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Eliminator (album)

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Eliminator
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 23, 1983
Recorded1982
Studio
Genre
Length45:00
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerBill Ham
ZZ Top chronology
El Loco
(1981)
Eliminator
(1983)
Afterburner
(1985)
Singles from Eliminator
  1. "Gimme All Your Lovin'"
    Released: April 1983
  2. "Sharp Dressed Man"
    Released: July 1983
  3. "TV Dinners"
    Released: December 1983
  4. "Legs"
    Released: May 1984

Eliminator is the eighth studio album by American rock band ZZ Top. It was released on March 23, 1983, by Warner Bros. Records, and rose high on the charts in many countries. Four hit singles were released—"Gimme All Your Lovin'" which reached the American Top 40, "Sharp Dressed Man", "TV Dinners" and their most successful single, "Legs". Eliminator is ZZ Top's most commercially successful release, with sales of 11 million and diamond certification in the US.[4]

Since El Loco in 1981, the bandleader, Billy Gibbons, had been moving ZZ Top's boogie and blues rock style towards the popular new wave style. For Eliminator, he increased the tempo and used more synthesizers and drum machines, producing a "tighter" album with a steady, driving beat.[1] The pre-production engineer Linden Hudson collaborated with Gibbons in Texas on the tempo and songs. The producer Bill Ham and the engineer Terry Manning joined Gibbons in Memphis, Tennessee, to edit the songs, replacing much of the contributions of bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard. Ham claimed the album was solely the work of ZZ Top, but in 1986 Hudson won a lawsuit establishing himself as composer of the song "Thug".

Music videos for "Gimme All Your Lovin'", "Sharp Dressed Man" and "Legs" received regular rotation on MTV and helped ZZ Top gain popularity with a younger base. A customized 1933 Ford coupe, depicted on the album cover, appeared in the videos. Following Eliminator's release, ZZ Top embarked on a worldwide concert tour.

The video for "Legs" earned the band the MTV Video Music Award for Best Group. Rolling Stone named Eliminator number 398 on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.[5] It was listed at number 39 in The 100 Greatest Albums of the 80s, and it was also included in Robert Dimery's book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[6] A remastered version was released in 2008.

Background

[edit]

In 1978, ZZ Top went on hiatus, weary of constant touring. Bandleader and guitarist Billy Gibbons traveled around Europe, and bassist Dusty Hill vacationed in Mexico; both grew their beards longer. Drummer Frank Beard checked into Palmer Drug Abuse Program, a Houston detox community, for his addiction to hard narcotics. To help finance Palmer, Beard organized a benefit concert and an album titled Freeway, working with engineers Steve Ames and Linden Hudson at Rampart Studios in Houston.[7] After signing to Warner Bros. Records, ZZ Top released Degüello in 1979, which was certified platinum in early 1980.[8]

In 1979, Beard bought a large house in Quail Valley outside Houston, overlooking a golf course where he often played as a way to stay off drugs.[9][10] The band wanted a private rehearsal studio, so Beard invited Hudson to move in and construct a recording studio in his home. Hudson designed the studio and oversaw its construction, centered on an isolation booth holding Beard's drum kit, with more booths for guitar and bass amplifiers. Microphone signals ran through the mixing console and some outboard gear to the band's semi-pro 1-inch 16-track Tascam tape recorder.[11]

In 1980, ZZ Top used the studio to work on material for their next album, El Loco. Hudson played on several demos, including a synth line on "Groovy Little Hippie Pad" which was mixed into the album by ZZ Top's engineer Terry Manning. Hudson was not credited but was promised future compensation.[11] Hudson also introduced Gibbons to drum machines during these rehearsals.[12] Gibbons later called Hudson "an influential associate... a gifted songwriter... He brought some elements to the forefront that helped reshape what ZZ Top were doing, starting in the studio and eventually to the live stage."[10][13]

From this point forward, the band was not able to reproduce certain songs in concert without using pre-recorded tracks.[10] They carried a small tape player to each concert, with a technician hitting the "play" button to give Beard a click track cue in his headphones. The tape held synthesizer parts, drum samples and other elements.[14][15] None of this was made public; Bill Ham, the band's manager, was closely controlling their image to create a "mystique" of self-sufficiency and authenticity.[4][16]

