‘(Don’t Fear) The Reaper’ - Blue Oyster Cult
In recent years this has become a global biker anthem like ‘Free Bird’, as well as the victim of a side-splittingly funny Christopher Walken ‘More Cowbell’ routine on America’s
Saturday Night Live
. Back in ’76 though this majestically creepy rumination on looming death hit all the right buttons amongst record buyers and rock critics alike, both of whom couldn’t get enough of its ingenious ‘Byrds meet Darth Vader’ ambience.
‘The Boys Are Back in Town’ - Thin Lizzy
Full-tilt seventies testosterone rock was what Phil Lynott’s boys served up to the masses, and this breakthrough single proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that they were the toughest and tastiest in their field.
‘Love of the Common Man’ - Todd Rundgren
Rundgren was an oddity throughout the seventies. Early in the decade he looked set to become America’s answer to Bowie but - after experimenting with psychedelic drugs - veered away from his more commercial instincts to clumsily embrace prog rock. Result: his fan base never grew beyond a cult. Still, in ’76 he released some of his best-ever work on the album
Faithful
, specifically this killer salute to everyman that packed into approximately three minutes everything you needed to hear from his wide-ranging talents.
Hejira
- Joni Mitchell
For my money, this remains the most intimate and breathtakingly
beautiful album released during the seventies bar none.
The Pretender
- Jackson Browne
The haunting title track - inspired by the suicide of Browne’s girlfriend - was an unforgettable ‘how to survive the seventies’ burst of lyrical self-exegesis.
‘Two Headed Dog’ - Roky Erickson and Bleib Alien
One of the first ‘indie’-distributed 45s I ever heard or saw. Mad as a sack of wild cats. Pure cerebral psychosis with a flaming back-beat and demons for guitar picks.
1977
‘Watching the Detectives’ - Elvis Costello and the Attractions
I remember spending an evening with Nick Lowe and Jake Riviera at their Kensington flat listening to a rough mix of this track - which Lowe had just produced - over and over again. I’d already heard Costello’s
My Aim Is True
record and thought it was good. But this was monumental. Still one of the only examples of white blokes playing reggae that hits all the right spots for me.
The Idiot
/
Lust for Life
- Iggy Pop
I’ve already praised these two Iggy/Bowie sonic groundbreakers sufficiently in the 1977 chapter.
Marquee Moon
- Television
Several London punk notables took me to task for raving about this record so extensively in the
NME
that year. They said it was just ‘music for old hippies’ and that it would never last the test of
time. Thirty-two years later though I see
Marquee Moon
routinely perched in the highest branches of all those ‘greatest-ever albums’ polls instigated by the media whilst the recorded output of those who castigated them barely gets a mention.
‘Joe the Lion’ - David Bowie
The album
Heroes
could well have been the creative blueprint for the late-seventies ‘new wave’ musical hybrid. Everyone from the Human League to Simple Minds drew their core musical cues from its sulphurous contents. But no one ever merged US funk with European avant-pop drama more artfully than the Bromley Alien, and the album’s second selection-a skewed homage to performance artist Chris Burden - was uncommonly inspired even by Bowie’s exacting standards.
‘Bodies’ - the Sex Pistols
‘Anarchy in the U.K.’, ‘God Save the Queen’ and ‘Pretty Vacant’ were all brilliant blockbuster singles but the uproariously venomous ‘Bodies’ best captured the full foul-mouthed, flint-hearted essence of who and what the Sex Pistols really were from my vantage point.
Aja
- Steely Dan
It’s amazing to think the Sex Pistols’ debut album and this sublime collection were released during the same year. The Dan’s creative high point was the sonic antithesis of punk and took Donald Fagen and Walter Becker’s noble quest to merge penetrating pop songcraft with sophisticated jazz-drenched chords and arrangements and five-star musicianship to a level of accomplishment no one has since come close to matching.
Little Criminals
- Randy Newman
Greil Marcus really laid into this record via a long
Rolling Stone
review but I actually preferred its sleeker sound to most of Newman’s early-seventies output.
The Belle Album
- Al Green
In the mid-seventies, Green’s mighty run of hits was interrupted by the singer’s sudden urge to become an ordained preacher.
The Belle Album
was his first self-produced effort and first post-religious-conversion musical statement. Rarely has music promoting the ‘I’ve found God and you should too’ message sounded as compelling and persuasive to non-believing ears.
‘The Book I Read’ - Talking Heads
I stopped listening to David Byrne and his pals in the eighties when they opted to concentrate on manufacturing yuppified funk pastiches for white people with no sense of natural rhythm but this overlooked song from their debut album was still one of my favourites from 1977.
New Boots and Panties!!
- Ian Dury and the Blockheads
Dury truly found his form once he’d disbanded the Kilburns at mid-decade and thrown in his lot with the more musically accomplished Blockheads. This seminal celebration of English eccentricity was one of the decade’s stand-out musical statements.
1978-1979
Darkness on the Edge of Town
- Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
For most Europeans,
Darkness
was the place where Springsteen
finally rose above all the formative musical influences that had previously defined his recorded output and became an unstoppable rock superpower strictly on his own terms. These eloquent anthems for blue-collar Americans struggling to keep their faith in uncertain times sounded even better on the various live bootlegs that started appearing hot on the heels of this studio album’s ’78 release date.
Blue Valentine
- Tom Waits
Predecessors
Small Change
and
Foreign Affairs
both had their share of stellar moments but
Valentine
was Waits’s real ‘coming of age’ artistic triumph during a decade that never quite knew what to make of his music.
