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#Eddie and The Hot Rods
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Eddie and the Hot Rods, 1977.
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killcityarchive · 4 months
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Eddie And The Hot Rods, 1977
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bradkyle · 5 months
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musickickztoo · 5 months
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 Barrie Masters *May 4, 1956
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mywifeleftme · 10 months
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219: Eddie and the Hot Rods // Teenage Depression
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Teenage Depression Eddie and the Hot Rods 1976, Island
Eddie and the Hot Rods were pub rock legends, which is one of those particularly subby subgenres you need to be fairly deep into your second divorce proceedings (thanks for nothing Debra) to understand as distinct from punk rock or power pop. You do know it when you hear it though—more soul and maximum R&B than punk’s bleached ferocity, a certain sing-songy bop. The Hot Rods had as frenzied a staccato attack as any in the UK’s first generation of punk, were considerably more competent musicians, and beat most of them to market by six months to a year. They also had a lot less to say artistically, but the Rods still made a formidable mini-boss for any fledgling punk band who shared a bill with them.
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Their debut Teenage Depression absolutely goes—half of the songs are originals recorded in a studio, the other half ferocious live covers, and all of it sounds like a party thanks to their relentless “Train Kept A-Rollin’” chug. Of the originals, “Double Checkin’ Woman” has the best riff and is therefore the best song, but the snappy “Been So Long” and “Why Can’t It Be?” (in certain moments a dead ringer for Stiff Little Fingers’ “Alternative Ulster”) aren’t to be slept on. As to the covers, they’re all pilled to the gills, though the specific songs vary a bit between the UK and American issues, as was (annoyingly) common at the time. Alongside the expected ‘60s rock chestnuts (e.g. The Who’s “The Kids Are Alright”), the UK version showed greater range with its takes on Sam Cooke’s “Shake” and Joe Tex’s “Show Me”; the North American edition swaps these soul tunes out for more white R&B, including Bob Seger’s recent “Get Out of Denver.” (Wild that at a time when Seger couldn’t buy a hit outside the Midwest his numbers kept cropping up in UK bands’ live sets.) The most impressive testament to the Rods’ power as a live force might be that they manage to get more than an eyeroll out of their medley of Them’s “Gloria” and the Stones’ “Satisfaction.” It’s an object lesson in the power of teeth-kicking rock ‘n’ roll that even those played-out jams can sound new again given sufficient wallop.
Folks who are into this kind of music tend to already know Eddie and the Hot Rods, but if you’re a Reigning Sound / Dr. Feelgood / Oi! etc. type and you haven’t had a session with Teenage Depression, best get to it.
219/365
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n3wy0rkd011 · 10 months
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what I've been saying every day since 7th grade except I don't have the guts
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whitetrashsoul · 2 years
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topoet · 2 years
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Layers of Lavender Power
Layers of Lavender Power
It’s almost as if Orville Peck or Lil Nas X invented lgbtq pop but the history stretches back to Johnny Ray, all the’s changed is it is easier to be out. The road for Orville was paved by rockers like Tom Robinson. Tom Robinson Band’s ‘Power In The Darkness’ (1978) was released the year I moved to Toronto. I also have Two (1979) & his solo: North by Northwest (1982) – on a pair of mp3 cd’s. Tom…
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artehago · 2 years
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musicandoldmovies · 3 months
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Eddie and the Hot Rods - Beginning of the End
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turnupthevolumebelgium · 10 months
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CLASSIC CLIPS
EDDIE & THE HOT RODS
TEENAGE DEPRESSION - 1977
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americanahighways · 2 years
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Music Reviews: Guns n’ Roses’ ‘Use Your Illusion’ (Super Deluxe Ed.), plus Jimi Hendrix, Amy Ray, James Houlahan, Eddie & the Hot Rods, and Louis Armstrong
Music Reviews: Guns n’ Roses’ ‘Use Your Illusion’ (Super Deluxe Ed.), plus Jimi Hendrix, Amy Ray, James Houlahan, Eddie & the Hot Rods, and Louis Armstrong @gunsnroses @JimiHendrix @AmyRay @byjeffburger #louisarmstrong @jameshoulahan #eddieandthehotrods #newmusic2022
Guns n’ Roses released Use Your Illusion I and II, their third and fourth albums, simultaneously, on Sept. 17, 1991. They’re not the only act to have employed this two-at-once approach, which is ostensibly designed to offer alternatives to fans who might be put off by the price of a double LP. Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, and others have tried the same thing. But nobody has…
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[Eddie as Steve is dropping him off at his trailer]
Eddie: You look pretty!
Steve: What did you say?
Eddie: I said you look shitty! Goodnight Steve!
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musickickztoo · 1 year
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Barrie Masters  *May 4, 1956
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rastronomicals · 3 months
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9:29 PM EDT June 29, 2024:
Eddie & The Hot Rods - "Do Anything You Wanna Do" From the box set   No Thanks! The ’70s Punk Rebellion (October 28, 2003)
Last song scrobbled from iTunes at Last.fm
Island WIP-6401, August 1977, as "The Rods." Love the Alastair Crowley picture sleeve.
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n3wy0rkd011 · 10 months
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this song hits so hard except weekends don't exist anymore
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