BLOODROCK - BLOODROCK 2 (1970)
MANILLA ROAD - The Courts of Chaos (1990)
Ok, this is thee Halloween post that never was. My modem decided to be a fickle little bitch on me last week, and although I thought about dumping this fucker outright, the concept was too damn sound to jettison... so here goes: Fort Worth, Texas' Bloodrock was one o' them late 60's combos that straddled the line between patchouli-stankin' *ahem* Flower Power Phurry Phreakery and thee burgeoning thud that would evole into heavy metal. Bearing more than a slight resemblance to Deep Purple, complete with John Lordian Hammond Organ high in the mix, their eponymous 1969 debut LP was a fine example of slightly-delic heavy rock that only lacked a signature tune to set it apart from the thousands of other bands mining the same turf. A quagmire that would be remedied the following year on "Bloodrock 2."
"D.O.A." is the musical equivalent to grindhouse guinol like "Blood Feast" and "Texas Chainsaw Massacre." I remember being a tyke camping with my hippie parents and their cadre of past-due flower children, and it seemed whenever I was stuffed into a tent for sleepytime, "D.O.A" would come on the radio for no other reason than to freak. Me. The. Fuck. Out. Underscored by eerie keys imitating ambulance sirens, it is thee tale of an aircrash victim recalling his final moments in lurid detail-- at least by 70's standards. In a way, it's an almost unknowable song-- the chorus states: "we were flying low... and hit something in the air." What the fuck?! Something? Yet it is this macabre mystique that makes it so endearing. Along with Manson and Altamont, it is yet another fork in the idealism of the 60's.
It is so damn good in fact, that Wichita, Kansas' ultimate purveyors of epic metal, Manilla Road would do a faithful cover 20 years later. Fittingly so, as "Courts of Chaos" is an odd entry in their catalog. To whit:
1. Randy Foxe, one of metal's top 2-3 drummers, plays guitar on it, replaced by a drum machine.
2. It is chock fulla keyboards, something inconceivable at the time.
3. It contains only one of their trademark 7-minute plus behemoths ("The Books of Skelos").
Despite what written down sounds like a recipe for disaster, "Courts" is still a solid ball of metal. The synths are a bit obtrusive at times, but never enough to diminish the power of Mark "The Shark" Shelton's impeccable riffing and hardy, untrained yowl. And, as I've tried to make clear--- you can never have enough versions of "D.O.A."
Both in comments.
Bloodrock: http://sharebee.com/b93b28de
ReplyDeleteManilla Road: http://sharebee.com/dd1a9a05
pw for both = sln2008
Fantastic. That's one of my favorite historical moments in rock -- when the '60s went creepy. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteI never quite understood what the song was about. An airplane crash, a paranormal event? Either way it's an epic, and the fact that Manilla Road covered it just shows that they are a bit more astute than other bands.
ReplyDelete*Puts on tinfoil helmet* Could be both, man. Mebbe that airplane hit one o' them there UFO thingamajigs? And yup, "epic" is the only way to describe it.
ReplyDeletei saw a great metal show last night! Revenge played with Krieg. Revenge were great! Just thought Id let you know. i was out of the country for a bit but will now be checking your blog again for goodies!!
ReplyDeleteHate Krieg, LOVE Revenge-- they're my homeboys. You need all three of these-- same blackened style of chaotic thrash.
ReplyDeleteThanks Bloodrock is one of those bands who rock ass but I always seem to forget. Don't Eat the Children off the USA album is a good one too. A good song and words to live by.
ReplyDeleteI've always been a bit intimidated by Manilla Road's catalog (aside from Crystal Logic) not knowing where to start and that so thx for pointing this one out.
cheers
Thx!! for your amusement:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2008/1112081drinkwine1.html