Recording

[edit]

Gibbons was inspired by British electronic acts such as Depeche Mode and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark to explore electronic music technology.[17] He often spoke with Hudson about new ideas in music. A former radio DJ, Hudson presented Gibbons with personal research showing that many hit songs were clustered near a tempo of 124 beats per minute—faster than ZZ Top's normal practice.[10] Gibbons followed suit with most of Eliminator, setting the new pace with drum machines.[4][11][18] "Legs" and "Sharp Dressed Man" are both 125 bpm while "Gimme All Your Lovin'" runs at 120.[10] Gibbons said in 2012 that he first used a drum machine on Eliminator—the first album on which ZZ Top "paid serious attention" to timing and tempo, which was "timed and tuned very tight".[13]

The first songwriting sessions for Eliminator were mainly Gibbons and Hudson working together in Beard's home studio while Beard was out playing golf. Beard and Hill sometimes participated, and Ham checked in occasionally. Hudson programmed a drum machine for the rhythm, and played keyboard bass. Gibbons and Hudson collaborated on lyrics and music, putting together a demo of "Got Me Under Pressure" featuring Gibbons's electric guitar work on top of the electronic sounds.[19][20] Gibbons felt that the synthesizers "created a nice platform that allowed the guitar to stand on its own", and that as the synthesizers could play an octave lower than a bass guitar, they created "a nice full bed of sound" that contrasted with his guitar.[13] Ham was initially unaware that Gibbons was building a new sound without Beard or Hill.[19] While the band was off touring, Hudson wrote "Thug" by himself.[21]

Carrying the demo tapes created by Gibbons and Hudson, ZZ Top traveled without Hudson to Memphis, Tennessee, to stay at the Peabody Hotel while they recorded basic tracks at Ardent Studios,[4] with Manning once again at the controls of the custom-built SpectraSonics mixing console. For the majority of songs, Gibbons played Dean guitars with DiMarzio super distortion pickups, plugged into a Legend hybrid amplifier, and miked with an AKG 414B-ULS large-diaphragm condenser microphone. When recording rhythm guitar parts, the sound pressure level (audio volume) was set very high to satisfy Gibbons, but this made it impossible for him to lift his fingers from the guitar to change chords without feedback. Instead, each chord was played once and doubled again on a pair of tracks, then the next chord was played twice and recorded to two more adjacent tracks. These alternating pairs of tracks were blended seamlessly into each other by Manning punching the tracks in and out. A side benefit of this laborious process was the elimination of the usual squeaks from shifting the fingers to change chords.[22] Hill and Beard laid down bass guitar and drums, recording their parts onto 2-inch tape. Hill sang his vocals for "I Got the Six". When they were finished, Hill and Beard returned home to Texas.

Gibbons, Manning and Ham continued to work on the album without Hill and Beard. Vocal harmonies were supplied by Manning and Jimi Jamison, the new lead singer of Cobra. To achieve Gibbons' desired clock-steady rhythm section, most of Hill's bass parts were replaced by Gibbons or Manning playing bass guitar or a Moog Source—a keyboard synthesizer.[22][23] A Memorymoog was also used for supporting synth sounds.[22] Most of Beard's drumming was replaced by drum machine or Simmons SDS-V electronic drums, keeping Beard's acoustic tom-tom drum fills and cymbal accents. The song "Legs" was not coming together for Gibbons, so Manning carried the tape home to his 24-track attic studio and reworked every part except the guitar and vocals from Gibbons. Manning also created a longer dance mix for "Legs".[22] To replace the drums, Manning programmed his Oberheim DMX drum machine, then augmented the snare drum and hi-hat sounds by triggering more samples on an AMS DMX delay unit.[23][24] Eight years later, Gibbons thanked Al Jourgensen because his early Ministry drum samples had been used to polish Eliminator.[25]

Writing dispute

[edit]

