Showing posts with label Fast Eddie Clarke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fast Eddie Clarke. Show all posts

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Fast Eddie Clarke - It Ain't Over 'Till It's Over

Size: 342 MB
Time: 50:06
File: Flac
Released: 1994
Styles: Blues-Rock
Art: Front

1. Snakebite (3:22)
2. Lying Ain't Right (3:21)
3. Back On The Road (4:17)
4. Naturally (4:29)
5. All Over Bar The Shouting (4:31)
6. Make My Day (3:21)
7. Laugh At The Devil (3:51)
8. No Satisfaction (5:03)
9. Lessons (4:33)
10. Hot Straight And Normal (3:15)
11. In The City (4:11)
12. It Ain't Over 'Till It's Over (5:46)

Here's a CD release that I never thought would end up seeing the light of day. As most of you probably do know that Fast Eddie Clarke was guitarist for Motorhead from 1976-82 until him and Lemmy had an apparent falling out. He then formed Fastway in which their first three lp's were great '80's metal. Getting back to 'It Ain't Over Till It's Over', I personally thought Clarke handled both the vocal chores as well as the guitar playing rather well. This is a heavy rock CD, with some bluesy influence thrown in. Tunes that totally rock out were "No Satisfaction", "Snakebite", "Laughing At The Devil" (which features Lemmy on lead vocals - alright!) and "In The City". Not a bad piece of semi-historic music here.

It Ain't Over 'Till It's Over FLAC

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Fast Eddie Clarke - Make My Day Back To Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 37:01
Size: 84.8 MB
Styles: Rockin blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:28] 1. Nothing Left
[4:47] 2. Mountains To The Sea
[4:12] 3. Make My Day
[4:00] 4. Heavy Load
[2:41] 5. Fast Train
[3:48] 6. Walking Too Slow
[3:20] 7. Haven't Got The Time
[3:52] 8. One Way
[3:38] 9. My New Life
[3:12] 10. Ethereal Blue

Former Motorhead guitarist Fast Eddie Clarke had not played with a keyboardist since performing with Curtis Knight in the’70s. A few years ago Clarke was introduced to jazz/funk keyboardist Bill Sharpe (Shakatak) and they gave the blues a go. The project produced a healthy supply of heavy blues; however, it lingered on the backburner until last year. This year Clarke and Sharpe finally got to release the material as a genuine modern blues album, Make My Day: Back to Blues — as good as many of them being put out today.

Clarke also takes his stab at vocals (after many challenging relationships with professional singers) on Make My Day: Back to Blues and serves up adequate rough and tumble blues vocals. With a “I-don’t-give-a-shit” delivery, Clarke sounds just like a man down on his luck, playing dive bars and scrapping up just enough money to survive. But the exceptional parts that make up Make My Day: Back to Blues are the guitar work from Clarke and the keys from album collaborator Bill Sharpe (also some ace backing vocals by Jill Saward of Shakatak to really enhance the songs).

Most songs like “Nothing Left” and “Mountains to the Sea” chug steady blues out with Clarke accenting guitar perfectly all the way through. “Make My Day” is a standout with a smooth Steely Dan approach. But the instrumental “One Way” is actually the song to return to. Now that Clarke has successfully gone ‘back to blues,’ perhaps he has the confidence to move forward with a follow-up.

Make My Day Back To Blues mc
Make My Day Back To Blues zippy