Nobody knows what The
Next Day will bring, especially for the unpredictable David Bowie. His
future uncertain, having turned 65 in January, Bowie has been adamant that his
days of touring are behind him. And having reached retirement age, it begs the
question: Is this Bowie’s last hurrah? From the title of his latest LP, it
appears even Bowie has no idea. There is, after all, an incredible amount of
ambiguity in those three little words.
Does it mean he plans on doing more recording and that he’s
going back to work … well, The Next Day?
Or, does it mean he’s moving on to another chapter in his life, one that
doesn’t involve music at all? It could be he’s confronting his own mortality
and wondering just how many “next days” he has left. Then again, maybe it’s
simply a more artful and humanistic expression of that old Yiddish proverb
that, when translated, says, “Man plans and God laughs.”
As far as the planning for The Next Day goes, Bowie and his co-conspirators had to chuckle at
how successful they were in keeping word of this new record under wraps. The
Conclave of Cardinals was conducted with less secrecy. When news arrived that a
fresh Bowie record was imminent, it was met with expressions of shock and
surprise. That it could possibly contain his most inspired work in ages was
even more stunning, considering the parade of lackluster and unnecessarily difficult
albums he’d released since Let’s Dance or Scary Monsters, the LP that seems to
have provided the template of experimental accessibility for The Next Day.
Coming 10 years after 2003’s Reality – the successor to 2002’s Heathen – The Next Day
finds Bowie as open and revealing about himself as he’s ever been, and that, in
and of itself, is noteworthy for a man whose multiple personalities and masquerades – from that of the Thin White Duke to
Ziggy Stardust – have played out on very public stages over the years. It should come as no surprise then that, amid
the treatises on loneliness, regret and wrenching heartache, questions of
identity should arise in the alien soundscape “Heat,” with its quiet, martial drums,
mournful strings and melancholic acoustic guitar strum marching gently under
wraiths of lightly corrosive feedback. Here, Bowie’s weary, confessional
expression of confusion and despair mesmerizes, just as it does in the elegant,
smoky torch song “Where Are We Now?” Gorgeously rendered with dark, lush piano
and watery pools of electric guitar, it’s a number that’s wide awake at 3 a.m.
contemplating the erosion of time and life’s little mysteries. Sleep is
overrated anyway.
Darker and even more stylish, with seductive, irresistibly melodic contours and a streaming pace pushed along by smooth, taut bass, “The
Stars (Are out Tonight)” shimmers like a glassy city harbor in the clear moonlight.
And Bowie’s increasingly urgent vocals and voyeuristic, unsettling poetry heighten the drama and paranoia of an
absolutely intoxicating song that could rank among his best, even if it does bear an uncanny resemblance to “China Girl.” Even Iggy Pop, however, would forgive the likeness. Like Scary Monsters, though, the classy, well-manicured The Next Day spikes its arty pop-rock punch
bowl with the slightest traces of intriguing discord, the off-kilter vocalizing
in “How Does the Grass Grow?” being one example and the slashing guitar playing
off the melodic buoyancy of the title track being another. In “If You Can See
Me” the track’s compelling stop-start funk movements and dizzying array of beats
– straight out of Radiohead’s playbook – dive right into a rushing sonic flood,
as Bowie’s delivery shifts from robotic malfunction and threatening aspect to an all-too-human pleading for
salvation and recognition.
Rather clunky and clumsily executed, “Dirty Boys” and the
dull, thudding “Love is Lost” are minor missteps, as is “Boss of Me,” with its
sleazy saxophones and alarmingly low energy levels. The interminable sameness of “Dancing Out in
Space” is hard to get though, as well. Nevertheless, even these flawed pieces have qualities that make them compelling. Essentially, The NextDay is a tour of some of the most interesting and exquisitely detailed aural architecture Bowie has designed in recent years, and
when the serrated edge, swirling beauty and propulsive drive of “(You Will) Set
the World on Fire” breaks through the door Bowie is redeemed. Bowie is fighting
against the dying of the light, and he’s winning, despite any doubts he may
have.
Saxon's current lineup includes Nibbs Carter, Nigel Glockler,
Biff Byford, Doug Scarratt and Paul Quinn (Photo by Kai Swillus)
Dodging flying beer bottles and sidestepping brawling
hooligans isn’t everybody’s idea of fun.
Biff Byford and the boys of Son of a Bitch, precursors to
the New Wave of British Heavy Metal legends Saxon, always found trouble in one
particular live venue in the northeast of England – in the industrial town of
Burnley – called the Bank Hall Miners Club, but that didn’t stop them from
playing there as often as they could in the early days.
As the lanky Saxon front man recalls, “The money was good.”
And it had to be, because there was a real possibility that one or all of them
could wind up in the hospital after the gig.
“It was a club for miners, as the miners had their own
club,” says Byford. “That was pretty hard actually. That was a pretty hard
place. There used to be fights there every time we played – not because of the
band, but because there were two gangs that used to stand across each side of
the room looking at each other, and then at some point, they’d all charge at
each other and that would be the end of the concert. So yeah, it was a bit
rough. It was like ‘The Blues Brothers,’ where they’re throwing pots and bits
of beer at the band and things.”
Even for young men craving rock ‘n’ roll excitement and even
danger, the violence of the Bank Hall Miners Club in the late 1970s was a bit much for Byford and
Son of a Bitch. They had to make a buck, though. And, regardless of the trials and
tribulations of barnstorming England in a cramped van and performing at clubs
and bars where many of the patrons might want to take a swing at them, it beat
the hell out of working in the mines.
“When I was 17 or 18, I was working in the coal mines,” says
Byford. “It was difficult. It was really hard work. When you’re that young,
you’ve got mates in there, and I wasn’t in there for very long. It was a
dangerous place. But, yeah, I know what it’s like to work hard for everything.”
Perhaps that’s why Son of a Bitch, and later Saxon,
originally had such a large following in working-class communities in the north
of England and in South Wales, landscapes once dominated by factories and “cut
off from the south,” the more pastoral area of Britain, as Byford says.
“I suppose people just wanted to go out on a Friday or
Saturday night and have a great time and just watch a great band,” says Byford.
“All these little villages or towns had clubs or bars, and we used to play
them. You could play one every night for a month. And that’s what we did.”
The song “Stand Up and Fight,” off Saxon’s newest LP Sacrifice (a video of the making of the album is shown above), out on the UDR label, speaks
to the struggles they encountered before the tsunami known as NWOBHM swept
through the U.K. If the raging thrash and thundering traditional metal of Sacrifice – as well as other recent
efforts like 2011’s Call to Arms,
2009’s Into the Labyrinth and 2007’s Inner Sanctum – is any indication, the indestructible Saxon
has rediscovered the passionate intensity and raw energy that made their early
‘80s albums such classics.
Making a ‘Sacrifice’
Saxon - Sacrifice 2013
Sacrifice is
Saxon’s 20th album, and for the occasion, Byford decided to take the
con. Or, in other words, he assumed the role of producer, and he wasn’t shy
about giving out orders.
“I just really wanted to make an album that I liked and not
be beholden to the people who are not doing it,” says Byford. “The fans are
quite happy with that, so that was good … there are no ballads, just good rock
music, just good metal music. That’s what I wanted to do.”
The plan was to revisit Saxon’s most revered albums – the
early ‘80s holy trinity of Wheels of
Steel, Strong Arm of the Law and Denim and Leather – for inspiration,
while incorporating the balls-out, crash-and-burn mayhem of the thrash-metal
titans of today who were weaned on the NWOBHM sound Saxon helped establish.
