ZZ Top had a long history on the Texas blues and garage rock scene, beginning in 1963 when
Rocky and
Dusty Hill started
the Warlocks with
Frank Beard. Specializing in a kind of scruffy garage folk-rock,
the Warlocks released a handful of singles on small regional labels, including the ambitious and folk-rocky “Life’s a Misery” in 1966. That same year, fellow Texan
Bill Gibbons formed
Moving Sidewalks, a band similar in intent and execution to
the Warlocks.
Moving Sidewalks released a few singles with local label Tantara Records, including the garage anthem “99th Floor,” the sneering yet alluring “Need Me,” and a wonderful, narcotic cover of “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” which sounded like
the Beatles on cough syrup. The group also released the intriguing
Flash LP in 1969, a record that certainly deserved more of an audience than it got. In 1967
the Warlocks changed their name to
American Blues and released a pair of LPs and a single on Karma Records under that name. They weren’t really a blues band, though, despite the name, and sides like the ornate “Just Plain Jane” and “Nightmare of a Wise Man” sounded like the psychedelic side of
the Byrds and
Cream, respectively. Finally in 1969,
Gibbons,
Dusty Hill, and
Beard formed
ZZ Top out of the remnants of all these bands, then reverted to a more straight-ahead blues-rock base, and boogied their way into mass commercial success. This set collects all of the above songs into a kind of primer of what led to the birth of
ZZ Top, and it is certainly interesting as a history lesson -- but it also stands alone as a nice glimpse at some vital '60s Texas garage rock.
–
Steve Leggett, Rovi