Hudson collaborated on the album tempo with Gibbons, and he co-wrote several songs. The band's longtime stage manager, David Blayney, wrote about the collaboration in 1994 in his book, Sharp Dressed Men.[11] The demo version of the album that was prepared for Memphis was largely the product of Gibbons and Hudson.[4] On "I Got the Six", Hudson helped write the lyrics, and on "Dirty Dog" he originated the shouted phrase, "Hey! Get that dog outta my yard!", which was exactly duplicated and replaced in Memphis. He added special effects to "Dirty Dog" and "TV Dinners", and the pulsing synthesizer effect on "Legs" was his invention. He helped compose and arrange "Got Me Under Pressure", including playing the synth bass line and programming the drum machine.[11][26]

Hudson's song "Thug" was taken in its entirety: on the album, "Thug" lists Gibbons, Beard and Hill as the songwriters. ZZ Top's management company—Lone Wolf—denied that Hudson was significantly involved, and said that the album concept was solely the work of Gibbons and Ham.[4] After the album came out in late March 1983, Hudson moved out of Beard's house, cut his ties with the band, and sued Lone Wolf for $1 million, arguing that his December 1982 copyright date for "Thug" preceded ZZ Top's copyright date of April 1983.[27][28] Ham claimed that Hudson sold the song outright, but no record of such a sale was brought forward,[11] and in December 1986 the judge decided in Hudson's favor, awarding him $600,000.[4] Hudson paid a third of this to his attorneys, and a third to his publisher, Huey P. Meaux.[29] Blayney wrote that "Linden Hudson in a fair world should have had his name all over Eliminator and gotten the just compensation he deserved. Instead he got ostracized."[11]

Vintage car

[edit]
"Eliminator" coupe

The album was named for a drag racing term after Ham said the band should feature Gibbons's newly customized 1933 Ford coupe. An early suggestion for the album title came from filmmaker Mike Griffin who proposed Top Fuel, but Ham shifted the idea to Eliminator—the term for any category of race cars competing against each other.[4]

In 1976, Gibbons met with Don Thelen of Buffalo Motor Cars in Paramount, California, and Ronnie Jones of Hand Crafted Metal with some help from Sid Blackard, to build the car. It was built with a Corvette-style engine. It was finished in 1983 and called the Eliminator after the album name. The car has become recognizable for its red finish and graphics, and is in several of the band's music videos, plus appearances in television, movies, auto shows, and charity events.[30] The car reportedly cost Gibbons $50,000.[10] Gibbons keeps the car in Cleveland at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame where it is on display, but he may still "crank it up and take it out for a spin" whenever he is in the area.[4]

Release

[edit]

Eliminator was released worldwide on March 23, 1983. "Gimme All Your Lovin'", "Sharp Dressed Man", "TV Dinners" and "Legs" were released as singles. "Gimme All Your Lovin'" went to the number two position of Billboard's Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in April 1983,[31] then a month later it broke into the Top 40 pop chart.[32] The next three singles also hit the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart: "Sharp Dressed Man" peaked at number 8 in July, "TV Dinners" rose to number 38 in December, and then "Legs" topped out at number 3 in June 1984 after its video was released in May.[31] The song "Got Me Under Pressure" also received radio airplay and peaked at number 18 in May 1983.

Eliminator was the first ZZ Top album to become a worldwide success, and made the band "bona fide pop stars", according to the Financial Times.[17] By December 1996, Eliminator had sold more than 11 million copies in the US, ten times more than any previous ZZ Top album.[4]

Music videos

[edit]
The spinning sheepskin-covered guitars, used in the "Legs" music video, displayed at the former Dallas Hard Rock Cafe

Record executive Jeff Ayeroff saw how MTV was reshaping popular music throughout 1982. After he joined Warner Bros. Records in early 1983, he convinced them to pay for the first ZZ Top music video, for "Gimme All Your Lovin'". Warner hired filmmaker Tim Newman,[33] who also created videos for "Sharp Dressed Man" and "Legs".[34] The videos depicted America as "a land of rock and roll, cars and girls",[4] with three female models driving the Eliminator car.[34] The "Legs" video featured the debut of ZZ Top's spinning guitars, covered in white sheepskin.[35]

