Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Top 23 Of '23

Man oh man. I am usually right on top of this list every year but really there wasn't much new music that I connected to in 2023, so I have been at a loss. Part of that was that I came across a dearth of albums worth writing about. But I also wasn't looking that hard (I've been focusing much of my musical attention to the Dead in recent years, and building an amazing collection of that, but that's for a different post).

That being said, of course there was good music to come in 2023, and quite a bit of it. It just took more effort to connect. There are a few albums on this list that stuck with me all year. There are some that I obsessed over for a week or two (or maybe just a day) and then forgot about. And then there are some, including some very big ones, that I am only now finally getting to. As usual, there is one Album Of The Year that sits at the top but the rest is presented in alphabetical order by artist (because I have no patience for ranking shit - it's either good or it's not). 

So, without further adieu, the album that most grabbed me in 2023 was...



Yes: Mirror To The Sky

Following up 2021's The Quest, the second Yes album to not feature Chris Squire (and the first since 1972 to not feature Alan White), takes everything up several notches, from the songwriting to the performance. Led and produced by Steve Howe, the current lineup of Yes manages to remain relevant by continuing to forge its own identity without trying to sound like the past eras of the band. Jay Schellen takes over nicely from Alan White and really jumpstarts the lineup, while Billy Sherwood continues to fit perfectly into the role carved out by his mentor, Chris Squire. Jon Davison is firmly settled into his role, on his fourth Yes album, and that shows. Keyboardist Geoff Downes takes a creative backseat here, but his playing gives this album its moody vibe, and Steve Howe is as inspired as ever. What makes this album most compelling is that it doesn't try too hard to "be" anything. The whole record comes off with such fluidity that it almost sounds effortless. Mirror To The Sky may share zero personnel (and very few musical traits) with 90125 but it shares the same soul, that distinct "Yesness", and that is evident in every note of this fantastic album. They are currently at work on a new one. I can't imagine it topping this but I can't wait to find out. In the meantime, I will spin this at least a hundred more times.


And now for the runners up:



The Alarm: Forwards

Eternal survivor Mike Peters keeps the Alarm flame alive on this (depending on how you count it) 21st album to bear this band's name. As usual, the material on this album has an extremely earnest, uplifting, anthemic quality to it. Peters is a fighter - he's beaten cancer three times - and it's that spirit that propels the songs on this album. There might not be anything as epic as "Newtown Jericho" or "68 Guns" on this album, but that same fighting spirit is here, especially on bangers like "The Returning", "Whatever", and the album-closing "X".



Bass Drum Of Death: Say I Won't

Aside from having one of the most awesome band names ever, Bass Drum Of Death has been kicking out killer, catchy, grungy garage-rock for about 15 years now. Their fifth album for Fat Possum finds this trio laying down the kind of jams that would have Guided By Voices, Sonic Youth, and the Strokes all watching their backs. "Find It" is one of the great songs of the year, as is "Say Your Prayers".  



Cherry Glazerr: I Don't Want You Anymore

On their fifth album, Clementine Creevy & crew push their sound ever darker and dirtier. Electro textures color these heavy, sinister moods, pushing their sound ever closer to Metric territory, but then we get a touch of funk, a disco flash, and still a heavy dose of that sort of '90s indie vibe that they've always excelled at. Tuscadero, Helium, Hole, and Tsunami factor heavily into their sound (if not, then what a coincidence) however, at no time does this ever seem derivative. This band has a very distinct sound and this album finds them growing into it quite well. 



The Church: The Hypnogogue

On their 25th full-length album, our favorite Aussie psychedelic shoegazers deliver an album that is both forward-thinking as well as one that pays homage to their previous four decades. Steve Kilbey might be the only one that remains from the band's heyday, but the soul of the band is alive and well, especially in songs like "Ascendence", the multi-sectioned "C'est La Vie", and the hypnotic groove of the title track. 




Cowboy Junkies: Such Ferocious Beauty

Whenever there's talk about enduring lineups, you always hear mention of U2, ZZ Top, The Tragically Hip, Sloan, maybe King's X, but you rarely see Cowboy Junkies mentioned yet their lineup has been unbroken since forming, 39 years ago. Sure, 3/4 of the band are sibings, but we see how those kinds of bands go, all the time. Instead, this quartet (plus Jeff Bird, who has played with them, as a jack of all trades, since 1987) has pushed ever forward, on their own path (and never sounding like any other band but itself), cranking out albums and maintaining a reputation as a hell of a live band (one of my fave bands to see). Their 21st album might not stray from the usual fare but it, like most Cowboy Junkies albums, is a perfect aural painting of everything this band is about. Margo Timmins' voice is just as moving and soothing as ever, and Michael's songs - born from an era of intense grief - will scrape ya raw. Every one of them, however, is fantastic (even a bit upbeat) and the band sounds great. 



