Hymn for the Dudes - Mott the Hoople, Allen, Verden
Honaloochie Boogie
Violence
Drivin' Sister
Ballad of Mott the Hoople (26th March 1972, Zürich) - Mott the Hoople, Allen, Verden
I'm a Cadillac/El Camino Dolo Roso - Mott the Hoople, Ralphs, Mick
I Wish I Was Your Mother
The glam-rock makeover of the '70s produced a handful of masterpieces, topped by the likes of Bowie's Ziggy Stardust, the New York Dolls' two LPs, and this peak-performance effort by Mott the Hoople. The group's 1973 follo... more »w-up to their 1972 breakthrough, All the Young Dudes, bursts out of the gate with the infectious "All the Way to Memphis," one of a handful of great rockers from the Hereford, England, quintet. But frontman Ian Hunter--he of the charmingly limp Dylan-esque sneer ("I felt soooo ashamed!")--wears his heart all over his shimmering sleeve on the likes of "Hymn for the Dudes," "Ballad of Mott the Hoople," and, especially, the truly poignant "I Wish I Was Your Mother." --Steven Stolder« less
The glam-rock makeover of the '70s produced a handful of masterpieces, topped by the likes of Bowie's Ziggy Stardust, the New York Dolls' two LPs, and this peak-performance effort by Mott the Hoople. The group's 1973 follow-up to their 1972 breakthrough, All the Young Dudes, bursts out of the gate with the infectious "All the Way to Memphis," one of a handful of great rockers from the Hereford, England, quintet. But frontman Ian Hunter--he of the charmingly limp Dylan-esque sneer ("I felt soooo ashamed!")--wears his heart all over his shimmering sleeve on the likes of "Hymn for the Dudes," "Ballad of Mott the Hoople," and, especially, the truly poignant "I Wish I Was Your Mother." --Steven Stolder
"This is got to be one of the greatest albums of all time!
The songwriting, production, playing everything. Too bad
it was Mick Ralph's last album. I first heard this from
my older brother and I was just blown away. Drivin'
Sister is just a rocking classic. All the way to Memphis
should be played on every classic rock station. Also
Honolochi Boogie should've been a mega hit. If if was
released today, it would be considered genius. It's so
ashame Mott was overlooked. One of my favorites is the
Mick Ralph's I'm a Cadillac. awesome. If your buying a
Mott album for the first time, this is the one.
"
A Classic Rock-n-Roll album
Tracy M. Wood | Chesterfield, VA USA | 01/27/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Through the years I have listened to hundreds of albums and CD's. Most are not so good. Some are great. A few are brilliant. Then there is this album, "Mott", by Mott the Hoople. This is #1, the best of the very best, my favorite all time album. Every note is perfect, every lyric is perfect. There are no flaws anywhere on this album. It has a perfect mixture of thundering rock songs, beautiful ballads, silly foot tapping songs, songs of love, songs of despair, songs of hope. Most of the lyrics are written by one of the greatest rock composers ever, Ian Hunter. Guy's a genius. He's the perfect foil for the more bluesy guitarist Mick Ralphs. Mott was never afraid to think outside the box on this record.Bassist Overend Watts, drummer Dale (Buffin) Griffin and keyboardist Verfen Allen are top notch musicians that round out the band. Sorry "Stairway to Heaven" and "Freebird" fans, the rollicking "All The Way From Memphis" is THE greatest rock-n-roll song ever written. To appreciate this song however, one must know and understand the history of Mott the Hoople. Buy Ian Hunter's book (diary)"Reflections of a Rock Star", and Mott's music and lyrics will make more sense. Also take the time to buy 2 of Mott's previous albums, "All the Young Dudes" and "Brain Capers".You just can't go wrong. Finally, check out Ian Hunter's solo albums. Trust me!
Bill Wood"
The grease paint still sticks to my face...
Michael Goglia | Dallas, Texas | 09/21/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"so what the hell, I can't erase,
the rock and roll feeling from my mind."
What a follow up
THE Uncle Todd | Cleveland | 12/27/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Bowie saves band on verge of breakup
Mott takes 'Dudes' instead of 'Suffragette City'
History
Songs and production, my keys to a great LP (yea I'm old)
This is an 'every instrument' in your face LP. To me this is the new Wall Of Sound. Guitars, drums, bass, vocals and everything else is up loud and mixed appropriately.
This is enhanced by the songs. At my funeral, I want Hymn for the Dudes to be played. Poigniant lyrics and a melody to die for (no pun). As the song quiets down, the vocals get more pronounced, and the the instrumental break/guitar comes in even louder.....Ian and the boys knew what they were doing.
'Ballad of' recounts Ian take on the band while becoming huge.
'..Cadillac' falls into the same vein as 'Ready For Love... on the ATYD LP. 'Memphis, Honaloochie, Drivin' Sister, and Violence' just straight out rock.
It's no wonder that most seasoned critics rank this LP highly in the Best Of All Time catagory.
A Keeper"
Mott's Zenith
Original Mixed Up-Kid | New York United States | 07/24/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"At this point in their life Mott acheived some success with Bowie's All The Young Dudes and went further than the glam-rock posturing of the album with this masterpiece.Ironing out the rough edges of All The Yound Dudes with this well produced sounding batch of songs Mott never strayed from their roots of hard melodic rock and folk ballads with strings that reach a crescendo of guitar fused power. Ian Hunter sneers like a British Dylan and the energy of rockers like Little Richard the temperment of the Velvet Underground,hippie leanings of folkies like Melanie never leaves their music.
Mott's songs remain winners to this day and takes the All The Young Dudes sound further by giving a polish to that rougher sounding diamond that was All The Young Dudes.
Both are essential with the followup The Hoople cd a great listen of great songs but lacks the cohesive feel of Mott and is somehow a paler imitation of Mott, nonetheless all 3 cd's are wonderful."