“I mean, we went back to the ‘80s a little bit for two or
three of the songs, just to figure out what made us great,” explains Byford. “I
think ‘Warriors of the Road’ and ‘Stand Up and Fight’ are sort of
thrash-metal-y like the ‘80s were, and yeah, I just wanted to play with
Marshalls and Gibsons really, and just play and not rely too much on too many
digital tricks and just play like it is really. Some of the stuff is quite
modern, like ‘Made in Belfast’ is a really heavy song, with the Celtic sort of
style. We were experimenting as well, but yeah, I wanted the songs to have that
kind of push like it was just recorded yesterday, but still have that one foot
in the past.”
Infused with Irish folk accents, “Made in Belfast” certainly
has historical significance.
“It was originally just a heavy riff and a melodic turn,”
says Byford, referring to how the song was constructed. “I wanted it to have a
Celtic feel to it, so we went and Paul Quinn wrote the more Celtic part of the
beginning and we put it in the song. We liked it that much and it’s in all the
bridges of the song. And in Belfast, not the song but the city, I went to see
the museum, the Titanic museum. And I just thought it would be nice to write a
song for the people that worked on the ships really, rather than those who were
[passengers] on the Titanic.”
“Walking the Steel” also expresses empathy for the plight of
the working man, although this time it’s the construction being done on One
World Trade Center – one of the new towers being built on the old site of the
former World Trade Center, which was destroyed by the 9/11 terrorists – that
stirred Byford’s imagination.
“I went to Ground Zero in 2011, and we saw the progress
being made on the towers, and we were talking to a couple of guys there,” says
Byford. “And they called it ‘walking the steel,’ when they worked up there in
the clouds.”
Available as a standard jewel case CD, a limited-edition
deluxe digibook, a vinyl picture disc, a digital download that comes with a
bonus song or in a direct-to-consumer fan package, Sacrifice was mastered by in-demand producer Andy Sneap, who has
worked on a number of recent high-profile metal releases.
“We’ve known him for quite some time, and we wanted to work
together a little bit last year, or the year before, but couldn’t get to it. He
had a little bit of time free ‘cause the Killswitch [Engage] album was delayed
a few weeks. So, I asked him if he wanted to mix the album, and he said he’d
love to mix the album. So, that’s how it happened really, just over e-mail. He
came down to the studio to talk a couple of times, while I was recording the
band, and we came up with a plan.”
Giving Sacrifice
that contemporary feel was important for Byford, as songs like the title track
have the heaviness and raw power he imagined it would, while retaining that
classic Saxon sound.
“I’m a bit mixed really. I love the melodic stuff, but I
also love the heavy stuff as well,” admits Byford. “I guess I’m a bit of a
hybrid really. I love the melodic stuff – ‘747’ from the early albums – but I
also like ‘Motorcycle Man’ and ‘Princess of the Night,’ so I’m a bit of a
sucker for it all really.”
And he’s in absolute awe of the guitar work of Quinn and
Doug Scarratt on the latest record, as well as the performances of the band as
a whole.
“The musicianship of this band is great,” says Byford. “So
it’s a lot easier to go to different places with this band than it was with any
other band. So, yeah, it’s great this time. It’s really inspirational.”
Road tested
Back in the 1970s, Byford only had to witness the tough
lives of his fellow miners to give himself the push he needed to make it as a
musician.
In 1976, Byford, guitarists Quinn and Graham Oliver, bassist
Steve “Dobby” Dawson and drummer David Ward – who would soon be replaced by
Pete Gill – formed what would become Saxon in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, only
they started out as Son of a Bitch. They toured England relentlessly, as is
recounted in the 2012 Saxon documentary film “Heavy Metal Thunder.” The venues
weren’t exactly posh settings.
“We played a lot of clubs and bars,” says Byford. “Yeah, we
thought it was great fun, although they were very rough. There were a lot of
fights and things.”
Part of the excitement involved having copious amounts of
sex with groupies in the band’s van – which also housed their gear – after a
gig. Their one-night stands occasionally got them into hot water.
“You had to have a good pair of running shoes to get out of
the way,” jokes Byford. “There was always somebody’s girlfriend that liked one
of the band members, and you had to get out pretty quickly.”
While the U.K. club circuit provided Saxon, who ditched the
name Son of a Bitch fairly early on, all the thrills and excitement they could
stand, they had bigger dreams. And they had no intention of being just a covers
band, which only served to rile audiences.
“In the early days, we used to do like three sets,” recalls
Byford. “We used to stop and have a break and then start again. And usually by
the end of the set, all of them were pretty rough actually. And we really
didn’t do cover songs back then. So a lot of people used to ask for ‘Smoke on
the Water’ and all (laughs). And we said, ‘We don’t play that.’ And then they’d
usually riot, you know what I mean? After a while, people would come to see us
because we were a good band then, so we actually got on a little bit easier as
time went on.”
Securing support spots on tours with bigger bands, including
Motorhead, gained them much-needed exposure and expanded their fan base.
“It was our first tour,” says Byford, referring to Saxon’s
opening gigs with Motorhead. “I mean, they were pretty big then in the U.K. at
the time. So, yeah, we jumped on their tour. It was great actually. They helped
us out a lot – telling fans to buy our records and things. They were really
cool about it. They were great.”
Gaining momentum, Saxon got signed to the French record
label Carrere, which put out their self-titled debut in 1979. Carrere, however,
would experience financial difficulties, and when the label went under, Saxon
was homeless. It wouldn’t take them long to find another label, and in 1980,
they released Wheels of Steel, which yielded the singles “747,” the title track
and “Suzie Hold On.”
So began a period of intense creativity and ceaseless touring,
with Saxon appearing at the very first Monsters of Rock concert on Aug. 16,
1980.
Saxon - Wheels of Steel 1980
“We’d just gotten Wheels
of Steel in the charts,” says Byford. “I think it had just gone gold in the
U.K. So we went onstage … and it just was crazy, with 80,000 people going nuts,
singing all the songs. Yeah, it was great. It was quite emotional for us. It
was the first time we played to more than 2,000 people.”
On the road, Saxon encountered larger audiences and they
were frothing at the mouth for something different. Much to their surprise,
Saxon found itself at the vanguard of a burgeoning movement. NWOBHM was
happening, and Saxon was taking notice “straight away really,” says Byford.
“It’s not like the U.S. It’s not like a massive country,” he
adds. “In the U.K., it happened pretty quickly for us – two or three big
magazines got a hold of it and gave us some fantastic reviews. You know, we
played quite a few shows in the early days of Maiden, like at Manchester
University and places like that. And yeah, it was a bit of a melting pot of
bands really. I remember we played with a band called Samson back then. Bruce
Dickinson was their singer, so I got to meet Bruce fairly early on as well.”
This conflagration of heavy metal and punk rock, combining
speed and all-out aggression, was sweeping across England, as Saxon’s
compatriots like Diamond Head, Budgie, Angel Witch, Girlschool, Motorhead,
Tygers of Pan Tang and, of course, Iron Maiden blew the doors off the entire
country.
“There was definitely a massive change in the size of
audiences that had interest in the band,” says Byford. “I really think the
magazines were a bit fed up with this punk thing. I just think they wanted
something new to write about. And we were in the right place at the right time
with some great songs.”
Humility aside, Saxon posted four albums in the U.K. Top 10 in the 1980s and had numerous Top 20 singles there and in Japan, at least in part, because of
their insane work ethic. Striking while the iron was as hot as it could ever
be, Saxon took whatever studio time they could get when they weren’t on the
road. While Wheels of Steel was still
going strong, Saxon released perhaps its finest recording, Strong Arm of the Law, which featured the title track and “Dallas 1
p.m.,” a song about John F. Kennedy.
“We were just very, very sort of inspired really,” says
Byford. “We were just writing the first things that came into our heads. You
know, they were great really. We had to work on the songs and get them sounding
great – you know, with the arrangements. But generally, we’d have an idea and
carry on with it and it worked out to be a fantastic idea – like ‘Dallas 1
p.m.,’ you know, I just sat down and wrote it. I said to the guys, ‘I’ve got
this idea about writing a song about the Kennedy assassination and about when
he was younger.’ And they were like, ‘Yeah.’ And we had this riff flying
around, and we put the two together and it worked fantastically. So, I think
that song probably took about two hours, from the original idea to the finished
song.”
