventional wisdom that Bowie's mix spoiled a potential masterpiece, so much so that in 1997, when Columbia made plans to issue a new edition of Raw Power, they brought in Pop to remix the original tapes and (at least in theory) give us the "real" version we'd been denied all these years. Then the world heard Pop's painfully harsh and distorted version of Raw Power, and suddenly Bowie's tamer but more dynamic mix didn't sound so bad, after all. In 2010, the saga came full-circle when Columbia released a two-disc "Legacy Edition" of the album that featured Bowie's original mix in remastered form]

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:35 (eleven years ago) link

Well my issue with Ziggy was always that Bowie is role-playing as this ethereal alien, but the music is anything but. It's just good ol' boogie glam rock. It's great, but doesn't quite match the image and story he's presenting. He obviously had not been clued in on the German Kosmische records as he was a few years later. If I could go back in time and snake him the right inspiration, I think the results would have been even more fascinating.

I would not, however, fuck with Highway To Hell. It's perfect as is.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:38 (eleven years ago) link

I never drink...wine. -- Lenny Kaye

I'm missing something, what's he mean by that?

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:41 (eleven years ago) link

Bela Lugosi in "Dracula"

Sir Lord Baltimora (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:45 (eleven years ago) link

Ziggy Stardust was the album that got me into Bowie so there's that... not my favorite though.

Everybody wants a piece of the (Viceroy), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:47 (eleven years ago) link

Nice! So I got that ridiculous Raw Power box set with both the original mix and Iggy's late 90s re-do, and like them both, just different facets of the ugly beast of an album...decked out in silvery leather pants and glitter. Their live shows have been incredible the past few years.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:49 (eleven years ago) link

21. GANG OF FOUR Entertainment! (3885 Points, 26 Votes)
RYM: #6 for 1979, #145 overall | Acclaimed: #148 | RS: #490 | Pitchfork: #8

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Though the stressful zigzag rhythms sound thinner on record than from the stage where their chanted lyrics/nonmelodies become visible, the progressive atavism of these university Marxists is a formal accomplishment worth attending. By propelling punk's amateur ethos into uncharted musical territory, they pull the kind of trick that's eluded avant-garde primitives since the dawn of romanticism. And if you want to complain that their leftism is received, so's your common sense. No matter how merely liberal their merely critical verbal content, the tension/release dynamics are praxis at its most dialectical. Don't let's boogie--let's flop like fish escaping a line. A -- R. Christgau

If the Clash were the urban guerrillas of rock'n'roll, Leeds' Gang of Four were its revolutionary theoreticians. The band's bracing and style-setting funk-rock gained its edge from lyrics that dissect capitalist society with the cool precision of a surgeon's scalpel. The Gang saw interpersonal relationships — "romance," if you must — as politics in microcosm, a view that gives Entertainment! its distinctive tartness. Jon King declaims brittle sentiments with the self-righteous air of someone who couldn't get to first base with his girlfriend the previous evening. The basic backing trio of bassist Dave Allen, drummer Hugo Burnham and guitarist Andy Gill churns up a brutal, nearly unembellished accompaniment on this challenging album debut. -- Trouser Press

ENTERTAINMENT! isn't just the best debut album by a British band -- punk or otherwise -- since the original English release of The Clash in 1977. Nor is it simply a fierce, emotionally taut dramatization of youth's loss of innocense as seen through the clouded lens of neo-Marxist dogma and ambitiously obscure free verse. Stripped of its own pretensions and the burden of sociopolitical relevance forced on it by a knee-jerk leftist English music press, Entertainment! is a passionate declaration of discontent by four rock & roll agents provocateurs naive enough to believe they can move the world with words and music. It's also the first real political partying record since the MC5's booty-shaking 1969 broadside, Kick Out the Jams.

The power, the glory and the paradox of the Gang of Four's mission on Entertainment! is neatly, if unconsciously, capsulized in the last line of "5.45," a typically kinetic dance tract about television news. "Guerrilla war struggle is a new entertainment," rails Jon King in demagogic sing-speak set against a wall of Gatling-gun guitar chords and snowballing bass and drum patterns. Contracted to two of the biggest corporations in the music business (EMI in Britain, Warner Bros. in America), the Gang of Four undoubtedly fancy themselves cultural guerrillas based in the heart of the beast, using its oppressive but efficient offices to issue an encouraging revolutionary word.
Like their namesakes (the four top Communist officials purged from the party in China's post-Mao upheaval), the Gang of Four have drawn scorn from their more extremist New Wave brethren in England for their ties with major labels. The charge, of course, is that mass-marketing dollars spent on behalf of an LP as radical (even in rock & roll terms) as Entertainment! merely reduces both the album and its message to just that: entertainment<>no different from a Beatles reissue or the latest Doobie Brothers release.

