Classic Rock

The Tubes

The A&M Years

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It’s strange that glam, punk, prog and artrock aren’t all fighting over who claims The Tubes as heroes of their own. In the 80s, the wonderfull­y theatrical San Francisco porno-politico collective smoothed out their live shock tactics to gain radio play, but their first five years were a riot of satire, excess and misdirecti­on.

This often inspired box set brings together their four opening studio salvos, plus

What Do You Want From Live?, recorded during a whole week of shows at Hammersmit­h Odeon. (Yes, they were that big; they headlined Knebworth in ’78.)

White Punks On Dope, the finale of their 1975 self-titled debut album, was cunningly pitched as a punk anthem in the UK two years later, but by ’79, their other notional hit here, Prime Time, was an ironically slick love duet. Their minds moved too quickly to let an audience settle.

So there are plenty of thrills and wry chuckles here, as even

the revolving producers – Al Kooper, Ken ‘Ziggy’ Scott, Roxy/ Genesis man John Anthony and Todd Rundgren – scream 70s rock invention.

That debut revels in sci-fi and trash culture; Young And Rich is wilfully sleazy; Now sees them anxiously covering Beefheart and Lee Hazlewood; Remote Control is an immaculate skewering of TV addicts.

Turn on The Tubes again.

 ??  ?? Not punk, definitely dope: early years’ effervesce­nce.
Not punk, definitely dope: early years’ effervesce­nce.

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