Status Quo, while touring in
Bielefeld, Germany, in 1970, heard the Doors' recording shortly after it was released. They were looking for a change of direction, away from their original
psychedelic pop style, and were unsure about what to do; after hearing the song in a club, they enjoyed its
12-bar shuffle and thought it would be a good template for future original material. The group recorded a studio version on the 1972 album
Piledriver, with bassist
Alan Lancaster taking the lead vocal and featuring an extra verse with three-part harmonies, which the Doors' recording did not have. The lyrics differed from the original; for instance, "I should have made you" instead of "Ashen lady". The track was released as a promotional single, with
Black Sabbath's "
Children of the Grave" on the B-side. The song was a regular feature of Quo's live setlist throughout the 1970s, its performance coming towards the end of the show. It was extended to allow a
jam session in the middle, featuring snippets of other songs, including the traditional "
The Irish Washerwoman" and "
Jarabe Tapatío" (known as the "Mexican hat dance") as well as "
Shakin' All Over". A 14-minute version appears as the final track on 1977's
Live. In 1992, the live album
Live Alive Quo featured "
Roadhouse Medley", which blended other songs into the main "Roadhouse Blues" riff and consumed over a third of their entire set at 20:35 in duration. "Roadhouse Blues" was revived for the "Frantic Four" tours in 2013. In 2014, a deluxe reissue of
Piledriver included a 15-minute live version, recorded in 1973.
Personnel •
Alan Lancasterlead vocals, bass •
Francis Rossilead guitar, backing vocals •
Rick Parfittrhythm guitar, backing vocals •
John Coghlandrums
Additional musicians •
Bob Youngharmonica • Jimmy Horowitzpiano ==References==