Yet this is exactly the level on which Entertainment! is most effective and the Gang of Four most subversive. Guerrillas they may be, with weighty political statements to make, but vocalist Jon King, guitarist Andy Gill, bassist Dave Allen and drummer Hugo Burnham have also made a damned entertaining record, angst and all. Allen's explosive bass and Burnham's deft command of funk, reggae and revved-up disco meters form a one-two punch whose tactility and musical strength equals that of the Rolling Stones and the Wailers. Gill ignores routine rock-guitar riffing, preferring instead to fire off polyrhythmic volleys of crackling dissonance that have more in common with ex-Dr. Feelgood guitarist Wilko Johnson than Johnny Ramone.

With King ranting in a pronounced British accent against declamatory harmonies, a background of the other three group members, the effect is one of orgasmic dance-floor release. Going into overdrive in a manic James Brown mutation ("Not Great Men") or in their implosive variation on three-chord, Chuck Berry classicism ("I Found That Essence Rare"), the Gang of Four dare you to go wild<>if not in the streets, then at your local rock disco. Sure, their lyrical concerns may be the stuff of furrowed brows in dank college coffeehouses (three of the four Gangsters were students at Leeds University). But even the dour rationalizations about love and sex in "Damaged Goods" and "Contract" aren't enough to neutralize the icy sting of Gill's guitar or to snuff out the propulsive blast of the latter tune's ricochet rhythms, which recall the shotgun thrust of Captain Beef-heart's Magic Band on Trout Mask Replica.

There's certainly a fine art to the Gang of Four's grooving. In "Armalite Rifle" (from their 1978 Fast EP, Damaged Goods, issued in America as part of a Fast compilation called Mutant Pop), the band twisted conventional rock & roll basics to subtle advantage. In his solo break, Andy Gill fought Hugo Burnham's steady tempo with a contrapuntal landslide of harmonically contrary chords. Then, in a split-second reversal of roles, Gill kept time with a single repeated note over Burnham's strident acceleration of the beat. The group's latest English 45, "Outside the Trains Don't Run on Time," employs a similar gambit, each musician taking turns holding to the springy Sly Stone pace while the others chip away at it.

Entertainment! features more advanced but no less danceable applications of the rhythmic possibilities in the Gang of Four's backbeat. Not surprisingly, most of them are initiated by Gill. First, he denies the harmony implicit in most rock rhythm-guitar styles by playing everything from one isolated note to a sputtering cough of distortion, all independent from King's austere vocal outline. Then he fortifies the band's pivotal bass-and-drums structure by creating one of his own in a simulated contest of wills. This guy even creates a conflict with himself in the argumentative guitar overdubs of "Guns before Butter."

"At Home He's a Tourist," the group's best recorded work to date, summarizes Gill's innovative approach to his instrument. Barely seconds into Dave Allen and Hugo Burnham's freight-train intro, Gill is furiously punching his strings with random atonal glee, stepping into a severely abbreviated chord progression to punctuate King's vehement observations about ulcers and urban tension. Like Keith Levene in Public Image Ltd., Andy Gill doesn't play the guitar. He uses it as a medium to transmit a new code of rock & roll signals that describe the social and spiritual turmoil at the heart of the Gang of Four's sound.

Often lost in Gill's blitzkrieg is the ghostly chanting of Jon King, who somehow manages a fascinating fusion of John Lydon's Sex Pistols snarl, a conversational drone and a bit of feverish pulpit pounding. But the three-way instrumental debates between Gill, Allen and Burnham are so absorbing that they stand as great rock art without any words at all. At their hardest and heaviest, the Gang of Four can sound like a goose-stepping Led Zeppelin or a lusty Plastic Ono Band. They can just as easily work up a funky Parliament-Funkadelic sweat ("Not Great Men") or slip into a psychotic stream of echoed PiL-like dub to the melancholy refrain of King's melodica ("Ether"). With all this going on, there exists the very real possibility that one can listen<>and dance<>to Entertainment! without paying much attention to the issues and imagery contained in the lyrics.

