| Although the chaotic sessions that spawned this album have passed into 
        rock & roll legend and the recording's very genesis (as an out-of-court 
        settlement between John Lennon and an aggrieved publisher) has often caused 
        it to be slighted by many of the singer's biographers, Rock 'n' Roll, 
        in fact, stands as a peak in his post-Imagine catalog: an album that catches 
        him with nothing to prove and no need to try. Lennon could, after all, 
        sing old rock & roll numbers with his mouth closed; he spent his entire 
        career relaxing with off-the-cuff blasts through the music with which 
        he grew up, and Rock 'n' Roll emerges the sound of him doing precisely 
        that. Four songs survive from the fractious sessions with producer Phil 
        Spector in late 1973 that ignited the album, and listeners to any of the 
        posthumous compilations that also draw from those archives will know that 
        the best tracks were left on the shelf  "Be My Baby" and 
        "Angel Baby" among them. But a gorgeous run through Lloyd Price's 
        "Just Because" wraps up the album in fine style, while a trip 
        through "You Can't Catch Me" contrarily captures a playful side 
        that Lennon rarely revealed on vinyl. The remainder of the album was cut 
        a year later with Lennon alone at the helm, and the mood remains buoyant. 
        It might not, on first glance, seem essential to hear him running through 
        nuggets like "Be Bop A Lula," "Peggy Sue," and "Bring 
        It on Home to Me," but, again, Lennon has seldom sounded so gleeful 
        as he does on these numbers, while the absence of the Spector trademark 
        Wall-of-Sound production is scarcely noticeable  as the object of 
        one of Lennon's own productions, David Peel once pointed out, "John 
        had the Wall of Sound down perfectly himself." Released in an age 
        when both David Bowie and Bryan Ferry had already tracked back to musical 
        times-gone-by (Pin-Ups and These Foolish Things, respectively), Rock 'n' 
        Roll received short shrift from contemporary critics. As time passed, 
        however, it has grown in stature, whereas those other albums have merely 
        held their own. Today, Rock 'n' Roll sounds fresher than the rock & 
        roll that inspired it in the first place. Imagine that.  (by Dave Thompson, All 
        Music Guide) |