Thin Lizzy is the debut studio album by Irish rock band Thin Lizzy, released on 30 April 1971. The album was followed by the EP New Day, produced and recorded by Nick Tauber at Decca Studios on 14–17 June 1971 and released on 20 August 1971. after listening to some of the songs Tuite tried to find a record deal for the band. Since he had a good friendship with Decca Records's A&R man, Frank Rodgers, tried to arrange a gig for Thin Lizzy and another of his acts, soul singer Ditch Cassidy. Cassidy lacked his regular band, and so Tuite put Thin Lizzy as his backing band.
After watching Thin Lizzy's performance at the Zhivago Club on 12 November 1970, Frank Rodgers showed his interest in them rather than Cassidy, and offered them a record deal with Decca; however, Rodgers also suggested another showcase gig for other Decca personnel before signing a contract. This time the band performed their original material. "Look What The Wind Blew In" was one of the songs that caught Rodgers's attention. Afterward Tuite travelled to London to meet Decca's head of A & R, Dick Rowe. The paperwork was drawn up on 12 November 1970, and on the first day of December, Decca officially signed “Tin Lissy" to a one-year recording contract, with the option of extending the deal by two further periods of one year in September 1971 and September 1972. All going well, they were committed to delivering three albums to the company. The advance was £500, with a further £500 to be paid after the album had been completed.
thumb|left|Former site of the Clifton Grange Hotel, [[Whalley Range, Manchester|Whalley Range, Manchester which was owned by Lynott's mother Philomena from 1966 to 1980 and inspired numerous songs, including the eponymous Clifton Grange Hotel]]
Thin Lizzy left Ireland after an afternoon gig on 3 January 1971 at the Afton Club in Dundalk, to start recording their first album in London's Decca Studios. On their way to London, Lynott met John Peel and introduced Thin Lizzy to him; within ten months Peel would be booking the group for a session on his Radio 1 show, on 12 October 1971. The band booked a guesthouse in Sussex Gardens in which to stay during the first album recording. The work began on the Monday morning and was done on Friday evening. Brian Downey says: "We got up at nine in the morning, [went] into the studio, played from about ten or half ten to eight or nine, then clocked off and went back to the guesthouse. Then we did it again, for the whole week". According to manager Brian Tuite, while working with producer Scott English, Lynott had a fight with him about the bass sound: "Philip fell out a bit with him because Scott wanted to turn down the bass. It got to the stage where I was up in the control room and Scott would say, 'Go down and tell the bass player to turn down.' He wouldn’t use the [talkback] mike because Phil wouldn't do it anyway. So I'd say to Philip, 'The Bearded One wants you to turn down the bass,' and he'd say, 'Tell that fucking Yank to piss off.' He knew full well the mike would be open."
Eric Bell explained that the band was stoned during the whole process of recording and that he doesn't remember anything from the sessions but he remembers Scott English's accompaniment with band of giving them bags of weed: "We were permanently stoned. Scott English was this jovial American guy, a nice big bloke. He had this enormous bag of grass in one of the drawers in the studio. He brought it out, threw it on the table and said, 'Help yourselves, boys!' That was it. I can’t actually remember recording the first album. I didn’t know anything until the end of the record, it was just a haze. Smoking a bit of dope and playing music went hand-in-hand for us. We were just that type of band at that point in time. It seemed to work for us, we got ideas. There was a lot of things on that album that were completely ad-libbed."
Reception
Eduardo Rivadavia, in a retrospective review for AllMusic, described the album as "surprisingly mellow" and wrote that a number of songs sound "confused and unfinished". However, he did describe "Look What the Wind Blew In" as a "hint of things to come", and that the bonus track "Dublin" from the "New Day" EP contained "Lynott's first great lyric".
Track listings
Remastered and expanded release
On 11 October 2010, a new remastered and expanded version of Thin Lizzy was released. This version features the following bonus tracks:
Personnel
Thin Lizzy
- Philip Lynott – vocals, bass guitar, acoustic guitar
- Eric Bell – lead and rhythm guitar, twelve-string guitar
- Brian Downey – drums, percussion
Additional musicians
- Ivor Raymonde – mellotron on "Honesty Is No Excuse"
- Eric Wrixon – keyboards on "The Farmer"
- Gary Moore – additional guitars, keyboards on tracks 16–19
- Midge Ure – additional vocals, guitars on tracks 16–19
Production
- Scott English – producer
- Nick Tauber – producer
- Peter Rynston – engineer
- Roy Esmonde – photography
- David Antsy – cover design
- Walt Mcguire – cover design