Not every song came together as fast as that one for Saxon,
but with their touring schedule having expanded worldwide, having a hit in
Japan with “Motorcycle Man,” there was less and less time for recording. Saxon
didn’t mind the work.
“We’d actually not been out of the country before 1980, and
most of us had never been on a plane,” says Byford.
Though they were spending more time on the road and in the
air, Saxon didn’t do much songwriting away from the studio.
“Not many. Not many. I think we probably wrote ‘Princess of
the Night’ on the road,” says Byford. “I can’t really remember many that we
wrote. I got a lot of ideas for lyrics on the road, but I can’t remember
writing one song on the road really. The guitarist might try something at sound
check, and it would come out way too long, but generally, we just went into the
room on Day 1 and started writing the album.”
Saxon - Denim and Leather 2013
With an ever-shrinking window to record, Saxon banged out
another seminal record in 1981 with the fan favorite Denim and Leather, the title track of which has been a rallying cry
for many metal fans ever since then. “Princess of the Night” was on Denim and Leather, and it was one of the
band’s most successful singles, but in the aftermath, Saxon’s united front
started to crack, as Gill departed and was replaced by Nigel Glockler for an
upcoming tour.
Still formidable, Saxon kept their foot on the gas,
releasing one of metal’s greatest live albums in The Eagle Has Landed. They were headlining tours of their own and
supporting superstars like Ozzy Osbourne. And they brought down the house at
1982’s Monsters of Rock Festival. The tide, however, was turning ever so slowly
against Saxon, as the glam-metal outbreak spread and NWOBHM started to fade.
Despite it all, Saxon released Power & the Glory in 1983, and it surpassed their previous best
in sales. What nobody knew then was that Saxon was about to undergo
earthshaking changes.
‘Crusader’ for truth
1984 saw Saxon sign with EMI Records, and they kicked off
their relationship with a new album in Crusader,
a record that critics found a bit commercial but Byford never saw it that way.
And the title track is still beloved by fans.
“It was a song [written] from the point of view of a young
lad watching the soldiers go off to war,” says Byford. “And yeah, it’s just a
historic song, and other people have all sorts of different interpretations,
but it’s just a history song, like ‘Dallas 1 p.m.’ or ‘Made in Belfast.’”
There would be other new releases in the ‘80s, including
1985’s Innocence is No Excuse and
1986’s Rock the Nations, although
they lost Dawson in the process. Paul Johnson was hired as Dawson’s
replacement, but Saxon was growing weary of touring. In 1988, they released the
commercial disappointment Destiny,
and EMI dropped the band.
Not willing to give up the ghost, Saxon continued on into
the ‘90s, signing with Virgin Records. But after recording Dogs of War in 1994, Oliver was
dismissed for trying to sell recording of Saxon’s 1980 Donnington performance
without the permission of the rest of the band. To this day, Oliver and Dawson
haven’t been welcomed back to Saxon, although Byford has left the door open for
reconciliation.
“I mean, never say never – we’ll see how it goes really,”
says Byford.
These days, Saxon’s lineup includes Byford, Quinn, Glockler,
Scarratt and Nibbs Carter, who replaced Johnson way back in 1988. And this
version of the band has been on an incredible roll, with each succeeding album
since The Inner Sanctum receiving
ever-increasing critical acclaim. Sacrifice
might be the best of the lot, and it’s going to give the Saxon fans in
Metallica and Megadeth reason to up their game.
“I think those guys were really into the old attitude and
concept of our albums then,” says Byford. “They were very sort of … no
particular style, just great songs played full bore – you know, no holding
back. So I think that’s what those bands from the U.S. sort of liked about us,
that metal/punk sort of stuff. So, yeah, definitely – and I’m sure a lot of
them will like two or three songs of this album.”
CD Review: Orange Goblin – A Eulogy for the Fans – Orange Goblin Live 2012
Candlelight Records
All Access Review: A
Orange Goblin - A Eulogy for
the Fans - Orange Goblin Live 2012
If the Hell’s Angels ever need a house band, they could do
worse than Orange Goblin. These beer drinkers and hell raisers from Britain
emit a gnarly heavy-metal roar as loud and smoky as the dirty exhaust pipes of
an old chopper. And in all probability, like their brothers in denim and
leather, they haven’t showered in months.
Or at least they probably hadn’t by the time they played
Bloodstock and Hellfest in 2012, while out on the road supporting their late
2011 album, A Eulogy for the Damned.
Welcomed with open arms by the great unwashed, the record knifed its way into
the U.K. Top 200 upon its release and motored all the way up to No. 38 on the
Billboard Heat Seeker’s chart. Taking no prisoners, A Eulogy for the Damned also conquered CMJ’s Loud Rock album
listings by eventually grabbing the top spot. Still, as devastating and
sonically brutal as A Eulogy for the
Damned was, Orange Goblin’s studio LPs have never quite replicated the
manly musk and hairy, brawling energy of the Orange Goblin live experience.
New from Candlelight Records, A Eulogy for the Fans
– Orange Goblin Live 2012, comprised of thrilling performance recordings
from both of those festivals of mayhem with videos and documentaries packed
into a lively DVD, fills that void and then some. From the first squeal of
feedback, Orange Goblin and their grizzly bear of a lead vocalist in Ben Ward set
out to pillage and plunder, with churning, furious riffage born of ‘70s proto-metal
and a healthy respect for doom rock, thrash and heavy, psychedelic blues that
comes alive in the raging maelstroms of “Red Tide Rising,” “Quincy the Pigboy”
and “Scorpionica.”
Relentless and punishing, Orange Goblin – established in
1995 – skillfully and dementedly handle twisting, crushing shifts in binge-and-purge dynamics with
teeth-gnashing glee, sending the recent single “The Filthy & the Few”
speeding into oblivion, bulldozing their way through “Acid Trial,” and then
mauling “The Ballad of Solomon Eagle” and “Some You Win, Some You Lose” in
beastly fashion. Whether he’s beating a meaty, menacing riff to death or flying straight into the sun on unpredictably wild solos, guitarist Joe Hoare
maneuvers his way through the carnage like some crazed motocross rider. Hoare
tears the guts out of the zombie-movie tribute “They Come Back” and the sprawling,
Black Sabbath-like horror of “The Fog,” as Ward, Orange Goblin’s Rasputin of a singer, treats chilling lyrics in a gruff and malevolent manner that puts the
fear of God into anybody who hears it. And that rhythm section, heaving to and
fro while seeming so certain of its direction and drive, doesn’t shy away from a good bashing either.
There’s a little bit of cowboy in Orange Goblin, as the
psychotic, mesmerizing grind of the irrepressible “Round up the Horses” so
aptly illustrates, and this live effort comes off like a never-ending bull ride
that tosses its audience around like rag dolls. Summoning the ugly power and raw,
massive muscle of originators like Blue Cheer, Mountain and Vanilla Fudge,
Orange Goblin claws through the tattered Southern rock glory of “Time Travelling Blues” and the rest of this set list violently, sending the frenzied crowd
into paroxysms of metal madness. Those who were there are probably still
talking about as one of the best nights of their lives.
CD Review: Justin Hayward –Spirits of the Western Sky
Eagle Rock Entertainment
All Access Review: B
Justin Hayward - Spirits of the Western Sky 2013
Justin Hayward hasn’t completely gone country. Only part of Spirits of the Western Sky, Hayward’s
first solo album since 1996’s The View
from the Hill, was recorded in Nashville, and it doesn’t take an Earl
Scruggs or an Emmylou Harris to figure out which songs he did in Music City.
