Lovedrive – Christopher Thelen

Lovedrive
Mercury Records, 1979
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Mar 4, 1998

Sometimes, as I wander the vast hallways of the Pierce Archives,
it amazes me to see some of the artists who haven’t had the chance
to grace these pages yet… and I’m truly surprised that we don’t
get flame mail about some of the bands we haven’t featured.

For some reason, this time through the Archives, I paused by the
section where the German metal band Scorpions have taken
residence… why not? They were a big force in metal’s rise in
popularity in the mid-’80s, and they’re still slugging it out,
though the spotlight doesn’t shine as brightly on them. So, out cam
their 1979 release
Lovedrive, quite possibly the album that first got them
prominently noticed. Either that, or I liked ogling the gum-covered
breast of the woman on the cover… naaaahh.

The band that gave Michael Schenker his start got a surprise on
this album – along with regular guitarists Rudolf Schenker and
Matthias Jabs, Michael himself returned to contribute some guitar
work to the album. Bassist Francis Buchholz and drummer Herman
Rarebell might not have hopped into the forefront, but they
provided a solid backbeat that kept this band going. And vocalist
Klaus Meine was one of the more powerful but melodic vocalists the
genre ever spawned.

Even today, almost 20 years since this album came out, there is
quite a bit on the disc that is enjoyable. The opening track
“Loving You Sunday Morning” is a great way to kick off the album,
especially with the highlighting of harmony vocals on the choruses.
The title track has lost little of its punch, while “Holiday” was
proof that a metal band could do a ballad of sorts without turning
into spineless wimps.

But in a sense, one wonders if Michael Schenker’s presence was
really necessary on
Lovedrive – the other five members were more than capable of
working their magic on their own. Songs like “Always Somewhere” and
the instrumental “Coast To Coast” sound like they could have been
UFO throwaways, never mind the fact that they were enjoyable. (I’m
not sure which tracks Michael Schenker played on – the liner notes
on my vinyl copy aren’t that detailed.) I’ve said before that UFO
was a band that wasn’t sure if they wanted to be hard rock or
progressive; at times, you can almost hear that kind of questioning
in the music of The Scorpions. Fortunately, they choose hard
rock/heavy metal.

One wonders today if anyone could get away with naming a song
“Another Piece Of Meat,” and it hardly represents the best work on
Lovedrive, but it is somewhat interesting to hear it in the
context of 1979 metal… even if it sounds out of place in 1998.
For that matter, I don’t remember the pictured cover being the one
I most often saw in my metalhead days – I think enough people
pitched a fit about the bare-breasted woman to scare the label into
issuing a milder cover. (The original cover has since been reissued
with the remixed CD.)

Lovedrive is an interesting picture of a band about to break
into the mainstream, and the Scorpions handle the transition quite
well. Maybe
Love At First Sting made them superstars, maybe
Blackout brought them their first real taste of success in
America… but
Lovedrive helped get us to know just who these five German
rockers were, and that they were worth the time to check out. The
same holds true today.

Rating: B

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