Wednesday, 25 October 2023

The Different Sounds of Brian May's Incredible Red Special - LOST70sGEMS

 Probably the most famous home made guitar of all time, and it adorned all the hits of one of the greatest rock bands of all time

Brian May's Red Special 

A mythic guitar that you can tell immediately from it's tactile purring and whining, it exudes far more character then most hard rock guitarists of the day.

In many ways, Brian May was the epitome of the great 70s guitar heroes; he had the sweet lilting tone of George Harrison, the gliding distortion of David Gilmour, the proto-speed metal playing of Ritchie Blackmore and displayed the finest expression of Jimmy Page's 'guitar army' concept with his heavy use of the treble booster and layers of overdubs.

The many tonal qualities of the Special enabled him to play a variety of styles of music; shape-shifting to fit the dynamic of each song. The animated shrieks, whines and drawls echo and back up similar trills and wails of front man Freddie Mercury's equally tangible voice.


Here is a rundown of the sounds I've identified throughout his Queen's legendary 1970s run;


1. Creamy, saturated sustain tone

 This bouncy, elastic tone pops up everywhere: its almost his default sound. It practically screams out of his treble booster with minimal volume due to the Vox AC30 amplifier. The best example is the nasally multi-tracked solo in Killer Queen, where the different tracks diverge at times for strong harmonies and interesting dissonance   


2. Sudsy sweet chord slides

One of my favourite sounds that comes out of the Red Special are the sliding figures, where May wrenches the guitar neck for maximum sustain and sweetness in tone. The texture of this sound is soapy and wringed out, as well as carrying a saccharine romantic lilt to it.  The most memorable usage of this sound was at the end of Bohemian Rhapsody, where it provides the musical bed for the bittersweet realisation that "nothing really matters": a line delivered by Freddie Mercury with breathy exhaustion, matching the weariness of the faint multi-tracked chord slide.


3. Warm flute tone

This is a fairly common tone in Brian May's arsenal; it is a clear, juicy, lightsabre tone that drips and slips all over several tracks whilst piercing through with the attack of a piccolo flute.  Midway through Love of my Life you hear this sound, as May’s Red Special prances back and forth in fanciful pied piper like doodles. 

It's spritely and fluttering like a woodwind instrument, fitting in with the jazz band mimicry of Good Company; where it spouts and dallies around the skiffle rhythms.


4. Muscular meaty torque slides

 Another feature of May's playing on the Red Special would be his ability to wrangle out the most tactile squeaks and scratches from his creation in direct contrast to the inflated, puffed up distortion. The thick gauged strings, along with his unusual choice of plectrum (an old British sixpence) and the unique dimensions and materials of the guitar itself, all allow May to achieve a equal balance of  smooth distortion whilst simultaneously producing sharp guitar zaps.

 The best example of this is the triple tracked slide guitar solo at the end of Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon where May squeezes out a zingy little solo, dragging the strings in a meaty legato slide right at the tail end of the track


Other experiments;

. Misfire kicks off with an array of sweet, multi-tracked slide guitars that sound like a hyped up Hawaiian lap steel

. In 39,  May lays down three guitar tracks, all an octave apart to create a majestic three part harmony line that cascades gloriously like a triumphant trumpet chorus

. All Dead, All Dead features walls of spongy fuzz guitars that converge on a beaming lead guitar. The sandwiched, multi-tracked fuzz guitars resemble a Moog or even a church organ in it's polyphonic grandeur

. Seaside Rendezvous features May’s tripled guitars strolling in a sultry, elegant drawl like a big band clarinet line

. In the intro of Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together), slowed down multitracked bass notes of the guitar are used to mimic the brooding cellos of a Wagnerian string section

 


Thursday, 16 February 2023

Album Reviews: Player (1977) Player - LOST70sGEMS

 Though known primarily for their No 1 hit Baby Come Back, a soft rock song in the vein of Hall And Oates that peaked during the Bee Gees reign, Player had a debut album full of fresh instrumental hooks and indelible melodies. This album had a bit of everything, from yacht rock, prog rock passages, soaring falsettos and even a countrypolitan closing track;


"Come On Out" (Crowley) – 3:43 STEVIE WONDER  &  FOREIGNER 

The ending coda is very much the style of Hall and Oates soul numbers and a throbbing bass-line taken from She's Gone. There is a blues Hard rock guitar turnaround from Traffic's Mr Fantasy and Led Zep's Ten Years Gone as well as guitar arpeggios from Bell Bottom Blues. It also starts with a Stevie Wonder mix of droopy wah synth and clavinet.


