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Open All Night

The Georgia Satellites

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Open All Night The Georgia Satellites 2:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Don't Pass Me By The Georgia Satellites 4:52 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Open All Night had the unwieldy pressure of being the follow-up album to a surprise hit. The Georgia Satellites' self-titled offering, issued in 1986, yielded the smash single "Keep Your Hands to Yourself," which was also an MTV staple for six months. The track and its accompanying video were viewed as novelties by radio and MTV, so when Open All Night appeared, the "joke" was over. Too bad. If ever a band was miscast as class clown, it was these guys. Songwriter and frontman Dan Baird wrote another slew of tough rootsy rockers that evoked everyone from Chuck Berry to AC/DC. Boogie, biker bluesy rock, Faces-style garagey rawness, and the swagger of the Rolling Stones along with the overdriven razored guitar of Rick Richards powered Baird's songs. And the man could write a hook, as evidenced by "Sheila," which sounds like a punk Del Shannon backed by .38 Special at their best. The cover of "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" takes the Jerry Lee Lewis arrangement and rips it wide open with a honky tonk piano shoved into the '80s by stomping guitars. Likewise, the Satellites' cover of Ringo Starr's "Don't Pass Me By" makes it a bona fide Saturday night barroom country-rock number. Once again, though, it's Baird's own material that separates them from their peers — not that there were many in the mid-'80s. "Mon Cheri" feels like a remake of "Keep Your Hands to Yourself," but its storyline is amusing and the guitar crunch is irresistible. "Down Down" is a balls-out rocker with open ringing riffs like "Highway to Hell." The set closes with a fine Rick Richards tune called "Hand to Mouth." It's true that he's not much of a singer, but he can write a power ballad and he loves Ron Wood and Ronnie Lane. If this recording had been issued in another era, it would have been truly appreciated for what it was: a solid and punchy, loud and proud rock & roll album.

Recent Customer Reviews

Don't Pass Me By
     
by House of Cheese

Rarely does a cover of a Beatles tune surpass the original. The GS blow the friggin' doors off Ringo's rockabilly-ish original and create one of the great Southern Rock classics that, unfortunately, not enough people know about. Truly a great band, criminally ignored.

Not Really a One Hit Wonder
     
by teletwang

Okay, so the Satellites only had one Top 10 hit (Keep Your Hands To Yourself), but this band played around the Atlanta, GA area for years before (and after). While you might think of "Hands" as a novelty song, it was truly representative of the style of music they played: Chuck Berry and Keith Richards soaked in Jack Daniels, coated with George Jones and chicken-fried to greasy perfection.

Open All Night is the second installment in their three album major label deal, and it finds them doing exactly what they did in the bars of Atlanta for years: covering sleepy songs with high-octane intensity (Don't Pass Me By), working two guitar interplay with Richards/Wood aplomb (Mon Cheri), and throwing in some damn fine original music (Hand to Mouth, Open All Night).

This was never a band that wanted to win awards, or sell records for that matter. They just wanted to play. That's evident on Open All Night. If you're a fan of basic, three chord rock and roll, download it and crank it up!

Biography

Formed: 1980 in Atlanta, GA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '90s

At a time when rock & roll didn't care about its roots, the Georgia Satellites came crashing into the charts with a surprise hit single to remind everybody where the music had come from. The hit single, 1986's "Keep Your Hands to Yourself," rocked as hard as an old Chuck Berry song, as well as being...
Full Bio

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