The videos greatly advanced ZZ Top's visibility.[36] According to Texas Monthly, the album's synthesizer sound was "perfect" for the MTV audience, who had previously seen ZZ Top as an "old-fogey band".[4] The videos earned ZZ Top awards for Best Band and Best Group Video at the 1984 MTV Awards.[4] For "Legs", Newman negotiated a fixed payment every time Eliminator was certified for another 250,000 units sold in the US, earning him a substantial sum.[37] The "Legs" video was released in May 1984, driving the single into the Mainstream Rock Airplay charts the next month.[31] A video was also released for "TV Dinners",[34] it was directed by Marius Penczner, and featured clay animation.[36]

Tour

[edit]

The Eliminator tour was a return to the larger-than-life scale of ZZ Top's 1976–1977 Worldwide Texas Tour. From May to October 1983 the band toured the US, interrupted in August by several days in the British Isles, playing Dublin and then Castle Donington: the Monsters of Rock concert.[38] The European leg of the tour in October–November 1983 brought the band to Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Germany, France, Belgium and back to the UK, including one added date at Wembley Arena to meet demand. The final leg of the tour picked up more dates in the US in early 1984. The band performed all four singles from Eliminator as well as selections from their earlier albums, closing the show with "Tush".[39] The Eliminator car was represented by an outsized replica, and the stage equipment included laser lights. At each concert on the final song, a smoke bomb was triggered, then parts of the lighting structure along with a mannequin roadie crashed down from the overhead grid to simulate a rigging failure.[7][10] The stage itself was patterned after the dashboard of the vintage car.[40]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Robert ChristgauB+[41]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[42]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[43]
Tom HullB[44]

Robert Christgau wrote that the album's faster tempo produces "boogie in overdrive... The videos make you smile, the record runs you over. That's the pleasure of it."[41] Writing for Record, Samuel Graham found it lacked variety compared to the band's previous albums, but praised "Gimme All Your Lovin'", "Legs", "Thug", and "I Need You Tonight". He wrote: "We've heard most of this before. Eliminator, then, will probably satisfy ZZ Top's boogie chillin' faithful. But it's a lateral move at a time when Gibbons, Hill and Beard could be stepping forward."[45]

A number of ZZ Top fans reacted negatively to the album. The prominent use of synthesizers and drum machines marked a significant change for ZZ Top, and drew speculation that Hill and Beard did not play on the album. Hill compared the reaction to Bob Dylan's controversial move to rock music.[4] However, the album attracted many new listeners, including teenage girls for the first time,[34] and many teenage boys.[46] Spin's Glen O'Brien wrote in 1986 that the "average ZZ Top fan" was no longer a long-time follower but a young person who had discovered them through music videos. He said that "ZZ Top is a joke [...] but they're in on it. ZZ Top is like metal, but its blues roots are truer, and there's no bullshit. ZZ Top is not into the devil, leather, chains, or angel dust. They're into fun."[47]

Retrospective opinions are largely positive, praising ZZ Top's ability to match the spirit of the times.[23] Guitar World wrote in 2002 that ZZ Top had been expected to fail in the MTV era, but that they "surprised everyone with Eliminator, a brilliant merger of roadhouse blues and synthesizer swells and looped beats".[48] The Houston Chronicle wrote in 2018 that it brought together Gibbons's classic rock foundation and interest in new-wave synthesizers, retaining "a sense of the Delta blues under all the technology".[46] Critic Alan di Perna wrote in 2012 that "ZZ Top had found the potent combination that would bring them into the eighties and their era of greatest commercial triumph: raunchy guitar sounds coupled with the pounding drive and unrelenting sex machine rhythmic precision of electronic dance music and synth pop".[23]

The album spent 101 weeks on the Canadian album charts between April 16, 1983, and March 30, 1985.[49]

In 2000, the album was voted number 355 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.[50] In 2005, it was listed in Rock Hard book of The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.[51]

Track listing

[edit]

On the album, credits for songwriting were assigned to Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill and Frank Beard. Linden Hudson co-wrote several with Gibbons, and wrote "Thug" alone.