Crown Lands: Fearless

Of all the bands that have claimed Rush as a influence, I don't think any of them ever hit the nail as squarely as Canadian duo, Crown Lands. While there are plenty of times where it seems as if the band just has a big bag of Rush tricks that they arbitrarily pull from, they manage to do so in ways so convincingly that the layman may be forgiven for confusing the two bands (the primary difference being, of course, that even Rush's proggiest moments are filled with hooks and are catchy as hell). And yet, through it all, Crown Lands manages to maintain its own identity. The 18min opener, "Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II" presents that perfect balance and while it might plod on a bit, it is an extremely accomplished piece of music. Three years, and three albums into their career, this band has a very bright future so long as they play it right.



dEUS: How To Replace It

Belgium's finest might not be the most prolific band - eight albums in thirty years - but when they do put one out, they really make it count. Their latest comes eleven years after the brilliant Following Sea and it finds Tom Barman and crew as unique as ever. Their music has always had a cinematic quality to it and that is absolutely the order of the day here. "Must Have Been New" and "1989" are two of the best songs I heard all year, though the entire album is vital listening. 



The Flower Kings: Look At You Now

This 18th album to bear the Flower Kings name is the fifth since Roine Stolt reactivated the band and it continues the band's focus on shorter songs. Gone are the 20-30min epics, and bonus discs stretched to the limit. While the songs are shorter, they are not pop songs. This band is still as prog as ever. Just with less of the twiddly parts. 



Mike Gordon: Flying Games

When he's not holding down the low end for Phish, Mike Gordon has maintained a prolific solo career, releasing nine albums (including three with Leo Kottke). On his latest release, Gordon continues to carve a unique path outside of his main gig. While his material doesn't always land when Phish plays it, in this context it works. Especially in the slick, electro aesthetic that informs these tracks. That is especially true with "Back In The Bubble" and "Casual Enlightenment", both of which have been butchered on the Phish stage, though "Mull" has enjoyed success and remains in regular rotation. Most of this material will never make that jump and that is some of the most intriguing. 





Guided By Voices: Welshpool Frillies / Tremblers & Goggles By Rank / Nowhere To Go But Up

The modern lineup of GbV is just a couple albums away from equaling the album output of the entire rest of the band's history, and they keep cranking them out. These bring the total to 18 albums to come from the Pollard/Gillard/Bare/Shue/March lineup of the band (since 2017) and while one may be forgiven for not being able to differentiate much between them (or, at least, many of them), each one is a pristine example of Guided by Voices, and the genius of Bob Pollard. If I were to pick one, I would say that Welshpool Frillies may stand higher than the other two, but that is not to diminish those two albums, both of which are totally solid. Because, even though the catalogue is unfathomably vast, every GbV release is a gift. (all three count as one entry)



Lydia Loveless: Nothing's Gonna Stand In My Way Again

On her sixth album, Lydia Loveless continues to prove that she is the real thing, what country music should be, even if she goes far beyond country, alt.country, whatever. Loveless has a way of delivering raw, personal emotions with one of the best voices out there, and one hell of a songbook. While it seems that some of her more abrasive sentiments are at least slightly reeled back, as Lydia settles into her mid-30s, these songs are still capable of punching your gut. She might be a big deal already but she deserves to be much bigger.



The Mother Hips: When We Disappear

San Francisco's rootsy Mother Hips deliver their twelfth album and one that is chocked full of solid songs that sit somewhere between Tom Petty, the Dead, and maybe the Black Crowes. While the band doesn't tread any particularly new ground here, you don't always have to do that. Sometimes you just need to slap down a set of great songs, with no ulterior motive. While this band has been around forever, they have never gotten as big as they should have. This album is worthy of changing that, so long as it gets heard. 



Motorpsycho: Yay!

One of the defining aspects of our favorite Norwegian outfit is that, over the past 35 years, they have never been afraid to change course abruptly. Some of those results were one-off anomalies while others would send the band down a whole new road. Which one this album is remains to be seen but, whatever the case, it is a fantastic offering from a band so late into their career. Yay! was born of the covid lockdown, and an inability to operate as a full band. So the material went into a lush, acoustic-based direction. Sitting somewhere between Laurel Canyon and English folk, these songs have every bit of the intricate character of their usual fare (whatever that might be at the time) but are also sparse and perfectly laid-back. Bonus points for the overt Pavement homage in the album art. 



The Nude Party: Rides On

On their fourth album, our favorite modern-day '60s pop group delivers a set that sounds precisely what you would get if you melted down the Velvet Underground, Rolling Stones, and the Faces, threw in a few random scraps, and made a new band out of it. Sometimes it really works, sometimes it's really weird, but every song has a character that, despite being from a band whose influences are so audible, is uniquely its own. 



