Fifty years ago this week, Grand Funk Railroad sold out Shea Stadium in 72 hours, a feat that, 6 years earlier, took the Beatles about two weeks. To be fair, no band had ever played Shea before the Beatles. It may even be possible that the Mets were never able to sell it out in their early years.
They were huge at the time, yet nobody could figure out why. Their first two albums, if you read up on them, are often compared unfavorably to Black Sabbath, or Spinal Tap around the time of Brainhammer.
More "hard rock" than "heavy metal", the first two albums feature a lot of heavy boogie and hard funk riffing without the hooks of Zeppelin or Deep Purple. Production values are pretty lo-fi, they almost seem live. "Got This Thing on the Move" sounds like Blue Cheer or maybe early MC5 while "Paranoid" - not the Sabbath tune - could fit on the Stooges' Funhouse.
They were all about the live show. In 1969, as yet unknown, the were well received at the Atlanta Pop Festival. Later that year, they were booted off of the opening slot on the Zeppelin tour after Peter Grant pulled the plug on them during their second show. To be fair, the Funk were in their home territory, but nobody wanted to follow them.
Why are we making excuses for the Beatles and Led Zeppelin?
The critics hated them. The songs were simple - like that's a bad thing. The playing was mediocre - eh, sounds good enough to me. The lyrics were stupid - unlike, um...
I think I might've liked these guys.
This playlist features the more tuneful tracks from their first 5 studio albums, it's surprising that only one of them has a presence on classic rock radio.
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