
Ian Hunter Flaunts Long-Term Dedication To Rock On Spirited “Defiance Part 1′ (ALBUM REVIEW)
If there’s one aging but vital rock and roll songwriter/musician who doesn’t need a list of famous names to sell an album, it’s Ian Hunter.
If there’s one aging but vital rock and roll songwriter/musician who doesn’t need a list of famous names to sell an album, it’s Ian Hunter.
Some of the greatest songwriters invariably have some of the greatest backing bands. Bob Dylan had the Band, Graham Parker had The Rumour, John Hiatt had the Goners (and now The Combo) and Ian Hunter has The Rant Band. The vibrancy with which they bring to life the material on When I'm President reaffirms why the former frontman for Mott The Hoople chooses to share headline status with them on his 20th solo album.
It may be no coincidence Ian Hunter’s newest solo album precedes a reunion of Mott the Hoople in autumn of 2009. The prospect of revisiting the most-high profile work of his career appears to have elevated him as a songwriter and performer on Man Overboard.
As leader of Mott the Hoople, Ian Hunter was as vulnerable as he was acerbic, seeing rock and roll as a metaphor for all facets of the human condition. The perpetually-shaded iconoclast has continued this work through a dozen post-Mott solo albums, the success of which has depended, as is the case with most literate songwriters, on the balance between musicianship/production and the material as means to a message.