Do You Remember Bloodrock? Um, Oh Yeah...

Written by Eric Olsen
Published November 04, 2003

At 45 I have been listening rabidly to rock music for over 35 years - I AM classic rock. If it came out in the late-'60s or '70s, I pretty much know it, but I have to admit all I remember about Bloodrock are their album covers. Barry Stoller passionately seeks to rectify that:

    "I still have dreams about Bloodrock. It's always in slow motion and the band is starting to play and I'm in back still trying to put my drumkit together. I've concluded there is an absence of resolution and conclusion that is profound and I would be willing to bet that all 6 of us have some form of the same dream" (Rick Cobb, May 7 2003).

    In those dark insecure days following the 9/11 attacks, I remember the moment a crack of light - a little unintended levity - emerged, however briefly. The Clear Channel radio conglomerate published a list of 150 songs 'best avoided' by its zillions of affiliates in the immediate wake of 9/11.

    There were some that were apparently considered too ideologically amped (Barry McGuires' 'Eve of Destruction'), too flippant (Queen's 'Another One Bites the Dust') and, to the outrage of liberals everywhere, simply too hopeful (Simon and Garfunkel's 'Bridge Over Trouble Water'). As amusing as the list was, I was thunderstruck to note an incredible omission: Bloodrock's 'DOA.'

    'DOA,' a heavy metal chronicle of an airplane crash's bloody aftermath is, after all, the supreme candidate for a 'forbidden' 9/11 tune. 'I remember - we were flying along, and hit something in the air; laying here, looking at the ceiling, someone lays a sheet across my chest...' And so on - with shrieking sirens - until the vocalist's last gruesome gasp.

    Whew! How could Clear Channel have omitted 'DOA'? Just because it's been forgotten for decades is no excuse. No station has played 'Eve of Destruction' since the Johnson administration, so the list was more an aesthetic document than a real guide to censorship (DJ's haven't been permitted to play songs on a whim since Reagan took office). Talk about lost fame.

    I've always loved underdog bands and in such negative sweepstakes Bloodrock is a major contender. How underdog is Bloodrock? On Grand Funk Railroad's box anthology, the booklet's opening photo shows the boys from Flint embarking on yet another stadium-shaking US tour, standing proudly in front of a GFR jet, surrounded by their 'road crew.' Whoops - half of the 'road crew' shown is their perennial openers, Bloodrock. Ouch.

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Do You Remember Bloodrock? Um, Oh Yeah...
Published: November 04, 2003
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Section: Sci/Tech
Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Internet, Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: News
Writer: Eric Olsen
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#1 — November 4, 2003 @ 17:28PM — Hazy Dave [URL]

Eric, I always thought "DOA" was about a car crash. I have no authority for this, but I always interpreted "we were flying low and hit something in the air" as indicating driving while high or under the influence of something...

#2 — November 4, 2003 @ 18:48PM — Eric Olsen

Dave, your memory is far better than mine, I didn't even remember the song. I'm not sure where I was.

#3 — November 5, 2003 @ 13:40PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

I thought it was "we were flying along." And how do you "fly low" in a car anyway?

Bloodrock was one of the first band I ever saw live. Unfortunately, this was the post-D.O.A. outfit, so despite pleas from the crowd, they wouldn't play their only hit.

#4 — November 10, 2003 @ 16:33PM — Al Barger [URL]

I dug up "DOA" again. In theory, it's fairly cheesy, but I have to say that it really is a pretty effective record. It does articulate a strong aura of morbid dread.

Indeed, I'd rate this one song, at least, higher than any one recording of Black Sabbath. Sorry. Couldn't help myself.

For an eight minute plus recording, it actually doesn't really give any significant details of whatever kind of accident exactly is being described. "We were flying along and hit something in the air." Sounds like a plane wreck, but it could be something where they've driven off a cliff or gotten thrown through a windshield. Hard telling.

#5 — November 10, 2003 @ 16:37PM — Eric Olsen

add sex to the story and you have "Warm Leatherette"

#6 — November 10, 2003 @ 16:44PM — Al Barger [URL]

Exactly how do you add sex to the DOA scenario? Some kind of necrophilic deal?

#7 — November 10, 2003 @ 16:48PM — Eric Olsen

pre-necro

#8 — November 11, 2003 @ 21:36PM — Barry Stoller [URL]

When I posted chapter 1 on Indymedia, loads of people debated the circumstances of the crash in case - instead of taking me, Bloodrock's biographer, at my word. Ah, ye of little faith...

From part 5 of my bio...

Rick Cobb [Bloodrock drummer/lyricist] noted (in conversation, May 7 2003):"[Bloodrock vocalist Jim] Rutledge swears the song was about a car crash, but 100% of the public thought air crash and 5/6 of the band thought air crash, so air crash it is!"


#9 — November 14, 2003 @ 11:29AM — Hazy Dave [URL]

If it was a plane crash, it'd be hitting something on the ground, right? ;-> The lyric sounds like "we were flying-a-low" to me, so perhaps that can be transliterated into grammatical English in a couple ways. So, I took the "flying" part to be metaphorical. (You wouldn't be HIGH by any chance, would you?) The girlfriend, the ambulance sounds, I always just took it as the sludge rock successor to "Last Kiss". So, I vote with the vocalist on this one, and if 99% of the public and the band (including the lyricist!)thinks it sounds like a plane crash scenario, that's cool. Even the best lyrics can often be interpreted in various ways...

