BAD COMPANY -Rock Band
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Four of the original members of Bad Company.
Their hits include “Feel Like Makin’ Love,” “Can’t Get Enough,” “Runnin’ With The Pack,” “Rock ‘N’ Roll Fanasy,” “Shooting Star,” “Movin On,” “Young Blood,” “Good Lovin’ Gone Bad,” “Ready For Love,” and “Bad Company.”
One of the most acclaimed bands of the classic rock era, England’s Bad Company has put its indelible stamp on rock ‘n’ roll with a straight-ahead, no-frills musical approach that has resulted in the creation of some of the most timeless rock anthems ever. Led by the incomparable Paul Rodgers (alk/a “The Voice”), arguably the finest singer in rock ‘n’ roll, the current band also features from the original lineup drummer extraordinaire Simon Kirke. Rounding out this potent lineup that will tour the U.S. in 2001 is longtime Bad Co guitarist David “Bucket” Colwell and renowned bassist Rick Wills, who has also performed with Foreigner, David Gilmour, Frampton’s Camel and in a previous version of Bad Company.
Formed in 1973, Bad Company came to life when Rodgers was looking to start anew after the disintegration of the legendary Free. His powerhouse vocals were a main ingredient during Free’s impressive five-year run; a period of time that saw the release of seven extremely influential albums that featured Free’s minimalist blues-rock approach. Included among Free’s dynamic body of work is the 1970 smash, “All Right Now,” one of the most recognizable rock anthems ever recorded.
Rodgers had met Mott The Hoople guitarist Mick Ralphs when both Mott and Free had toured together. After jamming together and listening to several new songs that Ralphs had penned, Ralphs made the decision to leave Mott and form a new band with Rodgers. The duo recruited Kirke and former King Crimson bassist/vocalist Boz Burrell and christened themselves Bad Company, the name inspired by the 1972 Robert Benton Civil War film of the same name. Hooking up with Led Zeppelin manager Peter Grant, Bad Company became the first band signed to Zeppelin’s Swan Song label. “I had to fight to get the management and the record company to accept the name Bad Company,” explains Rodgers. “They thought it was a terrible name. Peter Grant called a meeting and the band met beforehand. I told them that I had been through this before with Free as Island Records had wanted to call us the Heavy Metal Kids. We agreed to go in and tell them that we were going to be called Bad Company and that was the end of the story. As soon as Peter heard how strongly I felt about the name, he became very supportive and turned the record company around.”
Bad Company was an instant hit worldwide. Their 1974 self-titled debut went platinum five times over and featured the smash hits, “Can’t Get Enough,” (a Number One single) and “Movin’ On” along with electrifying rock anthems like “Ready For Love,” “Rock Steady” and the title track. Because of their association with Grant, a unique opportunity arose for them when it came time to record that classic first album in November 1973. “We were bursting at the seams to get into the recording studio,” says Rodgers. “Led Zeppelin had a mobile studio together at Headley Grange all ready to go, but they were delayed for two weeks. Peter Grant told us that if we were quick, we could probably use the studio to lay a couple of tracks down. We steamed in and put the entire album down. Headley Grange was very atmospheric. We had the drums set up in the hallway and the guitars in the living room. We did interesting things like placing the vocal microphone way out in the fields for the song’ Bad Company. underneath a full moon.” , We recorded that track late at night
The eight tracks recorded at Headley Grange clearly defined the band’s stripped-down sound. Rock, blues and even country influences were skillfully layered within songs such as the beautiful Rodgers-penned ballad “Seagull,” the straight-ahead rock of “Movin’ On” and “Rocky Steady.” Also featured from those fertile sessions at Headley Grange are “Little Miss Fortune,” the brooding blues rock classic “Ready For Love” and the previously unreleased “Superstar Woman.” While “Superstar Woman” ultimately did not become part of Bad Company’s catalog, Rodgers’ belief in the song never diminished. He would eventually record a new version of the song for “Cut Loose,” his 1983 solo album.
“We were influenced by people like Jimi Hendrix, Cream, and, to a certain extent, the Beatles,” explains Rodgers. “I don’t think that Bad Company was particularly blues influenced as a band, although I probably brought that in as I’m such a huge blues fan. We were just trying to play what felt good and natural. I think that is what gave us our identity as a band.”
Taking full benefit of Swan Song’s visibility and Grant’s press and marketing skills, Bad Company made their formal debut at Newcastle City Hall in March 1974. The rousing response they enjoyed from fans and critics in the UK propelled the group to America on a high note, brimming with confidence. “In America, we opened for Edgar Winter,” remembers Rodgers. “The response to Bad Company was overwhelming, night after night. When we started out on tour, the album had just broken into the charts. Three months later, we were at number one. We were received with open arms.”
In the United States, Bad Company’s popularity soared. While some fans had recognized Rodgers’ voice from “All Right Now,” the group’s energetic stage shows wowed audiences largely unfamiliar with the work of Free or Mott The Hoople. FM radio devoured their debut disc, ultimately working “Can’t Get Enough,” “Rock Steady,” “Bad Company,” “Ready For Love” and “Movin’ On” into regular rotation. Rodgers’ passionate, soulful vocals were reminiscent of one his idols, Otis Redding, and struck a chord with the group’s rapidly expanding fan base.
