The Jolt is the sole album by Scottish mod revival band The Jolt, released in July 1978 by Polydor Records.

The Jolt
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 1978
StudioIBC Studios, London
Genre
Length34:01
LabelPolydor
Producer
The Jolt chronology
The Jolt
(1978)
Maybe Tonight EP
(1979)
Singles from The Jolt
  1. "All I Can Do"/"You're Cold"
    Released: October 1977
  2. "Whatcha Gonna Do About It"
    Released: 21 April 1978[1]
  3. "I Can't Wait"
    Released: July 1978
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
Record Mirror[3]

Release edit

The first single released by the band was the double-A-sided "You're Cold!" / "All I Can Do". However, "You're Cold!" wasn't included on the original release of the album. "All I Can Do" was included on the album and was released as a single in Germany, with "You're Cold!" as the B-side.[4] The next two singles, a cover of the Small Faces "Whatcha Gonna Do About It" and "I Can't Wait" also flopped.

The album was reissued on CD in 2002 by Captain Mod, a sub-imprint of Captain Oi! Records, and includes the B-sides from The Jolt's singles as well as the four tracks from the EP Maybe Tomorrow.[2]

Reception edit

Reviewing the album for Record Mirror, Bev Briggs wrote "Three things to get your name in lights – expertise, exploitation or experimentation. The three 'E's to success. Surely The Jolt could have managed one of them. The finesse isn't there – but we accept their apologies because they're a relatively new band. The exploitation, the gimmick also notable by its absence (Thank God!), so you gamble your last greenback on experiment. Sorry, The Jolt don't. Their mistake. A new band can afford to gamble. Can afford to release 10 riotously different tracks on their debut LP. Should risk the tentative walks on the wild Side. The Jolt stagnate in the safety zone, so young and yet so careful."[3]

Reviewing retrospectively for AllMusic, Dave Thompson described The Jolt as "one of the few bands who not only straddled the divide between classic punk and that more specialist sound, they were also the only ones who could give label- (and genre-) mates a run for their money." But that "by the time of their self-titled debut album, however, the Jolt were already consigned to dwell in the Jam's lengthening shadow, a fate that the band themselves seemed to encourage. The best tracks on the album were those that could have sprung from Weller's pen -- and that is precisely where they did get "See Saw," the finest song among the eight bonus tracks appended to the Captain Oi! reissue. The B-side to Jolt's final single, "Maybe Tonight," the song was written for the band by the Jam man himself. But there is so much more to Jolt than an adrenalin rush of Jam-isms. Noisy, exuberant, eminently danceable and absolutely exhilarating, Jolt is the sound of mod at its most potently creative, a record that could have been made in 1965, but was certainly remixed in 1978, to take into account all that had happened since then. Even more importantly, the passing years have chipped none of that original excitement away, and Jolt remains just that...a welcome, thrilling jolt."[2]

Track listing edit

All tracks are written by Robbie Collins, excepted where noted[5]

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Mr Radio Man"Robbie Collins, Jim Doak2:25
2."Whatcha Gonna Do About It"Brian Potter, Ian Samwell2:16
3."I Can't Wait" 4:10
4."Chains" 2:57
5."No Excuses" 3:15
6."Decoyed" 2:03
7."I'm Leaving"Robbie Collins, Iain Shedden2:36
8."Everybody's the Same" 2:11
9."In My Time" 2:48
10."Hard Lines" 3:21
11."(Can't You Tell) It's Over"Robbie Collins, Jim Doak3:22
12."All I Can Do" 2:37
Total length:34:01

2002 CD bonus tracks:

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
13."You're Cold" 1:52
14."Again and Again" 2:23
15."Route 66"Nelson Riddle2:33
16."Maybe Tonight"Kevin Key3:03
17."I'm in Tears"Kevin Key3:19
18."See Saw"Paul Weller2:42
19."Stop Look"Kevin Key2:36

Personnel edit

The Jolt

  • Robbie Collins – guitar, vocals, harmonica
  • Jim Doak – bass guitar, vocals
  • Iain Shedden – drums

Technical[5]

References edit

  1. ^ "Music Week Fact Sheets – Singles" (PDF). Music Week. 29 April 1978. p. 48. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Thompson, Dave. "Jolt – Jolt | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Albums" (PDF). Record Mirror: 12. 8 July 1978. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  4. ^ The Jolt - All I Can Do, retrieved 25 January 2021
  5. ^ a b "Jolt - Jolt | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 April 2020.