The Rockologist: Got My Cheap Trick Records Out!
Published November 03, 2008
I have to be honest and say that when I heard Sony/Legacy was doing yet another commemorative repackaging of Cheap Trick's legendary 1978 live At Budokan album, I was a bit skeptical.
How much more mileage can you get from a single concert, I thought to myself? The original single disc album only featured about half of the concert, and they already had unearthed all of the previously unreleased songs from the concert on 1998's At Budokan: The Complete Concert repackage.
I mean, what could possibly be left?
As it turns out, what they found was nothing less than the Holy Grail itself. For the upcoming 30th anniversary boxed set Budokan! (it comes out on November 11), they've actually restored the video from the concert for a DVD, complete with a 5.1 Dolby remix.
This astounding footage, which was originally shown just once on Japanese television (Cheap Trick were huge in Japan at the time), puts the seemingly well tread Budokan concert in an entirely new light. Here you can not only hear, but see Cheap Trick at their artistic and commercial peak performing the very show that basically made this band's career.
It looks and sounds great, and is an amazing find by the folks at Sony/Legacy.
For the uninitiated, Cheap Trick is a band that should've been absolutely huge. I'm talking Beatles huge here. And for about five minutes at the end of the seventies, they actually were — especially in Japan. For most of the usual reasons these sort of phenomenons never last in rock and roll, this one didn't either (however unlike most of them, Cheap Trick are still together all these decades later).
But for a brief time, Cheap Trick were not only one of the biggest bands in the world, they were also arguably the best.
At a time in the late seventies when the rock music audience had become ridiculously polarized — you had your metalheads and arena rock types, your punk rockers, and then you had those who had abandoned rock altogether for disco — Cheap Trick was just about the only band everyone could agree on.
And why not? They had the perfect gimmick for starters. With two pretty boy glam rock types in vocalist Robin Zander and bassist Tom Petersson, and two nerds in guitarist Rick Nielsen and cigarette smoking drummer Bun E. Carlos, the marketing possibilities — beginning with the album covers — were limitless.
But beyond the look, Cheap Trick had the sound. To begin with, Rick Nielsen's songs were a wet dream come true for power pop fans brought up on the Beatles, Big Star, and the Raspberries. The songs had the same sort of bright, smart, irresistible pop hooks as those bands that had obviously inspired them. Nielsen was (and is) also a guitarist cut from the Pete Townshend school of big power rhythm chords and economical but effective solos.
- The Rockologist: Got My Cheap Trick Records Out!
- Published: November 03, 2008
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Live Concerts, Music: Rock, Music: Video, Review, Video: Music
- Part of a feature: The Rockologist
- Writer: Glen Boyd
- Glen Boyd's BC Writer page
- Glen Boyd's personal site
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Comments
Great post, thanks!
I warmed up to them about the same way you did.
Great to see the promo video- I ordered mine from www.deepdiscount.com for only about $27. I get nothing for endorsing them but they do a good job- and very low cost.
Good Stuff - Trouser Press Record Guide rules
Great Band even if Rick was sort of a jerk to me at his pizza joint in Chicago
Long live Bun E
Great read, your personal recollections made the story all the more interesting. I was never more than a casual fan myself, but there was no question this band was on a serious roll for a while and it is amazing that they didn't get much bigger than they were.
great stuff glen. dang, i'm gonna have to get this i think. Budokan and the first three records are just great stuff.
The first record is the best of the best, tho'.


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Must've been Heaven Tonight when Rick Nielsen and crew took a power pop shine to you. (I had similar but more bumbling brushes with greatness with Elvis Costello and Tom Waits, but still...) Nice write-up, and thanks for evoking Trouser Press and the Move, too.