The Pretty Things: First Album – Live At The 100 Club

R&B crucible retains white heat for the 60s legends.

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In a world where everybody and their roadie seems to be off to Toe Rag studios or seeking out analogue reel-to-reel tapes or old recording booths, all to get some much-vaunted “authenticity”, it’s good to see a band cut through that sort of nonsense just by being themselves for half a century.

Not that The Pretty Things need to be authentic – if by authentic, we mean a 1960s blues band from London who invented the concept album and surfed every musical wave from psychedelia to hard rock – but they just are. Which is why this fantastic, raw, thrilling recording of a 2014 revisit to their 1964 debut album is a brilliant thing.

With singer Phil May as good as he’s ever been and guitarist Dick Taylor (an original Rolling Stone, lest anyone forget) blueswailing like 1967 never happened, this reconstruction sounds more exciting and – alright – more authentic than a thousand narrow-lapelled blues-fuelled retro wannabes could ever be. A warm and wonderful live celebration.

David Quantick

David Quantick is an English novelist, comedy writer and critic, who has worked as a journalist and screenwriter. A former staff writer for the music magazine NME, his writing credits have included On the HourBlue JamTV Burp and Veep; for the latter of these he won an Emmy in 2015.