That would be unfortunate. "Guns before Butter" should be required listening for Americans, age nineteen and twenty, facing the possibility of a new military draft. The idea of sex as false emotional advertising is heightened by Jon King's bittersweet readings of "Natural's Not in It" and "Damaged Goods." And in "Anthrax," Andy Gill's orgy of introductory feedback is the cue for a discussion between King, who likens love to a cattle disease, and Gill, who explains why the Gang of Four don't sing about love like everybody else. "These groups and singers," Gill says like a student reading his homework in front of the class, "think they appeal to everyone singing about love because apparently everyone has or can love or so they would have you believe anyway...."

The Gang of Four would have you believe that the body politic is a higher authority than the body physical. But the exclamation point on Entertainment! suggests they really know better. All revolution and no rhythm makes their more radical British peers (the terminally eclectic Pop Group and the sub-Ramonesish, reactionary Crass) extremely dull entities. A brilliant, ferocious dance band, the Gang of Four have something to say, and they say it best with body language. These musicians may not change your mind, but they'll definitely grab your attention. -- David Fricke, RS

Gang of Four formed in Leeds, England, in 1977, naming themselves after the Chinese political faction associated with Mao Tse-tung's widow. Eyebrows were raised when this avowedly left-wing group signed to EMI, but their uncompromising attitude remained intact.

Entertainment!'s groundbreaking sound is due to the tight funk rhythms laid down by bassist Dave Allen and drummer Hugo Burnham, and Andy Gill's scratchy staccato guitar. The use of space allows Jon King's intelligently delivered vocals to be heard, while the gaps are filled with jagged guitar feedback and melodica.

Defiantly anti-sexist and anti-Fascist, the band were lyrically inspired by the looming specter of Thatcherism and the rise in violence between right- and left-wing factions that they witnessed in their native Yorkshire in the late 1970s. "At Home He's a Tourist" and "Contract" attempt to challenge men and women's traditional roles in society; "Ether"'s Funkadelic-inspired call-and-answer vocals examine the way the media's exposure of British mistreatment of Northern Irish prisoners was obscured by the discovery of North Sea oil. "Damaged Goods" explores the metaphors between sex and consumerism. Most powerful of all is "5:45," with its portrayal of graphic war scenes on prime-time television news.

The music is, however, delivered with wit, anger, and raw energy, and the vocals never descend into mindless ranting. Entertainment! is fresh and consistent, the Gang's "Neo-Marxist funk" inspiring groups as disparate as the Red Hot Chili Peppers and The Rapture. -- Chris Shade, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Andy Kellman

Entertainment! is one of those records where germs of influence can be traced through many genres and countless bands, both favorably and unfavorably. From groups whose awareness of genealogy spreads wide enough to openly acknowledge Gang of Four's influence (Fugazi, Rage Against the Machine), to those not in touch with their ancestry enough to realize it (rap-metal, some indie rock) -- all have appropriated elements of their forefathers' trailblazing contribution. Its vaguely funky rhythmic twitch, its pungent, pointillistic guitar stoccados, and its spoken/shouted vocals have all been picked up by many. Lyrically, the album was apart from many of the day, and it still is. The band rants at revisionist history in "Not Great Men" ("No weak men in the books at home"), self-serving media and politicians in "I Found That Essence Rare" ("The last thing they'll ever do?/Act in your interest"), and sexual politics in "Damaged Goods" ("You said you're cheap but you're too much"). Though the brilliance of the record thrives on the faster material -- especially the febrile first side -- a true highlight amongst highlights is the closing "Anthrax," full of barely controlled feedback squalls and moans. It's nearly psychedelic, something post-punk and new wave were never known for. With a slight death rattle and plodding bass rumble, Jon King equates love with disease and admits to feeling "like a beetle on its back." In the background, Andy Gill speaks in monotone of why Gang of Four doesn't do love songs. Subversive records of any ilk don't get any stronger, influential, or exciting than this.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:53 (eleven years ago) link

So do you want to finish it all today as planned or take it down to #11 and finish tomorrow?

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:53 (eleven years ago) link

I'm around, though I haven't heard most of what's placing atm so don't have much to say.

Newgod.css (seandalai), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:56 (eleven years ago) link

finish it!

Everybody wants a piece of the (Viceroy), Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:56 (eleven years ago) link

This pace seems to be discouraging discussion, but I'm fine either way, though I'll have to bow out in 45 min for meetings the rest of the day.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:57 (eleven years ago) link

I'm out this evening but it's up to you AG. Xgau actually sort of on the money with that Go4 review.

Neil S, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:57 (eleven years ago) link

Finish it

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:57 (eleven years ago) link

Direct Link to poll recap & full results

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 17:01 (eleven years ago) link


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