AUTOR

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Stan Webb´s Chicken Shack-That´s The Way We Are (1978)

Chicken Shack was a British band primarily remembered for its keyboardist, Christine Perfect, who left to join Fleetwood Mac. While not a leading band, Chicken Shack was quite popular in the late 1960s, placing two albums in the top 20 of the UK charts. However, their frontman wasn't Christine Perfect, but rather the fantastic guitarist Stan Webb, who thrilled audiences by mingling with them during concerts thanks to a guitar cable that measured approximately 30 meters. In the mid-1960s, he formed this blues-rock band, and they have been releasing albums for over 50 years. Chicken Shack made their debut in 1967 alongside Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac in Windsor, during the National Jazz and Blues Festival of Great Britain. The group was the second most successful artist on the Blue Horizon label, second only to Fleetwood Mac. Chicken Shack's first two albums, "40 Blue Fingers Freshly Packed and Ready to Serve" and "OK Ken", were quite successful, partly because the presence of a woman as keyboardist and vocalist was significant and unusual in those years, a scene largely dominated by men. "That's The Way We Are" (1978), the band's tenth album, features a selection of original songs and covers, characterized by soulful guitars, powerful blues rock, and even boogie rock. From the opening, forceful tracks "The End" and "It Wasn't Me", the album reaffirms a band that sounds very tight and powerful, yet also includes quieter moments, as in the melodic "Emily". Chicken Shack is one of those bands that never usually appear in historical rock lists, but whose legacy deserves to be given its due, as one of the great milestones of British blues.