Classic Rock

Lee Brilleaux

Rock ’N’ Roll Gentleman

- Hugh Fielder

Brilleaux padding.

The name of this band is Dr Feelgood. Lee Brilleaux was their singer from their early70s Canvey Island beginnings to their demise in 1994 after his death. And this four-CD anthology takes it’s title from a recent book about the gentleman. So hey.

Like all the best groups, Dr Feelgood were more than the sum of their parts. For the first few years, they were nearly twice that as guitarist Wilko Johnson cannoned off Brilleaux, with his urgent vocals, matching harmonica and a driving rhythm section. The eight tracks from their 1975 debut Down By The Jetty show their uncompromi­sing stance in mono.

Malpractic­e later that year plundered the R&B catalogue that had inspired the Stones and their ilk a decade earlier.

It all came together on 1976’s live Stupidity, which for many remains the band’s peak, highlighte­d by the title track and Johnson’s Back In The Night. But temperamen­tal difference­s were driving Brilleaux and Johnson apart and after 1977’s Sneakin’ Suspicion, Johnson split.

So that’s the first CD and

there’s no way the other three can compete. After a shaky start, new guitarist John Mayo settles in and enjoys the radiofrien­dly renaissanc­e producer Richard Gottehrer brought on 1978’s Private Practice album. But they weren’t made for the 80s and by the start of the third disc, Mayo is gone and the band are struggling.

After the rhythm section quit, Brilleaux got back to what he knew best on 1984’s Doctors Orders and they’re almost full circle by the fourth disc, which ends with Brilleaux’s final gig.

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