Rock’s Great “Lost” Albums of the Eighties: #5 Tesla – Mechanical Resonance

Tesla Mechanical Resonance cover

When Mechanical Resonance was released in December 1986, I was pretty much certain it was a seminal moment in rock n roll, like that of The Beatles’ landing at JFK, Van Halen‘s debut release, or Adam Ant’s performance at Live Aid. It has always been something of a disappointment to me to know that, according to much of the rest of the world, in fact it wasn’t.

In May 1987, Tesla played a live show at The Marquee in Wardour St, London. I had a pound off voucher from Metal Hammer Magazine and went along, ignoring an Aerosmith-style band who were about to release their debut album and were playing the same venue at a similar time. That other band turned out to be Guns n Roses. Talk about seminal moments in rock n roll…

The Marquee club was a tiny venue in Wardour Street, Soho. The walls were as black as the souls of a Norwegian death metal band, or perhaps a Sun journalist. A facade at the front containing the ticket booth allowed you to enter the room within. It was the sort of place where you could get close enough to put your beer on the stage, if only you could push past the seething mass of people all trying to do the same. Bearing in mind this was the eighties, the biggest obstacle to avoid was other people’s hair. There wasn’t enough room to swing a cat, although it was rumoured that many had tried. It was just that sort of place. As with many of Soho’s clubs, by the end of the evening, the floor would be sticky underfoot. (Uniquely for the area, at the Marquee that tended to be due to spilled beer).

How I remember the Marquee club looking: picture from mid-eighties
How I remember the Marquee club looking: picture from mid-eighties

Picture a dingy pub right outside a football ground a half hour before kick off on a hot day and you’ll get a good idea of what it was like most nights. It was so small the music was always loud. The Marquee also had a fine heritage. The Who, Hendrix, The Rolling Stones (and so many others) had played there.

So when Tesla played this debut London show, the look on the band members’ faces that night as the crowd sang back every word of their debut album was that of astonishment. I saw that look a couple of times with US bands who played in London with low expectations, only to be blown away by the fervour of the crowd. It’s a wonderful thing.

I stumbled out of this sweat-box of a venue at the end of the night and turned to a friend who had a startled, exhausted look on his face. “That was good wasn’t it?” he said with some understatement. He was right.

Over the next year, I played Mechanical Resonance inside out, admiring it’s electrical-themed cover, firmly considering its mix of Led, Def, Van and Bad (Zeppelin, Leppard, Halen and Company respectively) to be a towering work of staggering genius, an artistic statement perhaps only ever equalled by Edward Hopper’s “Nighthawks” – or perhaps Val Kilmer’s understated lead role in “Top Secret”.

Val Kilmer in one of the greatest films ever. Seriously.
Val Kilmer in one of the greatest films ever, Top Secret. Seriously.

Clearly I was youthful and inexperienced, but there is something rather special about this album.

In style, it is straight ahead “classic rock” as the term is now, so its appeal to you now will depend upon your appetite for such things. They were a blue collar, honest to goodness rock n roll band with a singer called Jeff Keith who, so the story went, learned to sing whilst driving his truck, a drummer called Troy Luccketta, guitarists Tommy Skeoch and Frank Hannon and a bass player called Brian Wheat, who sounds like he was born on a farm and would have been one of Mumford’s sons if only he’d been born twenty five years later.

They were into CCR, covering Lodi on a later album, and dressed like them too – setting themselves apart from the eighties glam metal fraternity. If you look up the phrase “No nonsense” in the dictionary, there’s a picture of Tesla in there. But tracks like “Cumin’ Atcha Live” which began with a bubbling twin guitar dual and rapid-fire drums, “Modern Day Cowboy” (perhaps the standout track from the album), plus psychedelic closer “Right Before Your Eyes” raised the album above more workmanlike efforts by other, better known bands of the time.

Less than a year after that Marquee show, Tesla supported Def Leppard at Hammersmith Odeon, and from my front row perspective wiped the floor with them.

Can we truly describe Mechanical Resonance as “lost”? Although it never charted in the UK, Tesla went on to have good success in the US with their second album “The Great Radio Controversy” which went double platinum. Third album “Five Man Acoustical Jam” coincided with the start of the MTV “Unplugged” trend. A couple of studio albums of decent quality followed before the band split after the release of ’94s”Bust a Nut”, only to reform in true rock band style in 2000. They continue to tour and plan to release a new album in 2014.