Pallas: The Messenger

The eighth album to come from these neo-prog veterans comes nine years after the excellent Wearewhoweare, and finds the band sounding stronger than ever. Of all the bands to come from that '80s prog scene, Pallas seems to have remained closer to their original vision than the others and, yet, further under the radar. Marillion has gone all over the place and are superstars in their field. IQ and Pendragon both got really dark and dystopian. Solstice has changed singers too many times to be consistent, and Twelfth Night disappeared up their own arses. Pallas, on the other hand, has had a lot of turnover and gaps between releases but still very much true to its original vision. Their latest is the first to feature classic-era vocalist Alan Reed since 2005 and his is a very welcome return. Every track on this album is killer - "The Nine" is a particular standout, with its cold, mechanical rap-styled vocal, while the epics that bookend this album - "Sign Of The Times" and the thirteen-minute title track - show that this band is every bit as deserving of the accolades of its peers. Unfortunately this album is not available on Spotify so you will have to seek it out in some old fashioned way. It's worth it. 



Polymoon: Chrysalis

On their second album, Finnish psych-proggers Polymoon push the barriers ever further, with a set of tracks that perfectly mirror the saturated, multi-hued kudzu garden depicted on the sleeve. These tracks sway between quiet & spacy, mellow & jazzy, and molten, moog-laden grunge that'll stand yer hair on end. The entire record kicks ass, but it's the eight-minute "Instar" that is a particular highlight, as is the ferocious (and cleverly titled) closer, "Viper At The Gates Of Dawn". I would really like to see these guys play with King Buffalo. What a lineup that would be. I will certainly be paying close attention to this band.



Trevor Rabin: Rio

Following his 1995 exit from Yes, guitarist Trevor Rabin changed careers and became one of the most sought-after film composers this side of John Williams. He returned to the guitar for an instrumental album called Jacaranda, back in 2011, but it was not until now that we got to hear him sing again. And it's wonderful, sounds like he never left it behind. Much of this feels like the logical next step from Talk (his last album with Yes, in 1994) but you can hear the film-score influence, in some of the more dramatic areas, and there are a lot of very different moods explored as well. This album is definitely the proggiest of his solo career - and I swear, deep within the rich vocal harmonies, I can hear Jon Anderson and Chris Squire in there. Welcome back, Trev!



Olivia Rodrigo: Guts

On her second album, the former Disney-channel-star-turned-voice-of-the-angry-Zoomer proves that 2021's Sour was no fluke. This new set explores several different layers - lots of acoustic passages, and other dramatic bits, but mostly this record ROCKS. And I appreciate the shit out of that. In her songs, I hear CBGB, and I hear Seattle, but nothing about this seems retro in the slightest. Just a good idea, updated for a new generation. I will admit there are times when Rodrigo comes across as overly bratty and entitled, angry for anger's sake, that sort of thing, and sometimes that can be a bit much (especially coming from someone whose big break was High School Musical). But when she finds that perfect balance, she reveals herself to not only be the real thing but, really, a potential icon. 



The Rolling Stones: Hackney Diamonds

Some sixty years after they made their debut, the Rolling Stones delivered a brand new album. Just let that sink in. Charlie Watts had recently passed away and perhaps the ol' Glimmer Twins realized that it was time to shit or get off the pot. Fortunately, what they came up with is one of the finest Stones albums to come in decades. With only a few contemporary-sounding exceptions, the bulk of this album is the Stones being the STONES, with all the awesome that comes with it. The best part about this is that, while it sounds like classic Stones, it's no nostalgia trip, nor does this album try too hard. It doesn't have to. These are the kind of songs that drip effortlessly off the Jagger/Richards pen. I think the problem that plagued their last several albums was that they were trying to sound relevant (when, really, we all just wanted the Stones). But then they made Blue & Lonesome and reset the rules. Now they're just playing to their strengths, and killin' it.



Solstice: Light Up

Solstice may have only made seven albums in 43 years but they always take great care to make each one memorable. None more so than here, where we find the current lineup of the band really jelling. Jess Holland has really settled into her role, on her second album with the band, and may actually be the best vocalist Solstice ever had (sorry Emma). The interplay between Andy Glass' guitar & Jenny Newman's violin give this band its signature sound and it is in full force here. 



Teenage Fanclub: Nothing Lasts Forever

On their twelfth studio album, these Scottish rockers mellow out on a set of solid, strummy tunes that almost recall Meat Puppets in places. The harmonies of Norman Blake & Raymond McGinley are sweeter than ever, and their songs have a certain maturity to them, and a very laid-back, Laurel Canyon sort of vibe. Songs that you can chill out to. Nothing here that's terribly outlandish but that's okay. Sometimes the perfect album doesn't need to try so hard to present itself. Sometimes mellow is what you need. And "Self-Sedation" - that is a great song. 



