Monday, November 27, 2017

BGH: CT50 November 25, 1989

November of 1989.  In Canada, we were at a pivotal moment in the national institution that is the Degrassi franchise, as the scene switched from junior high to high school.  They eased their way into the transition with a episode where Erica has an abortion.  And Saved by the Bell thought tackling caffeine pill addiction was pushing the envelope.  Meanwhile, on the radio:

Bonus Track #1: 72 - °The Maker," Daniel Lanois (CanCon!)
Based in my birthplace of Hamilton, Ontario, Lanois first made his name as a producer of Canadian artists, then got his big break when Brian Enough asked him to produce U2's blockbusters The Unforgettable Fire and The Joshua Tree.  He became one of the most sought-after producers in rock, and in between assignments he put together an album called Acadie which featured this atmospheric track about longing for God.  It's moving and stirring, and gets a boost from a vocal cameo from Aaron Neville.  I love it, and I also love that CanCon regulations are the only reason it charted.

BonusTrack  #2: 63 - "Blow at High Dough," The Tragically Hip (CanCon!)
Founeed in Kingston, Ontario, in 1984, the future national heroes made their first chart appearance with this driving, inscrutable rocker that references taxis, supper bells, wedding rings, and the Elvis movie Speedway.  And the title is apparently a saying Gord Downie's grandmother would use that compared a rising cake to going too far too fast.  No one is really sure what it all means, but it hasn't mattered, as this is one of the band's most beloved songs.

49 - "House of Dreams," Blue Rodeo (CanCon!)
Formed in 1984, this Toronto country-rock band became CanCon superstars near the end of the 80s.  Their fifth Top 50 hit was this ballad about being left by the one you love.  This one features smooth-voiced Jim Cuddy instead of their other singer, the more weathered-sounding Greg Keelor.  It's not one of their bigger hits, but it's good enough that it would be a signature moment for many other bands.

48 - "You've Got It," Simply Red
Mick Hucknall and Co. followed up their Triple Crown near-miss "If You Don't Know Me By Now" with this ballad about an inescapable love.  Performed well, but not much.

47 - "Sons and Daughters," Chalk Circle  (CanCon!)
The final hit for these Newcastle Ontarians was this tune that I think is about American cultural imperialism.  It chugs along nicely, then finishes with kind of a gospel breakdown.  A nice little moment in a nice little career.

46 - "Another Day," Paradox (CanCon!)
This Quebec band sounds like Glass Tiger on their second of three hits, a decent enough acoustic rocker about carrying on.  They broke up in 1991, but leader Sylvain Cossette subsequently became a major solo star in Quebec.  I had no idea, which will give any outsiders reading this a taste of how French-Canadian pop culture is an island unto itself.

44 - "Another Man's Gun," Ray Lyell and the Storm (CanCon!)
Another Hamiltonian, Lyell and his band scored their first hit with this Old West-themed roots rocker.  My favorite of their handful of hits.  And for the record, Lyell is the only artist I have written about here who I have seen perform live at a funeral in a small church.

43 - "Let Love Rule," Lenny Kravitz
The son of Jeffersons actress Roxie Roker and a Jewish TV news producer, Kravitz launched his career with this idealistic bit of retro psychedelia.  Soulful, maybe too derivative of his influences, but shot through with charisma.  You could probably use the previous sentence to describe his entire career.

42 - "I'm Not the Man I Used to Be," Fine Young Cannibals 
FYC's sixth and final Top 50 here was this contemplative soul song that employs the then-ubiquitous "Funky Drummer" sample.  Another fine Roland Gift vocal.

41 - "The Way to Your Heart," Soulsister 
This Belgian duo had their biggest international success with this Motown-styled love plea. A nice little footnote to be reminded of.

40 - "Rockin' In the Free World," Neil Young (CanCon!)
The 80s were a time of experimentation and commercial struggle for Mr. Young.  It was a time when he was sued by his then-record label for not making albums that sounded like him.  But he ended the decade on a high note with this blistering rocker about staying positive in a troubled world.  Like Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A.," it has been misinterpreted as a jingoistic fist-pumper for mindless patriotism, but the lyrics lament the hopelessness of a junkie mother and take multiple stabs at Bush 41.  It deservedly took a place among his standards.

34 - "Crossroads," Tracy Chapman 
After her debut album went multi-platinum and spawned the smash "Fast Car," folkie Chapman returned with this defiant number that rails at the "demons" that would have her compromise her art for continued commercial success.  Perhaps inevitably, it bombed in the U.S., and while it did a little better her, it spelled the end of her as a player on pop radio until her surprise 1996 hit "Give Me One Reason."

