eMusic Review 0
Released in 1973, ZZ Top's third album proved the charm, establishing the well oiled road warriors as authentic recording stars. Not only did it make the Top 10 on the LP charts, but it gave the Texas trio their first taste of a legitimate hit single with "La Grange," a boogie-'til-the-longhorns-come-home salute to the infamous Lone Star shack of ill repute — later commemorated in the hit Broadway show (and hit film) The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. For guitarist Billy Gibbons, bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard, big-time success came when the band went lighter on the psychedelic side they'd leaned to in earlier efforts and heavier towards the basic blues 'n' booze bar band ethic they'd originally sprung out of when they formed in 1970.
Of course, it's one thing to title a song "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers" or "Hot, Blue and Righteous," and quite another thing to actually pull it off. But the then (and still) woefully underrated Gibbons showed an uncanny ability to intertwine the Texas-bred approach of bedrock instrumentalists like T-Bone Walker and Freddie King with the more open-ended style of '60s British disciples like Eric Clapton and Peter Green. As a result, Gibbons… read more »