Label: Air Mail Archive (Japan), AIRAC-1207
Style: Hard Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
Time: 57:55
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 371 Mb
PLAY
‘N’ THE GAME is an enjoyable and varied collection of songs that are
more upbeat and playful than their two prior releases. While there is a
bit less of the plodding hard rock riffing these Scots are known for,
the songs they’ve chosen here make for nice Album Rock fare. It’s a nice
change after the moodier CLOSE ENOUGH FOR ROCK ‘N’ ROLL, which was
released earlier in 1976.
The record opens with the catchy and
incessant riffing of “Somebody To Roll”, which is easily a highlight.
This is followed with an amusing rendition of the Butler/Leiber song
“Down Home Girl”, which The Rolling Stones covered back in 1965. The
lyrics here hardly seem that they would be a flattering come on for any
Southern girl. (“Lord I swear, the perfume you wear is made out of
turnip greens” / “And every time that I kiss you girl it tastes like
pork and beans”.) “Flying” is a fairly standard Nazareth ballad and
probably one of the less memorable moments. The original first side of
the record ends with the thumping bass groove of “Waiting For The Man”,
which is a rare, but interesting funk experiment. Maybe John Deacon was
listening to this bass line when he came up with "Another One Bites The
Dust" a few years later? They are melodically different, but both have a
similar groove.
“Born To Lose” is an up-tempo hard rocker that finds
the band returning to their trademark sound, if just briefly. The Joe
Tex cover “I Want To (Do Everything For You)” is a slow, pulsing R&B
shuffle that works surprising well for them and play live for many
years. “I Don’t Want To Go On Without You” finds the band playing much
in the same vein as “Love Hurts” and possibly trying to recapture that
magic again. It’s a nice track, but not quite on the same level. The
Beach Boys cover “Wild Honey” is a catchy pop/rock tune that works
alright, but not something I’m likely to cue up on its own. Ending the
album is the Nazareth penned “L. A. Girls” that is another less
memorable song that tries to be catch and is punctuated with hand claps.
Nearly
half of this record is cover songs, which leads me to wonder whether
the band lacked their own material or just wanted to have fun with this
album. I will admit that it’s that element of playfulness that I enjoy
about this record, even if doesn’t rock quite as hard as RAZAMANAZ or
HAIR OF THE DOG. Overall, it’s an enjoyable collection of songs, if not
always a consistent one.
(sputnikmusic.com/review/68179/Nazareth-Play-N-The-Game/) Review by Robbit. August 15th, 2015
01. Somebody To Roll (03:54)
02. Down Home Girl (05:03)
03. Flying (04:20)
04. Waiting For The Man (04:53)
05. Born To Love (03:58)
06. I Want To Do Everything For You (04:18)
07. I Don't Want To Go On Without You (03:46)
08. Wild Honey (03:03)
09. L.A. Girls (03:56)
10. Good Love (03:52)
11. I Don't Want To Go On Without You -Alternate Edit Version- (03:24)
12. Waiting For The Man (Alternate Edit Version) (06:13)
13. Somebody To Roll (Edit Version) (03:31)
14. Born To Love (Edit Version) (03:36)

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