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(2 Customer Reviews)
Rising like a Phoenix, which was the title of one of their previous albums, perhaps Mark Farner is sending a subliminal message with opening track "Good Times" that his "Bad Time" is over? The song "Testify," track three, sums up this very good album from Mark Farner, Don Brewer, and bassist Dennis Bellinger replacing the MIA Mel Schacher. It's a hooky rock tune with Farner's religious overtones. All these tracks are strong, from "Can't Be With You Tonight" to the glorious ending of "Wait for Me." The no-nonsense production of manager Andrew Cavaliere -- shades of Terry Knight! --- and Bob Destocki, lets Farner and Brewer shine. This album is like a subdued version of the Grand Funk classic Survival. In fact, both Survival and Grand Funk Lives are underrated, not just among Grand Funk fans. Where the first Mark Farner solo album, produced by Dick Wagner, had more of a bluesy feel in 1977, and 1978's Flint by Brewer and company sounded like a stab in the dark, this collection rocks. "Queen Bee" has riffs taken from Black Sabbath and Uriah Heep, specifically the ending of the song; "Black Sabbath meets Heep's "Easy Livin'," with Farner's pop influences glossing it up. "We Gotta Get out of This Place" has more in common with a hard-rocking Young Rascals than the Animals or David Johansen. "Y.O.U." is almost there, halfway to a hit, missing the strength of producers Jimmy Ienner, Todd Rundgren, heck, even Frank Zappa might've lifted this track into the Top 40. The restrained production on the rest of the album is a plus except for "Y.O.U.," which needed just a bit more. "Stuck in the Middle" is fun Mark Farner, and is perhaps the best track on this excellent outing. Heavy keyboards, a great hook, and thick chorus -- a nice sequel to Funk's 1975 hit "Bad Time." "Greed of Man" goes back to the harder preaching of original GFR. All tunes except the cover of "We Gotta Get out of This Place" were written by Farner, who closes out the album with the introspective "Wait for Me." In a world mutated by Guns N' Roses, Nirvana, and Aerosmith gone pop, Grand Funk Railroad kept the flame of hard rock lit with this solid disc. It's too bad it didn't reach a larger audience. ~ Joe Viglione
Digitally remastered by Bill Ingot and Dave Schultz.
Grand Funk Railroad: Mark Farner (vocals, guitar, piano); Dennis Bellinger (vocals, bass guitar); Don Brewer (vocals, drums); Lance Ong (organ, synthesizer). Grand Funk Railroad Grand Funk Lives Songs Grand Funk Lives Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   CRUNCHING FUNK Five years after working with Frank Zappa in 1976 on their one and only record for MCA, Grand Funk (minus crucial members Craig Frost (keyboards) and Mel Schacher (bass)--although Frost not being a part of this new album was a huge letdown for me, new bassist Dennis Bellinger (he played on Mark Farner's No Frills LP), was a more than capable choice to fill the bass-gap, as well as being a great backup singer.
I guess the idea was to go back to the classic original GFR power trio. The music on this and the follow-up What's Funk? was damn good, but the rebirth of Grand Funk Railroad was extremely and disappointingly short-lived.
The last album GFR did for Capitol Records was Born To Die, so it was probably a humorous choice for Mark and drummer-vocalist Don Brewer to call this one Grand Funk Lives.
The album starts off with "Good Times," and right away you realize that this is the heaviest this band have ever sounded on record. Crunching Funk, so to speak. The follow-up track "Queen Bee" was featured on the Heavy Metal soundtrack, and is a really exuberant, fun, fast rocker. But perhaps the Funkiest track is "Testify." I mean, this band is really stomping hard on this record. One of the singles that actually got some airplay was the nice, poppy "Stuck In The Middle." The whole album is some of Mark's best work since Born To Die. This does not sound like the Frank Zappa Good Singin' Good Playin' much at all, which is definitely a good thing! A major mistake however was that vocalist ("We're An American Band") Don Brewer did not sing one lead. Crucial mistake in my book at the time. The song "No Reason Why" is a blistering, angry tune. I felt at the time of this album's release (1981) that Mark might have written this tune about what happened to John Lennon.
Grand Funk's bid for eighties success was not to be, unfortunately. Grand Funk were playing louder and heavier than ever, but apparently not too many people were listening. Submitted by Peter (Iowa USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 3 of 4 found this helpful.
Long Lost Classic Grand Funk Lives is a lost classic by the legendary band. Different from their other albums but a classic none the less. Thanks to Wounded Bird Records for the reissue! Submitted by fwalt63 (Casper Wyoming) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
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