All Night Long – Jason Warburg

All Night Long
Capitol Records, 1978
Reviewed by dvadmin
Published on Dec 9, 2002

Sammy Hagar’s career as a solo act was not immediately
successful after his departure from Montrose in 1974. In fact, he
didn’t chart a single song or album in the ’70s. What he did,
instead, was to build a cult following via relentless touring and a
reputation for putting on electric live shows, featuring highlights
from both his nascent solo career and his tenure as lead singer for
a band whose name still inspired lighter-snapping reverence from
legions of hard rock fans. While he would taste chart success in
the ’80s via a series of increasingly poppy singles (his first big
hit was the cheesy 1982 fast-cars-and-girls two-fer “Your Love Is
Driving Me Crazy”), his ’70s following received a significant boost
from
All Night Long, his fourth solo album and first live
disc.

The strength of this album is simple: seven tracks covering all
his best early material, no filler whatsoever, and high energy all
the way.

The solo tracks are the best material Hagar ever put out,
pounding, raucous, celebratory tunes like “Reckless,” “Turn Up The
Music” and “Rock And Roll Weekend.” It’s obvious from song titles
like those that depth and subtlety were never Hagar’s strong suit,
but here he doesn’t even try, which frees the songs from any
pretense and allows them to just flat-out rock. And really, when
someone has the balls to write and record a ringing, pounding,
shout-it-out-loud anthem to their favorite color (“Red”), what can
you do but plant a goofy smile on your face and sing along?

This album also has the good fortune to capture Hagar’s
supporting band at its strongest. By 1978 Ronnie Montrose had
broken up his namesake band, enabling Hagar to sweep up the entire
supporting cast from those first two classic Montrose albums – Bill
Church on bass, Denny Carmassi on drums, even Alan “Fitz”
Fitzgerald on keyboards. The only “new guy” was Gary Pihl, a
guitarist whose long tenure with Hagar was marked by an emphasis on
speed over feel and a willingness to play the role of the hired gun
sideman to the hilt – in other words, just what Hagar was looking
for after his experience with Montrose.

Part of the fun here is getting one of the few officially
recorded glimpses on record of what the live Montrose experience
must have been like. While the Hagar-penned “Make It Last” and “Bad
Motor Scooter” do miss the uniquely rich guitar tone of Ronnie
Montrose in this incarnation, Hagar and the Montrose rhythm section
still give this thundering pair of rockers a very respectable
airing.

(Note: There is also a U.K. edition of this album called
Loud And Clear that includes
All Night Long in its entirety and adds a 1979 live
performance of the Montrose nugget “Space Station #5.” Don’t be
fooled into spending big dollars for it on eBay. Whatever magic is
present on
All Night Long, it doesn’t carry over to the latter track,
on which a tired, sloppy Hagar and band butcher a great song,
reducing it to a barely-listenable mess.)

For fans of Hagar’s ’70s output, this album is required
listening, a set of incendiary live performances that helped make
the “Red Rocker” rep he’s been living off of ever since. For fans
of high-energy guitar rock,
All Night Long is the light beer you’ve been looking for –
less filling and it tastes great.

Rating: B+

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