"Bang A Gong (Get It On)"
T. Rex Reprise 1032 Jan. 1972 Billboard: #10 ![]() ![]()
In 1971, more than a few fans thought Bolan's ideas could hold up not just for a few hits, but for an entire career. Times have changed. Judging from the sobering distance of twenty-odd years, I'd say that his albums sound painfully dated and that his material lacks any sense of variety. Over the years, his musical ideas (all three of them) have become transparently threadbare. His songs all share similar rhythmic ideas and lyrical thrust, while his singing never varies from the double-tracked, whispering frenzy technique that he developed.
Did I say driving? That reminds me, what exactly was it with this guy and his auto-erotic imagery? "You're built like a car, you got a hubcap diamond-star halo. You're built like a car, oh yeah" is only a sample lyric from his catalog of songs that use the automobile as a metaphor for sex. Before his chrome-finish fetish became public knowledge, Bolan's music was actually quite different. Originally, he was a folkie from Donovan's School of Outer-Space Sensitivity and called his partnership with a bongo player Tyrannosaurus Rex, because he expected to become the biggest thing on earth. When this slightly pudgy and inarticulate guy with luminescent blue skin decided to drop his sad-eyed, acoustic guitar act and trade it in for electric glamour and a new bongo player, T. Rex was born. From that point on, English critics treated Bolan as though he were a treasonous phony. The kids loved him. American critics had trouble putting him into perspective. Seemingly out of nowhere, here comes this supposedly sensitive guy dressed in the most campy attire, wearing heels and women's mascara while singing to teenagers. The unisex styles of the '60s, such as love beads and long hair, had begun to develop into the androgyny of the '70s, and Bolan was intelligent enough to aim it at the kids who were open-minded and eager to develop their own identity separate from the hippies. It took American kids a while to catch on. "Bang a Gong" was a hit in America almost a full year after it topped the English charts. By then, Bolan had opened the door for other acts who subscribed to the decidedly English phenomenon of glam-rock, such as Sweet, Slade, Gary Glitter, and Mott the Hoople. Over the years, David Bowie would be elevated to superstar status as he developed glam-rock into a futuristic amalgam of sex and theater. Overshadowed by these later acts, Bolan's popularity decreased, despite his attempt to remain in the spotlight. While riding in a car driven by his girlfriend, Gloria Jones ("Tainted Love"), he was killed in a crash on September 6, 1977. - Thomas Ryan, American Hit Radio, Prima Entertainment, 1996.
ralphie 1. "HUB CAP, (is a) DIAMOND-STAR HELO"? "Diamond Star" Motors The red Mitsubishi logo can be interpreted as a Diamond Star, look it up! However, the logos on the cars look like Dodge or Plymouth logos, not DSM Diamond Star. Perhaps it's "Diamond Star" for the organization name. Some 1971 custom wheels for the Dodge Colt had no hubcaps but were in the shape of star and the name was "Helo" (intended lyrics "hubcap, Diamond-Star "Helo"?) 2. A "DIAMOND STAR HALO" IS IN IMAGES OF JESUS' MOTHER MARY in historic art depicted around her head, representing holiness and innocence. Please look at those images. ![]() |
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