‘Too Much Heaven’ - the Bee Gees
Considering we almost came to blows back in 1973, you could be forgiven for thinking that I’ve always felt only contempt for the Bee Gees but - like virtually everyone else in the late seventies - I fell under the spell of their
Saturday Night Fever
contributions such as ‘Stayin’ Alive’ and ‘How Deep Is Your Love’. Even more irresistible was this lilting soul ballad from their
Spirits Having Flown
album.
‘Tropical Hot Dog Night’ - Captain Beefheart
This infectiously demented samba was all the proof I needed to show me that Beefheart had bounced back from his mid-seventies wilderness years to re-establish his rightful place on the throne as rock’s very own King of Weird.
Excitable Boy
- Warren Zevon
Zevon started out hell-bent on portraying himself as West Coast rock’s very own Hunter S. Thompson and this - his second solo
album - still ranks as his most successful and imaginative attempt at spicing up LA-centric, radio-friendly tunesmithery with an authentic ‘gonzo’ edge.
‘Señor’ - Bob Dylan
The highlight from ’78’s otherwise lacklustre
Street-Legal
, ‘Señor’ is the gloomily compelling sound of Dylan staring down the black hole of despair and betrayal just prior to being touched by the hand of God.
‘Domino’ - the Cramps
LA’s rockabilly renegades outstripped even Roy Orbison’s original version of this song by investing it with just the right hint of authentically psychotic swagger.
Rust Never Sleeps
- Neil Young
To my ears this remains Young’s all-time career peak. Every song is a masterpiece.
‘Kid’ - the Pretenders
The Pretenders’ second single was the one that really brought it home to me that my old flame Chrissie Hynde had developed into a songwriter of consequence.
‘Brand New Cadillac’ - the Clash
I was never the world’s biggest fan of the Clash’s various studio recordings but always kept a special place in my heart for their ferocious rendition of the old fifties rocker first recorded by Vince Taylor.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Kalina Villeroy, Angus Cargill, Lee Brackstone and Richard Thomas.
Index
Adam Ant
Allison, Morse
Allman Brothers Band
Allman, Duane
Allman, Gregg
Almost Famous
(film)
Altamont Speedway concert (1969)
Amis, Martin
amphetamine sulphate
Anarchy package tour (1976)
Anderson, Ian
Anger, Kenneth
Arden, Don
Asheton, Ron
Atlantic label
B-52s
Bacharach, Burt
Bad Company
Baker, Ginger
Band, the
Bangs, Lester
Barres, Michael Des
Barrett, Syd ‘Golden Hair’
Basie, Count
Bath Festival (1970)
Bay City Rollers
Beach Boys ‘Surf’s Up’
Beal, Michael
Beatles ‘Love Me Do’
Beck, Jeff
Bedford College
Bee Gees ‘Too Much Heaven’
Beefheart, Captain (Don van Vliet) attack on Zappa
Clear Spot
concert at Brighton’s Dome interview with
Safe as Milk
Strictly Personal
‘Tropical Hot Dog Night’
Trout Mask Replica
Belushi, John
Bernstein, Elmer
Betts, Dickey
Beverley, Ann
Beverley, John ‘Sid’
see
Vicious, Sid
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls
Bickershaw festival (1972)
Bicknell, Ed
Big Star: ‘The Ballad of El Goodo’
Billboard
Bindon, John
Bingenheimer, Rodney
Birmingham (Michigan)
Blackmore, Ritchie
Blondie
Blue Oyster Cult: ‘(Don’t Fear) The Reaper’
blues-rock
Bluesbreakers
Bolan, Marc death ‘Get It On’
Bolder, Trevor
Bonham, John
Bono, Sonny
Boomtown Rats
Boushell, Debbie
Bowie, Angie
Backstage Passes
Bowie, David
Aladdin Sane
‘The Bewlay Brothers’ changes in music style concert at Cobo Hall (Detroit) (1973) ‘Cracked Actor’ and disco and drugs and exorcism ‘Fame’ intelligence of interview with
Playboy
(1977) ‘Joe the Lion’ legal battles with Mainman living in Los Angeles
Low
The Man Who Fell to Earth
meeting with musical collaboration and relationship with Iggy Pop physical appearance sexuality smear campaign against
Station to Station
work method
Young Americans
Ziggy Stardust role
Boycott, Rosie
Boyd, Joe:
White Bicycles
Brando, Marlon
Breslau, Marty
Brock, Dave
Brown, James ‘King Heroin’
Browne, Jackson
The Pretender
Bruce, Jack
Buckley, Jeff
Buckley, Tim
Greetings from L.A.
‘Monterey’
Buell, Bebe
Buffalo Springfield
Burchill, Julie
Burnett, T-Bone
Bushell, Debbie
Buzzcocks
Byrds ‘Chestnut Mare’
Cale, John
Callan, Alan
Calvert, Robert
Cammell, Donald
Can
Future Days
Tago Mago
Capitol Cinema (Cardiff)
Capote, Truman:
In Cold Blood
Carr, Roy
Carroll, Ted
Carson, Phil
Cash, Johnny
Cashbox
Cassady, Caroline
Cassady, Neil
Cassidy, David
Cave, Nick
CBGBs scene
Chandler, Chas
Channel, Bruce
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Chelsea Hotel (Manhattan)
Cher
Chimes, Terry
Churchill, Sir Winston
Clainos, Nicholas
Clapton, Eric
Clark, Dick
Clarke, John Cooper
Clash, the ‘Brand New Cadillac’
Cobain, Kurt
Cohen, Leonard
Cole, Richard
Collins, Joan
Cooder, Ry
Cook, Paul
Cooper, Alice ‘I’m Eighteen’
Costello, Elvis ‘Watching the Detectives’
Cramps, the: ‘Domino’
Creem
magazine
Crosby, David
If I Could Only Remember My Name
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young
Crossroads
Crowe, Cameron
Cure, the