📰 Oh La La! Ron Wood Sings – News: Mar. 1973
- Faces

- Mar 3, 1973
- 2 min read
A Melody Maker feature spotlighting Ron Wood’s growing vocal presence in Faces as the band prepares their next album amid shifting tour plans.
Melody Maker reports that Ron Wood is stepping forward vocally on the upcoming Faces album, as the band reshapes plans for a postponed European tour.
📰 Key Highlights
• Feature article in Melody Maker, March 3, 1973
• Focuses on Ron Wood’s increased role as a vocalist
• Discusses the Faces’ postponed European tour
• Previews the band’s forthcoming album Ooh La La
• Notes internal dynamics and evolving creative roles
• Includes a large performance photograph of Wood
📰 Overview
By early 1973, Faces were entering a transitional phase. Rod Stewart’s solo success was reshaping the band’s internal balance, and Ron Wood — long celebrated for his guitar work — was stepping into a more prominent vocal role. Melody Maker’s feature “Oh La La! Ron Wood Sings” captures this shift, offering insight into the band’s creative process and the anticipation surrounding their upcoming album.
📰 Source Details
Publication / Venue: Melody Maker
Date: March 3, 1973
Issue / Format: One‑page feature
Provenance Notes: Sourced from original print scan.
📰 The Story
The article opens with news that Faces’ projected European tour has been postponed, leaving fans waiting for new dates. Against this backdrop, the band is deep into work on their next album — soon to be released as Ooh La La — and Ron Wood is taking on a more central role.
Rob Randall’s piece highlights Wood’s increasing confidence as a singer, noting that he contributes lead vocals on several tracks. This shift reflects the band’s evolving dynamic: with Stewart’s solo career accelerating, Wood and Ronnie Lane were stepping forward creatively to maintain the group’s identity.
The article describes the band’s recording sessions as loose, spirited, and characteristically chaotic — a hallmark of Faces’ charm. Wood’s vocal performances are framed as raw, distinctive, and well‑suited to the band’s rough‑and‑ready aesthetic. The feature also touches on the band’s camaraderie, their humour, and their ability to turn studio unpredictability into musical personality.
The accompanying photograph — Wood in flamboyant stage attire, cigarette in hand, guitar slung low — reinforces the article’s theme: a musician stepping into the spotlight with swagger and ease.
📰 Visual Archive

Ron Wood photographed in Melody Maker, March 3, 1973, accompanying the feature “Oh La La! Ron Wood Sings.”
📰 Related Material
Explore the tags below for connected posts and themes.
📰 Closing Notes
This Melody Maker feature captures a pivotal moment for Faces — a band balancing shifting roles, postponed plans, and the emergence of Ron Wood as a charismatic vocal presence ahead of Ooh La La.
📰 Sources
• Melody Maker, March 3, 1973
• Faces discography and session documentation
• Secondary commentary on Ooh La La and early‑’70s band dynamics
📝 Copyright Notice
All magazine scans, photographs, and original text excerpts referenced in this entry remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This Chronicle entry is a transformative, non‑commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference. No ownership of the original material is claimed or implied.





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