"Baby Come Back" (Beckett, Crowley) – 4:10 HALL AND OATES TAVARES

A disco cymbal heavy beat, Hall and Oates styled confessional verses and a big falsetto chorus reminiscent of Tavares


"Goodbye (That's All I Ever Heard)" (Crowley) – 3:44 STEELY DAN EARLY TOTO/ EARLY FOREIGNER

This song starts off similar to the openings of Every Which Way and Come on Out, with stacks of sweet but regal keyboard chords and lilting guitar sustains, the kind you would hear from Stevie Wonder.

The verses are a walking bassline, with a Steely Dan vocal and tremolo synthesizer ripples. The chorus is built around a stacked harmony rendition of the title, again sounding like Steely Dan before a middle eight, where circular guitar riff and equally circular vocal melody enter, claiming "Love is Strange.."

  The quiet bridge is baroque with it's gentle/night time mix of playful flute, oscillating vibraphone and plucked flamenco strings reminiscent of the prog mid song breaks of early Foreigner and Toto


"Melanie" (J. Crocker) – 3:39  LITTLE RIVER BAND

A summery soft rock song, similar to Shandi by Kiss, it has the layered shimmering tremolo guitars of Wild Cherry's Hold On and the vibe of Little River Band, it's defining hook is the big meaty, flamenco tinged guitar riff that bookends the song. 


"Every Which Way" (Beckett, Crowley) – 3:34 Michael McDonald era DOOBIE BROTHERS & STARBUCK

Every Which Way is a Michael McDonald era Doobie Brothers patented song, with the funky 'Mario Kart' keyboards during the verses and Sting like vocals of the chorus; the refrain of Every Which Way reminiscent of It Keeps you Running/ Minute by Minute. However it starts with a luscious multi tracked, synth part warbling in and out alongside a vibraphone part, a combo of instruments popularised by funky, Yacht Rockers Starbuck.


"This Time I'm in It for Love" (Larry Keith, Steve Pippin) – 4:20 - ENGLAND DAN JOHN FORD COLEY & HALL AND OATES

The 'stop watch' sounding keyboard ticking away during the opening of This Time I'm in it for Love sounds like it was taken directly from the opening of Hall and Oates' Out of Me, Out of You. The chorus is the saccharine sentiment and soothing countrified balladry and twin slide guitars you would often find in songs by England Dan and John Ford Coley


"Love Is Where You Find It" (Crocker, Reed Kailing, Crowley) – 4:00 ELO  

            A light disco-fied pop rock tune highlighted by call and response vocals with sprightly, pitchy falsetto harmonies reminiscent of ELO, that remind me of the schoolkid vocals song Dance by Justice


"Movin' Up" (Crocker, Kailing, Steve Kipner) – 2:50  BONEY M BEE GEES OHIO PLAYERS  

The jumped up rhythms of the Commodores, the clanky funk guitar chord strikes of disco groups like Boney M or the Kay Gees and the hysterical falsetto of the Bee Gees. But most of all it reminds me of the Ohio Players heavy funk bops like Body Vibes,Merry Go Round, Dance (If Ya Wanta), Funk-O-Nots, Contradictions etc


"Cancellation" (Crocker, Kailing, Kipner) – 4:07 LRB FOREIGNER TOTO

Full of interesting elements from the swirling teapot flute in the middle of the verses, to the dueling Arena rock guitar riff,  to the cooing Paul Stanley falsetto and finally the punchy synth solo 


"Trying to Write a Hit Song" (R. L. Mahonin) – 4:36 - GORDON LIGHTFOOT

A typical Gordon Lightfoot type of singer songwriter ballad

 

 VERDICT: A Soft Rock Album with does of arena rock, funk disco rhythms and Blue eyed soul. Some tracks remind me of the Hall and Oates Silver album 1975 which featured more guitar interplay. Overall it has the mix of blue eyed soul soft rock and hard rock of Toto's first two albums in the late 70s

 

A lot of Hall and Oates and early Toto/Foreigner in the prog bridge sections as well as Bee Gees Pablo Cruise but mainly a precursor to the late 70s albums by Toto