Friday, August 15, 2014

Little Games (The Yardbirds, 1967)


This album, the only full album to feature Jimmy Page on guitar, usually ends up disappointing just about everyone. Fans of Jeff Beck era Yardbirds stuff like Roger the Engineer are left scratching their heads wondering what happened. Meanwhile, people like my younger self track it down in hopes of discovering the mythical Led Zeppelin 0 and are more than a little bummed out. Let's address each perspective.

(1) It's not the Yardbirds. Well, it says so on the cover, so what gives? The main problem here is the producer Mickie Most was hell-bent on getting the band some hit material, even if it meant totally stripping their identity. Following the departure of original bassist Paul Samwell-Smith, the band rebounded fantastically by finally landing the services of Jimmy Page, first as emergency fill-in bass player ("Psycho Daisies"), then as co-lead guitarist with Beck for a pair of songs ("Stroll On" and "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago") and some guy named John Paul Jones providing the bass until Chris Dreja could properly switch instruments. Alas, it turned out to be a "jump the shark" moment for the band. They just couldn't top this. Not to mention none of this stuff was particularly lucrative for the band, as much as it is appreciated way out here in the future, so they turned to Most to get a really commercial album out and restore their financial fortunes.

Mickie Most was best known for stuff like Herman's Hermits and the Animals. In the case of the latter, the band got much better once they severed ties with Most, and the Yardbirds proved the reverse of this. He effectively split the band into Jimmy Page and Keith Relf on one side, who would play on all the tracks, and Jim McCarty and Chris Dreja who would be mostly left off the album, with their roles filled by session musicians. Consequently the only real link between this album and the previous one is Keith Relf's singing and he himself was clearly getting tired of the whole scene ("Only the Black Rose" illustrates the direction he was heading). Oddly enough the songs sounded a lot better and more energetic when performed live, since the whole band was involved. In fact the Little Games tracks played at the BBC are among the best of the set.

(2) It's not Led Zeppelin. A lot of fans of proto-metal mistakenly assume that anyone who was a part of Led Zeppelin played that way all the time and/or everything they were a part of was automatically something special. Although John Paul Jones was around for a lot of the sessions, you really can't call anything Zeppelin if Robert Plant and John Bonham are nowhere to be found. There are little glimpses (no pun intended) into Page's future throughout Little Games, but nothing here really screams "we're turning into Zeppelin!!!". Examples of these glimpses include the manic solos on "Smile On Me", the bowed guitar on "Tinker Tailor Solider Sailor", and of course "White Summer" which survived into the Zeppelin era. Also interspersed among some truly ridiculous songs like "I Remember the Night" are gems like "Think About It" and "Puzzles". Those songs, as was Most's strategy, are relegated to B-sides (bonus tracks here) to stuff like "Goodnight Sweet Josephine" and other inferior work.

In the wake of this album, the band sort of split along the lines of Page and Dreja on one side and Relf and McCarty on the other. When the second faction left to pursue a folk-rock career with bands like Together and Renaissance, and soon after Dreja quitting to go into photography, Jimmy Page had a chance to remake the Yardbirds to his own specifications. A "New Yardbirds" emerged with John Paul Jones, and Band of Joy members Plant and Bonham. Of course, there was a name change after just a few performances by a band that really had no strong ties or obligations to any band called the Yardbirds....

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