Though
Savoy Brown is primarily known as a blues band,
Rock 'n' Roll Warriors says in the title what this is all about, as
Kim Simmonds' aggregation obtained in vocalist
Ralph Mormon a major component from
the Joe Perry Project's first solo album,
Let the Music Do the Talking, released the year before this. With producer
Richie Wise, himself the lead singer of the heavy metal band
Dust and co-producer of the first two albums from
Kiss, there is a decidedly different edge to this release on Capitol/Town House. The bandmembers look like they are the prototype for the 1984 film Streets of Fire on the cover, and though the three live tracks tacked onto the end of the LP on TKO Magnum's CD release has this group truer to its blues roots, the original ten studio tunes include some variety that
Savoy Brown's followers may not have been accustomed to. Those bonus tracks, "Street Corner Talkin'," "I'm Tired," and "Hellbound Train," were recorded live at Denver's Rainbow Music Hall on June 27, 1981. They make a great reference point to hear how this version of the band tackled familiar territory, but original material like "Shot Down By Love" could easily have found itself on
Joe Perry's disc and shows the bite producer
Wise infused into this version of the group. This is the last
Savoy Brown album to chart in the U.S., which is validation of its quality but still a shame, since the music here is vital enough to have jump-started
SB's storied career.
Mormon sounds comfortable and in control; that he had the opportunity to front bands featuring two guitar greats is something you can feel he embraced wholeheartedly.
Michael Heatley's year 2000 liner notes to the CD reissue give some history and the
Chinn/
Chapman tune that hit for the U.K. band
Smokie, "Lay Back in the Arms of Someone," is a real treat -- pure pop that is wildly different from the band's minor '70s radio hit, "Tell Mama," or anything else here. The songs are mostly composed by
Kim Simmonds, were recorded in North Hollywood, and shift from rock to blues to rock. Though viewed as an anomaly in the band's catalog,
Rock 'n' Roll Warriors has gained credibility and much-deserved respect over the years.