Triptides: Starlight

After venturing into a more stripped-down, song-oriented direction for 2022's So Many Days, Triptides have ramped it back up and returned to their signature, trippy, '60s vibe that made them so great to begin with. Some of the tracks, such as the opening "Starlight Ritual" have a slightly funky groove, while most of this is devoted to some of the band's best swirly, reverb-laden psych-pop. 


Honorable mentions: 

Altin Gun: Ask

American Authors: Best Night Of My Life

The Bad Ends: The Power And The Glory

Brandy Clark: Brandy Clark

Chappequa Wrestling: Plus Ultra

CVC: Get Real

DeWolff: Love Death & In Between

Las Robertas: Love Is The Answer

Lucero: Should've Learned By Now

Miesha & the Spanks: Unconditional Love In Hi-Fi

The Minks: Creatures Of Culture

The Subways: Uncertain Joys

Tanukichan: Gizmo


So there we go, another year done gone. It had its ups and downs and, between the cracks, there was some pretty good music being made. The above will attest to that, and I know there are a lot of major releases that I have yet to get to (like the Peter Gabriel) so there are glaring omissions for sure. There always are, but now I'm looking forward to what 2024 has in store. 

Lastly, 2023 (just like every passing year) suffered a great deal of loss in the music world. We lost some big ones last year, some that will sting for a while (2024 is not shaping up to be much better - we already lost Melanie). Eternal thanks and RIP goes out to Wayne Shorter, Gordon Lightfoot, Jeff Beck, David Crosby, Tom Verlaine, Jimmy Buffett, Burt Bacharach, Vivian Trimble, Ahmad Jamal, Harry Belafonte, Tina Turner, George Winston, Astrud  Gilberto, Tony Bennett, Sinead O'Connor, Robbie Robertson, Gary Young, James Casey, Russell Bastiste, Carla Bley, Les McCann, Shane McGowan, and the great Jim Ladd. Music heaven just got a major upgrade.

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Bob Dylan: Bob Dylan (1962)

 


I totally forgot that I own this on vinyl. A savagely underrated debut, this. Sure, it may only include two original songs and it may not possess the iconic sense of poetry  that would soon follow, from his next album forward. But what this record does is two things: one, it introduces the character of “Bob Dylan” to the world. A primer, to get accustomed to Bob’s style, before he hits you with his own shit. Secondly, this album serves as a perfect exclamation point to his coffee house upbringing, and the hundreds of songs he cut his teeth on. If you have the bootlegs (official and otherwise) then you know what I mean.

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Charlie Gearheart (1939-2024)


 

RIP Charlie Gearheart. Papa Goose has flown. This band should have been a much bigger deal.

Focus: 3 (1972) & Ship Of Memories (1976)

 


I went digging through the dollar bin today, on a very specific quest that turned out to be fruitless, but I nabbed a couple Focus albums and that is a win. Aside from a few clips, here and there, I never really heard this band. I know who they are, and see their albums in the bin all the time, but did not know their music at all. So I finally pulled the trigger (can’t leave empty handed, right?) and snagged these two. What a wise choice. This band totally lives up to the legend. Of the two albums here, Focus 3 is the better and more vital, though the hodgepodge Ship Of Memories yields some pretty amazing moments as well. 

I’m pretty sure I saw other Focus albums today. I might have make a return trip…

Sunday, January 14, 2024

Locomotiv GT (1971)

 


The great vinyl purge continues. This one will be spared for now. Fun stuff.


Blind Willie McTell: The Legendary Library Of Congress Session (1940)


 I’m sticking a pin in this round of the great vinyl purge. I’ve easily put in 30 hours in the last two days (and there will be another round soon). So far, over 500 records have been pulled and will either be put up for sale or decommissioned. This is absolutely not one of them. These recordings are a treasure.

Pallas: The Sentinel (1984)


 As with my It Bites revelation last night, I’m finally giving this slab of 1984 neo-prog a go. I never could get past the sheen of the opening track, so I’d put it away. Pressing on, finally, it all came together quickly, and now I totally get it. Despite being produced by Eddy Offord, this does not have much in common with Yes or ELP. Instead, I hear shades of Van der Graaf, Rush, and Saga, among others. There is a rawness to the production that stands in contrast to other recordings from that era. But I do wonder how this would have sounded had they had a more fluid drummer; this dude’s playing is very stiff and it drags the material down at times (especially during the slow parts). The writing and arranging is very original, sometimes even clever, but it’s clear why bands like Marillion and IQ left them in the dust. That being said, this is a very cool record and I’m glad I stuck it out. I will spin this many more times and explore this band’s catalog further.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Bread: Manna (1971)


 Spinning a Bread album for the first time in my life. I’ve had this probably 35 years and now it’s on the chopping block. I don’t think I could name a single Bread song and I always assumed them to be really soft, and I guess they are, but there is a lot more character in their music than I assumed. And some of the tracks even rock. That said, I don’t see this passing muster. If I ever get a wild hair to hear this again, a copy of this can be found in every single Goodwill and dollar bin in the country.

