Whatever the reason, I cannot convince myself to like this album. And it’s not that I just don’t like this album; the more I listen to it, the more and more I truly despise it. The lyrics seem meaningless, a sleazy vacuum of empty words, and the instrumentation sounds dated to a specific, short-lived, and – Ziggy Stardust excepted – forgotten era in music history. And I’m told that lyrics and instrumentation are approximately 100% of a song.
One of my coworkers, a fellow unrepentant sick music junkie, tells me that Electric Warrior is one of the boldest, most creative albums of the 1970s, and that I’m missing the point. According to him, the album challenged gender roles in the early 1970s, questioned standards of both male and female sexual expression, and served as an important link to such gender-bending groups as the New York Dolls.
Of course, he and his wife occasionally wear feather boas and platform shoes to concerts. Me, I’m shelving my Marc Bolan wardrobe until my opinion of Electric Warrior changes.








Article comments
1 - alessandro nicolo
Radiohead, Dire Straits, Queen, Aerosmith: Never could get into them. So true about the angst thing. You listen to it 15 years later and you laugh at how stupid the political statements are. I suspect we'll be doing the same for American Idiot. Nothing like listening to millionaire socialists babbling about politics.
2 - Phillip Winn
I do that already about American Idiot. I enjoy it as a piece of music, but the politics are laughably naive. Might as well be John Mayer's "Waiting on the World to Change" for all the gravitas in it.
3 - Al Barger
Much of the time, fanboy types talk themselves into gushing over certain groups because of all kinds of ideological nonsense that has nothing to do with MUSIC. Note Mr Whelchel's friend explaining about this "great" Marc Bolan album "According to him, the album challenged gender roles in the early 1970s, questioned standards of both male and female sexual expression, and served as an important link to such gender-bending groups as the New York Dolls."
That's not even a little bit of saying anything about, you know, songs, or guitar playing or anything. And if you think that you're getting some kind of intellectual statement about the age old questions of gender and sexuality from the lyrics of a frickin' pop record, then you just badly lack an education. Ol' boy might want to put down the crappy glam rock and crack a book.
But on that basis of music, including Sgt Pepper's on a BAD album list is just silly. There might be a bunch of crappy groups that would wish to claim some influence from the Beatles - but that's hardly their fault. Song by song, Pepper is one of the best slabs of vinyl ever put out, regardless of the popularity or good or bad influence. I mean, damn man, it's got "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds".
4 - Tan The Man
"And if you think that you're getting some kind of intellectual statement about the age old questions of gender and sexuality from the lyrics of a frickin' pop record, then you just badly lack an education. Ol' boy might want to put down the crappy glam rock and crack a book."
You're right, but art affects culture. Art shouldn't be the prime source of information/education, but it does help give perspective and insight reflection.
5 - Tan The Man
*meant to say incite, not insight...
6 - Michael J. West
So with all the shots taken at The Wall, why not include The Wall on your list?
7 - urban_d
pet sounds is at the top of my list... not kidding. followed by anything from the flaming lips.
8 - JC Mosquito
Eric - you nailed the TRex album to the wall where it belongs! I thought maybe I just missed the TRex thing thr first time around (you can't hear everything all the time), so I bought the deluxe reissue last year - what a mistake. Bang a Gong and maybe one or two other just OK songs and that was it. Terribly overrated...
... as is Sgt. Pepper. Letsee... good songs would be Lucy in the Sky, Day in the Life... and that's about it All the rest are simply again just OK songs, but they survive on great playing, clever arrangements and 1967 studio wizardry. But they're pretty darn average songs. If you take Lucy & Day In the Life, the Strawberry Fields/Penny Lane single, and the best of the other 1967 sessions that ended up on Magical Mystery Tour, then you'd have a great album.
9 - alessandro Nicolo
By the way, I know what you mean about T-Tex. Collectively the songs are ok if not solid but it never quite takes off. Phillip, I agree. when I read the lyrics I thought this would have been so cool....when I was 15. Now, Randy Newman he makes me think when it comes to politics. Heck, he even wrote a song called 'Political Science.' Incidentally, I agree. I'm Canadain but I say tear down the world and build an amusement park. Coney Island style!
10 - Glen Boyd
I never got a damn thing by the Grateful Dead or Jackson Browne. But that's just me...
-Glen
11 - snowzone
beatles fan's make it sound like without st. pepper music would have just stopped because musicians couldn't have any original ideas.
otoh, i'm a big fan of T.REX i happen to think "electic warrior" is probably the best album i've heard. but then again i listen to it for what it is.
personally i think anybody who doesn't like the first track "mambo sun" has lost their musical taste buds.
my picks for worst songs. "peg" by steely dan, "paperback writer" whiniest song every written by anybody. any rap "song" ever written.
12 - Gav Ross
How can you listen to Cosmic Dancer on T.Rex's Electric Warrior and not be moved to a different dimension. Who needs drugs when we've got T.Rex?
13 - jobriath
marc rocks, you're wrong. and his lyrics ARE deep, he's just not afraid to be juevenile and silly. and SLEAZY is always a compliment.
green day are a fraud, i agree with above also shitty...
U2 will never be heard again except on elevators at non-profits run by trust fund kids
COLDPLAY will be remixed as bossa nova, new age, into eternity, but will still be organic tea shopping music. blech
actually, anybody being promoted right now sucks.
thank you