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Electric Warrior

Marc Bolan & T. Rex
 
 

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Year Released 2003
Label Reprise
Categories Rock & Pop  >  Glam Rock
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description
Includes liner notes by Nikki Sudden, Cliff McLenehen & Bill Legend.
 
Includes liner notes by Nikki Sudden, Cliff McLenehan and Bill Legend.
 
Marc Bolan/Marc Bolan & T. Rex/T. Rex: Marc Bolan (vocals, guitar); Mickey Finn (vocals, percussion).
 
Additional personnel: Ian McDonald (saxophone); Burt Collins (flugelhorn); Steve Currie (bass instrument); Will Legend (drums); Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman (background vocals).
 
Liner Note Author: Seamus Egan.
 
Prior to ELECTRIC WARRIOR's release, T. Rex (or, as it had mostly been known, Tyrannosaurus Rex) was a folk-rock duo that played acoustic guitar and bongos augmented by the occasional electric and full drum kit. While some of the hippie-prophet philosophy that dominated Tyrannosaurus Rex's music can still be heard here (especially on the dreamy geneology of "Cosmic Dancer"), ELECTRIC WARRIOR, for the most part, represents a revolution in attitude and approach. Singer/songwriter/guitarist Marc Bolan expanded the band here for a full rock sound, and focused on lean, hook-heavy pop songs that relied on slinky grooves and the riveting energy of early rock & roll. Married to Bolan's cheeky sexuality and theatrical flair, the results were undeniable.
 
From the mid-tempo thump of "Mambo Sun" to the crashing yowl of "Rip Off," ELECTRIC WARRIOR is fuzzy, nasty, and immediately appealing. Songs like "Jeepster" and "Bang A Gong" pump straight from the elemental heart of rock & roll, yet the songs are fleshed out beautifully with strings, handclaps, backup vocals, and Tony Visconti's expansive production. Bolan's glitzy, sexy aesthetic directly sparked the glam movement (he was a huge influence on David Bowie and the creation of his Ziggy Stardust persona), while his punchy, back-to-basics approach also presaged the stripped-down, three-minute song attack of the Ramones and the punk movement in the later '70s. As a result, ELECTRIC WARRIOR can be seen as one of the most enduring and quietly influential records in the rock canon.
 
It's pretty easy to argue that T. Rex hit its peak with 1972's ELECTRIC WARRIOR. Song for song, WARRIOR sported the group's most consistent set of tunes. Marc Bolan found his voice here, both the metallic purr of songs like "Planet Queen" and the salacious crooning of "Life's a Gas." Tony Visconti's superb production gave the tunes much-needed heft, and the groovy, gritty guitar never sounded better. It also included the group's signature song, "Get it On (Bang a Gong)."
 
The ELECTRIC WARRIOR SESSIONS consists of earlier takes of some (but not all) of the album's tracks--sometimes in multiple versions--along with early rock & roll covers including "Summertime Blues" and Carl Perkins's "Honey Don't." Among the minutiae revealed by these rough versions is that Bolan's seemingly offhand, half-spoken "Meanwhile, I'm still thinkin'," in the fadeout of "Get it On" was actually in the song in a much earlier take. Most fascinating is the 12-minute 1971 Bolan interview. His words "I don't feel there's that much time to jive about anymore...I realize the urgency to do whatever you're gonna do...now" are eerily prophetic in the light of his fatal car crash five years later.

music tracks
song title
1Mambo Sun listen listen
2Cosmic Dancer listen listen
3Jeepster listen listen
4Monolith listen listen
5Lean Woman Blues listen listen
6Get It On (Bang A Gong) listen listen
7Planet Queen listen listen
8Girl listen listen
9Motivator, The listen listen
10Life's A Gas listen listen
11Rip Off listen listen
12There Was A Time listen listen
13Raw Ramp listen listen
14Planet Queen - (previously unreleased, acoustic version) listen listen
15Hot Love listen listen
16Woodland Rock listen listen
17King Of The Mountain Cometh listen listen
18T. Rex Electric Warrior Interview, The listen listen


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additional info
Manufacturer's List Price:  $11.98
Producer:  Tony Visconti
Format:  CD
Popularity Rank:  123,868
Purchase this item:  Amazon.com

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