Love's 1967 masterpiece
Forever Changes was an album so beautiful and timeless that it tends to dwarf everything else in the group's repertoire, and its gentle balance of grace and dread has made a lot of people forget just how hard
Love could rock when
Arthur Lee and his bandmates were of a mind. While
Love's debut album pushed folk-rock into an overdrive that resembled punk,
Lee's first solo set, 1972's
Vindicator, was a muscular set of guitar-fueled hard rock laced with blues, showing the clear influence of
Lee's late friend
Jimi Hendrix. With
Charles Karp's powerful guitar leads dominating the arrangements and
Lee's vocals strutting with maximum rock star swagger on tunes like "Love Jumped Through My Window" and "Sad Song,"
Vindicator boogies with a cocky confidence that belies the fact
Lee's career was in need of a clear direction at the time, and while there are no signs of the delicacy of
Forever Changes, three decades on this sounds like mid-'70s guitar rock at its best.
Lee was able to bring a soulful edge to songs like "Everybody's Gotta Live" and "He Knows a Lot of Good Women," and he connects with a sly blues shuffle on "He Said She Said," but it's when
Lee and
Karp crank up their guitars and the rhythm section of Don Poncher and
David Hull turn up the heat that
Vindicator really takes off, inviting the spirit with the kiss-the-sky spirit of "You Want Change for Our Re-Run" and laying out some thick Marshall-stack crunch on "Every Time I Look Up I'm Down." And anyone wanting a dose of
Lee's well-documented eccentricity won't be at all disappointed with the brief spoken word fragment "You Can Save Up to 50% But You're Still a Long Ways from Home" and the anti-fast food tirade "Hamburger Breath Stinkfinger," both of which confirm
Lee didn't turn away his muse when he cut these sessions. While
Arthur Lee could create music of simple and fragile beauty, that doesn't change the fact he was a rocker at heart, and he rarely rocked harder or with more passion than he did on
Vindicator. ~ Mark Deming