Showing posts with label alan wilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alan wilson. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Classic Album revisited - The Sharks


The Sharks - Phantom Rockers
Nervous Records
1.Moonstomp 2.Skeleton rock 3.It's all over now 4.Crazy maybe 5.Take a razor to your head 6.Death row 7.Love bites 8.Short shark shock 9.Ruff stuff 10.Phantom rockers 11.Charlie! 12.Slipped disc 13.I can't stop 14.Electrifyin' 15.Ghost train 16.We say yeah

I wrote this a couple of years ago and after listening to the Sharks going to work this morning I thought it would be worth adding it hear.

When I bought this wonderful album in the mid-80s I had no idea who the band were. I'd never heard of them and had never seen a review for the album, but I was attracted by the cover and the back photos of three sharp rockabillies with leopard skin kit and the basic line-up, double bass, giutar and snare drum. I thought the cover would look good on the wall even if the music was crap. Fear not, the music contained within, is the best psychobilly album ever recorded - to these ears anyway.

Members Alan Wilson (guitar), Steve Whitehouse (bass) and Paul Hodges (drums) developed from a typical rockabilly revival band into one of the neo-rockabilly / psychobilly movements premier bands. Recording for the genre's leading label, Nervous Records, they produced the brilliant Phantom Rockers in 1982. The album was recorded in just a few days with most of the songs written on the way to the studio.

The album kicks off is stunning style with the frantic Moonstomp, my first taste of Wilson's crispy clean guitar style and the equally brilliant slap-bass playing of Whitehouse. Others in the manic, breakneck psycho style are Charlie and Ghost Train. Ghost Train is an astonishing gallop with all three playing their instruments like no other psycho band has done before or since. The drumming and bass pound a massive beat at hell for leather speed and Wilson again demonstrates his prowess.

The pick of the hole lot has to be the wonderful story of Charlie, the chainsaw wielding 12 year old schoolboy who decaps the teacher before "He butchered all his classmates/and just to make his day/He smeared blood on the blackboard/ saying 'Charlie rules OK'. His parents would surely disapprove so "The headmaster sent a letter home/telling of what he done/'I know he is a lively lad/but this is not my idea of fun./You must point out to Charlie/that what he did was bad'/But Charlie doesn't care because /he's killed his Mum and Dad". Classic psychobilly, in fact, the best pyschobilly track ever, no question.

Ruff Stuff is pretty much a straight forward rockabilly record (they actually sound like the Polecats on this) as is their version of Sir Cliff's We Say Yeah. Short Sharp Shock is neo-rockabilly of the highest order as is the free bit of haircut advice, Take A Razor To your Head. Skeleton Rock, Electrifyin' and Death Row are great numbers and again show off the prowess of all three. Their sound is so clear and the guitar notes are so pure that to me they just stand above the rest. I think it's like comparing Gene Vincent's Blue Caps sound to some of the obscure garage bands you hear on the Collector label.




On the slower end of the scale the best must surely be Love Bites. It's gentle and hypnotic and much surley be the greatest psychoballad ever. I've sang this song to myself for twenty years now and it still sounds fresh (their version not mine!).
"my baby is a vampire and she's not much good for you / my baby is a vampire and she'll suck the blood from you, / When you meet her at night times, and you love her charms/ But don't give her a cuddle coz then, you'll die in her arms".

The only tracks that don't really do much for me are Crazy Maybe and their cover of the Stones' It's All Over Now. Apparantly, the record still sells well in CD format, and over the years has even been issued on coloured vinyl and picture disc. It's a classic which you should own. Why not buy it from Nervous Records, after all, it's thanks to them that we got it in the first place.

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

Bill Fadden & The Mostly Losers - Looking For Some Happiness


Bill Fadden & The Mostly Losers - Looking For Some Happiness
Western Star Records


Tracklisting: Just A Waiting / La Mesa Prison Blues / Mission Bell / Tell Me Why / Gil's Place / Hold On Tight / Mexicalli Bound / The Dead Balladeer / North Wind / Dia De Los Muertos / Little Baby / Little Green Bag

Bill Fadden & The Mostly Losers are: Bill Fadden - Lead Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Alan Wilson - Lead Guitar, Keyboards, Jack Boxwell - Bass (except "Little Baby" which was Upton Lovell), Ben Turner - Drums, Bob Dixon - Pedal Steel, Graham C. Reynolds - Trumpet, Moses - Accordion, Steve Holbrook - Piano, Bill Fadden, Alan Wilson and Liz Avent - Backing Vocals

Bill Fadden and his band The Silvertone Fliers, hit the scene like a tornado a few years ago with two great albums, Bop Party and Satellite Rock. He now works with the remnants of the Rimshots/Gene Gambler's Shufflers, but for this latest release he's backed by a mix of musicians. It was recorded about five years ago with Western Star owner, Alan Wilson, who was also involved in the previous two albums. The story goes that Wilson invited Fadden to his over over Easter 2004 to write and record a few songs. Fadden turned up with two massive sombreros and a bottle of Tequilla. Wilson was fresh from a trip to Tijuana so everything took on a Mexican buzz.
For the most part the band comprises Fadden on vocals and rhythm, Alan Wilson on guitar, ex-Silvertone Flyer Jack Boxwell on bass and Ben Turner on drums. With their pedigree you won't be surprised to hear that the musicianship is spot-on throughout, be it rockabilly, country or the Tex-Mex sound that oozes throughout the album. The opener is a Western ballad complete whistled intro and outro that is an inspired, subtle way to show that the guy is happy to keep "just a waiting". La Mesa Prison Blues is the first of the quartet that Fadden and Wilson co-wrote. It tells the gruesome tale of life in a shithouse Mexican prison, set to a dark rockabilly sound and trumpet. Mexicalli Bound and Dia De Los Muertos again get their inspiration from south of El Paso, with the instrumental Dia De Los Muertos being ideal fodder for a tarantino or Coen Brothers movie. The Dead Balladeer is a rhumba ballad with trumpet that doesn't really work for me, but then I don't like the rhumba beat.

Fadden wrote three of his own, the best being the rockaballad Tell Me Why. The best track on the album is Little Baby, a stop start rocker that has a hint of His Latest Flame. North Wind is a western rockabilly number that runs Little Baby a close second. The album is rounded off with a rockin' take on the late 60's hit Little Green Bag. So bhasically what you've got is a hot little platter that should appeal to rockers and westerners alike.