THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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Phantom, Rocker & Slick

Sample this concert
  1. 1Intro00:21
  2. 2What You Want04:36
  3. 3Men Without Shame06:59
  4. 4Well Kept Secret04:35
  5. 5Runnin' From The Hounds04:22
  6. 6Time Is On My Hands04:33
  7. 7Sing For Your Supper04:19
  8. 8Hollywood Distractions04:20
  9. 9My Mistake03:35
  10. 10Green River04:27
Liner Notes

Slim Jim Phantom - drums, vocals; Lee Rocker - bass, vocals; Earl Slick - guitar, vocals; Kevin Russell - guitar

In late 1984, the Stray Cats were coming off the rails. The band had seen massive success in the early 1980s (thanks largely to MTV) and had a good run of albums (produced by Dave Edmunds), and tours. But personal conflicts between Brian Setzer and the other two cats (Slim Jim Phantom and Lee Rocker) made it impossible for the band to carry on.

Not willing to throw in the towel when Setzer went solo, Phantom and Rocker instead recruited guitarist extraordinaire Earl Slick. Slick had spent several years working with David Bowie and had been one of the go-to session guys of the late '70s and early '80s (among those who hired him were John Lennon).

Phantom, Rocker & Slick, while having the potential to be a successor to the Stay Cats, came far short. They made two albums for EMI (the first of which included guest appearances from Keith Richards and the late Nicky Hopkins) and saw some radio success with a single from the debut LP called Men Without Shame, but the group never ignited commercially.

This recording, done for the King Biscuit Flower Hour, was captured as the group was heading out on its first U.S. tour. Most of the debut album is featured here, including energetic versions of "What You Want," "Runnin' From The Hounds," and "Hollywood Distraction." The highlight, however, is "Men Without Shame," which the band placed early in the set. They would have been better off to close with it. For a closer, they do a lukewarm cover of the Creedence Clearwater Revival classic, "Green River."

The group did a second album. Cover Girl, in 1986, but shortly after its release they dissolved. Slick returned to session work (and would eventually find his way back to David Bowie), and Phatom and Rocker would do various solo projects before reunited a few times with Setzer in the Stray Cats.