Foghat’s breakthrough on a number of levels. The title track kicks things off in classic Lonesome Dave style, with a dopey, yet personable tale about a dude who prefers the action of the city to boring country life. And the music feels like a bunch of loud, screeching hot rods on dark pavement, leaving tire tracks. The insanity continues with "My Babe", the sing-along old Righteous Brothers cover which Humble Pie formerly mixed into their version of "Rollin' Stone". Here, it's just another excuse to party and head bang to Price's slide licks. Up next, is the main course - the full enchilada of "Slow Ride", which runs for over eight minutes - not the shortened version most people hear on the radio. They break it down into two sections - the easy-struttin' initial half, which has massive, sleazy strip-club overtones - and the furious, race-to-the-finish second part, which builds and builds until a final, ultimate climax. Definitely, "Slow Ride" is something which could have only been made in either the 70's, or maybe the 80's, and is an all-time sleaze-rock classic. The rest of the album, incidentally, is a gradual comedown from that raunchy high. They throw in another, brutish cover ("Terraplane Blues", given over to more slide guitar and dominance from Earl's thunderous drum kit), a more playful toss in the hay ("Save Your Loving For Me"), getting back to bar-room basics ("Drive Me Home"), before rounding off on quite the subdued note (the soft-rock ballad "Take it or Leave it"). Again, the main thing here is how pop and out front this album is, compared to the ones that came before it. And it works pretty well, even though it is short, both in amount of songs and in run-time.
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