"FOOLS GOLD" THE STONE ROSES (1989)

You can get off to a fast start. You can sustain your opener with the main course, not filler. But can you end on a high note? Sometimes I wonder if recording a strong closer is the most difficult thing to pull off when it comes to album rock. When it comes to the cream of the crop in music, I can think of more strong openers than strong closers. Nonetheless, I still have my favorites which I’ll be featuring on Mental Jukebox all month.

The Stone Roses was one of those bands that made me want to be in a band myself. They didn’t last long, but for a couple of years, it seemed like they were almost larger than life. They paved new musical territory and are considered by many to be the catalysts of the Madchester scene. The debut album is one of my Top Ten albums of all time, and several of the songs are among some of my favorites. At the top of that list is the infectious “Fools Gold”.

Highly unusual, the album version of the song clocked in at nearly ten minutes. It was the last song on the debut album, serving as the coda to a brilliant record. It was all funk, all beats. While many rhythm sections do their thing in the background, Mani and Reni were often thrusted into the foreground — and “Fools Gold” was their song. The bass line cascades down and the trippy snare hits are relentless. John Squire adds the funk with his wah-wah effects while Ian Brown murmurs a story about the unlikely perils of searching for gold with friends. Every song on the band’s debut album seemed to be a brash statement — and on “Fools Gold” the band used the rhythm to deliver it.

“The gold road's sure a long road. Winds on through the hills for fifteen days. The pack on my back is aching. The straps seem to cut me like a knife.”

"STEP ON" HAPPY MONDAYS (1990)

For the last five days of October, I’m remembering music artists that died in 2022 by celebrating the music and legacy that continues to live on.

Paul Anthony Ryder: Apr 24, 1964 – Jul 15, 2022

The bassist and one of the founding members of the Happy Mondays, Ryder was an important and influential artist in his own right. I still remember hearing songs from Pills ‘N’ Thrills and Bellyaches on my local alt rock station WDRE/WLIR and thinking that the songs stuck out like sore thumbs. Their upbeat vibe contrasted with the demeanor of bands from the same genre like The Stone Roses as well as bands from the same generation like the Pixies, Smashing Pumpkins and Nirvana. I remember “Step On” with the utmost clarity.

“Step On” is a song that was played at a local club near my hometown. During my senior year in high school, we would show our terribly made fake IDs and get in on Friday night because that’s when they played the alt rock gems. The music ranged from industrial to goth to new wave to jangle pop to the burgeoning Manchester rock scene. Two songs ruled the dance floor from this era. The Stone Roses’ “Fools Gold” and the Happy Mondays’ “Step On”. These two songs could not sound more different, but on those Friday nights they seemed like they were on the exact same page.

“Gonna stamp out your fire. He can change your desire.”

"BYE BYE BAD MAN" THE STONE ROSES (1989)

One of the most powerful things about music is that it is the soundtrack of our lives. Fellow music fanatic Sharon Hepworth started a music challenge on Twitter for the month of July. Each day, fans around the world will select a song from their life and describe what it means to us. These are my songs. #SoundtrackToYourLife

Day 6

I’ve loved music from a relatively early age. I grew up in a home that had Mozart and Bach playing on our piano and Cantonese adult contemporary music playing on our car stereo. My foray into classic rock is when I started to dial things up – Rush, Floyd, Zeppelin. Then I found my way to alt rock. The day I discovered The Stone Roses’ debut album was a watershed moment for me. Looking back, I think this is when I became a serious fan of music. I got lost in the music – and I couldn’t help but dissect every element of those songs. The Velvet Underground was known as the band that made its listeners want to start their own band. Well, that’s what The Stone Roses did for me. One of the less heralded tracks on the debut record would be another band’s anthem track. “Bye Bye Bad Man” is resolutely a significant part of my life’s soundtrack.

The melody is exceptional. So exceptional, in fact, that I can’t imagine another band concocting it. It gives “Bye Bye Bad Man” that rare juxtaposition of smooth flow and hard edges. Instrumentally there are no slouches here. Every band piece is so critical to the sound. Each member adds serious muscle to the track – from Ian Brown’s Manchester drone and Squire’s jangle fest on guitar to Mani’s chunky bass meanderings and Reni’s garage rock sound on drums. The song is a reminder of how endearing Tracks 1-12 were, not just the single releases. An extraordinary track from one of the most impressive debut albums of all time.

“Choke me, smoke the air in this citrus-sucking sunshine. I don't care. You're not all there.”

"I WANNA BE ADORED" THE STONE ROSES (1989)

For a hot minute, this was the greatest band alive. The Stone Roses never regained form after recording one of the strongest albums ever, but they deserve a ton of credit for inspiring a new musical era and helping to birth the Manchester scene. “I Wanna Be Adored” will forever be The Stone Roses’ anthem. It’s their entry into the rock world and perhaps it’s also a glimpse into what ultimately caused their demise. On every part of this track, there was an attitude that we haven’t heard before: Ian Brown’s insistent vocals, John Squire’s wailing guitar, Reni’s barrage of drums and that killer bass line from Mani that made bass guitar cool once again.

“I don't need to sell my soul. He's already in me.”