Well, it is Monday and I’ve
survived my birthday weekend. Many
thanks to all those folks who took the time to survive it with me.
I’m now off for a week of holidays
(yay!) and plan to get a good chunk of writing done on my next novel. For now, however, I’ll stick with the next
album review in the CD Odyssey.
Disc 405 is…Squawk
Artist: Budgie
Year of Release: 1972
What’s Up With The Cover?: Budgie has the best album covers because they know
what the art world needs more of; fantastic drawings featuring giant budgies or
creatures with giant budgie heads grafted onto their bodies. I couldn’t believe how little of this stuff
we saw on our recent trip to the Louvre.
“Squawk’s” cover is a jet fighter
– with a giant budgie head at the front end.
There are many ways to make awesome art, and the decision to put a
budgie head on the front of a jet is definitely one of them.
How I Came To Know It: As I’ve noted in
prior Budgie reviews, I got to know this band through my buddy Spence, who has
an incredible depth of knowledge when it comes to seventies hard rock (and many
other things besides – musical and otherwise).
How It Stacks Up: I have five Budgie albums. I like all of them, but I’m going to put
Squawk 4th out of the 5 in a tough field.
Rating: 3 stars, but close to 4.
“Squawk” is a poor name for this
album, which is probably the least ‘squawky’ and most ‘rocky’ album of the five
Budgie albums I’ve heard.
To quickly recap for those few
people who have not religiously read my previous two Budgie reviews, these guys
are a hard rocking trio from England that make heavy hard rock. They sound like a cross between Rush, Black
Sabbath and very early Judas Priest. Or
in other words, they sound great.
“Squawk” has all the usual things
you expect on a Budgie album. First and
foremost, are the riff-heavy compositions.
These guys write great rock guitar riffs, and this is on full display
from the very first track, “Whiskey River.” “Whiskey
River” sounds like an amped up blues classic, but I couldn’t find any
indication that it is anything other than a Budgie original. Sounding like a timeless classic, by
definition, makes a song a timeless classic, and “Whiskey River” is a great song that at only 3:22 leaves you wanting
more.
Other rock classics on the album
include “Rocking Man” which strongly
reminded me of Rush’ debut album. Partly
because it is such great rock and roll, and partly because it is mildly goofy
in places, and not afraid to wink and nod at you that the boys in the band had
a good time composing it.
Lyrically, “Rocking Man” annoyed me however, with some of the stupidest lyrics
I’ve ever heard. The worst example is
probably the overwrought “Just like a
hammer, well I hammer a song.” Hammers
don’t hammer songs, Budgie . “To hammer
out a song” would be the metaphor – by adding a second simile into the
sentence, you left me with the impression that you literally took a hammer to a
song, which makes no frickin’ sense, unless you’ve taken one too many hammers
to your head.
These rock songs still hold their
own against other albums of theirs that I prefer, but in other areas “Squawk”
is just a tiny bit weaker.
For example, their albums also
always feature soft, sixties inspired hippie rock. Budgie is quite proud of the fact that their
records have a lot of range, and I like that as well. In this way they are like a better version of
more recent acts like Black Mountain (another band I like, and even Canadian!)
However, the softer side of Budgie
on Squawk isn’t the same level as some of the songs on their other albums. “Make
Me Happy” is a little too Rod Stewart for my tastes, and while the more
ambitious “Young Is a World” is much
better, it is also a bit rambling near the end where it needs to wrap up. I prefer the meandering “Parents” from 1973’s “Never Turn Your Back on A Friend” when I want
to meander.
Every Budgie album has two more
staple offerings: the epic, overlong
rock song and at least one bizarrely titled proto-progressive song.
For the epic, “Squawk” offers up “Stranded” which is a little short (for
Budgie’s standards) at 6:21. “Stranded” has a collection of fine
riffs, and some really heavy grooves that reminded me of Black Sabbath’s debut
album. It is an excellent track, although
I’d have to put it slightly behind truly great Budgie epic songs including “Homicidal Suicidal,” “Breadfan” and “Zoom Club” all of which appear on other albums.
The bizarrely titled song is “Hot as a Docker’s Armpit” which I think
edges out “In The Grip of a Tyrefitter’s
Hand,” “Crash Course In Brain Surgery”
and “Nude Disintigrating Parachutist
Woman” as best Budgie song title ever.
It was a tight race, but including the word ‘armpit’ in a song title put
it over the top.
That said, “Hot as a Docker’s Armpit” falls apart a little in the chorus, after
a very promising beginning. The chorus
is a staccato chant of the song title repeated two or three times in a way that
seems hurried and artificially squeezed too tightly to fit into the space the
tune allows. Here, Budgie could learn
from Rush, who always manage to put Neil Peart’s sometimes difficult lyrics
into a song in a way that makes them feel natural – even if they have to change
the time signature three times while doing it.
Instead, I get the impression that Budgie just fell in love with a
catchy expression, and then tried to contort the rest of the song to fit it in.
Overall, “Squawk” is the most
bluesy of all Budgie’s records, and among fans is regarded as one of their
better albums. I really love it as well,
and it came close to scoring four stars with me. It’s only sin is that I prefer a few other
Budgie albums more, but that doesn’t stop me from often picking it off the
shelf and giving it a listen.
Best tracks: Whiskey River,
Rocking Man, Stranded.
1 comment:
Wow. Never heard of these guys. May have to check some out!
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