Kewl, Bort! Thanks for the review! Some r/x to your r/x:
bort Wrote:
1. Skyhooks - Smartarse Songwriters
Kinda wanky, maybe even glammy, it’s interesting that the song shifts from speedy licks to white funk though.
Skyhooks were an arty Aussie band that were a direct influence on Split Enz. Most of their output is too clever for its own good IMO but they generally saved themselves with a loopy sense of humor.
bort Wrote:
3. Streetwalkers - Me 'n' Me Horse 'n' Me Rum
A dark-bar slinky song. I like the Ahh-oooo parts, but the sing-speak narrative is done much better (and later) by nick cave, tom waits, et al
The Waits/Cave comparison is an interesting take on it, Bort. Streetwalkers were faves of fans of '70s British blooze rock, and I never got into them much - but I'm gonna have to re-listen with mssrs. Waits and Cave in mind.
bort Wrote:
4. Kursaal Flyers - Walking To School
Just about every song that’s about a girl walking to school is awesome, this track being no exception. Could’ve done without the studio string section though.
Nota bene: Kursaal Flyers eventually splintered into Eddie and the Hot Rods and the Records, best known, respectively, for "Do Anything You Wanna Do" and "Starry Eyes" (which many consider the quintessential power pop song).
bort Wrote:
6. Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel - Psychomodo
I like this one. Has a poppy, carnival, and British (?) feel to it.
Yep, British, for sure. Back in the waning days of glam, Steve Harley tried to out-Ziggy David Bowie.
bort Wrote:
9. Roy Harper - Don't You Grieve
Easily my most favorite track on the disc. I’m not a big Dylan fan but this kinda sounds like him and I love it. Will seek more of his work.
It's my fave Harper track as well. I took it off his
Hats Off compilation, so you might want to track down whatever acoustic set it originated from. Harper was well respected by some of the '70s bigwigs (for evidence, there's Led Zep's "Hats Off To Harper"), but I find a lot of his stuff is full of the sort of bloated cliches that made punk rock such a good idea.
bort Wrote:
12. Sensational Alex Harvey Band - Last Of The Teenage Idols Pts. 1 - 3
Takes a while to get going, but once it does, even the combined powers of Elton John and Meat Loaf better watch out!
Yezzuh, SAHB were pretty much the link between glam and punk. That song is off
Next, which is my fave SAHB disc.
bort Wrote:
13. Wizzard - Ball Park Incident
I like this track. It reminds me of Johnny Rivers perhaps?
Wizzard was Roy Wood's post-ELO band.
bort Wrote:
17. Artful Dodger - Honor Among Thieves
Has someone covered this song? I swear I’ve heard the opening hook before. Cool ol’ rock song.
Don't think anybody's covered it - but that doesn't mean it isn't a GREAT idea.
bort Wrote:
19. Michel Pagliaro - Some Sing, Some Dance
Another radio-ready nugget that sounds like I’ve heard it before
I didn't get into Pagliaro until '76, and by that time there was already over 5 years of radio-ready nuggets that sounded like I'd heard 'em before. And the reason for that was
because I had (and just didn't know it). "Some Sing, Some Dance", "Lovin' You Ain't Easy", "What The Hell I Got", "I Can't Believe It's You" and more - they were all AM radio hits in the early '70s. In his home province of Quebec the guy was like the Beatles
and the Stones. Massively popular - and effortlessly writing hit after hit. He deserves a revival.
bort Wrote:
21. Blue Ash - She Cried For 15 Years
Nice little pop tune. Left Banke-ish perhaps
Yeh, that's about right. Blue Ash, for a brief moment, were the main competition of the Raspberries in the neglected power pop sweepstakes.
bort Wrote:
22. Kevin Coyne - Marjory Razorblade
Just some oddball mountain-hippie stuff. Would be nice on a mix with Nikki McClure though
Don't know about the mountain-hippy thing, but Coyne is definitely an oddball. He came from the '60s band Siren, and reportedly turned down an offer to replace Jim Morrison in the Doors. He's got a ton of solo albums out, all of them decidedly odd - and with that elfin voice of his you'd think the time was right a rediscovery by the freak folk fans.