Rewind Review: Thin Lizzy – Jailbreak (1976)

It’s easy to forget that Jailbreak was Thin Lizzy‘s sixth album because Jailbreak was their commercial breakthrough and is so good that it often overshadows some of their earlier work.

The title track kicks off the album, and it’s essentially a line in the sand for every rock album that came after it.  If you’re a rock band currently practicing in a garage or basement, you need to hear “Jailbreak” and realize that you had better come up with an opener with as much fire as this or your band is already doomed.  Good luck with that, by the way, because matching the crunchy groove of it is nearly impossible.  The groove on “Angel of the Coast” is almost as jaw-dropping.  Drummer Brian Downey doesn’t screw around on this or any other track.  The slight bluesy sound of “Running Back” (with nice keyboard additions by Tim Hinkley) is a nice switch-up by the band.

The way Scott Gorham and Brian Robertson‘s guitars play off each other on “Romeo and the Lonely Girl” is impressive in its subtlety and talent.  “Warriors,” a song about drug addicts, has vocalist / bassist Phil Lynott singing and playing with swagger.  I can’t figure out how he keeps up his killer bass line while singing like Iggy Pop, and the guitar solo on it is a thing of beauty.

“The Boys Are Back in Town” is, of course, their biggest hit in the United States (and pretty much everywhere else).  It shouldn’t surprise anyone, really.  The beat is straight-up rock, Lynott sings about guys everyone knows, and Gorham and Robertson’s guitars play for the cheap seats.  “Fight or Fall” could almost be a Steely Dan track with it’s jazz guitar and drum touches.  “Cowboy Song” is a rocking ode to rodeo riders, cattle wranglers, and heartbreak.  The closer, “Emerald,” has enough guitar shredding for two albums, let alone one song.  Remember how I suggested you should try to match “Jailbreak” when opening your album?  It wouldn’t hurt to close with something as excellent as “Emerald” either.

Jailbreak is a classic that actually wasn’t heralded much in its time until “The Boys Are Back in Town” won the NME Award for Best Single in 1976.  It has since grown to influence hundreds, if not thousands, of other bands, and to blast out speakers around the world.

Keep your mind open.

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