Showing posts with label Hair Bands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hair Bands. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

W.A.S.P. - The Last Command




His name was Blackie Lawless. Part red headed stepchild of the LA metal underground and part Freddy Krueger, the stuff of nightmares for Senator's wives, concerned about the evils of rock and roll. Blackie paid his dues for over a decade, but he never surrendered. Finally when hair metal bands were all the rage he got signed by Capital records. Soon all of his rock and roll dreams would come true.

If there's any redeeming quality about Mr. Lawless it's the outrage that he caused Tipper Gore and the other Senator's wives with his bloody codpieces, chunks of meat and bones on stage, as well as his songs, one of which had the memorable title of "Animal (I F*ck Like A Beast)." While Alice Cooper's 1970's theatrics were meant to shock, they were also done with a nod and a wink to his audience. The guy had a sense of humor. Blackie Lawless and company just seem out to shock, and the whole thing comes off as incredibly juvenile. Hell, I even thought this at 13 years old when I was still playing Twisted Sister records.

Okay, so let's press play on this thing:

Here we are again with the Dolby notes. It takes quite a while to get a cassette to start playing. First the leader tape, then the Pentium-like greeting. More blank tape, and we're finally into the music.

Well, if you can call it that. The tape is playing this time, but it sure sounds like crap. Compared to mp3's I would think that tapes might even be superior in sound, but maybe not when they've been sitting in a trunk for this long.

I can't remember where I got this one. I always thought W.A.S.P. was a joke, so I know I didn't run out and buy it. I'm pretty sure I borrowed it from a friend. It may have been several years after it came out as a guilty pleasure. I did have a friend in college who used to love to crank them up once in a while when he was drinking. I don't know, but if anyone reading this can lay claim to The Last Command, I'll happily give it to you.

In 8th grade I sat down at my desk one day and saw "W.A.S.P." written on the chalkboard. It was a few minutes before class was to start and some kid in a jean jacket with Metallica and Iron Maiden patches on the back went up and wrote "sucks" under it. When class started the American History teacher was quite impressed, thinking that he was teaching a class well educated about White Anglo-Saxon Protestants and their role in our nation's history.

Rock and roll was seductive, but there was nothing remotely cool about W.A.S.P. for me. This wasn't David Lee Roth or even Vince Neil. I could have stood side by side with Tipper Gore and critiqued them for looking like a bunch of idiots. Sure Blackie Lawless seemed to make it his mission to try to out do even the most outrageous rockers with his stage theatrics and provocative song titles. He was repulsive, but more than anything he just looked like a dumb ass.

This music is about as bland as you can get. There's nothing memorable about it. The whole thing sounds like it was recorded with metal by the numbers production. Hundreds of other hair bands of the 80's adopted this same sound, and the bulk of them never learned to write a decent song along the way. While most of these songs don't stand a chance of getting stuck in my head, "Wild Child" is somewhat catchy, as is "Ballcrusher" with it's ridiculous lyrics:

Stole the rent and drank all my J.D.
She went and hijacked my brand new car
I say A.C. she says D.C.
The damned bitch is just too bizarre
Bye bye bye Ballcrusher

then later:

Before I go and leave her in the dust
I'm going to (lyric omitted in liner notes) her till she can't stand up

Nice guy, that Blackie. Around the time of this record I remember reading that he wanted to get into politics and maybe run for office someday. At the very end of the cassette insert's microscopic type he alludes to their song "Blind In Texas" by saying "Don't Drive Drunk...in Texas or anywhere else." So I guess he was already tackling the important issues.

Blackie and band sound like they're about to die. The tape is going to snap. They're dragging as badly as the Wilson sisters now that we're on side 2. I think it's the song "The Last Command." Yikes, and I thought backward masking was supposed to be scary.

And now the tape has stopped. I guess this is as far as I get. I have noticed that Heart and W.A.S.P., as unlikely of a match as it might seem, were in fact label mates. (Can you image the possibilities of a joint tour?) Both of these records were put out by Capital and have the "XDR" label on them: expanded dynamic range. Maybe this has something to do with the tape problems.

So I have to prematurely pull the plug on Blackie. Bye bye bye ballcrusher.




Heart- Bad Animals




And we're off. The counter has been reset and the cassette is playing. But not before I hear that Dolby sound at the beginning.

Wow, instant warping. This is not good. The Wilson sisters sound demonic. I'm unsure what I should do. Take the tape out? I keep checking on it, but it's not breaking. There isn't a run of tape clogging up the machine. But wow, this is some seriously damaged tape.

Now the machine has stopped. I must admit I didn't see this problem coming. Again, I push play and it warbles along and stops.

I remember reading an interview with the guitar wizard from Boston, whose name escapes me, and he said something about sticky tape. How when he went in to listen to all of the demos he had done years before for Boston's third album, the tapes had deteriorated to a point that they had to be reconditioned in order to be listened to, which apparently was quite the tedious process. I fear this kind of damage has happened to the Wilson sisters.

I'm going to try to fast forward a bit and see if it makes a difference. Nope. It goes for a little while and stops. Or maybe this is that built in feature to stop before the next track. I guess not. Still barely playing for more than a second and stopping.

Hmmm....I just tried the other deck and it appears to be playing fine. Let's rewind and start over from the beginning. Dolby sound. Check. "Who Will You Run To" in all its keyboard laden glory. A little misstep and we're off.

Not so fast. This tape is seriously messed up. It keep varying in speed. And it's annoying, because I find myself genuinely interested in hearing this whole tape. Plus it makes me fear for the very idea behind this project. Are all of my tapes this screwed up? I guess I better digitize the few that can't be replaced.

In the case of Bad Animals, it's proving to be completely unlistenable. The tape has again shut off. But it's not breaking like those overloaded C-120's or my twice returned copy of the Rolling Stones Steel Wheels. I've never had a problem with a cassette like this. Then again I never tried to play one 23 years after purchase.

What can I remember about Heart's Bad Animals? It was the follow up to their self-titled record when the Wilson girls went all heavy metal and tried to out do Poison with their new image. They had huge hits with "What About Love?" and "Never, " but this one was a mellower album. The big hit was "Alone." Other than that I don't think it did very well.

What does the packaging tell us about it? Not much. We're clearly in the big hair 80's here. The insert folds out giving us a couple shots of the band, segregated by sex, and by extension importance. And the lyrics. A sample picked completely at random:

Leaving you was an endless fight
I was wrong and you were always right
But look what happened when I called your bluff
When the truth comes out you ain't so tough

Oh yeah, I remember that one. This tape occupied quite a bit of time in my Walkman during a trip to Lake Tahoe to visit my Grandma. Summer 1987. After that I don't think I ever played it again. And now, it looks like I never will again.