Searchlight On The Future
On the surface, it might seem that Thin Lizzy have their eyes and hearts and minds on only one thing- the present.
Niall Stokes, 20 Jul 1978

On the surface, it might seem that Thin Lizzy have their eyes and hearts and minds on only one thing- the present. For a start they've just delivered what's commonly regarded as their definitive recorded statement in the brilliant "Live and Dangerous" double album set. Not only that, but the critical acclaim which greeted the work has been more than borne out by the immediate and, so far, sustained commercial success it's achieved.
"Live and Dangerous" has been in the top three in Britain- and don't forget we're talking about a double album- for the six weeks since its initial showing, being denied the number one spot by the sales-monster of the decade "Saturday Night Fever"; it's never easy to compete against an album that's got a film to market it and, what's more, a craze. And still Lizzy are there with a chance.
The same indeed is the case in Ireland, with extremely helathy figures to date suggesting that in the long run it can outsell their biggest money-spinner so far "Jailbreak'. Again, they've been No.2 in The Hot Press charts for a month with only (guess who?) the Stigwood gang holding them out.
On the live front, there was the successful negotiation of the Wembley Empire Pool hurdle, with two packed houses there finally estblishing the band with no remaining grounds for reasonable dispute or logical argument to the contrary, among the Major League as regards drawing power.
With that kind of momentum built up and an American tour imminent- almost certainly with the fresh promotional thrust of a new label, Warner Bros. behind them- there would seem to be little room for pausing, taking a breath or making any other nod in the direction of self-analysis.
And yet, amid all this high-powered achievement, that's precisely what's happening within Thin Lizzy. The rationale, of course, is simple. Stagnation kills. The way to ensure survival on a creative level is to keep one step ahead of the play, to realise when you've been doing material long enough, to anticipate and therefore forestall the point at which it begins to fossilise right there in front of everyone on stage.
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