My Secret Head-Banging Shame

The second concert I ever went to was Thin Lizzy at the Hammersmith Odeon in what I guess must have been late 1978 because their current album was "Live & Dangerous" (which is the one I would tell anyone to buy if they only wanted one Thin Lizzy album) and Gary Moore was occupying the lead guitarist slot. It remains the only "hard rock" gig I've ever been too and I remember being startled at how loud it was – it made my jaw hurt – but the mate I went with had seen Motorhead and Ted Nugent at the same venue and thought it was nothing ("you think this is loud? Ha!") By that time I was well aware that heavy metal was about as duff and retrograde as you could get in the late 70s (and the terrible clothes!) and was faintly amused to find myself getting caught up in the atmosphere, excitedly pumping my fist in the air and vigorously nodding my head along with all the other greasy long-hairs in the audience. Even today, when I play heavier Thin Lizzy tracks like "The Rocker" I can't stop myself from playing a little air guitar with my fingers while nodding my head and pulling the eyes-closed, white-man-overbite expression. Oh, the shame.
But trendy or not, Lizzy were yards better than your average hard rock outfit with a lead singer who oozed charisma and Irish charm and wrote romantic, lyrical songs about vagabonds, cowboys and bikers heavily influenced by Van Morrison and Bruce Springsteen. It's usually cringe-inducing when hard rockers get all soppy and sing ballads, wailing over crashing power chords about how their sweet lovin' woman left them, but "Still In Love With You" is a beauty in any genre, especially in this live version. A sad torch song as deep as the deepest Southern Soul ballad which Phil Lynott sings delicately without a hint of hard rock chest-thumping. The blazing twin guitar solos by Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham are pretty wonderful too and I usually hate guitar solos.
Though this was credited to Lynott apparently the song was mostly written by Gary Moore when he had a short spell with the group in the early 70s. Nice one Gary, though at the gig I had a feeling Phil didn't appreciate you trying to hog the spotlight by showing off with the solos a bit too much.
Download: Still In Love With You - Thin Lizzy (mp3)
Buy: "Live and Dangerous" (album)
8 Comments:
That's always been Gary's problem, hasnt it? My first big gig, Thin Lizzy, Live And Dangerous tour, Belle Vue, Manchester, 18.6.76. The Lynott/Gorham/Robertson/Downey line up, loved it, love them still (at least in that incarnation) and I'm no Rocker. Phil introduced "a friend of mine from Dublin" for the encore - "Who's this prat?" we thought, as a gangly stick insect bounded on and did 'Route 66' with Lizzy (presumably the only song they all knew). Twas Bob Geldof...
'don't believe a word' blasts out of our car cassette in all it's rock'n'soul wonder everytime we're zooming down motorways.
you can't half pick 'em!
x
The gig I was at Steve Jones and Paul Cook from The Pistols came on at the end dressed as Father Xmas and they did that Greedies single "A Merry Jingle"
I'm loving this blog! I've long been an anglophile, having stumbled upon my first episode of Monty Python on PBS at a fairly young age, so thank you! And now that you're giving props to Thin Lizzy (I like the Irish as well) you've cemented my admiration. I only wish I could someday visit! But I'm poor...sniff! I do have my own blog, however...
http://zatso23.blogspot.com/
Thanks again!
What's this I hear about 'shame' ... 'trendy' ... with a geeky head's down all about Thin Lizzy? Rise up Squire!
In the day, I thought they were great. But, your song selection - just blows me away! Fantastic choice that shows everyone another side of "The Boy's Are Back In Town".
Thoroughly enjoy your site and eagerly look forward to your offerings.
Hey - you actually stole a future post from me. I was going to highlight this along with 'Showdown'.
Lizzy were always cool! Even in the punk days they were the most 'allright' of the rock bands along with Motorhead. i saw them way back when Whiskey in the jar came out and they were great. I would still kill for a perspex bass!
the lyrics to The Rocker are the best tongue in cheek biker fantasy macho bit of nonsense ever.
nice one.
Jon
I used to downright worship Thin Lizzy! Phil Lynott was such a hero.
http://monkeybastard.blog.com
Love your comments about Thin Lizzy, they are a truly underrated proto-heavy metal rock band from an era that had a lot of great music. Its funny that in 2008 so many people admit to rockin' out to these guys, although at the same time it makes total sense. Epic stuff.
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