Friday, December 19, 2025

The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Give Us A Wink (Alternative Mixes And Demos)

 

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Sweet - Give Us A Wink (Alternative Mixes And Demos) - 2022

Andy Scott's archives are deep. The man kept everything. 

This was the first time Andy was in the producer's chair, along with the rest of the band, with Mack engineering. Andy explains at the top in an interview that Mack added all the intro stuff to "Action" without permission and that he wanted to be the producer but Andy wasn't going to give up his chance. 

Had he not remixed it, it would've been a much heavier record and I think that is reflected here. 

I think this is the record the band is most proud of. It's Sweet. The theatrics are gone. The Bubblegum is in the past. They are free from all the glitter and show. "Cockroach" and "White Mice" are as heavy as anything the band has done, heavier, in fact. 

I think this is better than the original in many ways. The addition of "Fox on the Run" is the selling point, I guess, but this is a beefier record than the 1976 record and I think that's what it should've been from the start.

Side Two is all the unfinished demos of "Yesterday's Rain" and "4th of July" and "Cockroach" and others which sound like Andy laid everything down and then presented it to the rest of the band. I don't know, there's no liner notes. There are unfinished songs here like, "Cold Light", "Give Me Your Love" and "Go Back Home" and "Second Try". They don't make you pine for finished versions but they help complete the Sweet story.

4.25 out of 5

The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Platinum Rare

 

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Sweet - Platinum Rare - 2021

This was originally put out on CD in the mid 90s, while Andy Scott was recording as "Andy Scott's Sweet". 

I hate thinking of musicians I like as cash grabbers but then again...if you can make some money from stuff you did in your past, why not go for it? At this point, Andy is in his 70s and still playing out with some incarnation of the band and he seems to have everything the band ever recorded. Sadly, this was a lost opportunity to give a history or backstory about each track. Since he doesn't and wants to let the music just speak for itself you have to be very very familiar with the songs to notice any differences. 

That said, there's enough curios for fans like myself to indulge in.

Like "Log One (That Girl)" which I think was previously unreleased and the demo for "Cover Girl" which was the B-Side to Love is Like Oxygen. And "Where Do We Go From Here" and "Maggie". I just wish we had more info on songs like those and what happened to them, what album were they recorded for?

For a long time this was really hard to find, it was an RSD release that would go for about $100 on Discogs. It was just rereleased and you can get it on Experience Vinyl and other places. 


4.25 out of 5


Thursday, December 18, 2025

The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Give Us a Wink


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Sweet - Give Us a Wink - 1976

Sweet was always seen by many as ventriloquist band. Puppets of Phil Wainman and the writing team of Chinn and Chapman. 
But they would always insist that the B-Sides of their singles should be written by them and, for the most part, that's what happened. 
And then, after Desolation Boulevard, they took their success and peeled away and wrote and produced this album all on their own. 
It does get a bit indulgent. "Healer" dives deep into that quasi funk, prog sound...for 7 minutes.
"Cockroach" sounds like they have been listening to a LOT of Priest and Sabbath and want to go in that direction. Sure. Why not. They aren't as good as those guys but they try. 

Here's your trivia:
The first side of this record was engineered by Mack. Mack, who, four years later, would produced the megahit album The Game for Freddie, Brian, Roger and John. 
Honestly, I think this is the best work Mack did. 
This is heavy rock made for the radio of the 70s. 

Sadly, this record is all over the place and can't really find a place to land. Sweet demanded that they be taken seriously and they wound up sounding very confused.
Or maybe this is who they really always were.

3.5 out of 5
A Side: Action, The Lies In Your Eyes
BlindSide: Yesterday's Rain, Keep It In



 

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Isolation Boulevard

 

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Sweet - Isolation Boulevard - 2021


"Still Got the Rock" is a deep cut. Dabbling in funk-tinged metal, it was the final track on a 2015 compilation CD collection and it's a Scott/Pete Lincoln song. So, it's very not Sweet. That one is 40 tracks and it's one too many. 

Why do this? Why re-record songs that you have already re-recorded in some fashion and do it in isolation during a pandemic and then release it to fans? Oh...right. Pete Lincoln is out as vocalist and Paul Manzi is in. 

This is a Sweet cover band, sanctioned only that the lead guitarist was in the original band and has the rights to the name. I like the songs. But this is only for completists. 

How did Blockbuster not use that song for a commercial?? I have to got a lot of props for the New York Groove in to Empire State of Mind mashup. 

Oh, and my version of Hell Raiser is light years better than this one.

4 out of 5



The Sweet Spot - Sweet– Sweet Fanny Adams Revisited (Recorded Live In 2012)

 

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(Andy Scott's) Sweet – Sweet Fanny Adams Revisited (Recorded Live In 2012) - released on vinyl 2025

Recorded in 2012 this collection is Andy and Bruce Bisland and the band put together for the NYC Connection covers record performing Sweet's breakthrough record Sweet Fanny Adams. Live.

The track order is not the same as the album and I don't know why they did that since it's obviously not one solid concert but live tracks placed in an order...I don't know. 

I really don't get these guys sometimes.

3.5 out of 5


The Sweet Spot - Sweet Teenage Rampage

 

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Sweet - Teenage Rampage - 1991

Some live recordings from 1972-1975 on Side One. Side Two is all The Rainbow in 1973. 

With how clean these sound for the era, I would wonder if there are some Kiss Alive overdubbing happening. Except that this is a bootleg. And I don't know if these tracks were ever officially released. 