Side one
No.TitleLead vocalsLength
1."Gimme All Your Lovin'"Gibbons3:59
2."Got Me Under Pressure"Gibbons3:59
3."Sharp Dressed Man"Gibbons4:13
4."I Need You Tonight"Gibbons6:14
5."I Got the Six"Hill2:52
Side two
No.TitleLead vocalsLength
1."Legs"Gibbons4:35
2."Thug"Gibbons4:17
3."TV Dinners"Gibbons3:50
4."Dirty Dog"Gibbons4:05
5."If I Could Only Flag Her Down"Gibbons3:40
6."Bad Girl"Gibbons[52]3:16

Personnel

[edit]

The official album credits lists:[53]

The actual musicians working on the album include the following:

  • Billy Gibbons – guitar, harmonica, vocals, bass guitar, keyboard bass, synthesizers, production, arrangements[22][24]
  • Dusty Hill – bass guitar, vocals
  • Frank Beard – drums, especially tom-tom drums and cymbals
  • Linden Hudson – synthesizer, production, arrangements[4]
  • Terry Manning – drum machines, electronic drums, bass guitar, keyboard bass, synthesizers, backing vocals, production, arrangements
  • Jimi Jamison – backing vocals

Production

Charts

[edit]

Certifications and sales

[edit]
Certifications and sales for Eliminator
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[76] 4× Platinum 280,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[77] Gold 25,000*
Belgium (BEA)[78] Gold 25,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[79] Diamond 1,000,000^
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[80] Platinum 71,121[80]
France (SNEP)[81] 2× Platinum 600,000*
Germany (BVMI)[82] 3× Gold 750,000^
Ireland (IRMA)[83] Platinum 50,000[83]
Netherlands (NVPI)[84] Gold 50,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[85] Platinum 15,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[86] Platinum 50,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[87] 4× Platinum 1,200,000^
United States (RIAA)[88] Diamond 11,000,000[4]

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Stephen Thomas Erlewine. "Eliminator - ZZ Top | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved April 30, 2017.
  2. ^ Prown, Pete; Newquist, HP (1997). Legends of Rock Guitar: The Essential Reference of Rock's Greatest Guitarists. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 91. ISBN 9780793540426.
  3. ^ "ZZ Top Vs. Blue Oyster Cult - Ultimate Classic Rock Hall of Fame, Round One". Ultimate Classic Rock. December 5, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Patoski, Joe Nick (December 1996). "Still ZZ After All These Years". Texas Monthly.
  5. ^ "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. May 31, 2009. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  6. ^ Dimery, Robert (2005). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (1st ed.). London: Cassell Publishing. p. 511. ISBN 978-1844037353.
  7. ^ a b c Sinclair, David (1986). Tres Hombres – The Story of ZZ Top. London: Virgin. pp. 40, 59. ISBN 0-86369-167-6.
  8. ^ "ZZ Top – Deguello". RIAA Gold & Platinum. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  9. ^ Sinclair 1986. p. 45
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Bomar, Scott B. (2021). Southbound: An Illustrated History of Southern Rock. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 191. ISBN 9781493064700.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Blayney, David (1994). Sharp Dressed Men. New York: Hyperion. pp. 196–203. ISBN 0-7868-8005-8.
  12. ^ Sinclair 1986. p. 76
  13. ^ a b c Bosso, Joe (June 3, 2013). "Billy Gibbons talks ZZ Top: The Complete Studio Albums (1970–1990)". MusicRadar. p. 8. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  14. ^ Rees, Paul (July 2016). "Sex, cars and videotape: how ZZ Top's Eliminator conquered the world". Classic Rock. No. 227. Retrieved September 1, 2021. Republished online on March 22, 2021.
  15. ^ Sinclair 1986. p. 81
  16. ^ Sinclair 1986. p. 67
  17. ^ a b Hann, Michael (November 12, 2018). "Gimme All Your Lovin' was a perfectly calibrated rock song—and was admired and covered by electronic acts". Financial Times. Archived from the original on August 9, 2021. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
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  87. ^ "British album certifications – ZZ Top – Eliminator". British Phonographic Industry.
  88. ^ "American album certifications – ZZ Top – Eliminator". Recording Industry Association of America.

Further reading

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