Accented with plucked banjo, some light fiddle and mandolin,
the gorgeously rendered, heartfelt acoustic sketches “It’s Cold Outside of Your
Heart,” “What You Resist Persists” and “Broken Dream” roll around in down-home
bluegrass and glow incandescently, like fireflies trapped in a Mason jar. And
the breezy pop touch of “Captivated by You,” seemingly spun from pure ‘70s
soft-rock gold, could easily have taken inspiration from some of country’s best
songwriters – that is if the choruses weren’t so lushly orchestrated.
Concerned as always with matters of the heart and
spirituality, the Moody Blues’ lead vocalist and guitarist also spent time
recording in Genoa, Italy, and there’s a sophisticated pop sensibility at work
here that takes advantage of Academy Award-winning composer Anne Dudley’s much-ballyhooed
skills. Always willing to flesh out skeletal arrangements with orchestral
flourishes, as the Moody Blues have often done, Hayward strums his acoustic
guitar so lightly that it’s almost whispering as he puts Dudley’s talents to
work on such dreamy, string-laden fare as “One Day, Someday,” “The Eastern Sun”
and “The Western Sky.” None of them are quite as intoxicating as the melodic
cocktails served by Burt Bacharach or as mysterious and bruised as the soul of
Nick Drake, but Hayward is getting close.
What sinks Spirits of
the Western Sky is how drenched in heavy-handed sentimentality – both musically
and lyrically – the record is, as the always-earnest Hayward just can’t help
but go overboard on “In Your Blue Eyes” and whitewash “On the Road to Love” in
utter pop blandness. A romantic at heart, Hayward is always going to go for the
grand heartfelt gesture, and sometimes it’s truly gorgeous and sometimes it’s
the wan, sickly “Lazy Afternoon” that comes through the door. And then there’s
the matter of the two remixed electronic dance versions of the Moody Blues
favorite “Out There Somewhere” that close Spirits
of the Western Sky. Surprisingly contemporary sounding – unlike that dated, cringe-worthy album cover – and hypnotic, they
still feel as completely out of place as … well, Justin Hayward at a rave.
Cutting the cord with Accept proved to be more difficult
than Udo Dirkschneider imagined. In 1987, this short, stocky, powder keg of a singer
announced his separation from a metal band that’s always been “balls to the wall.” Intending to go
solo, he assembled a band of mercenary gunslingers to make his new project, U.D.O., the scourge of true German heavy metal.
Parting ways on the friendliest of terms, the two parties
divorced. Only Udo wasn’t quite prepared to go it alone right away with his new
playmates, seeing as how his former Accept songwriting partners created and
crafted the content for U.D.O.’s debut LP, Animal
House, which sounded a lot like classic Accept – intense, aggressive, engorged
with testosterone and defiant, with just a hint of melody to sweeten the deal and hooks galore.
Interestingly, by the time U.D.O. set about recording their
sophomore outing, Mean Machine,
Dirkschneider had sent packing three-fourths of the original U.D.O., leaving
only guitarist Mathias Dieth to forge ahead with Dirkschneider and newcomers
Andy Susemihl on guitar, Stefan Schwarzmann on drums and Thomas Smuszynski on
bass. This time, the remaining members of Accept stayed out of it. With fresh
troops having arrived, U.D.O. was ready was battle.
U.D.O. - Man and Machine Anniversary Edition 2013
Their first salvo was 1988’s Mean Machine, a solid, workmanlike effort propelled by brawny
riffs, searing guitar solos, hard-nosed, pulverizing rhythms, shouted backing
vocals and Udo’s menacing wildcat howl. Part of a massive 2013 reissue campaign
initiated by AFM Records to unearth U.D.O.’s entire back catalog – meant to coincide
with U.D.O.’s 25th anniversary – Mean
Machine was included in the second wave of re-releases that hit U.S. shores
on Feb. 12, along with Animal House, Faceless World and Timebomb. And it may be the best of the bunch.
Forging straight ahead, with the emphasis on power, violence
and excitement, Mean Machine practically
spits nails, offering a series of vicious, bloody-knuckled traditional metal
attacks like the electrifying “Don’t Look Back,” “Dirty Boys” and “Break the
Rules” – these brawls of blistering hard rock, where lead pipes and chains are perfectly
acceptable weapons and Udo is orchestrating the fighting with his feral utterances and ferocious delivery. Simmering with tension, “Streets of Fire” explodes into
thunderous choruses, while “We’re History” goes on a curb-stomping spree of metal
riffage that effectively, and in no uncertain terms, ends a relationship built
on lies. A dark, melancholic ballad, “Sweet Little Child” floats in on tendrils
of piano and makes for wonderful, almost Gothic drama, but it’s only a short layover of
tenderness and mercy before the sonic crunch of “Catch My Fall” bites down
hard.
Like the rest of them, Mean
Machine getsa graphic makeover
and comes with a bit of bonus material. In this case, it is packaged with a
live version of “Break the Rules” that is meaner and nastier than the original,
plus the video for the song of the same title. Meanwhile, Man and Machine, initially put out in 2002, is not nearly as
raw as Mean Machine, but it is a more
polished, if less consistent, piece of work. Augmented by a punishing concert
version of the title track and a remix of Udo’s original duet with Doro Pesch
on the dream-like “Dancing with an Angel,” this cringe-inducing astral projection of softly melodic
incandescence, Man and Machine begins
with the pummeling, dystopian industrial nightmare of a title track and and its
high points are more glorious than those of Mean
Machine.
Sweeping epics “Like a Lion,” “Animal Instinct” and the
exotic “Unknown Traveller” build on the instrumental grandeur of Led Zeppelin and the
roaring emotions of power metal, while a churning, meaty “The Dawn of the Gods”
growls and snarls with primal, animalistic fervor. Along with Solid, No Limits, and Holy, the
re-released Man and Machine arrived
in late January in the first batch of reissues, representing U.D.O.’s later
period. Why some of these anniversary editions feature more bonus tracks than
others is puzzling, and you wish each album would include liner notes that might shed additional
light on the inner workings and history of U.D.O., although at least Man and Machine has a plethora of
behind-the-scenes, studio photos of bassist Fitty Weinhold, drummer Lorenzo Milani,
and guitarists Igor Gianola and Stefan Kaufmann, both of whom recently announced their departures from U.D.O.
Some of these records have been out of print for a while now,
and while U.D.O. hasn’t really distinguished itself from Accept over the years
in any meaningful way, it’s nice to have them back. Still, had more thought
been put into the packaging of each reissue, the word “essential” might apply
here. (www.afm-records.de) –Peter Lindblad
Lydia Criss has more KISS stories to tell in the second printing of "Sealed with a KISS"
By Peter Lindblad
Sealed with a KISS - Lydia Criss 2013
As the ex-wife of one of the most recognizable drummers in the world in Peter Criss, Lydia Criss has plenty of stories to tell about her days with the “hottest band in the world. Interviewed at length recently, Lydia has a lot to say about Peter, KISS and all who had a hand in helping drive KISS to the top, and we’ll have a much more expansive Q&A with her in future postings.
As a teaser, however, Lydia provided a couple of her own Ace Frehley anecdotes.
By now, everyone knows how Frehley walked into his audition for Wicked Lester wearing
one orange sneaker and one red one. Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss –
the group’s newest recruit – could only stare as the long-haired Frehley strolled confidently past them to plug in and play.
As they have all expressed in interviews over the years, none
of the three expected much from Frehley, given how he looked. Against all odds,
however, the mercurial Frehley impressed them with his prowess on the guitar,
and the rest is KISStory, as they say.
Lydia Criss knows the story of Frehley’s odd introduction
to his future band mates well. She writes about it in her book,“Sealed with a Kiss,” which is now in it's second printing with additional stories and photos. The book can be purchased by going to http://www.lydiacriss.com/.
For
Lydia, Ace “is a story in
himself.” This is, after all, the man who brought a smoking flute onto the set
of VH1’s “That Metal Show.”