Thelonious Monster: The Boldness Of Style (1987)


 The vinyl purge is going strong, with hundreds of albums hitting the pile. Every one of them meets the chopping block, and I can usually tell by a few random needle drops if the record will make the cut or not. Many get pulled (to be sold or repurposed)  but most get spared. This 1987 EP from the great Thelonious Monster is fortunately in the latter category. I need to dig deeper into this band. This shit is great.

The Hollies: What Goes Around (1983)


 The great purge continues and along  comes this 1983 reunion LP that is just so spectacularly, unabashedly abysmal that I cannot bear to let it go.

It Bites: The Big Lad In The Windmill (1986)


I have had this record for decades, and have dropped the needle on it many times. And I absolutely hated it every single time. Couldn’t even get through the first song. This was a shoe-in for the purge pile, surely. 

But, for some reason, tonight this album made sense. Perhaps it was the dozens of mid-‘80s productions I spent all day sampling, or maybe it’s because I finally listened past the first song. This is a very weird band, and a hard one to pin down. The songs and arrangements are very shiny and mainstream-sounding, very much a product of its time. Sometimes it’s a bit too much, and that’s what always drove me away. But upon closer examination, the arrangements and song structures are totally bonkers. Beats are dropped randomly, unrelated interludes stitched into the middle-eights. Sometimes they get super cheesy but then they flip the switch and get waaaay out there and I dig that kind of dichotomy. 

While I could never get into this album before, or this era of the band, I did get really into the John Mitchell version of It Bites, especially the last album, Map Of The Past. I just about wore my copy out and am bummed that they never made another one. 

It is still unclear as to my true feelings about this album but maybe repeat listening will push the meter further toward  “dig”.

Neil Diamond: Just For You (1967)


 There are a lot of Neil Diamond albums that have become victims of the purge, but not this one. Featuring the scribe’s original versions of such classics as “Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon”, “Red Red Wine”, “I’m A Believer”, “Solitary Man”, “Cherry Cherry”, and several others, this one is a keeper.

Friday, January 12, 2024

Smith: A Group Called Smith (1969)


This dollar bin staple is one of those records that winds up in pretty much every record collection but probably never gets spun. I’m working on thinning the herd, however, so it’s up to the chopping block for the debut Smith album from 1969. I’ve had this record forever but I may only be hearing it for the first time now. I definitely don’t recall them sounding like this. Very cool. Basically, it seems, Smith was kinda like a west coast Vanilla Fudge, in that they played radically reworked covers of well known songs, but did them in a style that was identifiably their own. I dig this a lot. 

Verdict: spared!

Thursday, January 11, 2024

Triumph: Surveillance (1987)


 Rik Emmett’s time in Triumph came to an end following the tour for this, the band’s ninth studio album. This record follows the songwriting formula from The Sport Of Kings, with additional writers credited on about half of the songs, but this album feels heavier and more Triumph-like. Lots of cool riffs on this record, and the production is considerably less over-the-top. The band sounds incredibly inspired on much of this album. Especially Rik Emmett who comes charging out of the gate with the fiery “Never Say Never”, and Gil Moore, whose rockin’ “Headed For Nowhere” sees Rik Emmett go head-to-headstock with the great Steve Morse. 

While Gil Moore got in a couple good ones, Rik Emmett’s songs dominate this album more than ever before (personally, I prefer it that way) and I’m sure that seeped into the bad blood that was soon to kill the band. Interestingly, his obligatory solo guitar solo spot was replaced by two fleshed-out instrumentals, both of which serve as lead-ins to other songs. 

While this album features far less synth than the last one, there is still a fair bit (a lot less than one would expect for a 1987 release). Still, most of this album escapes the pitfalls that many 1987 productions suffer from. It still has that brightness (and who can say no to reverb?) but it helps that the material is far less poppy this time out. 

Rik Emmett left the band following this album’s tour. Excuses range from creative differences to disagreements about the distribution of song credits.  Whatever the case, it was a bummer (and still is), but he  went on to have a solo career that has seen a bit of success over the years (enough so that he’s still at it). 

