The former gravel-voiced Butts Band shouter sounds riotously confident
on this live album, which has no real agenda except documenting a hot
night before a British college crowd. Roden's band is slick and proficient,
with guitarists Bruce Roberts and Steve Webb being the standouts, though
percussionist/saxophonist Ron Taylor gets lots of space, too. Roden and
company manage to show themselves as diverse performers and crowd-pullers
at the same time -- no mean feat when hits drove the engine of '70s mass-market
rock. The preeminent sound is slinky, laid-back pop-funk, as exemplified
on story songs like "The Ballad of Big Sally" or "Me and
Crystal Eye." Cut from similarly breezy cloth, "In a Circle"
is an example of how Lowell George might have sounded if he'd grown up
across the pond. The band stretches out on "Can't Get Next to You,"
which dips into the blues bag, but Roden's husky howl shines brightest
on the glistening title track (which also makes clever use of varying
internal rhymes). There's also a blistering boogie in "Jump Mama,"
where Roden pushes his throat in the manner of peers like Frankie Miller
and Maggie Bell. The album ends on an unconventional note with a brief,
piano-led reprise of "Blowin'." Unlike many live albums of this
period, there's no side-long solos to pad out an average evening -- just
a proficient band and their frontman throwing down before a packed house.
The story would change after Britain went punk, but there's no denying
what Roden could offer. This isn't an easy album to find, but worth the
hunt if you see it.
(by Ralph Heibutzki, All
Music Guide)
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