“He’s a character,” she adds.
One of the tales she could tell about Ace – which is
included in her recently revived and expanded biography “Sealed with a Kiss” – does get rather blue and involves a hotel balcony and a female companion. You’ll have to get the book to read that one. We’re not going to spoil it for you.
There are others, though … many others.
KISS - Ace Frehley
“I’ve got a story
about Ace. I probably don’t have it in the book. Okay … well, maybe I do. I’m
not sure,” says the Brooklyn-born Lydia, the former Lydia Di Leonardo, who was
married to Peter Criss from 1970 to 1979. “Anyway, Ace is here one day. He’s at
my apartment, and he’s going over to see this girl Linda, who lives on 72nd.
I’m like a couple of blocks away from there. A few blocks from the Dakota. So
he’s going over to see Linda, and he goes, ‘Lydia, could you lend me $20?’ I
said, ‘$20? What the hell are you going to do with $20?’ And he says, ‘Oh, you
know, just in case I need $20.’ I said, ‘Ace, I’ll give you $50.’ So I went
over the safe and got $50 out of the safe and I gave him $50, and he goes, ‘Hey,
you got a lot of money?’ And I said, ‘No, but I’ve got money.’ And he goes, ‘Will
you marry me?’ Needless to say, I never got the $50 back (laughs).”
Matrimony wasn’t in the cards for Lydia and Ace, but he would get the chance to win back that $50 for Lydia.
“He loves to gamble. I was at his apartment once. It was me
and [Frehley’s ex-wife] Jeanette Trerotola,” recalls Lydia. “We were at the
apartment, and he took a Lear jet to Atlantic City, and he called up Jeanette.
And he says, ‘Jeanette, I’m not coming home tonight.’ She goes, ‘What do you
mean?’ We were in his Manhattan apartment. He had a house at that point I think it was up in Irvington, New York. It was just a rental. Or maybe he owned
it. I’m not sure. He might have owned it. I’m not sure, but it wasn’t the big
house that he bought in Wilson, N.Y. He goes, ‘I’m not coming home.’ And she
goes, ‘Why not?’ And he says, ‘Because I’m winning $40,000. I’m up $40,000. And
I’m not coming home. We’re rained in.’ And she goes, ‘Okay, fine.’ The next day
he takes the plane out and comes home with $25,000. She goes, ‘What happened to
the other $15,000?’ And he goes, ‘Well, I lost it. And I also bought you a mink
coat (laughs).’ He’s hysterical.”
There are plenty of funny and touching moments in Lydia’s book, which
is jam-packed with KISS photos taken by Lydia and a treasure trove of KISS
memorabilia. Riding a rollercoaster of emotions, Lydia’s book tells the story
of KISS’s rise to fame through the eyes of someone who was there, experiencing
all the highs and lows the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle has to offer.
We’ll have a much more expansive Q&A with her in future postings.
The “T” stands for Talisman, Jeff Scott Soto’s old band. The
singer has been one-third of W.E.T. since 2009, the year Marcel Jacob, bassist
and founding member of Talisman, committed suicide after struggling with
debilitating health problems. As for the “W” and “E,” they represent Work of
Art and Eclipse, the two Swedish melodic rock bands that feature the
multi-instrumental work of Robert Sall and Erik Martensson, respectively.
Introductions are necessary, because besides Soto, who has
performed with the likes of Journey, Trans-Siberian Orchestra and Yngwie
Malmsteen, the rest of this “super group” is virtually unknown outside of
Europe. Their sophomore LP, Rise Up, may change all that.
Pregnant with huge, sing-along choruses, unexpectedly heavy guitars, voluminous
keyboards and earnest, bighearted melodies, Rise Up is intentionally and completely out of step with the times,
flooded with powerful adrenaline rushes like “Bad Boy” and “On the Run” that
wish it was the ‘80s all over again.
Not at all subtle, Rise
Up doesn’t want to be a record that grows on you. Immediacy is what W.E.T.
is after, and though there are layers of instrumentation to excavate, Rise Up would rather go for the early
knockout, with songs that are easy – almost too easy – to like and technically
brilliant playing to boot. Vibrant and inspiring, this is a record with a
bumper crop of singles, chock full of uplifting, three- to four-minute songs –
like the inspiring title track, the life-affirming “Learn to Live Again” and the
surging “Walk Away” – awash in slick, beefed-up production values and bursting
at the seams with the kind of strong pop-metal hooks and dramatic currents Def
Leppard wishes they could still write.
Too Many Reasons
is the new album from ‘70s soft-rock sensation Player, known best for their
smash hit “Baby Come Back.” Featuring original members Ronn Moss and Peter
Beckett, Player has been chomping at the bit to put this record out.
And the time is finally here.
“It was supposed to come out in November,” explains Beckett.
“I had it finished. I handed the finished thing in, in July of last year, and
it was supposed to come out in November. And as with everything, it’s hurry up
and wait; it didn’t come out because they held it back because of the Christmas
rush. And they said we’ll have a much better chance if we put it out after
Christmas. So, I think it was the right move.”
Now that is has, being released in North America on Feb. 26
via Frontiers Records, Beckett and Moss are more than eager to discuss it. They
went through some of its tracks in a recent interview:
Why did you want to
do an acoustic version of “Baby Come Back” for this record?
Peter Beckett:
That song had been … that’s one of the songs that I went in and did a while
ago. And I actually did it as a demo, an acoustic demo, with a little bit of
electric guitar and stuff on there, and Frontiers wanted a bonus track. And
they said, “Just do something acoustically.” So I said, “I’ve got this version
of ‘Baby Come Back’ that is semi-acoustic, and it’s been sitting here a few
years. You can use that.” And they heard it and they loved it, so they put it
on there. In fact, I think they actually said, “We like it so much we want
another bonus track (laughs) and we’re going to make it part of the album.” So
we had to find yet another bonus track. So that’s the story of the acoustic
“Baby Come Back.”
Tell us about how
some of the songs on this record came about, starting with “Man on Fire.”
PB: Okay. Well,
truthfully, that was one of the latest songs. When we had most of the songs
accepted by the record label, they said, “We want you to do a couple of
rockers.” Our guitarist, Rob Math, who’s … well, he’s younger than us. He’s
kind of a serious heavy-metal guitarist, actually. He’s quite amazing. And he
had this track, which he brought to me at my studio at home, and he had a
handful of songs. I said, “That track I consider a good hard rock track.” And
myself and Steve Plunkett [of the ‘80s metal band Autograph], we edited it,
changed parts, wrote the lyrics, wrote the melodies and sent it to Frontiers,
and they said, “Perfect. Now we need another one (laughs).” I went in and did
one by myself, but Ronn hadn’t heard that song until it was finished, and we
were actually rehearsing in Ronn’s garage at the house with the band, and we
just started playing it, didn’t we Ronn? And it was like instantly Ronnie loved
it, and the band loved it.
“The Sins of Yesterday” and “My Addiction” –
are they related somehow?
PB: Related to
each other? No. They’re all coming from life stories, you know. They’re all
little stories on their own, positive or negative, because everything comes
from more truth. Some are … Ronnie can explain “My Addiction” if he wants.
Ronn Moss: “My
Addiction” is from when I saw my wife … That’s my tribute to her. I dedicate
that to her.
PB: And “The Sins
of Yesterday,” I think speaks for itself. It’s a really weird thing explaining
your songs to people, unless you’ve written about something political and then
you can say whatever you want, but when you’re writing songs about your life,
you’ve really got to leave it up to the listener to pick up on what you
intended.
