Thin Lizzy
Thin Lizzy


3.0
good

Review

by LepreCon USER (14 Reviews)
April 5th, 2010 | 22 replies


Release Date: 1971 | Tracklist

Review Summary: A far cry from what most would come to know as Thin Lizzy, this nonetheless stands as an interesting piece of history documenting the humble beginnings of one of rocks most iconic acts

LepreCon Presents: Rock Legends
Legend In Focus: Philip Lynott- THIN LIZZY
Part One: Dundundun Diddly-Aye


Thin Lizzy were a hugely influential Irish hard rock band formed in early 1970. After guitarist Eric Bell and organist Eric Wrixon, both formerly of the Irish Van Morrison-led psychedelic group Them, saw bassist and singer Phil Lynott and drummer Brian Downey playing with their band known as Orphanage, the four decided to form a band. However, Wrixon left soon after to rejoin Them. The remaining three adopted the name Thin Lizzy and recorded their eponymous debut album with Decca Records in 1971.


Today, Thin Lizzy are well known for being a key innovator of hard rock, particularly the signature twin guitar lead attack which they developed alongside the classic metal band Judas Priest, proving to be very influential on giants of rock and metal such as Iron Maiden, Metallica, Guns N Roses and many, many more, and, arguably, the world of heavy music would be a lot different had this band not existed. They stand alongside acts such as Aerosmith, ZZ Top and Black Sabbath as a definitive guitar band of the 70s. Therefore it would come as a complete shock to those familiar with their later work to find that their debut, as well as a couple of albums to come afterwards, sounds nothing like the Thin Lizzy they are more accustomed to.

A far cry from the aggressive twin-guitar rock they would come to be known for, Thin Lizzy were originally a power trio much in the vein of Cream and, to a lesser extent, The Jimi Hendrix Experience. However, whereas these aforementioned bands had a charismatic guitarist at the helm, Eric Bell did not quite have the same stage presence as Eric Clapton or Jimi Hendrix, therefore leaving it up to the main songwriter Phil Lynott to be the face and personality of the band. Lynott was quite an iconic figure even back then, a black Irishman with a gigantic afro and a charismatic voice that complemented his lyrical abilities. Of course, this being his first serious project, Lynott was young and relatively inexperienced, only truly in the developing stages of being a rock songwriter. At this stage, the band were noticeably unsure of what exactly they wanted to be- a hard rock band with folk leanings or a bluesy Irish folk band.

However, most of the time this indecisiveness remarkably works to the record’s advantage, displaying a wide variety of influences, keeping it from leaning too far in any one particular direction, displaying a sense of diversity that is quite an achievement for a debut album. This gives the music a laid-back feel, something one can kick back and have an enjoyable listen of on a late night. The naivety of it all brings a smile to one’s face as they take in the poetic spoken word intro of the opening track, The Friendly Ranger At Clontarf Castle, over a soothing blend of atmospheric acoustic guitar work and an echoed drum pattern, before bursting into a more folk rock number. A moving ballad, Honesty Is No Excuse, is a further display of the band’s versatility, backed by guest Ivor Raymonde on the mellotron. The epic Diddy Levine is a surprisingly progressive number that blends their folk and blues influences to great effect.

Throughout the album, one realises that, while a competent guitarist, Eric Bell is not quite comfortable in his role as the melody carrier in the instrumental department. Tracks such as Ray Gun and Return of The Farmer’s Son sound far more subdued on the six strings than they ought to be. Other songs, however, such as Look What The Wind Blew In and Clifton Grange Hotel are simply a bit of distortion away from being exactly like the Thin Lizzy most people know and love. Also, Saga of an Ageing Orphan is fittingly subtle with relaxed plucked acoustic chord patterns complemented by Lynott’s soothing vocals and relatively simple bass line. Downey’s drumming has psychedelic elements throughout, utilising unusual beat patterns consisting of toms and hi-hat that sound like they would not be out of place with his old band, Them, but this was his style of the time and he would eventually develop a more aggressive rock persona. However his beats and fills suit the music here quite well.

Although their later albums would be more focused, Thin Lizzy’s eponymous debut is quite an interesting piece of history, documenting the simpler, humble beginnings of one of the most iconic acts of hard rock. Although Eric Bell would leave after two more similarly styled albums, Lynott and Downey pressed on, developed further as songwriters and crafted one of the most influential bands of all time. Not exactly essential listening for anyone except die-hards and those interested in the history of Irish rock music, this is nonetheless and interesting listen and quite a remarkable achievement on the part of the band who were still quite an obscure act on a tightly-limited budget.

The Thin Lizzy Lineup Was:

Philip Parris Lynott- Vocals and Bass guitar
Eric Bell- Guitars
Brian Downey- Drums
and featuring
Ivor Raymonde- Mellotron

To Be Continued In Part Two: Shades Of A Blue Orphange...



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user ratings (114)
3.2
good

Comments:Add a Comment 
LepreCon
April 5th 2010


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Just laying the foundations for some possible future discography reviews. Also once again if any negs could come with explanations, that would be great.

LepreCon
April 5th 2010


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Hilarious

Inveigh
April 5th 2010


26879 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

good review man, pos'd. this is one of the few Thin Lizzy albums I neither own nor have heard.

LepreCon
April 5th 2010


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

@ motocross: No problem, I knew you were kidding anyway, thanks

@ Inveigh: Thanks and yeah it probably wouldn't be your thing

LepreCon
October 9th 2010


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Lack of Thin Lizzy love on this site is depressing

Inveigh
October 9th 2010


26879 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

very. Jailbreak and Johnny the Fox are borderline classics imo

Maniac!
October 9th 2010


28548 Comments


pos'd

tombits
October 9th 2010


3582 Comments


Two mates and I have our ringtones set to "The Boys Are Back In Town" for each other in some sort of representation of our gay love triangle.

LepreCon
December 8th 2010


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

^ That's cool

KILL
March 8th 2012


81580 Comments


cool jams

LepreCon
March 11th 2012


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Forgot I reviewed this

Gemini1979
June 8th 2016


32 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Good review. A very interesting debut. The version I listened to is the CD version that includes the New Day EP as bonus tracks. Listened to it on YouTube like I did with a lot of the albums I've rated on Sputnik.



Highlights: "Ray-Gun", "Look What the Wind Blew In", "Eire" and from the bonus tracks "Remembering Part 2".

LepreCon
June 18th 2016


5481 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Thanks. Must get on reviewing the rest of their albums.

Source
July 16th 2020


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

has its moments

parksungjoon
September 30th 2021


47235 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

underrated

FR33L0RD
March 9th 2022


6401 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

getting their discog, nice bring memories run ahead.

FR33L0RD
April 18th 2022


6401 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

discog walk; What a good storyteller, this front man is.

alkostach
April 18th 2022


277 Comments


One of few bands I actually got the complete studio discog on CDs. Some albums aren't as great as others, but all are a great listen.

Opening three tracks on this one are amazing.

FR33L0RD
April 18th 2022


6401 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

kind of band that need more exposure

parksungjoon
April 18th 2022


47235 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Underrated, better than since of their later popular ones



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