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Friday, November 10, 2023

1230. Billy Idol / Rebel Yell. 1983. 4/5

Billy Idol had already had a solid career in music long before he became a successful solo act with the release of his first self-titled album in 1982. Originally hailing from the UK, he had been a staple of the growing punk movement in the mid-to-late 1970’s, first being the guitarist of the band Chelsea. Unsatisfied however he soon left the group, and with band mate Tony James they formed the band Generation X. With Billy Idol as lead singer, the band achieved success in the United Kingdom and released three studio albums over the next three years before disbanding.
In 1981, Idol moved to New York City to pursue his solo career. Here he met up with an up and coming guitarist called Steve Stevens, and they hit it off immediately. With Idol’s punk-like image combined with the growing glam metal scene, the pair looked like a match made in heaven. The pair pulled their band together, and eventually recorded their debut album, the self-titled "Billy Idol”. On the back of singles such as “Hot in the City” and “White Wedding”, and being picked up for heavy rotation on MTV, the album became a hit, and the band and its titular star were underway.
Keith Forsey returned to produce the follow up, and the trio of Forsey, Idol and Steven went to work on what was to become “Rebel Yell”. Idol apparently came up with the title for the album at a party he was attending where many guests were drinking Rebel Yell bourbon, and he liked the name. It of course then also became the titular song that dominated the album. Also, during the recording of the album, Idol had been fighting with the record company over creative control of the project. At the height of this, he stole the master tapes of the recordings, which he eventually returned to the studio when he had won his battle. It was at his time that Forsey informed him that he had in fact stolen the wrong tapes, and his tapes had never left the studio. Someone’s album could have met with a messy end over that dispute.

The album’s title track, “Rebel Yell,” is one of the most iconic songs of the 1980s. It features a catchy guitar riff and a memorable chorus that is sure to get stuck in your head. How this only reach number 9 on the charts in the US and 7 in Australia is beyond me. As terrific as “White Wedding” is as a song, this is the one that everyone knows, that everyone rocks out to, that you sing along to at top volume when it comes on. A terrific video clip featuring Billy, and that amazingly iconic solo from Steve Stevens. If you were to make a mixed tape of the 1980’s (and yes many of you would have no idea what that actually is) then surely this song has to be on it.
“Daytime Drama” is a typically new wave song that highlights the drama of relationships which, I believe, and it is only my thoughts, that mirrors the daytime soaps that proliferated the screens in the 1980’s, such as Days of our Lives and The Young and the Restless. The album’s second single, “Eyes Without a Face,” follows, and is a slower ballad that showcases Billy Idol’s vocal range. He had done songs like this before, but this was perhaps the best example of the range that Idol had with his voice, and the diversity the band had to create such a song, so different from the types of songs that they were best known for. The song was also a commercial success and peaked at number four in the US, helped by its susceptibility of radio airplay, as well as the growing medium of MTV. “Blue Highway” closes out side one of the album, and again delves into love and relationships, and a yearning for freedom. It’s a hard rock song with a great tempo and super riff that lifts the album again in a positive fashion.
The album’s third single, “Flesh for Fantasy,” opens up the second side of the album, and is a hard rock song that features a driving beat and a catchy chorus. Back to the hard rock roots of the band, the attitude is what drives this song beyond the average, a song that in the hands of another vocalist would not have worked as well as it did. It eventually reached only 29 on the US charts, which perhaps doesn’t reflect how popular it was at the time with his core audience. This is followed by the album’s fourth single, “Catch My Fall,” which is a slower ballad that features a piano and a string section. The song was not as successful as the previous three singles, and perhaps it was overkill going for another track of this type, but in the course of the album it is still a good song. “Crank Call” is a fun track highlighted by Stevens on guitar and bass, before launching in to “Do Not Stand in the Shadows”, a great fast paced hard rock track that lets Idol rip in with his vocals again in their best fashion. This is the song I would have released as that fourth single, because of the great energy it puts out, and would have allowed Billy to again put himself forward in a video clip such as his best efforts. The album then concludes with “The Dead Next Door” which for me is a very strange choice given the soft and quiet nature of the track. The end of “Do Not Stand in the Shadows” to me is the perfect finish to the album, “The Dead Next Door” is an extra four minutes of sleep music to finish off instead.

When the first album came out, I was completely obsessed with “White Wedding” as a song. In fact, it and Chris de Burgh’s “Don’t Pay the Ferryman” were the first two songs on a compilation cassette I was given for my birthday that year, and I wore out that tape just listening to those two songs. Then “Rebel Yell” came out, and that song caught my imagination as well. This was all in the days prior to me buying albums of bands, so the singles were what I had.
Flash forwards a few years, and I get my first listen to this album. And I knew the singles from the album very well, but from the first time I listened to this I thought it was just terrific. Even the slower songs have a depth about them that I enjoyed, which isn’t always the case when it comes to albums of such style. Especially I enjoyed “Blue Highway” and “Do Not Stand in the Shadows”, I felt they were terrific songs that were under utilised and certainly under appreciated when it came to Billy Idol’s work. In terms of album releases from the early 1980’s, I think this is up with the very best. And it is important to note that even though the album artist is credited to only Billy Idol, there are other very important people involved. Steve Stevens, not only as the lead guitarist and other instruments in the recording process as well, but as a co-composer of all of the tracks here, does a fantastic job. While the album is promoted by Idol’s presence, his writing and playing is just as important to the final product. And the producing of Kevin Forsey again is a major contributing factor to the eventual success of this album.
Overall, “Rebel Yell” is a great album that showcases Billy Idol’s and Steve Stevens talent as songwriters and performers. The album features a mix of new wave, hard rock, and pop rock that is sure to please fans of all genres. The album’s title track, “Rebel Yell,” is one of the most iconic songs of the 1980s, and it is a must-listen for anyone who is a fan of music from that era. Or essentially, any era.

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