“Life in Color” and
“Nothin’ Like You”
PB: “Nothin’ Like
You” again is one of the older songs that I wrote with Steve Plunkett. Steve
Plunkett was from the band Autograph. He was in a heavy-metal hair band, and he
had a bunch of hits on his own. We’ve written together for a long time, but
“Nothin’ Like You” … I don’t even remember what it was written about, ‘cause it
was a while ago. “Life in Color” is a brand new song, and basically, particularly
as you can hear in the words, I went through a big divorce – so did Ronn a
while back, before me – and you live with that for years after and there’s
something that’s always eating at you about it, you know. And my life changed
about two years ago. I met somebody who changed my life for the better and made
me positive again, and she just said, “You only live once. You can’t be
miserable. You’ve got to live your life in color.” And that’s where that came
from. It just puts a positive message out there.
Lyrically, do you
have a different perspective on things – I suppose you can’t help but have a
different perspective on things the older you get – but does that come through
in your lyrics?
PB: Yeah, you
know, somebody just said in an interview the other day – and it was a written
interview, somebody from Germany – and he said, “What do you think Player has
to offer?” or “Does Player have anything to offer these days?” And I said,
“What we have to offer now is experience.” We’ve lived. We’re older now. We’ve
got a lot of experience and that’s going to come through, probably more so than
30 years ago.
Ronn, do these songs
kind of capture how you’re feeling?
PB: We’ve known
each other a long time. You know, we’ve known each other since the beginning of
Player, and pretty much, even when we weren’t in contact a whole lot, we were
still in contact for the past 20 years or so. We’ve been constantly in contact,
and we’ve done a lot of stuff together and we’ve worked on a lot of stuff
together. One of the songs Ronn does on this album is a song called “Kites.”
RM: “Kites” is
really sort of an ethereal-flavored song that came from one of my solo albums,
and it came from a song in the ‘60s done by Simon Dupree, who had a No. 1
record with it in England when I was a kid. Well, interestingly enough, when we
signed … when we met the guys from Frontiers Records, based in Italy, who were
going to distribute our records, we started talking about this band …
PB: Simon Dupree
and the Big Sound.
RM: Anyway, we
did this song called “Kites” by this guy Simon Dupree, and this guy raised his
hand, and we go, “Are you Simon Dupree?” And he goes, “Yeah.” (laughs)
PB: We’re sitting
there with three of the executives from the label, and we said, “We’d like to
put this song on there. It’s a beautifully produced song, you know, and Ronn
does a great job on it and it’s called ‘Kites.’ It was a hit in England by this
guy, Simon Dupree and the Big Sound,” and he puts his hand up like this, and we
go, “No.” And he says, “Yep, that was me.” And he’s going to be our executive.
RM: Talking about
my relationship to all the lyrics, Pete has always written very wonderfully
crafted lyrics around amazing, memorable songs. He never writes to make a
couple of hits on the album … so we had a lot of material to work from. I
identified with pretty much all of it, as well. It’s become part of our thing.
And so I live through it, just like everybody, but we’re always starting new. This
band has always started new; everything’s fresh from the start, like erasing
everything on a chalkboard, like a kid, starting over. It’s always cool to
start over. And that’s what this has been. It’s been a rebirth for all of us.
You guys are planning
on touring?
PB: Yep, they’re
talking. They’re trying to get us to Europe, because our record label is based
out of Europe. We have a shed tour that our manager is trying to put together
in the summer with several other ‘70s artists … Bobby Kimball, Toto. I don’t
know who’s actually going to end up on the final bill … Christopher Cross, and
people like us, and the Little River Band … I’m not sure. People like us from
the late ‘70s and so far, we’re looking at about a month, between May and
August. Not sure if it’ll be a month in succession, but it’s about a month’s
worth of gigs and that’ll continue if it goes well in America.
‘70s group to release new album, ready to make film debut
By Peter Lindblad
Player - Peter Beckett and Ronn Moss 2013
Peel off the layers of the onion known as Player, and it
quickly becomes apparent that there was more – much more – to these ‘70s hit-makers
than the ubiquitous soft-rock chart-topper “Baby Come Back.”
Right off, there’s the fact that Ronn Moss is a huge
international soap opera star, having portrayed fashion mogul Ridge Forrester
on “The Bold and the Beautiful” for an astounding 25 years, before recently
calling it quits.
Moss’s partner in Player, Peter Beckett, may have an even
more interesting background. Not only did he see The Beatles play at the Cavern
Club and perform with the Little River Band from 1989 to 1997, but he also was
an integral member of Paladin, one of the U.K.’s most intriguing and
experimental early 1970s progressive-rock outfits.
When Paladin, which Beckett called “a fusion-rock, quasi-jazz
thing” formed by ex-Terry Reid band members Keith Webb and Peter Solley, split up, Beckett headed for America – or more specifically, California
– at the behest of friend Steve Kipner.
Thinking back to Paladin, Beckett recalls, “We did that
whole thing where we went out and lived in a castle in Gloucestershire in the
countryside for six months, and then did an album and we came back to London,
and we did the whole university circuit. We did two albums. It was a pretty
well-known band in England, and then it split up. And truthfully, I can’t
remember why it split up. It was just a couple of guys left, and we replaced
them, and it was never as good and the band split up.”
Looking around for work in L.A. after Paladin dissolved,
Beckett auditioned for record labels and management companies, before winding up in something rather ridiculous called Skyband.
“It was atrocious,” says Beckett. “I mean, I’m sure they had
their reasons, but they made us all dye our hair white, and they took pictures
of us with no shirts on with these big helmets with feathers in … and it was
Skyband and we were supposed to be like warriors from the sky – very
embarrassing album cover.”
Nothing they did was well-received.
“We put out one album, and it did nothing,” remembers
Beckett. “We did one tour of England, believe it or not, with the [Sensational]
Alex Harvey Band. We were horrible, and we came back and split up [in 1975],
and I was like floating for a year.”
Whatever sins Beckett committed beforehand in his life,
Beckett’s penance with Skyband more than made up for them, and soon, he was
rewarded with a 1977 meeting in Los Angeles with future band mates Moss and Texan
J.C. Crowley that would lead to the formation of Player.
As Moss recalls, “We met at J.C. Crowley’s little
cockroach-infested apartment. Peter and J.C. were there already and our soon to
become manager Paul Palmer had said to me, ‘I’ve got a couple guys that I think
you should meet, and I think the three of you will work really well.’ So he
arranged it, we exchanged demos that day, we played … the place was so small
that we had to go outside to meet each other, because there wasn’t room for all
three of us. But we wound up using his garage to finish writing all the songs
for the first Player album. And it worked out really well. I really liked the
guys, and we had a camaraderie that worked well.”
Player - Too Many Reasons 2013
That friendship between Moss and Beckett that began in that
tiny hole-in-the-wall has survived for decades, and they have made a lot of music
together, even though it’s been almost 20 years since the last official Player
record. In 2013, however, Player has resurfaced, with its newest album Too Many Reasons, and it feels to them
like the late ‘70s all over again, when Player’s varied musical tastes helped
propel them up the charts.
“Player’s always been a very eclectic band,” says Beckett.
“I’m always worried about the songs fitting together, which is kind of stupid
because The Beatles were like that anyway. You know, they always had hard rock
and soft ones, and so even in the old days, we’d have a song like ‘Baby Come
Back’ on the same album as a song like ‘Silver Linings,’ which was a total hard
rock song. And then we’d stick some pop in there, and it was always very
eclectic, and this album has turned out to be exactly that. As Ronn will tell
you, I was really worried that the songs didn’t go together, but when we put
them all together and mastered it, it sounded exactly like one of the old
Player albums. It’s got a bit of everything in it.”
Moss adds, “I feel like these songs now, even though some of
them are pulled from older songs, we’ve given them a new flavor. They are not
sounding like old songs. They sound new.” And that includes the title track,
which Beckett claims is “… from a while ago, and we fixed it up. That could be
anybody. It sounds to me like it could be a Whitesnake record.”