Oh, but this site says:


Misheard Lyrics:
We were flying alone and hit something in the air
Correct Lyrics:
We were flying low and hit something in the air


So, maybe there's 2% of the public that agrees with me... OTOH, incorrect information has been inadvertantly posted to the internet now and then, so maybe the 9 out of 10 sites that refer to "flying along" are right after all.

Isn't it great to waste time analyzing disposable pop culture from 30 years ago? Oh well, time to see if I can close all these pop-up windows from lyrics sites without crashing this fine web browser and operating system.

#10 — November 14, 2003 @ 11:41AM — Eric Olsen

thanks for the research Dave, you are coolest!

#11 — December 5, 2003 @ 13:28PM — garrison

bloodrock ! wow.. one of the greatest bands of all time. powerful and great rock melodicism.
as a teenager, i was in a band that did covers by the "underground" bands of the day. bloodrock was one of the groups we did. don't remember all, but i do remember we did gotta find a way, doa and lucky in the morning.
i miss groups like this that had a lot of musicality without the pop plague.

#12 — December 5, 2003 @ 13:38PM — Eric Olsen

Thanks Garrison, I am amazed how many people remember these guys, very interesing.

#13 — December 22, 2003 @ 15:45PM — Mark Gatzke

I was fortunate enough to make it to a small Bloodrock reunion in Dallas, Texas, in May, 1999. Three of the members of Bloodrock showed up. Despite the fact that it was billed as a convention, it ended up being a very pleasant day with about a dozen of us fans, Steve Hill, Nick Taylor, and Ed Grundy spending some up close, personal time together including a nice lunch at a cozy bar and grill across the street from the convention site. It was easily one of the major highlights of my life as I've been a huge fan of the band since their first album.

#14 — August 15, 2005 @ 20:32PM — Ed

Wow, now I know who these guys are. They play the full version of DOA here in San Antonio on KZEP 104.5 but have yet to say who they are. My search to find the name of the band brought me here.

#15 — November 3, 2005 @ 09:25AM — David E Martin

I'm surprised anyone ever thought the song was about a plane crash. Remember this was the psychadelic drug era of rock. The singer and his late girlfriend were tripping on LSD and going for a drive. A fun combination if you're on the Bonneville Salt Flats but otherwise a Darwinian move!
Thanks for finally identifying this song for me. My only copy was snagged off the air on my trusty cassette player/recorder.

#16 — November 5, 2005 @ 12:25PM — Justin Rupert

Man the song is not about LSD, or any other drug or sex for that matter. The keyboardist was at an airport a plane went to take off and crashed about 200 feet in the air. so they wrote a song about it

#17 — March 22, 2006 @ 00:10AM — Davies Smith ( musicmaker) [URL]

Hello-- Bloodrock really bring vary scary thought when a was really young! My big sister
heard it on the radio, and we both did. Anyway,
I was really into hard rock music and there was just some thing about it. was so erieeee! He( in the song) looked over(after crashing) and saw his girlfriend dead.. with a distant stare--- ( dead with eyes open) I think
from time to time about that band--- no-one talks about them, Im 46-- is it because was too
scary to think about? hmmm. Anyway,
the CRASH, I think they on a mini-bike. Just how he explans in the song. Bloodrock-- they were great musicians to. I am am from Alabama--
we love and apreciate great southern rock.

#18 — March 22, 2006 @ 23:12PM — Terry Blalock

Davies I do not mean any disrespect but-- why would in the name of heavens think they [assume a couple] were riding along on a darn mini-bike??? Then crashing! But you sure can spell good... ha! However, I do love Alabama-- my ex-wives cousin lived there. It is beautiful, with natural lovely pine trees, good bowling also. Bloodrock was really cool! I heard Korn was to do a remake of DOA.

#19 — March 25, 2006 @ 16:17PM — Justin Rupert

I still don't think it's about a car crash or a bike crash. check out blookrocks website, the keyboard player talks all about the song. Although it does sound like they did crash and proably died....you can think about how you want, just like Pink Floyds The Wall, does pink die in the end or just go nuts....You decide!!!! :)

#20 — March 25, 2006 @ 16:23PM — Justin rupert

Check out this site The last paragraph on page 1

#21 — December 15, 2006 @ 09:32AM — Tommie Thompson

Jan 1971, I was in the 11th grade when I first heard this song. I thought it was creepy, morbid and fasinating. It was always my belief and still is, (having just now listened to the entire 8+ min song 3 times)that it was an air collision. Unless the guy was Evel Knievel, it's unlikely a car or motorcycle going airbourne and then hitting something in the air. Also,there's no way to believe that drugs were an issue here and certainly no sex implied or otherwise. I find the most obvious answer is usually the correct answer. As an ex-army chopper pilot, it sounds logical! Even a bird strike (can) bring down an airplane.

As for the guy dying? The song is pretty clear in the lyrics, that his life is almost over.
First, the attendant in the ambulance whispers in his ear that there's no chance for him. Then he describes how as his blood is draining from his body, so too is his life.

#22 — October 13, 2007 @ 11:18AM — Eric

Ever heard the version done by legendary NYC/LA garageniks The Fuzztones? Very good, that, - and they even have it in their live set every now and then I believe.

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