Meanwhile, Triumph bought time by issuing a greatest hits set and then continuing on with current Bon Jovi guitarist Phil X taking Rik Emmett’s (instrumental) spot. In late 1992 they put out an album called Edge Of Excess that was nothing but Gil Moore songs and a vibe that was far past its expiry date (that album does not exist on vinyl so our journey ends here but I’m currently streaming it). Perhaps if they had not waited four years to put out an album it would have gotten some attention. Or maybe if they had stuck it out and made at least one more album it would have legitimized this lineup - this instead exists in that same universe as Calling All Stations & the ninth season of Scrubs. 

Anyway, that was a fun journey back to my formative years.  All this time, I never mentioned bassist Mike Levine. He doesn’t sing but he is the glue that held this trio together, he spent a lot of time in the producer’s chair, and he was a killer low-end. It’s a shame this band couldn’t keep it together (a couple brief reunions and the documentary and that’s it).

Triumph: The Sport Of Kings (1986)


 Something happened in the music industry in the mid-80s - record labels started scoring hits by pairing up veteran (original) bands with industry songwriters. It worked for Heart, Starship, Cheap Trick, and so many others. So why not Triumph? 

Filling the producer’s chair was Mike Clink, in his very first gig at the helm (and only two projects away from producing Appetite For Destruction). While Clink relied on GnR’s rawness for that album, this one saw him delivering a very polished product, drenched in synthesizers, gated snares, and big hooks. Outside songwriters were brought in to assist with several of the numbers, and their influence informed the rest of the songs on the album. 

For a pop album, it’s actually quite good - Rik Emmett’s “Somebody’s Out There” should have been a huge hit (it actually was the band’s biggest hit, but it should have been much bigger). Most of Gil Moore’s tracks follow his typical hard rock formula, with a fair bit of refinement (and the occasional power ballad), while most of Rik Emmett’s offerings are very mainstream (aside from the epic “Play With The Fire” which is just fucking astounding). Rik’s songs dominate the album - and of course he gets in a solo spot, the ethereal bolero, “Embrujo” - but apparently the cracks were in the wall already. He would last one more album with the band. 

This album (on cassette) was one of the first things I ever heard from Triumph and I honestly can’t say how many times I’ve heard it since, if ever. This album is far better than I remembered but it is still a swift beginning to a prolonged end.

Triumph: Stages (1985)


 Following the tour for 1984’s Thunder Seven, Triumph finally issued a live album. This set, compiled from several different tours, more or less plays as a “greatest hits” and most of them are here. These performances, laid out without the benefit of extra studio layers, reveals Triumph to be one hell of a live band. 

When I was in high school this was my go-to tape to slap into the Walkman while I mowed the lawn. If the mower didn’t break, or there were no distractions, it would take exactly the time of this album to get that chore done. I would daydream of playing big shows and wonder why Triumph weren’t a bigger band, and that made it bearable (maybe even fun). Even after my musical tastes moved far away from this sort of thing, I still would rock out to Stages every time. And, 35 years later, it still kicks ass. 

This set concludes, as they often do, with two new studio tracks - “Mind Games” and “Empty Inside”. These reveal a shift in direction that included (in the case of “Mind Games”) multiple songwriters, lots of keyboards, and a sound that was a bit too close to all the other radio bands of the time. There is, however, a lot of Pink Floyd in Rik Emmett’s “Empty Inside”, which is very cool (but also very un-Triumphlike). These changes would become more apparent on 1986’s The Sport Of Kings (and conclude the following year on Surveillance”). While those albums had plenty of highlights, and their own charm, this is the point where the band’s classic era concludes which makes Stages the perfect summation of Triumph’s career.

Triumph: Thunder Seven (1984)


 Moving to MCA for album #7, Triumph teamed up with legendary producer Eddie Kramer to come up with one of the most 1984ish hard rock albums ever. There is a quasi-concept going on, based on the concept of time, but that only really exists within a cluster of songs toward the middle of the album. 

Thunder Seven was my first experience with Triumph, purchased out of curiosity from a cutout bin at Camelot with I was 14 years old, and so I always hold this one dear. Fortunately it really is one of their best, so not a bad one to start on. 

Gil Moore leaves behind the politics on the last album and instead offers up two of his best songs ever - “Spellbound” and “Follow Your Heart” (which opens and closes side one, respectively) and he contributes to the “time” theme with side two’s “Killing Time”, which he sings as a duet with with Rik Emmett. 

Speaking of whom, Rik continues his streak of killer contributions with the Zeppified Def Lep vibe of “Rock Out, Roll On” to the explosive “Time Goes By”, the poetic “Stranger In A Strange Land”, and the balls-out Zeppelin groove of “Cool Down” (featuring a killer dobro break) Rik also gets in his solo guitar track here and this one - “Midsummer’s Daydream” - is by far his best. 

This would be the last album that Triumph would make without the use of co-writers and outside songwriters and, in that regard, they really went out with a bang.