In the meantime, this will always be my favourite of Tesla’s records, and I think there’s probably a few of us out there for whom this album “Resonates” strongly….

…isn’t there…?

Record #220: Tesla – Cumin’ Atcha Live

Comments

23 responses to “Rock’s Great “Lost” Albums of the Eighties: #5 Tesla – Mechanical Resonance”

  1. pete hobbs (@BoyLeastLikely2) Avatar

    I always remember liking the second album best, but listening to “Cumin Actha Live” now it sounds ace – love the “Eruption” – lite intro…”Gettin’ Better” sounds good too!

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      It was always the first album for me – I think it might surprise a few people who remember the second album better…

      Like

  2. pete hobbs (@BoyLeastLikely2) Avatar

    crikey “Too Late For Love” sounds amazing too – thanks for reminding me!

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    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      That’s great! Thanks for your response. I too love the Eruption-lite intro and Too Late For Love is such a good tune.

      Like

  3. mikeladano Avatar

    I think this is my favourite Tesla studio album too. It’s certainly not typical of albums that were coming out at the time, more like 10 years prior!

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      That’s so true. Glad you like it too.

      Like

  4. Universe Number Five Avatar
    Universe Number Five

    This was the only Tesla album I could stomach.

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    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      Heh, surely that 2nd album wasn’t that bad?

      Like

      1. Universe Number Five Avatar
        Universe Number Five

        Just couldn’t get into it…lol.

        Like

  5. Simon F Avatar
    Simon F

    First album was great and they blew Def Leppard away on that tour, felt the following full tour they did was a disappointment . To me they came on with to much attitude!!!

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      I never saw them after that tour – that’s a shame…

      Like

  6. 80smetalman Avatar

    Been to The Marquee four times including seeing my friend’s band Torque Show support German metal greats Bonfire and the final time was Girlschool in 92. Great memories

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      It was a good venue. ’92 would have been the one in Charing Cross Road, right? (Also an excellent venue).

      Like

  7. Mister STAP Avatar

    I live in Sacramento, which is generally overshadowed by San Francisco, 100 miles down the road, but at least we can claim Tesla.

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      Ah! Yes that’s true. It’s good to have a band you can claim as your own.

      Like

  8. […] great venues, (see this previous piece) the New Marquee was a relocation after the building that housed the original Marquee was condemned. […]

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  9. Dave Reynolds Avatar
    Dave Reynolds

    Absolutely fantastic album. I have it in a promo box set format containing six 12″ singles. I was at that Marquee gig. I think Monterrez supported, as they did at one of the GN’R shows (Little Angels played the other).

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      I like the sound of that promo box set! I think you are right about the support also – rings a bell.
      One of Little Angels ended up running and owning a music school…

      Like

  10. Dave Stainton Avatar
    Dave Stainton

    I also loved MR but in retrospect after buying …Controversy first. Little Suzi is such an air-punching, sunny song it should have been a big hit and Modern Day Cowboy is, as you say, the stand-out.

    Coincidentally, I’ve seen them live twice, once in support of the Edison’s Medicine album when they stunk out the Hammersmith Odeon (they looked either strung out or pissed off with each other, and us) and then way later in a converted steel mill in Rotherham at the first HRH AOR festival when they were absolutely briliiant and probably one of my top 5 gigs of all time.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      A shame they should have played such a good gig, and then such a bad one at the same venue – I guess you can catch bands at a good time and a less good time – glad to hear they were enjoying themselves better the second time around.

      Like

  11. Sandip Chakrabarty Avatar
    Sandip Chakrabarty

    Truly great album…… though I got into it retrospectively, having bought Great Radio first when it came out, so that’s probably more special to me as my first Tesla album. I always thought at the time that they were very reminiscent of a young Leppard circa High N Dry….

    Like

    1. Every Record Tells A Story Avatar

      Yes, I think a review in Kerrang! magazine described the debut as taking elements of Van Halen, Def Leppard and Led Zeppelin

      Like

  12. Sandip Chakrabarty Avatar
    Sandip Chakrabarty

    An album that’s truly all killer no filler, as were Great Radio and Psychotic Supper too…. each song’s fantastic

    Like

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