Showing posts with label Mick Ronson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mick Ronson. Show all posts

2022-11-08

LOU REED - TRANSFORMER @ 50

 

Celebrating half a century of walking on the wild side, it’s the sophomore solo LP from Velvet Underground main man, Lou Reed, with Transformer being released on this day, November 8th, 1972. It’s the album which would secure his place as a rock ’n’ roll legend and break him out from the shackles of cult obscurity into the realm of commercial accessibility.

After his years fronting The Velvet Underground, Reed had become infamous in certain circles, though his record sales would belie the far reach of his influence on the next generation of music makers who were starting to shape the decade of the 1970s. Principal among these was no less than the “Starman” himself, David Bowie, who had embraced Lou’s work and incorporated a number of VU songs into his live repertoire, including White Light/White Heat and I’m Waiting for My Man. Bowie had made reference to Reed on the liner notes for Hunky Dory and had struck up a friendship with him on his visits to NYC. After the failure of Reed’s eponymous debut to make any kind of commercial impact, Bowie and fellow Spider from Mars, Mick Ronson, offered to produce Lou’s next album and duly packed him off to London to record.

The duo proved to be the perfect conduit for Reed’s music and Ronson, in particular, ended up offering much more than production as he contributed session guitar, keyboards, recorder and, along with Bowie, backing vocals. Their prowess at the studio console was equally matched by the quality of the songs Reed brought to the table, several of which had been lurking around since the VU days. Andy’s Chest, Satellite of Love, New York Telephone Conversation and Goodnight Ladies had all been performed or demoed by the Velvets before they found their place on Transformer.

Overall, the album boasts a host songs which would become quintessential for Reed like Satellite, Vicious & Perfect Day, but the most significant of all has to be Walk on the Wild Side. It was released as a single and became a major hit and Lou’s most successful single ever. Over the years, it’s been used repeatedly in soundtracks for feature films and TV and become the most iconic piece of music Lou ever produced. It’s also one of his most controversial and prophetic songs. Given the evolution of transgender identity in the last 50 years, it can legitimately be seen as a flashpoint for igniting awareness of the culture within the minds of the mainstream. It’s gender bending was so unsettling for some that the single was edited in some markets and outright banned in others because of its reference to what was perceived as sexual depravity.

The cover for the album utilizes an image by legendary photographer, Mick Rock. The look of the photo was a total accident, however, as it came about when Rock overexposed the negatives. Lou loved the look and it ended up becoming the perfect image to represent the album.

At the time of its release, it became an immediate pillar within the “glam rock” scene of the early 1970s. Along with Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust and Bolan’s Electric Warrior, it was an album that was a must-have if you were part of that movement. Since then, it has become one of Reed’s most essential albums. Personally, my opinion is that, if you’re gonna have two Reed albums, you should have Transformer and Metal Machine Music though for entirely opposing reasons.

2021-12-17

DAVID BOWIE - HUNKY DORY @ 50


December 17th marks the 50th anniversary of the release of David Bowie’s fourth studio album, Hunky Dory, which was issued this day in 1971. While his previous album had not quite “Sold the World”, this would be where he’d put together the core of his “Spiders from Mars” and set the stage for the music revolution he’d lead with its follow-up.

After the somewhat lackluster reception of The Man Who Sold the World, upon returning from a US tour to promote that album, Bowie sequestered himself in his home, eschewing touring and studio time for the moment, and planted himself at his piano in order to start composing songs for his next album. Shifting his writing process off the guitar sent him veering away from the more hard-rock styling of his last album and into a more “pop”, melodic sound. When it came time to start assembling his band for the new album, he managed to bring back guitarist Mick Ronson and drummer Mick Woodmansey, despite some creative fallout after the previous album, but bassist Tony Visconti was replaced by Trevor Bolder to create the core ensemble which would become known as The Spiders from Mars.

Inspired by his trip the the US, Bowie came up with a number of songs that paid tribute to some of the personalities he’d become enamored with over there. These included Andy Warhol, Lou Reed and Bob Dylan, all of whom found themselves immortalize in song on the new album. Moreover, Bowie’s agenda for this album was freed from the influence of the demands of record companies and their executives insisting he pursue some vision of success which was outside his own agenda. For this album, he only sought to satisfy himself and it’s one of the main reasons it is looked back upon as a turning point in his career and the moment when he fully began to cut his own path through the popular music landscape. While most artists of the time were looking to revisit the past after the wild experimentation of the late ‘60s, Bowie was keen to discover new musical lands to inhabit.

While it met with immediate critical praise upon its release, commercially, it stalled and failed to chart prior to the release of the Ziggy Stardust album in 1972. Part of the problem when it came to sales for Hunky Dory was down to Bowie's new label, RCA Records, pulling back on promoting it when they got wind that he was about to change his image AGAIN for the Ziggy album, which was already being recorded. It gave them cold feet and caused them to pull their support for Hunky Dory until they saw where he was going. However, once Ziggy took off, the backlash of success ended up sweeping Hunky Dory off the scrap heap and pushed it up the charts as well where it eventually peaked at #3 in the UK.

For many Bowie aficionados, Hunky Dory is the turning point in Bowie’s career where his artistic vision and abilities finally came into complete focus at their full potential. It’s the album which put all the pieces in place to set the stage for his success on his next album. While on it’s own, it wasn’t the spark that lit the fire, it provided the additional fuel to help reinforce his trajectory once that flame was ignited. The album is loaded with songs that have become classics in Bowie’s canon of essential works. Changes, Oh! You Pretty Things, Life On Mars, Andy Warhol & Queen Bitch all attest to his ability to craft solid, inventive pop music that has stood the test of time for half a century.