Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Alice Cooper: Easy Action


ALICE COOPER: EASY ACTION (1970)

1) Mr. And Misdemeanor; 2) Shoe Salesman; 3) Still No Air; 4) Below Your Means; 5) Return Of The Spiders; 6) Laughing At Me; 7) Refrigerator Heaven; 8) Beautiful Flyaway; 9) Lay Down And Die, Goodbye.

A transitional record. You can already witness traces of the classic Alice Cooper sound here, but it is still trying to break through the wall — a wall that, in all fairness, need not ever have existed if the band had been originally brought into the studio by someone other than the original Mother of Invention. Still, history knows no subjunctive, and I dare say further Coop records wouldn't have been half as interesting if not for the Zappa influence.

Actually, Zappa was no longer involved at all during the sessions for Easy Action, an album pro­duced by Neil Young's producer David Briggs who, it has been said by Neal Smith, hated the band and their sound, but still gave it a much more polished, and also heavier, sheen than Zappa did not give Pretties For You. Technically, this is already "hard rock", although still bordering on noise and avantgarde most of the time. The only number that "rocks" in the conventional sense of the word is 'Return Of The Spiders' — the Spiders was one of the band's original names, so it's quite natural that a song thus entitled should plunge us into straightforward garage fervor — but it has no memorable melody to speak of, just kick-ass guitar 'n' drums.

Conventional "songs" include 'Mr. And Misdemeanor', a mid-tempo vaudeville number with dis­torted guitars replacing barroom pianos; 'Shoe Salesman', a slight nod to Brit-pop and its "little man" values, a particularly bizarre direction for the Coops that they never pursued again; and the Michael Bruce-sung piano ballad 'Beautiful Flyaway', a charming McCartney-style ditty that con­tains the album's most memorable moments.

In between we meet various uninteresting semi-musical links, as well as lengthier freakouts: 'Be­low Your Means' is a depressing guitar-and-organ blues jam, while 'Lay Down And Die, Good­bye' is essentially a long cluster of atonality that serves no serious purpose after we have already learned what atonality is with a little help on behalf of everybody from Stockhausen to Zappa. (And it is certainly far less evocative in terms of pure psychedelia than Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd).

It is always ego-pleasing to state, with authority, that you know better than popular opinion, but there really, really is no point in defending Alice Cooper's first two albums other than out of pure historical interest — for instance, some of the aimless jamming and noisemaking would, only a year later, be magically transformed into the visionary instrumental style on Killer, and to wit­ness this change is like observing accelerated cell mutation under a microscope, but whether it can also give one aesthetic pleasure is surely a question of much debate. 'Mr. And Misdemeanor' and 'Beautiful Flyaway' are two solid numbers that would have not been out of place on any of their classic records, and it is sad that the latter did not even make it onto the Life And Crimes Of Alice Cooper retrospective; the rest may be heard once and then forever held in peace, so here is another assured thumbs down for all parties concerned.

1 comment:

  1. " I dare say further Coop records wouldn't have been half as interesting if not for the Zappa influence."
    Yes, yes, and yes. This is a very keen observation. I think this stage in the band's history is the reason that their 70s output is so entertaining and timeless, they learned to make untrival melodies and even integrate experimentation. You can even heard the influence of these experiments in Killer, DaDa, and Love It To Death. I totally agree with you here George.

    "In between we meet various uninteresting semi-musical links, as well as lengthier freakouts"
    I think the golden age could have began with this album if only the band had a few more ideas. I kind of feel that their debut should have been in 1970, combining the best songs of Easy Action and Pretties For You into a minor classic. Alas, we have these two very unimaginative jams. :(

    "there really, really is no point in defending Alice Cooper's first two albums other than out of pure historical interest "
    I really disagree here. Once again, these records not GREAT as Alice Cooper's career from 1971-1983 would be, but many of the songs are really, really good. I find it strange that you wouldn't at least refrain from the thumbs down, there are enough high points to justify a decent rating (personally, a 9/15 is what you should have given both Pretties and Action, but it is your opinion after all)!

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