![]() Foghat Bearsville 2077 Released: July 1972 Chart Peak: #127 Weeks Charted: 21
Lonesome Dave's "Trouble, Trouble" and the group-written "A Hole to Hide In" are strong examples of the classic rock & roll song, with controlled but impatient verses followed by inevitable explosive choruses. Guitarists Peverett and Rod Price make a powerful team; each seems preoccupied with controlled, pungent rhythm guitar playing, to the exclusion of all but the briefest, most necessary solo. I suppose there had to be a Chuck Berry song on here -- it's "Maybelline," which has been done so often that it's getting a little frayed around the edges. Without the Edmunds supermix, "Maybelline" falls short of the two Berries on Rockpile, but it's still more than just competent. The third non-original, "Gotta Get to Know You" (this ain't the song popularized by Spanky and Our Gang), throws a slight change-up, ending the album. The pace is slowed, textures are muted, and the inclusion of what sounds like a mellotron both softens and fills out Foghat's stark and abrasive sound. It's not "Layla," but it's a classier way of ending the album than a no-holds barred, big-gun climax would've been. If your best-of-the-year vote goes to Exile on Main Street, you're gonna like both Foghat and the Edmunds LP. Hearing them may prompt you to move the Stones back a notch or two. - Bud Scoppa, Rolling Stone, 9/14/72. Bonus Reviews! In the music industry, the initials MOR stand for "middle of the road" -- which means light mood music, Broadway show tunes, and watered-down versions of contemporary pop hits with choral groups singing "doo-wahhhh" as the string section scrubs away. It is a little above the level of Muzak. Within rock itself there is no organized MOR (unless it be from such artists as the Carpenters, whose fluffy sound is more obviously pop in the old sense); all hard rock is considered to be contemporary, right-on, and, um, groovy. But it's time either to define a new kind of MOR, or to declare one, that could apply to rock. This would embrace all "known" rock forms: folk-, hard-, Jesus-, poetic-, pathetic-, bathetic-, country-, and so on. Under this heading would fall all those groups and singers who don't do anything wrong, provided that it's all been done before and very often done to death. The determining factor for including a band or singer in the category would be that they are Obviously Doing the Obvious -- there! That's it! ODO rock! And if anybody is ODO, then it's Foghat. Every guitar solo and amplifier-induced tone here has been heard before. The vocals are all standard white screamers. The tunes, with two exceptions, are as flat as Kansas. Even the final stereo mix sounds the same as dozens of other albums (this is distressing, since producers usually do the mix, and producers are, in theory, individuals). Foghat would fare much better if they stayed away from writing their own material until they are capable writers. Otherwise they will remain ODO-rock hacks. - Joel Vance, Stereo Review, 12/73. Formed last year by three ex-Savoy Brown members and Rod Price, this straight-ahead rock set brings the band into their own as performers and writers. Specializing in the wall of sound variety of rock and blues, the group also shows themselves to be top notch at slower material as well. Vocal honors go to Lonesome Dave Peverett, one of the few shouters who can do it in tune, and to Price for his fine guitar work. Best cuts: "Ride, Ride, Ride," "It's Too Late" (Foghat's, not Carole's), "What A Shame." - Billboard, 1972.
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