“The Faces got to be so good that I myself would stand on one side playing the bass, and I was in awe of the band I was playing with,” said Faces founder member Ronnie Lane in 1987. “We had a good time on the road. There was a lot of good living and a lot of bad living!”
Icons of British rock, Faces were active between 1969 and 1975 and, in this time, gained a reputation for their incendiary live shows. Often, the band would extend the length of their studio material until the songs ran on pure energy, while frontman Rod Stewart’s vocals strained and scratched at every crevice. Now a new box set, Faces At The BBC: Complete BBC Concert And Session Recordings 1970-1973, showcases the band at their sweaty, dynamic best.
Listen to ‘Faces At The BBC’ here.
One of Britain’s greatest-ever live bands
During their short lifespan, Faces were constants both onstage and in the record racks, releasing four studio albums and regularly touring in Britain, Europe and the US. And, although the band were English, they credited the US – specifically Detroit – as their live proving ground.
“Detroit is to America what Glasgow or Liverpool is to the British Isles; it’s very hard-living and depressed, but the lovely thing is the audiences are great,” keyboardist Ian McLagan said. “Music is a real escape for them. It’s the same way that Glasgow is your best audience in Scotland, and Belfast’s always been a great audience in Ireland, because life’s tough there.”
The sound of Faces’ music – vigorous, boisterous, almost physical in its effects – was particularly suited to live performance. The band had a reputation for their carefree and hard-partying lifestyle, and used this hedonism as part of the music they created together instead of a distraction from it. As guitarist Ronnie Wood put it, “We all used to get ripped, and while we were rehearsing, we didn’t realise how much work we’d actually done. When you’re enjoying yourself, time just goes by.”