Alternative Weekend: Focus on ‘Roxy Music'

in music •  5 years ago  (edited)

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Introducing #alternativeweekend. Post an article that highlights THREE great songs that are either progressive or alternative and use the tag #alternativeweekend or use the ‘Focus on’ series if you like. There are no rules, just make your own!

If you have a short story or something to offer regarding an opinion on your songs, then share it with us!


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It seems forever since I wrote an Alternative Weekend, and there’s a reason for this.

'...I’m simply out of bands to write about...'

Stretching into my memory bag of ancient music material I find Roxy Music, a band of two halves.

I say this because they enjoyed two definitive periods of success; the glam rock of the early seventies and the more mellow material a decade later.

I discovered them somewhere in between and hoped they would resurface. They did but not in the manner I would have hoped. I always preferred their edgy earlier songs, filled with amazing synth sounds courtesy of Brian Eno.


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I listened to Synth Britannia last night as it just happened to be on TV for the umpteenth time and noted that like Eno, Martyn Ware of The Human League was told he was no longer in the band.

According to the Wikipedia page, ‘Brian Eno left Roxy Music amidst increasing differences with Ferry’.

Such is the power struggles of bands and musicians, but did they lose their most creative influence?


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Roxy Music – Virginia Plain (Roxy Music – 1972)

1972, Christ! I was still at infants school and barely aware of music at all.

A year later, a well-educated school-kid friend of mine was into all this ‘weird music', including Roxy, Pink Floyd, and Uriah Heap, but never musically introduced it to me at the time.

I was more into the standard glam rock crap of the day such as Suzi Quattro, Slade and Garry Glitter (shudder).

They made a music video of Virginia Plain and does it look dated now. Just look at those outfits, it was so hip at the time. The music is still great though and really takes me back.


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Roxy Music – Out of the Blue (Country Life – 1974)

Years later, I figured my old school friend did have some good taste and mine during those old times had been mostly a load of old crap!

I bought Country Life from one of those rambling second hand records stores most likely due to the album cover! I never really got the grips with all the album tracks but Out of the Blue really stuck out.

Having been always a sucker for those strobing synth sounds, used somewhat in The Doobie Brothers, Listen to the Music, and to some degree Donna Summer's, I Feel Love, this one struck a chord.

Like some other seventies sounds, it does sound a little dated in today's world.

Keep it going to the end, it gets much better as it ends up quite progressive and psychedelic.


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Roxy Music – Both Ends Burning (Siren – 1975)

Oh, how I loved this song that was just a minor hit right at the end of Roxy Music's first half of fame.

Were these guys the trendsetters of synth music? From the first note, we are besetted with a strong string type overlay that persists throughout the song.

Maybe this song was a little early for the public to take in. Mix in some Andy Mackay saxophone and you have an intoxicating track which is probably a little too long to be a regular single.

At around 4 minutes, Phil Manzanera unleashes his electric guitar which combining with Ferry's soaring vocals, sends me to musical heaven!


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In 1979, Roxy Music were back with a single named, Trash which I blindly bought. Jeez, it certainly was trash too, I was so disappointed.

The crap music didn't last as we then got Dance Away and Angel Eyes which were both hits, decent but much different than I was expecting.

I would be lying if I said I really got into the latter Roxy Music. it was all a little poppy, smooth and silky but suited it's time rather well at the turn of the decade.


Roxy Music – Angel Eyes (Manifesto – 1979)

Angel Eyes I remember well as I was working at a certain supermarket who played those tapes of unoriginal artists on repeat to incessantly torment the staff in an attempt to make us insane.

Nonetheless, I don't dislike this tune but always longed for the older Roxy Music to come back. It never happened.


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Okay, I came unprepared! I'll be back!

