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Rock Of The Westies

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Rock Of The Westies album cover
01
Medley: Yell Help / Wednesday Night / Ugly
6:15
$0.99
02
Dan Dare (Pilot Of The Future)
3:29
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03
Island Girl
3:42
$1.29
04
Grow Some Funk Of Your Own
4:48
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05
I Feel Like A Bullet (In The Gun Of Robert Ford)
5:27
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06
Street Kids
6:25
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07
Hard Luck Story
5:16
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08
Feed Me
4:01
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09
Billy Bones And The White Bird
4:40
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10
Planes
4:32
$0.99
11
Sugar On The Floor
4:32
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 53:07

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

09.24.12
It's kinda clownish, but, for the first half, mighty fun
1996 | Label: Island Def Jam

The extroverted counterpart to Elton’s earlier album of 1975, his introspective Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, Rock of the Westies is almost completely manic. Having dumped longtime drummer Nigel Olsson and bassist Dee Murray, Elton flanks himself with a much larger and more aggressive ensemble for less-produced, nearly live spontaneity: The vocals are hoarse, and often unpolished. Elton’s coke consumption started with Caribou, but here, for the first time, you can hear it.

Westies repeats the unevenness of that disc, but with all the great stuff conveniently sequenced on Side One and all the marginal, substandard tunes tracks dumped onto Side Two, starting with the Who-like but soon monotonous “Street Kids.” Bernie Taupin’s lyrics are also uncharacteristically direct: His “Island Girl” would rather turn tricks for the white dudes on 47th and Lex than bounce back to Jamaica, but his grim scenario is set to some the most jubilant sounds in his partner’s catalog. This is the hard-rocking Elton who routinely dressed up as the Statue of Liberty for stadiums full of hit-pumped fans: It’s kinda clownish, but, for the first half, mighty fun.

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They Say All Music Guide

Less than four months after issuing the landmark and autobiographical Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy (1975), Elton John re-emerged with a new band and a slightly modified sound. However, the departure of Dee Murray (bass) and Nigel Olsson (drums) would ultimately begin a deceleration in terms of John’s success, which rivalled only the Beatles’ and Elvis Presley’s in terms of global acclaim. The revamped band grew to include new associates James Newton Howard (keyboards) and Kenny Passarelli (bass) as well as Roger Pope (drums) and Caleb Quaye (guitar), who had both performed with John as far back as his first long-player, Empty Sky (1968). He also retained the services of Davey Johnstone (guitar) and Ray Cooper (percussion) from the most recent lineup. Musically, Rock of the Westies (1975) maintains the balance of harder-edged material and effective ballads. In fact, one of the album’s strongest suits is the wide spectrum of strong material. The ballsy no-nonsense “Street Kids” and the aggressive gringo rock of the ZZ Top sound-alike “Grown Some Funk of Your Own” contrast the poignant power balladry of “I Feel Like a Bullet (In the Gun of Robert Ford)” or the dark and brooding tale of addiction on “Feed Me.” Perhaps inspired by the crossover R&B appeal of “Philadelphia Freedom,” the up-tempo “Island Girl” bears a distinct and danceable groove that lies somewhere between a slightly Jamaican vibe and disco. Perhaps more soulful in the traditional sense are the boogie-based “Hard Luck Story” or propulsive Bo Diddley beat that drives “Billy Bones and the White Bird.” While the increasingly fickle public as well as lack of a strong follow-up to the chart-topping single “Island Girl” may have prevented Rock of the Westies from becoming the heir apparent to Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, in the wake of John’s flawless predecessors it remains a strong and worthwhile entry that also sets the stage for its follow-up, Blue Moves (1976). [The mid-'90s CD remaster of Rock of the Westies also includes two supplementary cuts -- the outtake "Planes" and the Kiki Dee-penned "Sugar on the Floor" -- which were issued as B-sides to "Island Girl."] – Lindsay Planer

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