“We always tried to be natural,” says Ralphs. “We would play soul and blues favorites at rehearsals instead of learning new songs. My favorite guitarist, the man that inspired me to play, was Steve Cropper. Simon’s favorite drummer was Al Jackson and Paul loved Otis Redding’s voice. I guess we wanted to be the MG’s with Otis Redding. Basically, we played like a bar band but soon it was clear that the bars were getting very large indeed!”
With a number one album to their credit in America, Bad Company returned to London triumphant. “The end of our first tour, the four of us were summoned to Peter Grant’s suite,” remembers Kirke. “We thought we had done something wrong. We all went up to his room, coming in like toe-scuffing schoolboys. Peter said, ‘Now listen guys, it’s been a long tour and you’ve worked your asses off.’ Then he paused for dramatic effect and we thought, what the fuck have we done. He pulled back this sheet that had been on the ground and said, ‘I hope there will be a lot more of these in the future.’ Our gold albums for Bad Company were there and he gave each of us a warm embrace. It was a lovely moment.”
Grant played a critical role in the group’s early success. “He spoke our language,” Kirke says simply. “He loved his artists. He made us believe in ourselves. It really helped us that he had only one other act to manage and they were the biggest band in the world.” Heartened by the response to Bad Company, the group hired Ronnie Lane’s mobile studio and had it installed at Clearwell Castle in Gloucestershire, England in September 1974. “That was an interesting place to record,” states Rodgers. “Where next after Headley Grange but an old haunted castle! We had been touring very hard but we were still able to come up with the goods in the end. By comparison, we hadn’t done any touring before our first record.”
Bad Company followed up their initial success with the 1975 release of the tripleplatinum album Straight Shooter which contained the Top Ten smash ballad “Feel Like Makin’ Love” which also won a Grammy Award. “I loved Straight Shooter,” says Kirke. “Quite a few of the songs on that album came along during the first year of our existence. A lot of the songs on the first album had been done in 1973 before we really had started, so we were always playing catch-up with new material. We wanted to record a follow up album that really validated what we had done on Bad Company.” Other tracks form the album, such as “Shooting Star” have long since become concert and radio staples. “I remember Paul was singing a few of the verses for that song in the airport as we were going over to America to start our second tour,” remembers Kirke. “He had taken his guitar on the plane with him and was tinkering around with the song on the flight over.” “I just started singing that lyric, ‘Johnny was a schoolboy.. .,’ and I was thinking, that’s a good song,” continues Rodgers. “Where had I heard that? Then it dawned on me that I hadn’t heard it anywhere before. I quickly grabbed a pen and paper and wrote it all down. The song just flowed out of me. It wrote itself. I was thinking, wow, where did this come from? Since then, people have asked me who it is about including whether it’s about (former Free guitarist) Paul Kossoff. Actually, with hindsight, the song is about all of the casualties of rock music because there have been way too many.”
“Paul’s ability to come up with good lyrics have always enabled us to have rock songs with class,” says Ralphs. “I tend to write more simplistic songs, but believe me, it’s very hard to write a simple rock song on guitar that has something special without sounding ordinary.”
Eagerly anticipated by the group’s fans, Straight Shooter enjoyed international success, reaching number three on both the UK and US album charts. The ecstatic response to the album accelerated the group’s momentum and their standing as one of the most popular concert attractions in the world. “In 1975, we were able to come back and tour America as a headliner,” recalls Kirke. “It had been an amazing year.”
“There was quite a bit of pressure on us being the first artists signed to Zeppelin’s Swan Song label,” states Rodgers. “Behind the scenes, we did take the mickey out of each other mercilessly. We would stand on their side of the stage and yell ‘Rubbish!’ and the like at them. We never did shows together, but we did jam quite a bit. There was a real rapport between the two bands.”
“There is no doubt in my mind that without Peter Grant we would not have reached the level of success we achieved,” echoes Ralphs. “His clout and insights were essential to our elevated status. He was a great manager and a lovely man.”
The wildly successful Run With The Pack in 1976 was the band’s third consecutive platinum seller, fueled by the infectious Top 20 single success of the Coasters’ classic “Youngblood.” The band met in Grasse, France in September 1975 to begin recording the album. Upon its release, it soared to number five in both the US and the UK. With three albums now to their credit, the central ingredient to the group’s remarkable success was their steady stream of first rate original material. Rodgers and Ralphs were the group’s composers. “I always thought it was important for the group to have more than one writer,” states Rodgers. “If there was any competition between us, it was always friendly.”
Coupled with the strength of the group’s songwriting was the clarity and unmistakable power of Rodgers’ voice. Rodgers moved with ease among a wide range of emotions and musical styles. “Silver, Blue & Gold” celebrated the group’s skills for ballads, higWighting a softer, more introspective vocal performance by Rodgers.
