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109 articles found. Page 2 of 6.
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Van Morrison: His Band And Street Choir
Review by Dave Marsh, Creem, October 1971
THERE'S A SECRET to every Van Morrison album, and even this one, which too many of us wrote off too long ago, has it. The ...
Grand Funk Railroad: E Pluribus Funk (Capitol)
Review by Greg Shaw, Phonograph Record, 1 January 1972
It's time to admit we were wrong about Grand Funk. Oh, we were right too, but wrong just the same. Those three or four (I ...
Bernie Taupin: Bernie Taupin (Elektra)
Review by Lester Bangs, Phonograph Record, March 1972
ON NEW YEAR'S EVE of 1972 I attended a great party thrown by someone I didn't know and inadvertently fell into a protracted conversation with ...
Edgar Winter's White Trash: Roadwork
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, Cream, July 1972
EDGAR WINTERS White Trash are advanced cases of the Live Album Syndrome. Their line-up allows them to tackle soul, gospel, blues and rock, depending on ...
Review by Lester Bangs, Phonograph Record, September 1972
NOBODY LIKES Savoy Brown except everybody. Why? What? Well, you know, you either like 'em or ya don't. If you do, you got no problems. ...
David Bowie: The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (RCA)
Review by Dave Marsh, Creem, September 1972
DAVID BOWIE may become a star this year, or he may not. This may or may not make a difference in your life. But, for ...
Review by John Tobler, Let It Rock, October 1972
ROCK JOURNALISTS ARE not born. Probably theyre not made either it doesnt work to tell someone that theyre a rock writer, although people do. ...
Review by Ben Edmonds, Creem, October 1972
AS WE ALL KNOW, summer never lasts forever, and Alice was faced with the problem of rushing out a follow-up album before the leaves began ...
Review by Lester Bangs, Phonograph Record, 1 October 1972
GOOD FOR SLADE. They made it at last. These guys have been kicking around the Limey lard-tub for a little while now, garnering a fan ...
Led Zeppelin: Houses Of The Holy
Review by Metal Mike Saunders, Phonograph Record, May 1973
MERCY ME, it's time to bring out the Sominex again. If it weren't for Slade and the Stooges, God knows what sort of utter decay ...
Black Oak Arkansas: Raunch'n'Roll
Review by Robot A. Hull, Creem, June 1973
THE SORTA people who listen to Black Oak Arkansas are about the closest things to teenage Frankensteins in existence. They hide out in the hills ...
The Sonics: Explosives (BuckShot Records)
Review by Mark Shipper, Phonograph Record, June 1973
SUPPOSE I TOLD you there actually existed a band at one time (say around 1965) who sounded like (but better than) the Kinks on 'All ...
Review by Jonathon Green, International Times, 28 June 1973
Punk drunk junk ...
Iggy Pop, Stooges, The: Iggy & the Stooges: Raw Power (CBS)
Review by Richard Williams, The Times, 2 July 1973
Teenage insanity ...
New York Dolls: The New York Dolls: The New York Dolls (Mercury — import)
Review by Richard Williams, Melody Maker, 18 August 1973
Dolls: Junior Stones ...
New York Dolls: The New York Dolls: The New York Dolls (Mercury Import)
Review by Nick Kent, NME, 25 August 1973
THE NEW YORK Dolls are trash, they play rock 'n' roll like sluts and they've just released a record that can proudly stand beside Iggy ...
Review by Gene Sculatti, Phonograph Record, October 1973
I DON'T KNOW if there's any correlation between Brownsville Station's oddly misplaced power chords on parts of their new album and the band's misreading of ...
Pink Fairies, The: The Pink Fairies: Kings of Oblivion (Polydor)
Review by Dan Nooger, The Village Voice, 13 December 1973
JUST RELEASED: The Pink Fairies' third album (first in America) Kings of Oblivion (Polydor). The Pink Fairies are the successors to the Deviants, a politico-raunch ...
Review by Alan Betrock, Phonograph Record, March 1974
IT'S HAPPENED BEFORE — little known American rockers going over to England to be "discovered", and returning to their homeland as superstars. The most obvious ...
Kiss: Kiss (Casablanca Records 9001)
Review by Harold Tribune, Zoo World, 11 April 1974
SOME RECORDS by new groups on new labels might be looked on with considerably more disinterest than what's greeted this release. Just as Casablanca Records ...
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