Released

Everything finally came together for Mott the Hoople in 1973. After years of grinding away in obscurity, elusive success finally followed via a well-timed Bowie-assisted commercial breakthrough with “All the Young Dudes” just as glam rock and Ziggy Stardust reached peak visibility in the UK. Mott presaged glam but their irony-laced hard rock crunch fit right in. None of their albums were flawless but this quasi-eponymous LP – their first as hitmakers – comes close. “All the Way From Memphis” is a witty, tragicomic peek behind the music business curtain. Ostensibly a travelogue about chasing his lost guitar on an American tour, Ian Hunter’s caustic lyrics “you look like a star but you’re still on the dole” deflate rock and roll myth while the R&B piano chords prop it up. The surreal arc of the rising celebrity is one of Hunter’s main themes but the other is the ignominious way it ends; “Hymn for the Dudes” and “Ballad of Mott the Hoople” are bitter, gorgeous elegies to a fallen star. And Mott themselves had plenty of great songs left in them, as the sleek, restrained “Whizz Kid” and the sweetly nostalgic “Honaloochie Boogie” proved.

Joshua Levine

Suggestions
Rides Again cover

Rides Again

James Gang
Drive My Car cover

Drive My Car

Bill Wyman
Elvis at Stax cover

Elvis at Stax

Elvis Presley
Mano a Satano cover

Mano a Satano

The Neptune Power Federation
Karnak cover

Karnak

Karnak
Yeah! cover

Yeah!

Def Leppard
Harvest cover

Harvest

Neil Young
Out of Our Heads cover

Out of Our Heads

The Rolling Stones
Fleetwood Mac cover

Fleetwood Mac

Fleetwood Mac