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Slade

Slade Album: “Old New Borrowed and Blue”

Slade Album: “Old New Borrowed and Blue”
Album Information :
Title: Old New Borrowed and Blue
Release Date:1974-01-01
Type:Unknown
Genre:Hard Rock
Label:
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:0042284918121
Track Listing :
1 Just a Little Bit Video
2 When The Lights Are Out
3 My Town
4 Find Yourself A Rainbow Video
5 Miles Out To Sea
6 We're Really Gonna Raise The Roof Video
7 Do We Still Do It Video
8 How Can It Be
9 Don't Blame Me
10 My Friend Stan Video
11 Everyday Video
12 Good Time Gals
Review - :
It took {$Slade} two years and one hits-and-rarities compilation ({^Sladest}) to get around to following up 1972's U.K. chart-topping {^Slayed?}, two years during which the entire complexion of the band had altered dramatically. No longer the rampant yobs out on the stomp of yore, the quartet members placed the rabble-rousing bombast of old far behind them during 1974, and switched their songwriting efforts to more mellow pastures -- the gentle {&"Everyday,"} the yearning {&"Far Far Away,"} and the decidedly pretty {&"Miles Out to Sea."} {^Old New Borrowed and Blue} was the album that introduced the chrysalis to its audience -- not that you'd know it from the opening bellow. Riding a raw guitar line based, very loosely, around the guttural riffing of {$the Beatles}' {&"Birthday,"} {&"Just a Little Bit"} cranks in with almost metallic dynamics, even retaining the in-concert ad-libbing that had long since made it a highlight of the live show. {&"We're Gonna Raise the Roof,"} {&"When the Lights Are Out,"} and {&"My Town,"} too, offer little that {$Slade} wasn't already well renowned for and that, perhaps, was what the bandmembers were thinking as well. The glitter-soaked thunderclap was old news now; they could write those rockers in their sleep. The {\vaudeville} piano-led {&"Find Yourself a Rainbow,"} though, was new territory altogether, while the {\country-rock}-inflected {&"How Can It Be"} posited a direction that {$Holder} himself admitted had long been a regular on his home turntable. It was {&"Everyday,"} however, that held the secret of the band's future, a crowd-swaying singalong of such scarf-waving majesty that it might well be single-handedly responsible for every great record {$U2} has ever made. It was certainly {$Slade}'s most memorable new single in a while and, as the cue for further airborne anthems, it became one of the most crucial songs in the group's entire repertoire. On an album that, at best, can be described as patchy, {&"Everyday"} is a new day altogether. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide
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