Triumph: Never Surrender (1982)


 Following the success of 1981’s Allied Forces, Triumph pushed on, and grew immensely in the two years, leading up to Never Surrender. They still sounded like themselves, but it all went up a notch. Part of that was in having a longer gap between albums, and part of that was the band working with an outside producer for the first time. The edges were refined and there were new and deeper layers to the songs and the recordings. 

One of the most significant developments is in Gil Moore’s songwriting. Up to this point, pretty much every one of his songs was about being in a rock & roll band, playing music and partying (he was the drummer, after all) and now all of a sudden he’s gotten deep (not exclusively, however; see “When The Lights Go Down”). Songs like “Battle Cry” (which, if you lowered it by two steps, might sound like King’s X) and the opening “Too Much Thinking” feature political and philosophical themes - thinkin’ man’s music. They wear it well. 

As usual, Rik Emmett’s songs are the ones that grab me the most and this album features two of his most classic - “A World Of Fantasy” and the wicked title track with its angular rhythms and raging middle jam. Of course there is a solo guitar piece - this one is called “A Minor Etude” and is just that. It comes and goes in a flash. He offers up a couple of more songy-type songs, with “All The Way” and “The Writing’s On The Wall”, both of which are full of lyrical cliches but are fun, catchy tunes. 

Side two opens and closes with an instrumental Overture and Epilogue that are both cool but kinda give the impression that Triumph wanted to appear smarter than they actually were (it’s part of their charm - no one is listening to Triumph to learn anything). Fortunately this band had the chops (and the hooks) to make you forget about its half-baked pretensions.  Once you do that, you’re in for a hell of a ride.

Triumph: Allied Forces (1981)


 Triumph’s fifth album was probably their biggest dent into the US market, thanks to Rik Emmett’s “Fight The Good Fight” and “Magic Power”, both of which were sizable hits for the band. As usual, the album is divided by Emmett’s earnest, multi-layered anthems and Gil Moore’s stupid, good-time, Camaro-rock songs. “Fool For Your Love” and “Hot Time (in this city tonight)” (which is sung by Emmett but is clearly written by Moore) come across exactly as you would expect songs of those titles to sound. The title track totally rocks but is yet another song about rock & roll with some of the most juvenile lyrics ever sung into a mic. As usual, Rik Emmett gets a solo spot with “Petite Etude” and, as usual, it’s a really pretty, really accomplished piece of classical guitar music that has no place on a band album. Fortunately he makes up for it elsewhere, in the aforementioned singles as well as the complex “Ordinary Man”, which is one of the highlights of Emmett’s entire catalogue. 

As this band had nine albums, and this was the 5th, it actually lines up well that Allied Forces is the apex of Triumph’s career. While they still had some great work ahead of them, nonetheless it was downhill from here, if not artistically then at least commercially.

Triumph: Progressions Of Power (1980)


 Triumph’s fourth album saw them trade off the pretensions of Just A Game for a more streamlined, hard-rock approach (except for the sleeve - that’s prog af). Gil Moore leads the charge on this one, penning and singing the majority of songs on this album while Rik Emmett delivers some very unconventional material (“Take My Heart” was the closest to “soft rock” this band ever got) and, of course, his customary solo guitar piece (“Fingertalkin”).  After dominating Just A Game it’s only fair for Rik to cede the controls to Gil this time, even if that meant dumbing it down a bit. 

As usual, Rik Emmett’s songs are complex and interesting while Gil Moore sings about shit like partying, rebellion, chicks, and being in a band. I know it sounds like I’m being a dick about it but the thing is, that pairing worked. Gil kept Triumph from getting too pretentious while Rik kept them from being too lowbrow.  

While this is by far not my favorite Triumph album, that’s not to say it’s a bad record. This jam totally rocks. Very hard at some points. It’s just not necessarily their most memorable.

Triumph: Just A Game (1979)


 For their first album specifically recorded for RCA, Triumph delivered a concept album about - you guessed it - a rock & roll band on the road and all the pitfalls and hurdles that come with it. The album sleeve even features a board game about being a band on the road (oh the number of stoned hours spent playing that game back in the day 😂). 

This album saw the band’s songwriting jump several levels and, in “Hold On” and “Lay It On The Line”, Triumph got two of its biggest and most enduring hits (there is no classic rock station in all of Canada that does not play both of those songs at least once a day). The epic title track, which kicks off side two, is one of Rik Emmett’s greatest works (and my favorite Triumph song ever), and his “Suitcase Blues”, which closes out the album, sums up the album’s theme perfectly. As with most of their albums, he gets in a solo track and here we have “Fantasy Serenade”. As always, it is an absolutely lovely, classically-styled guitar piece that shows him off to be the master guitarist that he is. However, as is mostly the case, it is totally unnecessary and disrupts the flow of what is otherwise a really solid band project (I’ll shut up now). 

