The Dark Side of the Licorice Pizza: Annivysary 1973

ISSUE #263

If you want a little taste of what 1973 was like, go watch Licorice Pizza, the title of which refers to the old LP, a.k.a. the vinyl record—and boy, was this year firmly the middle of the Album Empire. Even with an oil crisis that led to a vinyl shortage (so much so that Todd Rundgren had to scrap a planned double album), some of the greatest albums of all time were released that year—Let’s Get It On, Innervisions, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, and, of course, The Dark Side of the Moon, maybe the first album I listened to with full intention: headphones on, lyric booklet out, eyes fixed up at the ceiling.

Not to get too cute about it, but where the music of 1963 was a monolithic beam of homogenous light—bubblegum doo-wop and pop; a sprinkle of jazz if you like the spice—the music of 1973 was that beam refracted, shot through the prism of the Nixon era and the death of 60s ideals. The result was a rainbow of experimentation and growth, adventures into the avant-garde: colors as varied as Krautrock (Can), proto-metal (Hawkwind), prog (King Crimson), reggae (Bob Marley & the Wailers), and more.

Perhaps most consequential to the next ten years, 1973 saw the birth of proto-punk with the release of The Stooges Raw Power and the self-titled New York Dolls—queens of glam and drag, Warhol residents and chroniclers of the underground. The Dolls would dissolve far too quickly, but lived on after Malcolm McLaren (who managed them briefly toward the end of their career) stole their concept to form the Sex Pistols.

Another tiny cuteness: ten years after landing stateside, the Beatles may have broken up, but three of the former members (Paul, George, Ringo) each went #1 that year, one after the other. A little help from our friends and all that. Cheers.


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Max Rebo, King of Indie: Annivyrsary 1983

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Year of the Surf: Annivyrsary 1963