5.0 out of 5 stars
Family's Most Accessible Masterpiece, March 8, 2008
This review is from: Bandstand (Audio CD)
Bandstand is probably Family's most accessible album. It has enough variety and eccentricities to satisfy the devotees, but also a number of songs a Family fan could play for friends without frightening them away. Lovely ballads like "My Friend The Sun" and "Dark Eyes." A crackling rocker like "Burlesque." Even straight-up R&B in "Ready To Go." I figured that the rest of Bandstand had probably never been played on any radio station this side of Leicester, but a reviewer of another edition insisted that he played more of it on his college radio station. Duly corrected, it's still safe to say that American radio stations failed to wear out their copies.
Only Roger Chapman could come up with "Broken Nose," an aggressive rock torch song with unusual propulsive rhythms, written sympathetically from the point of view of a stalker who laments: "The day that I stopped loving you was the day you broke my nose." "Bolero Babe" sounds like it was written by Maurice Ravel's cousin from Saturn. "Top of the Hill" is yet another example of how Chapman & Whitney often sounded like they weren't playing the same song, but still made it work in unimaginable ways.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Solid, Classic, Powerful, Excellent, Dense, Wonderful, January 4, 2006
This review is from: Bandstand (Audio CD)
Family was always the real deal, the working person's band, a group that did not pander to the top-40 crowd, recording executives, or misguided program directors.
Roger Chapman and Charlie Whitney are clearly the most underrated duo of songwriters ever to front a rock band. Few realize just how many songs they composed together in both Family and later in Streetwalkers. Chappo's vocal prowess once led "Rolling Stone" to dub him arguably the best rock vocalist ever. The remarkable guitar playing of the versatile Whitney, the solid bass lines and backing vocals of John Wetton (his counterpoint to Chapman worked remarkably well), and the ever steady drumming of Rob Townsend still sound fresh and inventive. One quibble is that Poli Palmer sometimes goes overboard on the synthesizers making some passages clearly show their age, but then he redeems himself on others.
The opening track, the classic "Burlesque," kick starts this session. "Burlesque," which may be just the song you need to bring any moribund gathering to life, is one of the few Family songs any of my friends can recall having ever heard. Solid power rock songs such as the darkly humorous "Broken Nose," the snarling "Ready To Go," or lament "Top of the Hill" anchor the CD, and these are all tracks that, together with "Burlesque" can easily toe to toe with the best hard rock of the '70s. The acoustic tunes such as their gentle anthem about dealing with depression "My Friend The Sun" or the homage to memories in "Coronation" songs are even more remarkable for their beauty when contrasted with the grittiness of the real rockers here. Clearly, Family covered all the bases. Even the throwback bonus track, "The Rockin' R's," which harkens back to early '60s pop of the pre-Family line up of the Farinas sounds great on this remastered CD.
The fact that Family never broke through to become as big as its contemporaries does not diminish the importance of their body of work. Their music is worth the effort to seek out. I envy those of you who will soon be hearing some of this music for the first time.
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