‘Silver Linings’ Playbook
Unlike Beckett, Moss grew up in L.A., the son of the owner
of Mutual Ticket Agency, a predecessor to Ticketmaster. Concerts, theater and
music – Moss became immersed in the entertainment industry from a young age,
and he played multiple instruments, including drums, guitar and bass.
Moss found his kindred spirits in Beckett and Crowley, who
had been in a band together called Riff Raff, which changed its name to
Bandana. That band had been on Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter’s label Haven,
but Haven folded. There was a silver lining, however. The two record company
moguls eventually moved on over to RSO Records, the Robert Stigwood label that
would go on to sign Player, but not before Beckett, Crowley, Moss and the
drummer Moss brought to Player, John Friesen, went to great lengths to get a
deal.
“We got turned down by almost every record label in America,
until we found the RSO label through Dennis Lambert,” remembers Beckett.
Player’s search for a label involved performing live in front of producers, because as Moss
puts it, “We’d always wanted to play live in those showcases. We never wanted
to play tapes of us playing. We wanted to make sure they saw us and heard us
playing live.”
Before each one, Beckett says Player would rehearse for a week.
“I think we did two or three, the final one being when we
had ‘Baby Come Back,’ and that’s when we were starting to get pretty good,” says Beckett. “There was one we did … I think we did about five songs, and we did ‘Baby Come
Back’ at the end, and got all of it done. I seem to remember being very cocky
in those days and all that, but I went on the mic and on that last song –
nobody had ever heard ‘Baby Come Back’ yet – and there’s all these record
executives, and I said, ‘Now, we’d like to do our No. 1 record.’ And this was
like six months before it even came out, and we did it and it kicked ass. And
everybody’s mouth was open like, ‘Oh my God. That sounds like a hit.’ And then
we went and recorded it, and you know the rest.”
Player's self-titled debut album
Well, that’s not quite all there is to the story. With their
self-titled first record out, Player brought their brand of breezy,
laid-back pop-rock out on the road, initially touring with Gino Vannelli in
November 1977.
“The very first gig we did – and we’d been rehearsing for a
while, but we hadn’t been playing gigs – and we got this gig at the Buffalo
Town Hall and we were supporting Gino Vannelli, who is, you know, amazing,”
says Beckett. “And we all, with our little guitar cases, just kind of walked in
behind the stage and he was doing his sound check, and it was just monstrous.
It was just so good, just as synthesizers were coming in and his whole thing
was synthesizers, and it was just huge. And we were sitting in the wings going,
‘Oh my God, we’ll never be anything like that (laughs).’”
While out with Vannelli, “Baby Come Back” was climbing the
charts by leaps and bounds.
“We were in … a real dirty little rehearsal place, and the
manager comes running and he said, ‘You guys are No. 80 on Billboard,’” says
Beckett. “And we just went crazy,” much as they did when they first heard the
song on the radio.
“I remember the first time we heard it on the radio,” says
Moss. “J.C., Peter and I were actually driving up La Brea Avenue in my car and
it came on the radio – it was one of those freak things that just happen in
life. And we just started screaming in the car. It was a great moment.”
There would be many more highlights. With their hit single
on the rise, going all the way to No. 1, where it spent three weeks in the top
spot, Player was shifted from the Vannelli tour to the Boz Scaggs bill. “We
were plucked and put on [Scaggs’s] ‘Silk Degrees’ tour,” says Beckett. “And we
went from just medium-sized gigs to doing huge arenas, and [‘Baby Come Back’]
hit No. 1.”
The Scaggs gig was a high-profile one for Player, but in
short order, they’d be called up to the big leagues as the support act for
guitar god Eric Clapton on his “Slowhand” tour.
“Well, you know, the Boz Scaggs tour wasn’t chopped liver,
either,” says Beckett. “But we’d already done about two months of 30,000-seat
arenas, and then we went back and did the Danger
Zone album. We knew we were going on the ‘Slowhand’ tour, so we made the Danger Zone album harder edged so that
we were able to go out and support Eric Clapton and have the right kind of
music under our belts.”
As it turned out, they were a little too good for Clapton’s
entourage.
“We had a wonderful little thing happen to us at the Aladdin
Theatre in Las Vegas,” says Moss. “Player had the No. 1 record, and in the
middle of ‘Baby Come Back’ there’s a silence, before the last chorus starts.
Well, right at that downbeat to that chorus, after the silence, we all came in
… and, no power. The power had gone out. There was nothing but drums.”
Beckett chimed in, “The sound had gone out,” before Moss
added, “The lights didn’t go out – just the power to our amplifiers. So we all
looked around, and they finally got it up and rolling.”
Evidently, as Player would later find out, one of Clapton’s
roadies pulled the plug on Player’s performance. “It took several days for
somebody backstage to finally fess up,” says Moss. “And it turned out to be
Eric Clapton’s crew who fessed up and said, ‘Yeah, we pulled the plug on you
guys.’ We were going down to well, and initially, we were really pissed. ‘Why
would you do that?’ and the guy said, ‘It’s because you were going over a
little too well.’”
Beckett says Clapton knew nothing about the incident, but
after the roadie admitted what he’d done, Clapton tried to make peace. “They
fessed up. They fessed up. And [Clapton] came in the dressing room a couple of
weeks later with a bottle of Jack Daniels, and he never really admitted
anything, but he said, ‘Are you guys okay?’” says Beckett.
Comeback
The original Player lineup started to break apart after the Danger Zone LP, as Crowley departed for
a solo career in country music. There were arena tours with Heart and Kenny
Loggins, a handful of hit singles such as “This Time I’m in it for Love” –
which went to No. 11 on the Billboard chart – and 1980 saw Player release Room with a View, but Moss and Friesen
left soon after.
“My own decision came from the fact that our record company
seemed to be falling out from under us,” explains Moss. “RSO Records had
reached the pinnacle and then disbanded. And then we went to Casablanca, after
Neil Bogart had died. And we weren’t recording enough. We were basically
sitting around, getting frustrated and I decided to do acting and give it a
try. So I went from having something in music to basically having absolutely
nothing in the acting world. And I took a couple of years’ hiatus from being with
Peter and Player and doing music, and they continued on, with another album
from Player. He never stopped doing music, and I took a short break, and
eventually we hooked back up and it’s been a nice ride – still is a nice ride.”
Player - Lost in Reality 1996
Beckett kept Player going, recording one more album with Spies of Life in the early ‘80s before
shelving the Player name, until Moss and Beckett – the sole remaining original
members – made 1996’s Lost in Reality. Over
the years, Beckett has been a prolific behind-the-scenes songwriter, penning
material for such artists as Heart (one of his favorites), Kenny Rogers, The
Temptations, Poco, Janet Jackson, Survivor, and Olivia Newton-John, who scored
a Top Five hit with one of Beckett’s compositions.
“I love Heart. I had a song on Bad Animals,” says Beckett. “Kenny Rogers, I had a beautiful song
that Ronn actually did as well, called ‘All This Time.’ It’s a song that’s one
of my favorites of what I’ve done. Kenny Rogers did it and then Ronn put it on
one of his solo albums. With Olivia Newton-John, she had a song at No. 5 on
Billboard called “Twist of Fate,” which we do onstage today with our band. It’s
a lot harder than Olivia did it.”
Writing music for the movies has also kept Beckett busy.
“I’ve written rap songs for movies. I’ve written ballads. I’ve written heavy
metal. I had two things in ‘Rock Star,’ the Mark Wahlberg movie. I had the main
song, ‘Living the Life.’ And that’s serious metal,” says Beckett.
But, it’s his partnership with Moss that has endured, and
soon Player and its music will make it into a feature film being directed by
none other than Moss himself.
“Combining Player’s music with the visual, that’s something
we’ve been heading toward for a long time,” says Moss, who regrets that Player
missed out on the MTV explosion. “When we did our videos, everything was very
simple – standing up on a soundstage and filming the band actually playing the
song. We didn’t have all that great imagery you have now.”
