Whitesnake’s existence in its earliest form, as a blues-based hard rock band that combined half of the end pieces of Deep Purple and the recruitment of other excellent musicians and writers had become better and more popular with each year and album that passed. The core of David Coverdale on vocals with former bandmates Jon Lord on keyboards and Ian Paice on drums, along with Micky Moody and Bernie Marsden on guitars and Neil Murray on bass, formed what became the initial essential group, mixing blues based rhythm with the harder centre that had come from Purple. Each album, even going back now and listening to them in order of their release, shows an improvement in the music and the way the band gels with its writing and performing.
The band’s 4th album “Come an’ Get It” had produced the best reviews the band had received, and the band’s highest album position in the UK, and yet according to the band members they were still making relatively little money from albums and sell-out concerts. This was causing growing dissent within the ranks, such that when the band reconvened to write and record the follow up, tensions within the band was clear. Coverdale had already written much of what eventually became the “Saints & Sinners” album, something that was also a step out of the ordinary from previous band collaborations. The recording began, but before it could be completed, Moody quit the band at the end of 1981. This set off a chain reaction of events, including Coverdale deciding to put the band on hiatus while his daughter was sick. During this hiatus, Coverdale sacked the band’s manager, bought out many of the contracts he was tied to, and eventually decided to let go almost off of the remaining members in Marsden, Paice and Murray, claiming they lacked the enthusiasm needed to keep the band going.
Towards the end of 1982, Coverdale had contacted Moody, and asked him to come back and help him finish the album, which Moody agreed to. In the end most of it had been done, so it just required a few guitar pieces and backing vocals added to have it done, and producer Martin Birch then spent a few weeks putting it all together to complete the procedures. It had been a long hard road, and one where Coverdale was obviously angling to try and get a breakthrough in the US. And while some of the songs here seem skewed with that in mind, the progression from blues rock to hard rock is not as noticeable here as was perhaps thought to be the case when the album was initially released.
In many ways this is a conduit between the way the band had begun, and the way it ended up by the late 1980’s. Given that this was the final album to feature those main six players, the real change towards cracking the US hard rock market probably came on the follow up to this album, “Slide it In”. But this album does progress further down the path on the back of “Come an’ Get It” without totally giving up that blues and in places almost rockabilly style that early Whitesnake had garnered its support. “Rock an’ Roll Angels” is an upbeat blues trip with piano bar keyboards from Lord being a centrepiece. “Bloody Luxury” is in the same vein, it sounds like it is coming straight from an old blues bar, again with two great solo guitar pieces from Moody and Marsden with Lord’s own blues piano set between them. “Dancing Girls” is another catchy song that has Lord dominate the middle of the song in great style, while Moody and Marsden have their moments. There are also atypical Whitesnake songs in the mix, including the opening track “Young Blood” and then the mid-tempo “Victim of Love”. And you can’t go past those titles when it comes to a Whitesnake album, with “Rough an’ Ready” and “Love an’ Affection” and “Rock an’ Roll Angels”. And “Saints an’ Sinners”. All very good songs, don’t get me wrong, with typical Whitesnake hooks in the guitar riffs and Coverdale’s smooth yet biting vocals throughout. “Love an’ Affection” has a call back to Deep Purple days, while the closing title track is a get hard rock song to finish off proceedings in style. But what is it with dropping the ‘d’ in all of the ‘ands’ on the song titles? It’s a bit wanky isn’t it. It does date the album back to that period.
The two obvious standout songs on this album are ones that fans of any generation would know - “Crying in the Rain” and “Here I Go Again”. When the album was released back in 1982, they were the best of what comes here. What makes them unique here is that both were eventually re-recorded for Whitesnake’s 1987 album, with a more updated style that better reflected the style Coverdale wanted at that time in his efforts to break the American market. Comparatively, both versions of both songs hold up, and both versions reflect the time and audience they were written for.
1982 was some time before I began to find bands like Whitesnake. Indeed, like I guess most of my generation, I fell head over heels in love with the band with the 1987 album, it being one of the albums of playlist of that year. From there it was the “Slip of the Tongue” album, and more fanboying over that. Beyond that, I didn’t go back to find and appreciate this album until the 2000’s had arrived. And it’s a shame it took me that long, because the wonderful connections of Moody and Marsden and Murray on guitars in this era is quite spectacular, and I probably would say that it culminates at their best on this album. Which, given the history of the making of the album, ends up being rather strange. Apart from that small concession that all was not harmonious within the group, I have a great affection for the album. Each member plays their part. The guitarists as mentioned sound great. Lord and Paice are as noteworthy as always, and Coverdale’s vocals are sublime. I may not have gotten this album until quite late in the piece, but that hasn’t stopped me from enjoying it thoroughly, and the last couple of weeks have only helped me to appreciate it even more.
Whitesnake the band had more rough waters to navigate following this album and its tour, and the maturing of the band’s sound and the morphing of the band’s direction all contributed to that. Which continues to make this album a litmus test of the band’s discography, one that is generally well received by fans of all eras of the band.
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