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Easy Action

Easy Action
EasyAction.jpg
Studio album by Alice Cooper
Released March 27, 1970 (1970-03-27)
Recorded 1969-1970
Studio Sunwest Studios, Hollywood
Genre
Length 34:13
Label Straight
Producer David Briggs
Alice Cooper chronology
Pretties for You
(1969)
Easy Action
(1970)
Love It to Death
(1971)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars
Rolling Stone (unfavorable)
Robert Christgau (C)

Easy Action is the second studio album by Alice Cooper's band, released by Straight Records in March 1970. The title comes from a line in the musical film West Side Story, which was one of the band's favorite films. As with Pretties for You, the band's debut from the previous year, Easy Action was neither a commercial nor critical success.

Drummer Neal Smith later said of the record producer David Briggs, "David hated our music and us. I recall the term that he used, referring to our music, was 'Psychedelic Shit'. I think Easy Action sounded too dry, more like a TV or radio commercial and he did not help with song arrangement or positive input in any way." [1]. None of Easy Action’s songs have ever been performed live by Cooper since the tour in support of their third album Love It to Death; in fact, only "Return of the Spiders" was performed on the tour for that album.

A small number of early U.S. copies were pressed on the blue Bizarre Records label. These copies carry the same catalog number WS-1845 and album cover as the regular Straight Records release.

Though perhaps seen as being a looked over work in terms of later releases, Easy Action tracks "Mr. & Misdemeanor" and "Refrigerator Heaven" were both later included in the well-received compilation album The Life and Crimes of Alice Cooper. "Refrigerator Heaven" was also included in the Warner Bros. compilation album Zapped, which was a single LP (all the other Warner Bros. compilations of that time were either 2 or 3-disc sets) showcasing acts signed and/or produced by Frank Zappa. The closing track "Lay Down And Die, Goodbye" begins with a sample of Tom Smothers saying "You are the only censor; if you don't like what I'm saying, you have a choice: you can turn me off". Also, it incorporates part of a piece performed at Live Peace in Toronto, "Written Home To Mother".


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