Discovering Graham Parker
By 1979 the angry, hurried punk-rock spewed out by such "Class of '77" grads as the Sex Pistols, the Damned, and others had begun to give way to the more considered, diverse, and admittedly softer-edged "new wave" sounds that would dominate the early 1980s. Also by this point Graham Parker, as angry a young bloke as any of his punkier musical brethren, had found near universal critical acclaim with his first three studio albums – Howlin' Wind and Heat Treatment in 1976, Stick To Me in 1977 – that would be unaccompanied by any semblance of real commercial success. Plagued by lack of promotion and label mismanagement for his albums – Parker would write the song "Mercury Poisoning" around this time about his label – and overshadowed by the commercial emergence of the similarly angry young artist Elvis Costello, Parker swung for the fences with his 1979 album, Squeezing Out Sparks.
Working for the first time with producer Jack Nitzsche after making three albums with musician Nick Lowe, Costello channeled all of his piss-n-vinegar energy, emotion, and frustrations into songs like "Discovering Japan," "Local Girls," "Passion Is No Ordinary Word," and "You Can't Be Too Strong." Squeezing Out Sparks would become Parker's best-known, and most successful album, topping 200,000 copies sold and inching itself into the Billboard magazine Top Forty.
As Parker remembers in the liner notes for Live In
This is the show that would later be used by Parker's label for a promotional album titled Live Sparks that culled San Francisco performances of the ten songs from Squeezing Out Sparks, tacked on a couple of songs from a live broadcast on WXRT-FM in Chicago, and would be quickly sent out to radio stations to help provide momentum for Parker's tour and album sales. The limited-edition, promo-only vinyl quickly became a coveted collector's item, but would later become redundant in the CD age when included as a second disc on the 1996 reissue of Squeezing Out Sparks.
Live Sparks only told part of the story, however, while Live From
Parker performs his Squeezing Out Sparks album almost in its entirety Live From
After ramping up the audience with three subsequent barn-burners, Parker & the Rumour deliver a swaggering look at "Don't Get Excited" that befits the song's syncopated electricity before launching into the pub-rock-flavored romp "Back To School Days." A piano-led, tongue-in-cheek boozy roll in nostalgia, the band cranks it out here like Friday night at the local watering hole and their life depends on winning over the crowd. The aforementioned "Mercury Poisoning," spit out here with all of the venomous intent of the original studio version, is one of the best songs written about the music biz. Directly targeting his former record label and its feeble attempts at promoting his music, Parker's nimble wordplay is matched by an infectious chorus and kicked out with a punkish fervor of clashing instruments and angry vocals.
The older material easily fits in between the newer songs here, the band's innate chemistry allowing it to change gears quickly from the swinging R&B rave-up "Heat Treatment" to the rockabilly-tinged "Clear Head" and the hard-rocking "Saturday Nite Is Dead." The band's cover of the
Live From
Related Content:
Graham Parker - Don't Tell Columbus CD review
Graham Parker - The Real Macaw CD review
(Click on the CD cover to buy Live In San Francisco 1979 from Amazon.com)
Labels: Graham Parker, pub rock, The Rumour




