Ben Davies called
Bachman-Turner Overdrive's first album a "fusion of
Lynyrd Skynyrd-style Southern/trucker rock and
ZZ Top's anthemic arena rock," and with their logo imprinted in a big metallic gear which looks like it inspired James Cameron's Terminator trademark,
Randy Bachman, his brothers Tim and Robbie, and C.F. Turner dish out a methodical mix of plodding hard dirges. They took the
Brave Belt beginnings and followed them to the harder extremes, a focus on blue-collar working men's music without the swagger of Michigan's
Grand Funk Railroad. Taking a cue from
Leslie West's Great Fatsby persona, much like
the Guess Who at this point in time,
Bachman-Turner Overdrive let it all hang out, choosing a sloppy "everyman" image for their stage look. It wasn't a pretty sight, nor is the music enhanced with any decorations; the discipline of Jack Richardson, who clearly had his hands full with
Burton Cummings' control of
Randy Bachman's previous group, was forsaken for
Bachman's vision, for better or for worse. Like the 1984 reunion/finale on Compleat/Polygram, also entitled Bachman-Turner Overdrive, this is a very consistent set with no hits and a focus on bottom-heavy sounds. Not heavy metal, more like molten metal, oozing and dripping without the high-energy
ZZ Top and
Led Zeppelin injected into their driving numbers.
Bachman-Turner Overdrive is rocking here in the sitting position even on an up-tempo opener, "Gimme Your Money Please," one of C.F. Turner's best contributions to the
Bachman-Turner Overdrive catalog. But Tim Bachman's "Down and out Man" does have the seeds of "Takin' Care of Business," and it is the cleverness of journeyman brother
Randy that crafted this enterprise, continually shaping it. The gatefold's side-view mirror images of the band in an automobile junkyard sums up what the music is all about. Fans of both
Bachman-Turner Overdrive and
the Guess Who had good reason to complain. Had
Burton Cummings and
Randy Bachman pooled their efforts,
the Guess Who would have been a North American powerhouse. Three decades after this music's release, the reconstituted
Guess Who plays hits from both bands, but the worst excesses of these artists were put on public display, with some of the klunkers recorded by both
Bachman-Turner Overdrive and
the Guess Who. Four of the eight tunes on this debut are from
Randy Bachman's pen, and though there is nothing as dynamic as their first hit, "Let It Ride," on this debut, there are none of the bad tracks found on future discs which hit the proverbial brick wall. C.F. Turner's "Blue Collar" is a harbinger of "Looking out for #1" from 1975's
Head On, and this debut sets the tone for the success that would follow. ~ Joe Viglione