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Bolan's Zip Gun

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Bolan’s Zip Gun
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 1975 (1975-02)
RecordedFebruary – August 1974
StudioMRI, Hollywood
Genre
Length33:42
LabelT.REX (UK), Ariola (Germany)
ProducerMarc Bolan
T. Rex chronology
Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow
(1974)
Bolan’s Zip Gun
(1975)
Futuristic Dragon
(1976)
Singles from Bolan’s Zip Gun
  1. "Think Zinc"
    Released: 1974 (Germany only)
  2. "Light of Love"
    Released: 1974
  3. "Zip Gun Boogie"
    Released: 1974

Bolan's Zip Gun is the tenth studio album by English rock band T. Rex, released in February 1975 by record label EMI.

Eight of the eleven songs on the album had already been released in the US the previous year on the Light of Love album on Casablanca Records. Zip Gun was a repackage with three extra tracks.[1] However, it was the only T. Rex album that failed to chart in the UK.[1]

Background

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The critical and commercial failure of the ambitious Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow in early 1974 rattled Bolan, who suddenly became uncertain as to what would please the public. With Bill Legend having quit the T. Rex lineup at the end of 1973, Davey Lutton was made drummer and new girlfriend Gloria Jones was made a permanent member on clavinet and backing vocals. Guitarist Jack Green and singer Pat Hall, who had filled out the band's live lineup in 1973, were dismissed from the group and in July 1974 Dino Dines was added as a second keyboardist.[2] That same month, the new lineup's single "Light of Love" could only manage to reach number 22 on the UK charts, T. Rex's worst placing yet, as the press began to savage him as a portly has-been. As a result, his drinking and cocaine use further increased and he soon left England for tax purposes, settling down in the French Riviera and Hollywood Hills.[1]

Songs and recording

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Bolan wanted to continue the funk and soul based direction recently glimpsed on Tanx and especially Zinc Alloy, although the production of the new album featured starker, stripped-down arrangements (perhaps as a reaction to the backlash given the heavily orchestrated Zinc Alloy) and lyrics which were simple and direct, often consisting of just three or four lines repeated over and over.[1] Several of the songs also had a futuristic tone, especially "Space Boss", "Think Zinc", and "Golden Belt", Bolan being a great fan of science fiction. The album also featured a twin-drum sound on some tracks, notably "Solid Baby", provided by Davy Lutton and Paul Fenton.[1]

The first sessions for the new album were held at Scorpio Sound in London at the same time Bolan was producing a solo album for Sister Pat Hall. On February 22 "Think Zinc", "Solid Baby" and "Teen Angel" were put to tape, while on the 23rd sax player Howie Casey joined them for "Space Boss" and a remake of "Solid Baby".[2] On the 28th the outtake "Sky Church Music" was attempted along with a jam of 50s rock'n'roll standards, with additional overdubs to "Think Zinc" on March 7. In the meantime, Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow was released to a negative reception on March 1.

Sessions moved to Musicland Studios in Munich, where much of Zinc Alloy had been recorded, from March 21-25 with Bolan as producer. These sessions were considered dispiriting and unproductive although the outtake "Metropolis Incarnate" was attempted on the 21st, followed by two more outtakes "Preacher" and "Saturation Syncopation" plus an early version of "Light of Love" on the 23rd.[2] Two more rehearsals, a Fats Domino cover "I'm In Love Again" and an untitled track known as "Na Na Na", broke down. On March 25 another attempt at "Light of Love" along with another outtake, "Why Stay", were recorded. Further sessions at Scorpio Sound in April attempted to complete the Pat Hall solo album, although it was to be shelved shortly afterward.[2]

Work on the new T. Rex album continued at MRI Studios in Hollywood with Bolan producing and Gary Ulmer engineering, but with several members of the band not invited;[1] the first session on May 14 resulted in working versions of "Light of Love" and "Token of My Love". On the 17th a remake of "Metropolis Incarnate" retitled "Teenage Angel" was attempted as well as the only serious recording sessions for the "Children of Rarn" project Bolan had conceived back in 1970, with rough versions of "The Children of Rarn", "We Are Dworn" and "Rarn Rarn" laid to tape along with another outtake, "Video Drama".[2] On the 19th further work was done on "Light of Love", with "Do I Love Thee", "Golden Belt" (working title "Dishing Fish Wop") and "I Really Love You Babe" (working titles "One From Column 13" and "Precision Debating") completed on the 21st. May 23 saw working versions of "Precious Star", "Girl In The Thunderbolt Suit", and "Golden Belt", while May 28 produced further work on "Girl In The Thunderbolt Suit" (named "Burrito Blue Jean Wop"), a remake of "Video Drama" and another outtake named "Every Lady".[2] Final overdubbing and mixing proceeded through June and July at MRI, with one final song, "Zip Gun Boogie", recorded in late August at Scorpio Sound. Another track, "Till Dawn" was pulled from the August 1973 sessions for Zinc Alloy and featured Bill Legend on drums.

Release

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With cover artwork credited to John Kosh, Bolan’s Zip Gun was released on February 14, 1975 on the T. Rex label (distributed by EMI).[3] Two singles were pulled for release prior to the album: "Light of Love" on July 5, 1974 which reached number 22 in the UK Singles Chart, and "Zip Gun Boogie" on November 1, which reached number 41. Press coverage for both singles was not favorable, and the album was released to complete indifference from the public, failing to chart at all in the United Kingdom.

