Capitol
12062
1980
Billy Squier knows his music is all right. He knows because he's got razor-sharp hooks, air-tight choruses and the "Big Beat." Though his former band Piper wasn't the next Kiss (both were managed by Bill Aucoin), Squier plays with the big boys right out of the gate on his first solo; Tale of the Tape deftly welds heavy licks to hard funk on a level with world-dominators Queen. Both beat-boxes and muscle-cars blasted "You Should Be High, Love" and "The Big Beat." But Squier's gentle melodic touch always surprises. Underneath the suburban Zep sludge pops street Raspberries bubble-gum. Squier doesn't fake sympathy for the working class; he wants to be rich and he wants young girls. On Tale of the Tape and its near-perfect follow-up Don't Say No, Billy Squier knows what he wants and he knows how to get it.
-STONE, Cheap Trash NYC
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