Thin Lizzy is one of those bands I turn up every time I hear a song of theirs
on the radio. I never gave them much thought beyond that. Recently, however,
I learned what Iâve been missing when I heard Still Dangerous:
Live at the Tower Theater Philadelphia 1977. Out the gate with that
famous double-lead guitar punch, Thin Lizzy pounds through âSoldier of
Fortuneâ and a sizzling âJailbreakâ before easing, ever so
slightly, into âCowboy Song.â Guitarists Scott Gorham and Brian
Robertson play fast and loud, causing certain studio nuances of âCowboy
Songâ to get a bit lost, but the drive is all here from what is unquestionably
a classic line-up of this hard rocking quartet.
Of course, âBoys Are Back In Townâ gets the crowd going with Phil
Lynott in great wry voice, roaring in front of Gorham and Robertsonâs
distorted guitar wail. The backing vocals ainât too bad either â
which surprised me. You can hear why this still stands as one of the best 70s
anthems ever.
âDancing In The Moonlightâ offers a respite from the full-frontal
guitar attack. Itâs a slower blues work-out with a sax lead, of all things.
âMassacreâ and âOpium Trailâ have that chunky heavy
groove, while âBaby Drives Me Crazyâ is more or less the center
piece with an call-and-response with the audience, outstanding fret work throughout
and the obligatory band member intros (though anytime Lynott addresses a crowd,
it is anything but obligatory). This is the most moving, grooving tune on Still
Dangerous and probably the best one of the 10 on this CD. The set ends with
the rousing, crowd-participating, faux 50s romp âMe And The Boys.â
One complain is that Phil Lynottâs bass is simply buried too far down
in the mix while Brian Downeyâs snare drum is a bit too high. Still, with
an unearthed treasure like this, beggars canât be choosers. Itâs
a shame Lynott died so young. You can only imagine that his songwriting might
have matured and transformed Thin Lizzy into a powerhouse of the 80s and beyond.
Guess, weâll never know. At least we have Still Dangerous: Live
At The Tower Theatre Philadelphia 1977, a raw yet powerful document
of a band I miss just a bit more after each listen.