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Saturday, April 01, 2023

1193. Fastway / Fastway. 1983. 2.5/5

Thinking of Motorhead without “Fast” Eddie Clarke and of UFO without Pete Way back in the early 1980’s was almost impossible, and yet this is exactly what occurred in 1982, with both looking to escape the perceived troubles they saw with those bands current line ups, and looking for a new start. That they came upon each other, and found enough similarities to form a new band together was also fortuitous. Thus, the name Fastway was launched, taking the “Fast” from Eddie Clarke’s nickname, and the “Way” from Pete’s surname. It seemed a perfect fit.
What wasn’t a perfect fit though was Pete Way’s contract with Chrysalis Records, one which he soon discovered he was unable to break in order to write and record with his new band. At the same time as this realisation hit, he was offered the bass players spot in Ozzy Osbourne’s touring band to replace Rudy Sarzo who had left to re-join Quiet Riot. This meant that despite being considered as a ‘founding member’ of Fastway, Pete Way never played nor recorded with the band.
Better news came from the recruitment of Jerry Shirley, the drummer from Humble Pie, and an unknown lead singer named Dave King, whose vocal chords perfectly fit what the band was looking for. Because although no one was looking for a Lemmy replica to be fronting this new band, they were certainly expecting those famous “Fast” Eddie Clarke riffs to be flooding through the songs. And they needed a front man with a voice to carry the performance, and in King they found their man.

With the focus of the fans on the band coming from its two high profile musicians in “Fast” Eddie Clarke and Jerry Shirley, there is little doubt that it is the vocals of Dave King that are the leading light of the band in the early songs of the album. The opening track “Easy Livin’” is a straight forward hard rock track that introduces his vocals from the outset, and from that point on, the album has set its template. The atypical boy-to-girl hard rock tracks such as “All I Need Your Love” and “Feel Me, Touch Me (Do Anything You Want) and “Give it All You Got” are the prototype to what the LA hair metal bands began to popularise, though Fastway perform them in denim jeans and leather jackets rather than the spandex and teased hair and make up that came with those bands. Songs like “Another Day” and ------- are where both Shirley and Clarke come into their own, where the drums sound like they are being hit with more intensity, and where Eddie lets loose on the strings and gives us the riffs and solo breaks that most of the fans have come for. Other songs such as “Heft!” and “We Become One” are more in that Diamond Head NWoBHM standard which almost a doom standard riff followed by a more complex solo piece from Eddie. And then you have songs such as “Say What You Will” that have a classic Motorhead sound without the gravelled vocal chords.
Listening to the album with these different sets of styles, it becomes an interesting task in retrospect, because it sounds as though the band was still trying to establish exactly what they wanted to sound like, or what direction they wanted their music to go in. So you will find different varieties and genres of the emerging hard rock heavy metal scene of the early 1980’s. And because of this, these songs probably shouldn’t gell together well on an album. But that is the surprising part about it – because it really does.

I didn’t come across Fastway until the end of my high school years, and the release of the horror metal-injected movie titled “Trick or Treat” which had cameos from Gene Simmons and Ozzy Osbourne, about a satanic-loving metal star who is raised from the dead by the playing of his unreleased album backwards. Go watch it if you are interested, but it has dated badly. The soundtrack for that movie was provided by Fastway, which is where I first heard them. It wasn’t until many years later that I went back and looked into the band, discovered the reason for its formation, and listened to their back catalogue. And it is fair to say that, by that time many years after its release, I found this to be interesting without being brilliant. Certainly, having read reports on it from the time it was released, I was expecting brilliance beyond what I had heard before, but that isn’t what I got. What I heard was a fairly decent hard rock album that had some good bits, but was not a stand out.
Having come back to it over the past couple of weeks in the lead up to recording this episode, I was pleasantly surprised to find that it actually retained its pleasure for me. I think going in without any expectations helped this, whereas in the past I was looking for something that it didn't have. But the vocals are very good, lifting the songs above an averageness that they could have had with a lesser singer. And Eddie’s riffs are good as well – not Motorhead good, but still enjoyable. It was marketed as a heavy metal album, whereas in reality it is a hard rock album with a reasonable kick. Come into it thinking you are going to hear AC/DC rather than Motorhead and you will find it is a good solid album worthy of your time.

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