Gil Moore’s voice is less represented on this album but when it does appear, he really makes the most of it. The opening “Movin’ On” is a pretty killer way to kick things off but it’s the dark, dynamic swing of “Young Enough To Cry” that is one of his greatest vocal performances. However, he is also responsible for “American Girls”, which closes out side one and is just insipid (it has a killer singalong chorus but it could have been written by a ten year old….that happened sometimes with Gil’s songs). 

Triumph took a detour away from the concepts after this album (for a while at least), which is just as well. This album will always be my favorite.



Triumph: Rock & Roll Machine (1978)


 When Triumph signed to RCA for worldwide distribution, the best tracks from their first two albums were compiled into a new album which, while retaining the title of their second album, ultimately served as their “debut”, and was a much better album than either. 

The opening one-two punch of “Takes Time” and “Bringing It On Home” is retained from the original Rock & Roll Machine, and is followed by the band’s straightforward cover of “Rocky Mountain Way”, which originally appeared on side two. The two-part “Street Fighter / Street Fighter Reprise” is subbed in from their first album, to close out side one (as it did there). 

The debut album is further represented on side two, which kicks off with that album’s opening track, “24 Hours A Day” and is followed by its closing track, the epic “Blinding Light Show / Moonchild”, before “Rock & Roll Machine” itself puts a blistering exclamation point on this all-killer-no-filler affair. 

Unless you were a ground-floor Canadian fan, this is how you first heard Triumph’s earliest music (most likely via the ‘80s reissue with its garish sleeve) and it was one hell of an introduction to this band. 

But this was only the beginning.

Triumph: Rock & Roll Machine (1977)


 Triumph’s second album, from 1977, finds the band taking baby steps forward, and a couple of giant leaps sideways. As with the first album, much of this is basic late ‘70s hard rock, but the songs show a lot of growth.  Such as the acoustic/electric dichotomy in “Bringing It On Home”, and the epic title track, replete with a Rik Emmett solo breakdown that owes more than just a simple nod to Jimmy Page. 

There is a fair bit of pretension on this album, such the multiple-movement song suites “The City” and “New York City Streets, both of which give the illusion that the band was far deeper than they were. However, those proggish leanings are curious and quite interesting (and they do pull it off even if they never quite see it through). 

The following year Triumph signed to RCA in the US and this album was reconfigured, with a new sleeve and a modified tracklist - the two aforementioned epics were given the boot, along with a pedestrian bar-band number called “Little Texas Shaker”, and they were replaced with the three best songs from the debut album - “24 Hours A Day”, “Street Fighter”, and “Blinding Light Show / Moonchild”. While this kind of bastardization I usually frown upon, it honestly makes for a better “debut” album. 

That having been said, I’m coming at this  having known the rest of this band’s catalog for more than 35 years but only now hearing this version of Rock & Roll Machine, and the songs they left behind, for the very first time. I really like those songs a lot but it’s totally understandable why they were left behind and I’m actually glad that it took until now to hear them because it’s kinda like a cool bonus. “The City”, in particular, is a monster.

Triumph: Triumph (1976)


 Out of all the so-called “Baby Rush” bands that came out of Ontario in the late ‘70s, none were more successful (commercially, at least) than Triumph. Sure, Max Webster was huge in Canada (and even recorded with Rush), but not really anywhere else. FM created probably the most interesting music of them all, and Saga totally went the distance with two dozen incredible albums (and are still at it). But Triumph had the hits, and a fair bit of character. Their songs were kinda dumb so they appealed to fans of April Wine (lots of songs about rock & roll, partying, chicks), but they were a trio with musical chops and a singer with a high voice (guitarist Rik Emmett), so the Rush fans dug ‘em too, while their other singer (drummer Gil Moore) had a very commercial rock voice that brought a certain accessibility to the band (ironic, however, that just about every one of the band’s most enduring songs were sung by Emmett).  

Triumph’s self-titled debut arrived in 1976 to very little fanfare but it set the stage for a career that would span over a decade and yield ten albums. Much of the album is pedestrian hard rock but then the album ends with the epic, Floyd-esque “Blinding Light Show / Moonchild”, which would go on to be a centerpiece of the band’s live performances for most of their run. 

In 1978, highlights from this and Triumph’s second album, Rock & Roll Machine, were compiled into an album (also, confusingly,  titled Rock & Roll Machine) to introduce Triumph to the US market. That is where most fans first heard “24 Hours A Day”, the two-part “Street Fighter”, and the aforementioned “Blinding Light Show / Moonchild”, but this album is where those songs were first introduced (plus you get to hear Rik Emmett’s “Be My Lover” and that is a kickass tune).