Whatever the reason, however, the best known song and title cut from the Steve Miller Band's 1982 album, "Abracadabra," is not one of the songs that first come to mind when I think of this band. This is in spite of the fact that when I went to the Driftwood in 1982 and I went there a lot in the four months I was in the US, there was a dancer, (not Twinkles, she had stopped dancing there in Autumn of 81), who knew how to work the stage to that song. Fortunately, as I know all too well, one song does not an album make.
[caption id="attachment_2237" align="aligncenter" width="258"] The Driftwood (I still can't believe I found a picture of it online)[/caption]
The best sticker I can assign to "Abracadabra" is soft rock or mellow out rock or melodic rock, probably a combination of all the above. The album has its good moments. While it was softer than what my musical tastes would allow at the time, at least it's done with guitars and no synthesizers. You can hear this in each and every song. "Give It Up" gets my vote for number one song and I have to give an honourable mention to "Never Say No," "Cool Magic" and the closer "While I'm Waiting." When I listened to the album again after so many years, I realised that it still possessed the quality musicianship I had come to appreciate about the Steve Miller Band back in the late 70s. I just didn't appreciate it back in 1982.
Track Listing:
1. Keeps Me Wondering Why
2. Abracadabra
3. Something Special
4. Give It Up
5. Never Say No
6. Things I Told You
7. Young Girl's Heart
8. Goodbye Love
9. Cool Magic
10. While I'm Waiting
The Steve Miller Band has always appealed to my more mellower side and I must give credit to where credit is due, the "Abracadabra" album is as good as some of their others although "Fly Like an Eagle" remains my favourite. I realise now that my mind was so focused on hard rock that the album didn't tickle my fancy back in 1982. Times change and though I still focus on the hard stuff, I can take time and appreciate some of the more melodic offerings like this album.Next post: Uriah Heep- Abominog
To buy Rock and Roll Children, go to www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/RockAndRollChildren.html
Also available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Froogle and on sale at Foyles Book Shop in London
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