Create account Log in

Rock and Roll Queen

[Edit]

Download links and information about Rock and Roll Queen by Mott The Hoople. This album was released in 1972 and it belongs to Rock, Glam Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 8 tracks with total duration of 35:43 minutes.

Artist: Mott The Hoople
Release date: 1972
Genre: Rock, Glam Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 8
Duration: 35:43
Buy on iTunes $5.99
Buy on Songswave €1.00

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Rock and Roll Queen 5:10
2. The Wheel of the Quivering Meat Conception 0:26
3. You Really Got Me 2:54
4. Thunderbuck Ram 4:51
5. Walkin' With a Mountain 3:54
6. Death May Be Your Santa Claus 4:54
7. Midnight Lady 3:28
8. Keep A'Knockin' (Live At Fairfield Halls, Croydon, London) 10:06

Details

[Edit]

Originally released in the U.K. during the first flurry of excitement following Mott the Hoople's 1972 breakthrough, Rock and Roll Queen is both an excellent introduction to the group's pre-"All the Young Dudes" background, and a vivid portrait of why it took them so long to actually make it. Just four of the eight tracks are what one would consider truly representative of Mott's early powers — the title track, of course, the claustrophobic hard rockers "Walking With a Mountain" and "Thunderbuck Ram," and the grinding "Death May Be Your Santa Claus." The remainder can be summed up either as novelty fragments ("The Wheel of the Quivering Meat Conception"), entertaining throwaways (an instrumental cover of the Kinks' "You Really Got Me" and the non-album "Midnight Lady"), or live spacefillers — eight minutes of Little Richard's "Keep a Knocking" were out of place enough on the otherwise sublime Wildlife album. They have no business whatsoever on a putative best-of. But it is that very inconsistency which made the original albums the minor/ignored classics they undoubtedly were — Bowie, after all, gave the band more than a major hit single; he also introduced discipline and order to the ranks, focusing vocalist Ian Hunter on a role as leader, and reminding him that even democracies need some kind of game plan. After Bowie, Mott albums were focused tight as a drum. Before him, they sprawled all over the place, and Rock and Roll Queen sprawls with them. Indeed, that might even be why it continues to occupy such a resolute place in the heart of the true fan, long after both its contents and its purposes have been superseded by subsequent anthologies. There is nothing here which cannot be as easily obtained elsewhere, with even the once super-rare "Midnight Lady," a Shadow Morton production conceived as a between-albums 45, now as familiar as any of its stablemates. But Rock and Roll Queen lives on regardless, the first Mott the Hoople compilation and, for all its brevity, faults, and idiosyncrasies, still one of the most breathtaking. This band knew no fear.