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Renamed
Mott The Hoople by manic mentor and producer Guy Stevens, Hunter
became the group's vocalist, principal songwriter and focal point
with visually striking corkscrew hair and omnipresent dark glasses.
Mott recorded four crazed but critically-acclaimed and highly influential
albums for Island Records and possessed enormous live prowess, but
poor record sales led to a temporary split and a move to CBS/Columbia.
With David Bowie's 'All The Young Dudes' as the launchpad, Mott
The Hoople hit superstar
status between 1972 and 1974 - seven hit singles, four chart albums
(including 'Mott' - still regarded as a seventies' classic); they
were the first rock band to sell out a week of Broadway concerts
in New York's theatreland, and Ian wrote his universally acclaimed
book,Diary of a Rock 'n' Roll Star.
Hunter's
lyrical foresight and percipience were astonishing - 'The Moon Upstairs'
(1971) pre-empted Punk Rock by five years, 'Crash Street Kidds'
(1974) predicted social unrest and British street riots in the early
'80s and Queen must have been
listening to Ian's five minute operetta, 'Marionette', an obvious
precursor to their #1 smash hit, 'Bohemian Rhapsody'.
Various
personnel changes in Mott The Hoople ended with the recruitment
of the highly talented Mick Ronson as lead guitarist, but personality
clashes and strains within the group resulted in its demise after
Hunter suffered a physical breakdown in the USA. In spite of the
considerable pleadings of their original guiding light, Guy Stevens,
Ian traded the safety of Mott the Hoople for unknown and risk-laden
solo territory.
On
paper, the combined potential of Mott and Ronson was frightening
and Ian's first stunning solo album, recorded with Mick, illustrated
the considerable opportunity that was missed. Hunter was soon trailblazing
again and his second LP, released fifteen months later, whilst labeled
commercial suicide, was soon mirrored by Sting after he quit The
Police and issued his first solo records in a style reminiscent
of 'All American Alien Boy.'
Hunter
continued to pool his vocal and writing expertise with Ronson's
instrumental and studio capabilities over the next fifteen years,
both for recording and production work. The latter included Generation
X, Ellen Foley, Hanoi Rocks and Urgent. By the mid '80s however,
Ian's output was less frequent, being restricted to occasional songs
for movie soundtracks, until he resumed his partnership with Mick
in 1988, when they recorded and toured for the first and only time
as 'Hunter Ronson'.
Ian
has been cited as a major inspiration and reference point for numerous
bands including The Clash, Kiss, Def Leppard, REM, Motley Crue,
Blur and Oasis. Hunter's influence has remained incalculable; accompanied
on stage by Ian Astbury of The Cult, Axl Rose and Slash, Roger Daltrey,
Meat Loaf and Bryan Adams amongst others (and at their request),
there are now over 50 different cover versions of Ian's songs from
artists as diverse as Great White, The Presidents of the United
States of America,
Status Quo, Blue Oyster Cult, Bonnie Tyler, Barry Manilow, The Pointer
Sisters, Willie Nelson, Thunder and The Monkees - further evidence,
surely, that he is one of our greatest-ever songwriters.
Freddie
Mercury of Queen enquired of a former Mott member in the '80s why
Hunter had never reformed such a successful and influential group,
a resistance which Mercury failed to comprehend. The clue is in
the unprecedented diversity of albums such as 'All American Alien
Boy', 'You're Never Alone With a Schizophrenic', 'Short Back n'
Sides' and 'YUI Orta' which bear witness to Ian's belief that artistic
honesty and independence outweigh any commercial consideration whatsoever.
It is also interesting to observe that so-called 'greats' such as
Dylan, Springsteen and Elton John have issued their share of patchy
albums over the years whilst the quality of Hunter's recorded repertoire
has never wavered from the very highest caliber and consistency.
Ian's
new 2CD collection 'Once Bitten Twice Shy,' released by Sony Music
on 15 May 2000, provides evidence of this quality in abundance including
classic single and album tracks, a series of rare and previously
unreleased recordings plus a special version of the eternal 'All
The Young Dudes', recorded live by Ian and Def Leppard.
The
aim of 'Once Bitten Twice Shy' was to draw together as many classic
songs as possible from former albums together with hard-to-find
B-sides, alternate versions, movie soundtracks and, of course, some
previously unreleased gems. Complete harnessing of Ian's substantial
solo repertoire is impossible on a 2 CD set, so for 'Irene Wilde',
'Just Another Night' and all other 'standards', please consult the
regular albums too.
The
breadth of songwriting and lyrical genius on 'Once Bitten Twice
Shy' are nothing short of astounding. Add to that the caliber of
the many renowned musicians who have joined Hunter on his sessions
over the years and you have a classy repertoire. Yip, 'Once Bitten
Twice Shy' is a timely reminder that the fad-orientated and decaying
music scene needs Ian Hunter more than ever.
He
is preparing a new album, provisionally titled 'Worm's Eye View,'
he continues touring, he is 'now'. In any case, someone capable
of composing songs entitled 'Bastard', 'God', 'Rape' and 'Morons',
without sounding lyrically banal, must be the ultimate in quality,
panache and cool. The man is unmatched anywhere in popular music
in my view but don't
be shy, 
listen
and get bitten!
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