I was just listening to “If You Want Blood, You’ve Got It” when I read the thread title, and of course first choice is AC/DC. Like others have said, if I want to show someone the true essence of rock, I play them AC/DC.
The Who also is a good choice, and I throw in another band that was almost always hard rock, but not heavy metal, ZZ Top.
That was the first thing I thought of too. They have the combination of fame and always-being-on-point in hard rock and never straying too far into metal, progressive, or punk (in their famous incarnation).
If there were still some of those hard rock stations that proudly proclaim that they play “Rock. And nothing butt rock”, I’d know that AC/DC would be on the menu.
No. Small Faces ended when Steve Marriott left. The rest of the band joined Rod and the Wood brothers to form Quiet Melon which changed its name to Faces after releasing four singles and Al Wood left.
ETA: It looks like their American label used Small Faces on that record without anybody’s permission.
Interesting, I had never heard of Quiet Melon, though they show up on Discogs.
AllMusic has this to say: " With Marriott gone, the group needed a replacement singer and lead guitarist and divided up the two jobs, finding artists to fill them in Rod Stewart and Ron Wood. Immediate having sunk below the waves in a sea of long-delayed bankruptcy proceedings, the new group moved to the much bigger and more stable auspices of Warner Bros. Records; the name “Small Faces” endured, attached to one Warner album before they officially morphed into Faces, an incarnation under which they went on to international glory for a time, before Rod Stewart finally eclipsed them as a solo act.
I’m kinda’ the same way. Hell, I remember hearing the band ‘Iron Maiden’ interviewed, and as to what is hard rock, heavy metal, NWOBHM ( New Wave of British Heavy Metal ) they were just like, “who cares? We just consider ourselves a rock band” even though their sound can rock harder than a cement pie in the face.
Might be sort of like someone discussing different beers. Stout, Porter, Lambic, IPA, Bitter, wheat: those are all ales, and all ales are beer.
When I read the OP’s question, I actually said out loud “Led Zeppelin’s first album”.
But that’s because it follows the chronology of my teen years. The Kingston Trio had given me a love of live music in '61, Dylan blew me away with his songwriting in '63, Beatles expanded my mind in '64, but it was Zep’lin that got me rocking in '69.
Still remember turning down the lights, gently putting that stylus on the first song, and “Good Times, Bad Times” shook the hippie basement we were hanging out in.
From that point on, life would rock, and it’d be hard.
I LOVE the Who but I wouldn’t say they “best typify” hard rock because Moon was too all over the place. He was all over the place in a way that the band managed to use perfectly, but he was not a pocket drummer and his playing did not have the sense of urgency that Bonham did. For that reason I would place Zeppelin as the Platonic ideal of a hard rock band, and Sabbath would be a refinement of that sound. Zeppelin did it first though, so my vote would have to be Zeppelin.
I’m kind of surprised that no one has mentioned Van Halen or KISS yet…so I will. (You might well categorize KISS as “glam”, but there’s no denying they rocked extremely hard)
I wouldn’t go with Cream or Led Zeppelin as the archetype because while they undoubtedly produced some hard rock, they had a substantial focus on blues.
To me, The Who or AC/DC are better choices simply because they did nothing but hard rock
Hmmm…regarding The Who, there’s a reason they assumed the “Maximum R&B” moniker in the beginning. Before Pete’s original material came to the forefront, their early setlists featured Motown and James Brown covers and they later went on to put their own unique spin on Mose Allison (jazz/blues) and Eddie Cochran(rockabilly) tunes.