Bolan's Zip Gun would be the last T. Rex album to feature Mickey Finn on percussion, who was fired from the group in January 1975.[1]

In 1994, Edsel Records's released Bolan’s Zip Gun as part of their extensive T. Rex reissue campaign, but cut down on the number of bonus tracks. A companion release, entitled Precious Star (The Alternate Zip Gun), was released in 1995 which contained alternative versions, studio rough mixes, a live version and demos of the main album and bonus tracks. A combined album digipak was released in 2002.

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[4]
New Musical Express[5]
Pitchfork5.9/10[6]
PopMatters4/10[7]

Upon release, Bolan's Zip Gun was poorly received by critics.[4] In the UK, Kate Phillips of NME complained it was "a far cry from the pure voices and guitars of the old Rex days...it might drive you mad, but after six or seven minutes you don't really notice whether it's playing or not".[2] Barbara Charone of Sounds stated that "what sounded like good, simple fun two years ago comes off sounding like inferior exercises in self-indulgence today" while Jan Iles of Record Mirror joked that "most of Marc's rumblings ride faster than a white swan but won't get to the top half as quickly!"[2]

In a retrospective review, AllMusic praised the diversity of the material, with tracks like "the delightful knockabout "Precious Star," the unrepentant boogie of "Till Dawn" and the pounding title track" which was a return to the "understated romp he had always excelled at", "Token of My Love" was described as "equally incandescent" for being a playful blues. Reviewer Dave Thompson noted that a sparser sound "emphasized the rhythms, heightened the backing vocals, and left rock convention far behind. "Light of Love," "Golden Belt" and the heavyweight ballad "I Really Love You Babe"" all had "an earthy authenticity".[4]

Pitchfork wrote, "A purposeful return to the looser sound of Electric Warrior, Gun fires blanks. For all its directness, the album is mostly perfunctory, working some of the same sounds and ideas, but the results lack movement and liveliness; Bolan's mojo definitely wasn't working. Worse, he really doesn't sound invested in these songs." However, reviewer Stephen M. Deusner noted that the alternate takes on the second disc of the 2014 reissue were "rougher and rawer" and "vastly improve on these songs, bringing out a charmingly stiff boogie piano on "Precious Star" and the popping bass line on "Light of Love".[6] PopMatters shared a similar opinion saying that "Zip Gun contains enough good moments to preclude classification as a disaster, but just barely." However, reviewer Whitney Strub praised a few tracks saying, ""Light of Love" opens things on a glam-funk note, and "Precious Star" offers irresistibly creamy doo-wop."[7]

Bolan biographer Mark Paytress called it a "fabulously flawed crystal ball which at its best made a virtue of trance-like repetition years before late seventies Industrial Music and early eighties Hip Hop paved the way for the entire dance music explosion".[1]

Track listing

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All tracks are written by Marc Bolan, except as noted

Side A
No.TitleLength
1."Light of Love"3:16
2."Solid Baby"2:37
3."Precious Star"2:53
4."Token of My Love"3:40
5."Space Boss"2:49
6."Think Zinc"3:25
Side B
No.TitleLength
1."Till Dawn"3:02
2."Girl in the Thunderbolt Suit"2:20
3."I Really Love You Babe"3:33
4."Golden Belt"2:41
5."Zip Gun Boogie"3:26
1994 CD reissue bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
12."Do You Wanna Dance?"Bobby Freeman2:13
13."(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" (sung by Gloria Jones)Steve Cropper, Otis Redding2:20
Precious Star (The Alternate Zip Gun)
No.TitleLength
1."Light of Love"2:22
2."Solid Baby"2:29
3."Precious Star"2:45
4."Token of My Love"3:40
5."Space Boss"3:17
6."Think Zinc"3:23
7."Till Dawn"4:54
8."Girl in the Thunderbolt Suit"2:42
9."I Really Love You Babe (Precision Debating)"3:06
10."Golden Belt"3:28
11."Zip Gun Boogie (Live)"9:11
12."Do You Wanna Dance?"2:15
13."Dock of the Bay"2:22
14."Solid Baby"6:06
15."Till Dawn (Marc's Guide)"4:44
16."Till Dawn"4:29
17."Till Dawn"4:03
18."Girl in the Thunderbolt Suit (Blue Jean Bop)"2:39
19."Dishing Fish Wop (Golden Belt)"3:17

Personnel

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Charts

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Chart (1975) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[8] 89

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Paytress, Mark. Bolan: The Rise and Fall of a 20th Century Superstar. Omnibus Press. 2003.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h McLenahan, Cliff (2019). Marc Bolan: 1947-1977 A Chronology. Helter Skelter Books.
  3. ^ "Bolan's Zip Gun". Discogs. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Thompson, Dave. "Bolan's Zip Gun – T. Rex". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 June 2024.
  5. ^ Morley, Paul (27 September 1980). "Marc Bolan Discography 1971~77". New Musical Express. p. 27.
  6. ^ a b Deusner, Stephen M. (5 February 2006). "T. Rex: Tanx / Zip Gun / Futuristic Dragon / Work in Progress". Pitchfork. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  7. ^ a b Strub, Whitney (23 January 2006). "T. Rex: Tanx / Bolan's Zip Gun / Futuristic Dragon / Work in Progress". PopMatters. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  8. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 302. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
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