A curio is the song Be With You Soon, which is only available as far as I know on the original Funny How Sweet Co Co Can Be CD. It's not on the original vinyl. And I can't find another version of it.

Many, they recorded a lot. A LOT.

4.5 out of 5



The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Sweetlife

 

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Sweet - Sweetlife - 2002


From a review on AOTY: "But I still didn't dislike it. It's an album I could leave in the background, so it wouldn't be too bad. Not much to add there. It's an album and it exists."

Yep. That sums it up. It's on the turntable. I can do other stuff while it's playing. It sounds like what it is: Rock music written by 50-somethings for themselves and using a name they are allowed to use to sell as many copies as they can. 

I can relate. 

Only Andy and drummer Bruce Bisland are still around from The Answer. This time it's Jeff Brown on vocals mostly. He has a very generic hard frock vocals style, indiscriminate and song serving, anonymous while carrying the load. But I feel the same way about Brian Connelly. 

I enjoy the chukka chukka stadium ready stuff like "Do It All Over Again". When it's on. Not sure I would add it to any playlists but I wouldn't be sad if it was on and I couldn't reach the fast forward button.

3.75 out of 5

ASide: Sweetlife
BlindSide: Do It All Over Again
DownSide:

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

The Sweet Spot - Sweet - Fox on the Run Rare Studio Tracks

 

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Sweet - Fox on the Run Rare Studio Tracks - 2013


Andy Scott kept everything. 
From the notes: "The tracks are drawn from guitarist Andy Scott's personal archive. They instead serve up an alternative view of Sweet, captured across each of the arenas that they bestrode like glitter-soaked colossuses. A couple of cuts are live, from a performance taped at the very height of their hit making powers. We hear Sweet on television, blasting away the cobwebs that once draped TV performances like a shroud; and we hear them in the studio, via alternate takes and early mixes of songs that would soon be proclaimed as anthems".

I am not entirely sure what the alts are until the outro guitar solo of "Ballroom Blitz" happens and then you realize that it was...a different take. 

The thing about Sweet is that they have repackaged everything they have over and over and over and I can't blame Andy Scott. His band is relegated to the "Bubblegum" footnote status and yet, I can make the case that they are almost single handedly responsible for the Glam Metal revival of the 80s. Nikki Sixx contact Andy to produce them when they were first starting. Andy kept EVERYTHING from every session he could and that's why there are SO many alternate takes of just about every track. I love Sweet so I am totally fine with that.

4.75 out of 5



The Sweet Spot - Sweet - NYC (New York Connection)

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Andy Scott's Sweet - NYC (New York Connection) 2012 - Rereleased 2025

Released on CD in 2012 and JUST put out on vinyl in 2025.

This is a covers album. Andy Scott, using the name Sweet that he split with Steve Priest, put together a new band, released some originals and then started quite a regurgitation campaign. 
The album is named after the early Sweet composition of the same name which showed up on that Hershey Bar record from 1973. 

For me, the New York Groove/Empire State of Mind mashup is worth the price of admission. But there are other New York-centric treats here. Like Andy Scott's Glam Metal version of "Gold on the Ceiling" and my fave, "You Spin me Round"/ It's a covers record by a bunch of fogey Boomers doing what they love to do. I'm a Sweet fan, so this is right up my alley. Also, Electric Frankenstein is a band I would not have known were it not for this comp.

Honestly, this is one of the best sets of covers I've heard. They make Sweet Jane into an epic and You Spin Me Round is bonkers great. 

4.5 out of 5

ASide: New York Groove/Empire State of Mind, All Moving Faster, 
BlindSide: You Spin Me Round, Sweet Jane
 

Monday, December 15, 2025

The Sweet Spot - Andy Scott's Sweet - The Answer

 

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Andy Scott's Sweet - The Answer - 1995

Sweet might have been over after it's Identity Crisis but nothing is gonna keep Andy Scott down. And why should he stop? 46 years old, can still play and he has the rights to the name. 
It's the mid-90s. The makeup and the glitter is gone but the riffs are still rocking.

Andy Scott says that Nikki Sixx reached out to him to produce Crue back in the day when they were first starting out. He didn't think the bass player and the drummer were in sync. Ok. But therein lies the true DNA of Glam/Hair Metal.
Crue was an updating of Sweet. After Glam basically left the consciousness with Bay City Rollers' "Saturday Night", it came roaring back, with more makeup and hairspray and tighter spandex. And better production.
And, on this release, Scott takes a little shot with the inclusion of "Crudely Mott". A bite on a Crue riff, which is a bite on Sweet riffs that Scott made famous.
Time is a flat circle.
This is 90s version of a hard rock band that calls itself Sweet and I happen to think it's just fine, thankyouverymuch.

Mal McNulty is the lead singer here and he's not Brian Connelly but you know what he does sound like? Baz from Massive Wagons. Decidedly British and growly. Not so much a singer but a presence. 

Like most records from the mid-90s...it's way too long, with a lot of filler. And most of it is pretty generic. It almost never ever sounds like Sweet. And at times it sounds like an AC/DC cover band. I'm looking at you, Marshall Stack

The Sweet is one of my favorite bands.
Andy Scott's Sweet is no one's favorite bands. 

3.5 out of 5
ASide: Do As I Say, X-Ray Specs, Crudely Mott
BlindSide: Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again (The Angels cover), Red Tape
DownSide: Nouveau Rock Star