TESLA – Mechanical Resonance Live! (2016 Ward Records, Japanese with bonus track)
30 years? Holy shit, I remember when Tesla was considered a new band. Far more talented that the critics gave them credit for, or the bands they are lumped in with, Tesla have officially stood the test of time. May as well use the 30th anniversary to put out a live album. Unlike many other bands from their era, Tesla produced a number of studio albums worth listening to from front to back. Their debut Mechanical Resonance has long been a favourite, a high quality slab o’ rock, so may as well play the whole thing live, right?
Tesla tweaked the song order (presumably for the live concert experience) to start with “Rock Me to the Top”. Eternally young singer Jeff Keith has barely aged, and has lost nothing in the decades. The rasp, the power, and the character are all intact. The keys have been lowered, as any 30 year old band would have to do, but it’s hardly noticeable. This makes Mechanical Resonance Live an absolute pleasure to listen to.
The other guys in the band kick as much ass as possible. Tesla are a guitar band, and losing the talented and charismatic axeman Tommy Skeoch (first in the 90’s and then again in 2006) was a hell of a blow to suffer. With mainstay Frankie Hannon on guitar, and new addition Dave Rude, they have continued on forcefully. You can tell one ingredient is missing compared to the original LP, but that also makes it a fresh take on an old favourite. As for the rhythm section of Brian Wheat (bass) and Troy Luccketta (drums), I think age has only made them better (just listen to “Cover Queen”). Troy has his own distinct drum style, and you can hear that in the cymbal work.
Strangely, some of the songs that stick out most are the slow tracks. “Changes” for example is amped up, guitars duelling furiously, with Jeff pouring his all into the microphone. “Before My Eyes” is another slower song with some stunning guitar work from Rude and Hannon. Of course the hits are also fantastic — “Little Suzie”, “EZ Come EZ Go”, and of course an explosive “Modern Day Cowboy” which is moved to the closing slot in the set.
Tesla have a 30 year friendship with Def Leppard, and that’s why there is one new studio song written and produced by Phil Collen. The opening chords, melody and rhythm of “Save That Goodness” are all immediately identifiably Def Leppard. Tesla are a little more rough-edged than Leppard, and that especially comes out in Jeff Keith’s rasp. Great track, and something special for the fans craving new music since 2014’s Simplicity. I’m a sucker for a great new song at the end of a live album.
But that’s not all! The Japanese release has one more extra — the classic “Hang Tough” from The Great Radio Controversy. It sounds live, but there’s no crowd noise. Whether it’s mixed out or if this is a rehearsal recording, the booklet does not say.
4/5 stars



Love me some early (late?) Tesla
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Early and late — best of both worlds!
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Since this is Tesla, I bet this album is electric.
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I ain’t acoustic!
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You got me intrigued. I only ever heard a couple of songs from Tesla and I did like them. My sister reviewed their 1986 album for her college newspaper and called them a corporate band in the sense that some corporate record company signed them because they ticked all the right boxes. They had a song for all the different metal tastes at the time. Still, she gave it 6 out of 10. So, would this live album be a good place to start my exploration of the band?
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Yeah I think so. Interesting about what your sister said because that’s pretty much how it went down. They had Def Leppard’s management behind them and a couple sweet opening tours, but they stand on their own.
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Thanks for the link dude! Great review and bang on with the cymbal work as its very clear and distinct on how the album is mixed! It’s a great live album! Good call on Changes that song is ramped right up!
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I saw Def Leppard on their Hysteria Tour with Tesla as the opening act.
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That, to me, represents Def Leppard’s peak time. What a tour that would have been.
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It was a good concert! Both Tesla and Def Leppard were very good!
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Nice review. I have listened to this a few times since it came out and have loved it. I thought they were always a very underrated band.
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ABsolutely. I’m always having to defend Tesla to people who just don’t know!
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I never had to defend them, but I was always surprised they were never bigger than they were.
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They got lumped in with so many bands they had nothing in common with. Do Tesla sound like Poison or Bon Jovi? Not at all!
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They were never a “Hair Band”. They were just a straight up rock band.
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Well Cinderella didn’t sound like Skid Row who didn’t sound like Slaughter who didn’t sound like Winger who didn’t sound like Mötley Crüe who didn’t sound like Europe who didn’t sound like Tesla who didn’t sound like Warrant but they all got lumped into the hair metal category. Which means that they all were called hair metal because they had long hair which in turn means that there’s no musical style called hair metal…
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Very wise!
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That same analogy could apply to folk, psychedelic, prog, disco, country, punk, NWOBHM, grunge, Nu Metal, all the multiple forms of metal.
I know hair metal is one that bugs you, but I don’t mind it. Just a general genre. Perhaps ’80’s metal would be better? Makeup Metal? Sunset Strip Metal?
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Me personally I always prefered the terms hard rock, or glam metal.
As an aside, I have some Canadian whiskey bacon in the oven right now and it smells incredible.
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To me hard rock is not a genre. From Deep Purple or Led Zep to a new band they could all be hard rock.
Glam Metal would work for me.
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Mmmmmm Canadian Whiskey Bacon.
In my best Homer Simpson voice followed by excessive drooling.
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Great review, Mike. You and Deke have got me looking forward to giving this a proper listen!
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Deke convinced me enough to do a SPECIFIC order with CD Japan just to get it! (To make it worth shipping, I added in the Japanese release of their studio album Simplicity, with two bonus tracks).
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I like the idea of going back after 30 years and doing alive album. It says more than just re-releasing the album with some bonus tracks and foisting that. It says they actually put some work into it, actually went out on the road to prove it, and can still rock like hell too, apparently!
Nice one!
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Great Radio Controversy is an LP I really need to buy again, time to replace that ancient cassette copy.
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Such an underrated band. They never made a bad album and they’re a killer live band, they really should have been one of the bands that made it big.
About this album, I’m not that fond of albums like this. I mean, I already have this album and I really don’t need a live version of it. I mean, it’s good and all, but it feels kinda unnecessary. But I do like the studio track.
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Yeah it would be nice to get the new studio track with 9 more new studio tracks. But I am sure Tesla will continue to release albums.
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