Label: Warner Bros. Records (Japan), WPCR 13841
Style: Rock, R&B
Country: London, England
Time: 36:17
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 251 Mb
Well, now this doesn’t make any sense at all. Rod Stewart has three
solo albums out, all of them excellent. With the release of A Nod Is As
Good As A Wink … the Faces, with Stewart singing lead, have three albums
out, each of them duller than the one that preceded it, and with the
first one having been none too great to begin with. It is apparent that
when Stewart takes charge of his music he elevates the musicianship of
everyone around him; when he submerges himself in the artistic group
democracy of this particular band he only succeeds in bringing himself
down to the level of the group’s lowest common denominator. Thus, at the
same time he is riding the success of an intensely personal and
beautifully crafted solo album, Every Picture Tells A Story, he
participates in the making of another almost completely devoid of
personality, character, depth, or vision.
The Faces do not, as some have recently alleged, play badly. They are more than competent, especially at creating a mid-Sixties Rolling Stones-styled groove, as their excellent version of "Memphis" proves. But like most rockers who just barely miss their mark, they can’t sustain ideas, so their music tends to be filled with bits and pieces - a bright 30 seconds there, an exciting riff here - and then back into a basic track that is usually melodically undistinguished, unimaginatively arranged, and sounds as much of a bore to listen to as it must have been to record.
"Miss Judy’s Farm" starts off strong enough with some Ron Wood guitar and then the whole band riffing behind him. But as soon as the vocal commences, the song emerges as the dog that it is, and what started off sounding funky now just sounds like rock band hacking. "Stay With Me" is a better example of a riff song, but isn’t all that exciting either - the ending is an obvious cop from Stewart’s own arrangement (performed with the Faces) of "It’s All Over Now," from Gasoline Alley.
"That’s All You Need" contains something of the groove heard on "Cut Across Shorty" and "Every Picture Tells A Story," but there is absolutely no song present here. Ron Wood plays some great slide guitar, especially on "Memphis," but his bashing about on this cut is just plain awful.
Perhaps the Faces recognize that their days with Stewart are numbered. For on this album Ron Lane makes his debut as a regular lead singer with the band, taking his turn on, "You’re So Rude," "Last Orders Please," and "Debris." And not badly either. He has plenty of charm, some real wit, and considerable style, if not a great lead voice, and he certainly bears watching in the future. In some perverse way, it occasionally seemed to me that his efforts were at least more natural and less forced than Stewart’s on this particular album. His best number is "Last Orders Please."
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/a-nod-is-as-good-as-a-wink-to-a-blind-horse-119081/) January 6, 1972 by Jon Landau
The Faces do not, as some have recently alleged, play badly. They are more than competent, especially at creating a mid-Sixties Rolling Stones-styled groove, as their excellent version of "Memphis" proves. But like most rockers who just barely miss their mark, they can’t sustain ideas, so their music tends to be filled with bits and pieces - a bright 30 seconds there, an exciting riff here - and then back into a basic track that is usually melodically undistinguished, unimaginatively arranged, and sounds as much of a bore to listen to as it must have been to record.
"Miss Judy’s Farm" starts off strong enough with some Ron Wood guitar and then the whole band riffing behind him. But as soon as the vocal commences, the song emerges as the dog that it is, and what started off sounding funky now just sounds like rock band hacking. "Stay With Me" is a better example of a riff song, but isn’t all that exciting either - the ending is an obvious cop from Stewart’s own arrangement (performed with the Faces) of "It’s All Over Now," from Gasoline Alley.
"That’s All You Need" contains something of the groove heard on "Cut Across Shorty" and "Every Picture Tells A Story," but there is absolutely no song present here. Ron Wood plays some great slide guitar, especially on "Memphis," but his bashing about on this cut is just plain awful.
Perhaps the Faces recognize that their days with Stewart are numbered. For on this album Ron Lane makes his debut as a regular lead singer with the band, taking his turn on, "You’re So Rude," "Last Orders Please," and "Debris." And not badly either. He has plenty of charm, some real wit, and considerable style, if not a great lead voice, and he certainly bears watching in the future. In some perverse way, it occasionally seemed to me that his efforts were at least more natural and less forced than Stewart’s on this particular album. His best number is "Last Orders Please."
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/a-nod-is-as-good-as-a-wink-to-a-blind-horse-119081/) January 6, 1972 by Jon Landau
01. Miss Judy's Farm (03:39)
02. You're So Rude (03:43)
03. Love Lives Here (03:06)
04. Last Orders Please (02:40)
05. Stay With Me (04:41)
06. Debris (04:37)
07. Memphis Tennessee (05:28)
08. Too Bad (03:15)
09. That's All You Need (05:04)
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