The expanded arrangement of the album’s title track effectively incorporated strings. The group had previously experimented with strings on Straight Shooter’s “Weep No More,” but Rodgers composed “Run With The Pack” with a string arrangement in mind from the outset. “I wrote that song on the piano and when I played it to the guys they fell right in,” detail Rodgers. “In my head, the strings were always a part of the song. Jimmy Horowitz came around to the studio and he was to do the scoring. Jimmy came to the session with a tape recorder in hand and while the track was playing asked me how I wanted the strings in the background. I sang the part that I had been hearing in my head and he went off and wrote it up.”
“I’ll never forget mixing the song with (engineer) Eddie Kramer,” states Ralphs. “We both had all hands on the desk and were riding about thirty six faders, trying to do a mix all in one take and get all of the parts at the right intensity. In the end, we had to do it in two bits, as it was just too much!”
Burnin’Sky, with its moody and atmospheric title track, reached gold status in 1977, followed by the double-platinum wallop of Desolation Angels in March 1979. “I think we had exhausted the pool of songs by the time we did ‘Burnin’ Sky,’ admits Kirke. “That album was as good as the three that preceded it, but I’ll never forget one of the headlines in the British music press. It asked, ‘Is there a crack in the sky?’ Looking back, we had done the tour, album, tour, syndrome for three years and we were getting a bit tired.”
Detemlined to reset their course, Bad Company gathered at Ridge Faml Studios in Dorking, Surrey to record the superb Desolation Angels. “Rock ‘n’ Roll Fantasy opened the album and set the tone for what was to follow. “I remember walking into the studio and Paul was playing this huge riff on the guitar,” remembers Kirke. “He had an octave divider device on his guitar and the riff was great. We recorded the song that day.” “I wanted to write an anthem which expressed my feelings about everything in rock ‘n’ roll,” explains Rodgers. “I wanted to cover the whole spectrum, particularly that rock ‘n’ roll was a magical illusion of colour and sound and light.”
Another of the album’s highlights was the rollicking “Oh Atlanta.” “That was Bad Company meets Little Feat,” laughs Kirke. “We always had a great time in Atlanta and I think you can hear a bit of the country influence in that song.”
The group’s affinity for country music was evident throughout Desolation Angels. The western-flavored “Evil Wind” was a noteworthy example. “‘Evil Wind’ was a strong track,” states Kirke. “That was full of Paul’s tumbleweed-across-the-plains imagery. I think Paul was a cowboy or one of those bounty hunters in another life.”
The wide approval enjoyed by Desolation Angels reaffirmed Bad Company’s commercial status. The album spawned the gold selling classic, “Rock & Roll Fantasy,” a staple on classic rock play-lists everywhere. The band, led by the soulful vocals of the charismatic Rodgers (who is also an accomplished guitarist and keyboardist), toured the globe countless times during this period, playing to enthusiastic sellout crowds every where. But there would be a price to pay for all of this success. According to Rodgers, “at this same time there came a point when I felt the band and its commitments had completely overtaken my life. I needed to get my feet on solid ground and spend some time watching my children grow. I never left music, I left the band.” After the release of the Top 30 album Rough Diamonds in 1982, Rodgers left the band to take time off and to eventually pursue an acclaimed solo career.
“Looking back, we stopped at the right time,” recalls Ralphs. “Paul wanted a break and truthfully we all needed to stop. Bad Company had become bigger than us all and to continue would have destroyed someone or something. From a business standpoint, it was the wrong thing to do, but Paul’s instinct was absolutely right.”
In 1986, Kirke and Ralphs resurrected Bad Company without Rodgers. Over a six -year span from 1986 to 1992, this Bad Company released four albums including Fame and Fortune, Dangerous Age, the platinum selling Holy Water and Here Comes Trouble. The band relased two more albums, 1995’s Company of Strangers and Stories Told and Untold in 1996. While the music was always consistently well played and tours well attended, nothing could replace the writing, stage presence and, of course, those one-of -akind vocals that Rodgers brought to the equation. Fans and critics alike began to clamor for a reunion of the original band and finally, it happened when Rodgers got together with Kirke, Ralphs and Burrell in England to hang out and record.
The long awaited reunion came together in 1999 and saw the band not only complete a rousing 3D-date U.S. tour that drew sellout crowds and much critical acclaim, but also oversee the release of the acclaimed Original Bad Company Anthology that year as well, a dynamic two-CD, 33-song overview of the band’s career released on Elektra Records. It features six B-sides and outtakes including “Easy On My Soul” and “Whiskey Bottle” that were recorded during the Straight Shooter sessions along with an alternate recording of “Do Right Woman” that, according to Rodgers, was recorded live around a campfire. “Unfortunately, the fire was sparking and crackling so we decided to go with the clean studio version for Run With The Pack, says Rodgers. “But with hindsight, it’s a great track.” Another previously unreleased track is the Boz Burrell-composed “Smokin’ 45” that was recorded during the “Bumin’ Sky” sessions. The Anthology also contains four new tracks including the Anthology’s two singles, new songs “Hey Hey” and “Hammer of Love,” which received significant radio and chart action exemplifying just how timeless Bad Company’s music is. Only the Bad could be this good.
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