With their latest album, out Feb. 26 on the FrontiersRecords label, Player now has plenty of songs for Moss’s directorial debut as a
filmmaker. Player will have more to say about their new album in a blog slated for that release date.
Sobriety seems to suit Glenn Hughes rather nicely. A nasty drug
habit nearly cost him his life, as well as his career, by 1990. Off of nearly everyone’s radar, Hughes was in danger of both burning out and fading away.
Miraculously,
despite all efforts at self-destruction, the former Trapeze, Black Sabbath
(yes, he was working with Tony Iommi on his solo album, but Seventh Star ended up a legit Sabbath
release) and Deep Purple Mark III and IV bassist/singer – dubbed the “voice of
rock” by, all of people, the techno-house outfit The KLF, who employed Hughes
on their 1991 single “America – What Time is Love?” – got clean and started
working his magic again, putting out an eclectic series of solo albums and
interesting experimental collaborations that, once more, brought out the
funk-soul brother in Hughes.
Live in Wolverhampton,
recorded over two nights in 2009 in Hughes’s hometown of Bilston, is sort of a Glenn
Hughes starter kit for the uninitiated. Joyous and life-affirming, with an
intimacy most concert recordings never quite manage to capture, this double-disc
set showcases the vocal gymnastics and vitality of Hughes and the impressive
chops of a band that twists and turns this material sideways and inside-out, breathing
new life into it. When they get cooking on extended jams, Hughes, drummer Steve
Stevens – not the guy from Billy Idol’s band – and guitarist Jeff Kollman
threaten to boil over on sweltering hard funk and vibrant R&B workouts like
the old Trapeze favorites “You Are the Music,” a cosmic “Your Love is Alright” and “Way
Back to the Bone” from Disc 2, themed “You Are the Music: An Evening of
Trapeze.”
And what a night it is for this particular performance,
reminding us all just how criminally underrated Trapeze is, the funk-rock
pioneers blazing trails few dared follow. Culling selections from both 1970’s Medusa and 1972’s You Are the Music … We are the Band, this set finds Hughes and pals
giving “Coast to Coast,” “Seafull” and the warm, charming little ditty “Good
Love” a soulful rendering, with some sophisticated jazz-fusion passages – as
well as a stormy, yet melodic, take on “Jury” – thrown in for good measure.
All the colors of Hughes’s rainbow are display on Disc 1,
where the rugged hard-rock stomp and thick grooves of both Hughes/Thrall’s
“Muscle & Blood” – off their self-titled 1982 album – and “Crave,” from
Hughes’s solo LP First Underground
Nuclear Kitchen, move with purpose and bad intentions, with just a touch of
psychedelic soul making the choruses bloom, as they also do in the sunny, kaleidoscopic
R&B feasts “Love Communion” and “Don’t Let Me Bleed.” Stevie Wonder, who
once called Hughes his favorite white singer, would be duly impressed, although
he might blanch at their lengthy and unnecessarily bloated 20:36 reading of Deep
Purple’s “Mistreated.”
Originally recorded by Purple for the seminal 1974 album Burn, Hughes’s first appearance on
record with the band after he’d replaced departed bass player Roger Glover and
David Coverdale had stepped in for Ian Gillan, “Mistreated” opens with an
imaginative and beguiling Kollman guitar solo that’s gentle and delicate in
parts and fluid and fiery in others. Still, this take is somewhat turgid and missing
the smoldering bluesy character of the original, with some of Hughes’s vocal
histrionics going a bit too far at the finish. Despite this misstep, Hughes’s confident
phrasing throughout Live at Wolverhampton
is sublime, those remarkable pipes of his sounding just as clear as they
did 40 years ago.
When he screams, “I’m a man,” at the end of “Muscle &
Blood,” you don’t doubt it for a second, and he chooses his partners well –
Stevens’ amazing stick work in “You’ve Got Soul” is intricate and propulsive,
and both he and Kollman, who sounds like a hundred of the greatest guitar
players of all-time all rolled into one, seem perfectly in sync with whatever’s
going on in Hughes’s head. The party for Hughes may no longer involve
mind-altering substances, but if Live at
Wolverhampton is any indication, it’s raging hotter than ever for a man who’s
found serenity and happiness.
Front man Biff Byford talks new album, U.S. release date pushed back
By Peter Lindblad
Like a general marshaling his troops for another saber-rattling, bloody charge into battle, Saxon’s Biff Byford had an inspirational message for the band on the eve of preparing to go to work on Sacrifice.
Saxon - Sacrifice 2013
Due out now in late March, the 26th to be exact, in the U.S., having been delayed
because of manufacturing problems, Sacrifice
is rough-and-tumble, old-school New Wave of British Heavy Metal mixed with fire-bombing
thrash, influenced by the same bands, including Metallica, that once worshiped
at Saxon’s altar.
As Byford says in the press materials related to Sacrifice, “My brief to the band was not
to be afraid, to be raw, be real and not be afraid to look back at the old
classic material for inspiration.”
Between 1980 and 1983, Saxon toured relentlessly and churned
out album after album of rugged, hard-working metal machinery that celebrated the
blue-collar lifestyle, the commitment to spreading the gospel of metal and the
pure enjoyment of engines and driving heavy-duty motorcycles. Studio albums
such as Wheels of Steel, Strong Arm of the Law, Denim and Leather and Power & the Glory are considered stone-cold
NWOBHM classics, and Sacrifice – coming
hot on the heels of such critically acclaimed works as 2009’s Into the Labyrinth and 2011’s Call to Arms – is a throwback to the
good old days of Saxon.
“Yeah, I think we’re in that sort of period again that we
used to be in, in the ‘80s,” says Byford, in a recent interview with Backstage
Auctions. “We’re knocking them out really good. So, yeah, we feel pretty good
about this album. I produced it myself. I was more in control of, you know, the
actual songs and the sounds, so I’m quite happy about that.”
The decision to captain the ship this time around came from
a desire to make a classic Saxon album, especially in light of the fact that Sacrifice is the band’s 20th
album.
“I just really wanted to make an album that I liked and not
be beholden to the people who are not doing it,” explains Byford. “The fans are
quite happy with that, so that was good. Yeah, I just wanted to reflect them on
this album. There are no ballads, just good rock music, just good metal music.
That’s what I wanted to do.”
For homework, the boys in Saxon – Byford, guitarists Paul
Quinn and Doug Scarratt, drummer Nigel Glockler, and bassist Nibbs Carter –
were assigned the task of sitting with those landmark recordings and trying to
channel the spirit and attitude of Saxon’s glorious past.
“I mean, we went back to the ‘80s a little bit for two or
three of the songs, just to figure out what made us great,” says Byford. “I
think ‘Warriors of the Road’ and ‘Stand Up and Fight’ are sort of thrash-metal-y
like the ‘80s were, and yeah, I just wanted to play with Marshalls and Gibsons
really, and just play and not rely too much on too many digital tricks and just
play like it is really.”
Forget Pro-Tools and all that foolishness. Sacrifice was made in England, the
old-fashioned way. And though it certainly contains elements of classic Saxon, Sacrifice did allow the band to stretch
out creatively.
“Some of the stuff is quite modern, like ‘Made in Belfast’
is a really heavy song, with the Celtic sort of style (mandolins being part of
the equation),” says Byford. “We were experimenting as well, but yeah, I wanted
the songs to have that kind of push like it was recorded yesterday, but still
have that one foot in the past.”
Sacrifice was originally slated for release Feb. 26 in
America. It’ll come out in a variety of packages, including a standard jewel-case
CD, a limited-edition deluxe digibook, a vinyl picture disc, a direct-to-consumer
fan package (available exclusively for online order from online retailers), and
a digital download that includes one bonus song, “Luck of the Draw.” It’s an
iTunes exclusive. A complete version of our interview with Biff will be available as the release date for Sacrifice approaches.