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Ted Nugent (album)

Ted Nugent
Ted nugent album cover.jpg
Studio album by Ted Nugent
Released September 1975 (1975-09)
Recorded 1975
Studio The Sound Pit, Atlanta, Georgia
Genre Hard rock
Length 38:33
Label Epic
Producer
Ted Nugent chronology
Ted Nugent
(1975)
Free-for-All
(1976)Free-for-All1976
Singles from Ted Nugent
  1. "Where Have You Been All My Life" / "Motor City Madhouse"
    Released: 1975
  2. "Hey Baby" / "Stormtroopin'"
    Released: 1975
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
Classic Rock 5/5 stars

Ted Nugent is the first solo studio album released in 1975 by Ted Nugent, after the disbanding of his former group, The Amboy Dukes.

Tired of The Amboy Dukes lack of effort and discipline, Nugent decided he had enough and left the group. He took a three-month vacation (his first ever) clearing his head in the Colorado wilderness, spending his time deer hunting and enjoying the outdoors.

Renewed, Nugent returned to civilization in search of a new direction and a new band. Joining him in the Ted Nugent Band would be former Amboy Duke Rob Grange on bass, along with Cliff Davies (ex-If) on drums and finally, from a local Michigan band called Scott which had opened for the Dukes previously, a singer/guitarist named Derek St. Holmes.

The new group hit the road and then the studio, forming the songs which would send their first album into the Billboard Top 30 and into the multi-platinum range. The first track, "Stranglehold", would set the stage for Nugent's career: an eight-minute plus guitar attack with vocals by St. Holmes and Nugent, a long solo played on Nugent's Gibson Byrdland guitar recorded in one take and a unique phase bass guitar effect by Grange. St. Holmes' sang tracks such as "Queen of the Forest", "Hey Baby", "Just What the Doctor Ordered" and "Snakeskin Cowboys", the latter featuring an 8-string Hagström bass played by Grange, which would prove to be staples of the band's concert tours for years to come. "Motor City Madhouse" is an ode to Ted's hometown of Detroit.

The album was produced by Tom Werman and former If manager Lew Futterman. Nugent said about the album, "If anyone wanted to know what rock 'n roll was all about, that's the only album they'd need".

The last track on the album, "Queen of the Forest", was the first rock song played by Dr. Johnny Fever on the TV series WKRP in Cincinnati.


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