Slade - Cum On Feel The Noize (Live TOTP 1973)

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Uploaded by on Nov 17, 2008

Slade are from Wolverhampton in the West Midlands. Drummer Don Powell and bass guitarist Jim Lea were both born and raised there, while lead guitarist Dave Hill was born in Devon and moved to Wolverhampton as a child. Lead singer Noddy Holder was born and raised in the nearby town of Walsall. In writings by and about Slade, the Trumpet public house in Bilston is mentioned frequently as a band meeting place, especially in their early days.
One of the most acclaimed British Rock bands of the 1970s, Slade are especially remembered for their brash songwriting and energetic live performances. Today, the band is often regarded as a pre-cursor to late 1970s British Punk (Sex Pistols, The Clash).
The group dominated the British charts during the early 1970s. During the height of their success, Slade out-performed their chart rivals, such as Wizzard, Sweet, T.Rex, Suzi Quatro, Mud, Smokie, Gary Glitter, Roxy Music and David Bowie. In the UK, they achieved 12 top five hits from 1971 to 1974, six of which topped the charts. In total, Slade had 17 top 20 hits between 1971 and 1976 including six #1s, three #2s and two #3s. No other UK act of the period enjoyed such consistency in the UK top 40 and Slade actually came the closest to emulating The Beatles' 22 top ten records in a single decade (1960s). Three of their singles entered the charts at #1 and they sold more singles in the UK than any other group of the 1970s.
While Slade's attempts at cracking the United States market were largely unsuccessful, they left their mark on several US bands who cite Slade as an influence. Kiss bassist Gene Simmons readily admits that his band's early songwriting ethos and stage performance style was influenced by Slade. In his book "Kiss and Make-Up," Simmons writes on page 85, "the one we kept returning to was Slade," and "we liked the way they connected with the crowd, and the way they wrote anthems... we wanted that same energy, that same irresistible simplicity. but we wanted it American-style." Tom Petersson of Cheap Trick has said that his band went to see Slade perform, and that they used "every cheap trick in the book", thus inadvertently coining his group's name. Quiet Riot had a U.S. hit with their cover of Cum on Feel the Noize.
The original band's memory was kept alive by comedians Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer, who respectfully sent up the band in a number of what the band called 'hysterically accurate' 'Slade in residence' and 'Slade on holiday' sketches in their The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer TV show in the early 1990s - these are available on DVD.
It has been said that Christopher Guest and Harry Shearer based their fictional band Spinal Tap, in the film This is Spinal Tap, on Slade. However, the comedians have since confirmed that the band in the film was based on the "tour diaries" of numerous UK "heavy metal" and "glam" bands. The events occurring to Spinal Tap in the film are based on the real exploits of not only Slade but also Deep Purple, Saxon, Led Zeppelin and Ozzy Osbourne.

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Top Comments

  • at 1:16 it looks like he's singing into a really, really big microphone.

  • SLADE at their finest....love it......

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All Comments (224)

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  • Im glad Noddy stopped when he did, hearing a 2006 recording of Quiet Riot, it just wasnt the same from their young days, Love Slade

  • Greatest rock song ever. Fact.

  • noddy must be irish ffs  SLADE!!

  • Yep, Quiet Riot hated Slade so much, they would cover 'Mama Weer All Crazee Now' on their second album as well. They needed good accessible material to spearhead their own efforts.

    Dubrow could vocally mimic Noddy Holder quite well...not an easy task.

  • @scottishzombie Well to people who like the slade version, it would. They tried as hard as physically possible to ruin it, because they HATED slade.

  • @B17b25guy Despite the fact that QUiet Riot hated this song when they wrote it, and tried as hard as possible to screw it up.

  • @vazqum1 well, it was the 1970's lol

  • Mick bustin's the name!

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