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Excellent choices! I remember being startled by Virginia Plain when I watched it on TOTP as a child - but there were so many other startling acts on at that time - David Bowie, Queen... what a time to be young! I discovered Roxy Music's albums when I was in my 20s, and I played them to death. I still remember some of the words of Out of the Blue, even though I probably haven't heard it in decades. I love the way the intro gradually comes in and builds up and the way that Bryan Ferry's voice just wraps around the music. But I agree that Brian Eno's departure made a huge difference. I hated Angel Eyes when I first heard it, but it grew on me massively. I still love it.
I really got into Fripp and Eno's music later on. A friend told me how it was meant to be almost mind-numbing etc. I came across No Pussyfooting in an old record shop - this was in the late 1980s - and as soon as I played it, I fell asleep. That happened every time I played it, so I started using it as a cure for insomnia - seriously! After a while, the effect wore off and I actually heard the whole album. From then on I loved it!

No Pussyfooting

I can see why this made you fall asleep. I'm a bit of a Fripp fan too, but the little bit I played from the wiki sounds a bit weird!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/(No_Pussyfooting)

(No Pussyfooting)
(No Pussyfooting) is the debut studio album by the British duo Fripp & Eno, released in 1973. (No Pussyfooting) was the first of three major collaborations between the musicians, growing out of Brian Eno's early tape delay looping experiments and Robert Fripp's "Frippertronics" electric guitar technique.
(No Pussyfooting) was recorded in three days over the course of a year. Its release was close to that of Eno's own debut solo album Here Come the Warm Jets (1974), and it constitutes one of his early experiments in ambient music.

Swastika Girls I think. That was the only excerpt I could find from this album. I think I still have it somewhere - I'll try to dig it out, but it would have to be digitised in order to share. Hmm.
It's not one I'd recommend playing in the car.

Hot damn, you are older than me!! This is quite refreshing. In a blockchain/steemit kind of way! :op

I am, I keep using the wrinkle cream on my eyes but not sure if it's working or not? What do you think?

I think it's working, such a young pup!!

I have to disagree with the choice of Listen to the Music as an example of synth. In fact if you watch this video, you wont see a synth. I would say flanger on the guitar, yes but not synth. Now maybe you meant some of the tracks from the Michael McDonald era, like What a Fool Believes...you know when the Doobies went soft lol. :D But I still like the Doobies and they enjoy airplay still ( even in the grocery store) LOL.

Your could be right, Listen to the Music (literally), at 2'20. That's the bit I mean.

Greta choices of thiers I remember many of them when they came out and liked a few of their songs including the ones you listed, but some of their tunes didn't grab me

Yeah I remember growing up my uncle was a huge Roxy Music / Bryan Ferry fan. I remember those album covers..... ;-)

And the music of course. I've started to listening to them more and more in the last couple of years, and really appreciating that early stuff. I still quite like Avalon, I think it's that easy-listening vibe which I like.

I'm going to go so far as to say they are the grandfathers of New Wave.... what do you think? They were certainly doing it a good decade before everyone else caught up.

Some of the New Wave / No Romantics theme was a kind of overspill from the Glam rock period I suppose, in terms of looks but not music.

The easy listening stuff, I wasn't too bothered about. I'm too much into my guitars I guess.

The guitar in Avalon is sublime ;-)
But yes I know what you mean....

I'll be honest, I haven't really ever heard much from them besides the one or two songs that got major radio play in the US. Actually I think there is only about one that I can actually recognize. I will have to add them to my explore list in Spotify.

They may not have cracked America, and the band are so old it may have been before your time. I hear countless eighties tracks everywhere still, but it's the older stuff I liked. You don't hear it anymore.

"More than this" and "Love is the drug" are the two main songs I am familiar with.

The latter one was a huge hit here, but in the mid 70's. That's the old band, while More than this is the newer stuff.

One of those bands where I know the hits, but didn't have the albums. They were pretty experimental, but then were so were a few bands in the 70s.

Never saw them live, but Mackay and Manzanera had a band later who played at Coventry Poly. I remember it being in the little basement bar and the power went out half way. They came back to finish the set. Can't say I remember what they played apart from a Bob Dylan cover, Subterranean Homesick Blues I think.

I wasn't taken much by their album tracks, I had several. It was a period in my life was I was much more into singles, so likely didn't try hard enough.

I never bought many singles, but then I was into bands like Genesis who didn't do those do much.