Bobby Shad And The Bad Men



Bobby Shad And The Bad Men ‎– A 65-Piece Rock Workshop Label: Mainstream Records ‎– MRL-306, Mainstream Records ‎– MRL 306 Format: Vinyl, LP, Album Country: US Released: 1973 Genre: Jazz, Funk / Soul. Style: Free Funk. Tracklist Hide Credits. The Bad Men Stories: Russian Arrogance Book #1 2.5M Reads 12.3K Votes 4 Part Story. By LittleRebelxo Completed. Embed Story Share via Email Read New Reading List.

  1. Bobby Shad And The Bad Men
  2. Bobby Shad And The Bad Men
  3. Bobby Shad And The Bad Men - A 65-piece Rock Workshop
  • No Time, a song by Bobby Shad and the Bad Men on Spotify We and our partners use cookies to personalize your experience, to show you ads based on your interests, and for measurement and analytics purposes.
  • Prelude to a Bad Man. Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Bobby Shad and the Badmen - Bob Shad on AllMusic - 1973.
This is the kind of musical experiment that could only have happened in the 1970s. It is described on the cover as 'a 65 piece rock workshop' and that's just about as apt as anything.
Bob Shad, for those unaware, was a big shot producer/ record label owner in the 1960s, working with such artists as Patti Page, Dizzy Gillespie, Lightnin' Hopkins, The Platters, Janis Joplin and Ted Nugent. Odd list. Odd album.
Basically what we have here is a full on orchestra, not a

Bobby Shad And The Bad Men

classical orchestra, but the kind you expect to hear in a 70's movie providing the theme music to the actions of the baddest cat keepin' the crime off the streets. Add to that The Amboy Dukes (Nugent's former band) and some of rock's most classic songs and you have, well, this. It's hard to tell if the intent behind this record was to expose rock and roll to a larger more mainstream audience, or to try and open the eyes of rockers by exposing them to something different in a way they could understand it. No matter, neither goal was accomplished. What did happen is a unique, oddly enjoyable LP that shouldn't work at all but somehow does.
As mentioned above, this sounds like the soundtrack to the greatest 70's spectacle never made. Acid rock meets 'Shaft' in an NBC movie of the week starring the Jackson 5. We get groovy, almost jazzy/soulful versions of 'Whole Lotta Love', 'Pinball Wizard', 'No Time', 'Up On Cripple Creek' (that's what I said...What?), 'Instant Karma' and 'I Want You Back'. Okay that last one sounds mostly the same but you get the idea. Oh, and did I mention that the songs are all instrumentals as well? Kinda like super groovy elevator music.
The whole thing is amazingly silly, and yet still kinda awesome. Go into it as a grizzled rock purist and you will hate it. But keep an open ear and a smile on your face and you just might be surprised. You see, for all the ridiculousness of this project, the musicianship and arrangements are quite good. Bobby Shad and his Bad Men really were some baaaaad cats, they just got wrapped up in a whole lotta cheese.
MenThis one is out there folks. Worth finding.

Bobby Shad And The Bad Men


Bobby Shad And The Bad Men - A 65-piece Rock Workshop

Rating: 3 out of 5 Daves.



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