Big Dog 92-7 Music Guide

Where the Beat Meets the Street

RELEASE
LABEL
Razor & Tie
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Rock & Roll

Album Review

If Bobby & The Midnites' debut album represented a half-hearted attempt to go pop on the part of Grateful Dead guitarist/singer Bob Weir, Where The Beat Meets The Street, The Midnites' second and final album, saw the group going for mid-'80s radio acceptance with a vengeance. As he had in his '70s group, Kingfish, Weir began to take a backseat in his own band, leaving most of the singing up to Bobby Cochran and bringing in a host of outside songwriters. Jeff Baxter provided a sharp production sound keyed to Billy Cobham's driving drums, and what you got was, as one song put it, "Rock In The '80s," a set of frisky toe-tappers that concerned themselves mostly with the magical world of rock & roll. What can Deadheads have made of this, especially at a time when the mother group seemed to have given up making its own records? Actually, probably only a few of them (or anyone else, for that matter) got to hear this album, which sank without a trace after four weeks at the bottom of the charts, followed by the demise of the group itself.
William Ruhlmann, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. (I Want to Live in) America
  2. Where the Beat Meets the Street
  3. She's Gonna Win Your Heart
  4. Ain't That Peculiar
  5. Lifeguard
  6. Rock in the '80s
  7. Lifetime
  8. Falling
  9. Thunder & Lightning
  10. Gloria Monday