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Oriental beat back cover
Oriental beat back cover













Lost In The City, with its Bluesy harmonica opening, most closely follows the NYDs, but the tune itself is a convincing dynamic rocker. The blurred cover photo of the band in live action perfectly purveys the image the band were striving for of reckless Rockin’ mayhem which this record, partly at least, fails to deliver. The Dolls were the obvious template for Hanoi Rocks to begin with but they were not really impersonators, they looked to adapt the NYD’s sleazy rock sound for a new decade of debauchery and in turn bringing some Punk noise into the Hard Rock arena. Paraphrasing the words of the old Kraut song they had “to look backwards to go onwards”. This did help to set them apart from virtually any other outfit of the time. Setting aside all these sonic issues, this album does show a band developing a Pop sensibility, confident enough in their ability to be able to dabble in Glam Rock, Punk and straightforward Pop Rock. Though the lyrics were not in the band’s mother tongue, they too could bear some criticism and this would remain a problematic area for the band throughout their existence. McCoy apparently still disapproves of the sound achieved by Johansson (and yes I have noticed the irony of someone called Johansson (sic) putting the skids under Hanoi Rocks career!) whilst Monroe hated his vocals at this point in time. Their combined efforts unfortunately yielded slightly tinny results. It does struggle to harness the band’s live power through the somewhat iffy production, with a studio hand Seppo Johansson putting his oar in as well as McCoy and Monroe under the pseudonym The Muddy Twins (which was their homage to the Stones The Glimmer Twins, not the only one in the Rocks’ oeuvre either). Though more than a little brittle sounding at times, “Bangkok Shocks, Saigon Shakes, Hanoi Rocks” (and try saying that ten times quickly) is a fairly decent debut LP and has some enjoyable moments.

oriental beat back cover

They quickly made a name for themselves in their adopted homeland and as their first LP hit the racks they were beginning to make ripples elsewhere in Europe too. A move to the Swedish capital of Stockholm set them off blazing a trail all over Scandinavia via a gruelling tour schedule and a hard living Rock ‘n’ Roll image. Forming in Helsinki at the end of the ’70s, Hanoi Rocks went through several players before arriving at their “classic” line-up of singer Mike Monroe, guitarists Andy McCoy and Nasty Suicide, drummer Gyp Casino and finally bass player Sami Yaffa (as we can see they mostly both anglicised and glam-punked their names).















Oriental beat back cover