Released in January of '75, Down by the Jetty is a black-and-white photograph in a year of neon oil paintings. No synths, no flutes, no glitter—just stripped-down rhythm and blues played like punk hadn’t been invented yet, but somehow already had. This is British music clawing its way back to its American roots, not through imitation, but through attitude. Doctor Feelgood weren’t revivalists—they were survivalists.
Recorded mostly live in the studio and released in monophonic sound, Jetty sounds like it was cut in an alley during a blackout. It’s all attack. No fat, no filler, no frills. Just Wilko Johnson’s stuttering, razor-slash Telecaster—part Bo Diddley, part machine gun—ripping through songs like “She Does It Right” and “All Through the City” with a ferocity that makes most punk bands sound academic. His stage presence—jerky, possessed, staring daggers—was pure alien energy in a working-class shell.
Lee Brilleaux, meanwhile, is all grime and bile and beer-soaked charisma. His vocals are part growl, part bark, part battered preacher. When he sings “Keep It Out of Sight,” it’s not a suggestion—it’s a threat. You believe him.
And the rhythm section? Locked in like factory machinery. Tense. Tight. Relentless. John B. Sparks and The Big Figure (yes, that’s the drummer’s name) hold the whole thing down with hypnotic precision. It’s rhythm & blues as urban blues—greasy, urgent, twitching.
In the context of the 1975 Series, Down by the Jetty is a street-level reaction to the cultural noise around it. While Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music burns down the concept of the “rock album” and Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti builds a palace out of excess, Doctor Feelgood are kicking down pub doors and playing like it’s their last night alive. It’s pre-punk in the best sense—pure energy, no ideology, no safety net.
And it had ripple effects. The Feelgoods inspired the entire UK punk and post-punk landscape: The Clash, The Jam, Gang of Four, even Joy Division. Johnny Rotten once said he liked his music “with the guitar up high and lots of treble”—he might as well have been describing Wilko. The ethos of Jetty—do it raw, do it loud, do it right now—was infectious.
This is the working-class gospel. Music for dockworkers, punks, poets, and anyone who’s ever wanted to bash through a wall just to feel something. It didn’t sell millions. It didn’t chart high. But it didn’t need to.
Because Down by the Jetty doesn’t ask.
It tells you.
And if you’re smart, you listen.
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