The three hundred and seventy-fourth song: Personality Crisis - New York Dolls
The New York Dolls are a new entry to the hard/glam rock arena, and here Personality Crisis has the screeching guitars, the scream-singing that was the reason parents got turned off and even some whistling. While it might set up the genre, it's hard to see what this brings and I feel the genre really needs a bit more development to be interesting, to be more than shouting over the song. The book describes this as being influential on punk rock, with other bands taking up the torch, but for me it's quite clear that those bands need to jump in to make it more worthwhile.
The three hundred and seventy-fifth song: The Ballroom Blitz - The Sweet
Here's an example of glam rock that works better. It's not hard rock, there's a lot of Bowie's work in here, but there's a melody and musical sound here that brings in a chorus, something catchy, giving you something to latch on to through the song. It sounds good and gives you something to dance to, something happier or more emotional, even with some tension in there that you could imagine building. It's gimmicky in places, but that works.
The three hundred and seventy-sixth song: Jolene - Dolly Parton
Jolene isn't the most complex soon, drums and a simple country guitar line accompanying Dolly Parton's vocals of a woman asking another, Jolene, not to steal her man. It's a simple concept, but it all works well, again with a memorable chorus. This version, with how small it stays, makes the desperation clear. She really doesn't want her man to be taken, and that works best here, with Parton's voice and the simpler music. I feel like subsequent covers sometimes go bigger, drowning the message and missing the point.
The three hundred and seventy-seventh song: Next - The Sensational Alex Harvey Band
Glam rock covering Jacques Brel is weird enough - apparently the Alex Harvey Band was known for its eclectic music and it somehow creates a merger here that pays tribute to the chanson, a louder version that sometimes sound operatic, with more full on glam rock breaking through. Still, more often we seem to get violins, pianos and classical sounds, rather than roaring guitars and drum solos. The song's message become a lot harsher, but with it being a decently accurate translation, this shows how much an interpretation can lend a different meaning to a song.
The three hundred and seventy-eighth song: 20th Century Boy - T. Rex
And to show that we do like hard glam rock, T. Rex gets it right. There's something in here that swings, something that entertains and keeps you moving along. It's energetic, fun and the vocals sound right - sure, they're loud, but there's a melody to them.
The three hundred and seventy-ninth song: Rock On - David Essex
With slow vocals, a limited backing track that is used more on its own than you'd expect and mostly relying on delays and echos, Rock On becomes an unsettling song. It's a performance, which goes for more than just entertainment, creating a mix of sounds that feels like it stands out as being incredibly different. It's good, great to listen to, but it keeps you guessing what's up and never giving you that explosion of sound that rock has trained us to expect by now.
The three hundred and eightieth song: Search & Destroy - Iggy & The Stooges
With the bar having been set by New York Dolls for this set, Search and Destroy sounds good, but fairly straight forward and by the numbers rock. There's a step towards punk here, but it's actually relatively smooth. Very competent and performed well, but not quite with punk's aggression that I'm looking for.
The three hundred and eighty-first song: Desperado - The Eagles
After all the hard rock, this is really a ballad, the piano and violins creating a longing atmosphere that feels miles away from Hotel California. It's a beautiful, emotional song that feels a love song hidden as a song about an outlaw. It's lovely, calming and a lovely finale.