32 - "Sold Me Down the River," The Alarm
From Rhyl, Wales, this band were consistent charters in Britain, but their peak I  North America was the late 80s when they dented the charts with both 1987's "Rain in the Summertime," and this gritty rocker about romantic betrayal.  Maybe not their best, but swampy goodness all the same.

27 - °What'cha Do to My Body," Lee Aaron (CanCon!)
Born Karen Greening in Belleville, Ontario, Aaron carved out a career as Canada's metal queen (she even named an album Metal Queen) which peaked with her biggest hit, an exuberant hard rock sex jam.  She had the attitude to pull off the rock chick thing, but she also had a versatile enough voice that she was able to credibly perform jazz and even opera later in her career.  One of our lesser-known musical treasures.

17 - "Hey Men," Men Without Hats (CanCon!)
Though this didn't crack America like previous hits "The Safety Dance" and "Pop Goes the World," these Montrealers managed one more Top Ten at home with this rock number admonishing males for their mistreatment of women.  They get the message across without preachiness, and it's a message that still resonates, particularly in this cultural moment.

16 - "Rockland Wonderland," Kim Mitchell (CanCon!)
The cottage rocker scored another hit with this midtempo tune about out the positive communal experience of being at a rock concert.  The song isn't quite as powerful as the sentiment it describes,  but it's okay.

14 - "Giving Away a Miracle," Luba (CanCon!)
Our second encounter with Ms. Kowalchyk of Montreal comes in the form of this folk rocker about an angelic figure who can change lives with music.  Kind of a grandiose and potentially sappy topic, but her passionate vocal sells it remarkably.  Anthemic and wonderful, and it deservedly became her only non-cover to crack the Top Ten.

Keepin' it Top Ten.

10 - "We Didn’t Start the Fire," Billy Joel 
Billy J had a U.S, #1 and a #2 here with this rock laundry list of stuff that had been in the news from his birth year of 1949 until the then-present.  If you're a kid trying to use it as a history cheat sheet, be warned that while there's a lot of events mentioned that happened up until the end of 1963 ("JFK! Blown away!"), he then ran out of room and he squeezed the other 26 years into one verse.  Yes, more happened in the 70s than just Watergate and punk rock.  It seemed like a neat gimmick at the time,  but it has not aged well.

9 - "The Best," Tina Turner 
Tina's finished off her great 80s with a CanadIan and British Top Five in the form of this song of praise that was first recorded by Bonnie Tyler.  Tina's version is okay, but it's been blunted by its repeated use in athlete retirement ceremonies.  If you're making a playlist of cliches, you need to add this.

8 - "Another Day in Paradise," Phil Collins 
Big Phil narrowly missed a Triple Crown with this maudlin three minutes PSA reminding us that homeless people exist, and that sucks.  His heart was in the right place, but the result isn't very affecting.

7 - "Cover Girl," New Kids on the Block 
The Kids tried to rock on this song about a girl they like better than the ones they see in magazines and such.  They didn’t quite get there, but at the time that didn't matter.  It was product for an audience that needed little encouragement to buy.

6 - "No Souvenirs," Melissa Etheridge 
More proof that Canada was an early Etheridge adopter, as this torrid tune about a clean break with a lover that isn't quite as clean as it seems.  She was really fantastic at depicting desperation and lust in those early years.

5 - "Angelia," Richard Marx 
The Marxman was deep into boring balladeer territory with this blah about wanting a lady back.  Don't mean nothing to me.  He should've known better.

4 - "Miss You Much," Janet Jackson 
Miss Jackson cemented her superstardom with the first single from her Rhythm Nation 1814 album, another blazing blast of Jam/Lewis goodness.  No Janet, that wasn't the end.

3 - "When I See You Smile," Bad English
During that time when Journey was broken up, guitarist Neal Schoen and keyboardist Jonathan Cain teamed up with Cain's fellow former Baby John Waite and scored a cross-border #1 with a Diane Warren power ballad.   Better perhaps than those parts would seem to  add up to, but still a hit with a shelf life.

2 - "Sowing the Seeds of Love," Tears for Fears 
The sad and scared ones picked up their third and last charttopper here with a song reminiscent of Sgt. Pepper-era Beatles.  The lyrics mostly criticize "politician granny" Margaret Thatcher, but they throw in a line indicating their preference in Paul Weller band's ("Kick out the Style, bring back the Jam.")  Their last great moment.

And on top way back when was...
1 - "Listen to Your Heart," Roxette 

The Swedes were denied a Triple Crown because they never got to the top in the U.K., but this power ballad inspired by the romantic travails of a friend of Per Gessle was the first of three Can-Am Number Ones.  It was intended to be almost a parody of power ballads, but I guess they imitated them too well for it to be a joke.

There's another one. And it's been over seven years since I started this, so why stop now.  See you again.

Friday, November 10, 2017

GATW: UKT40 October 28, 1978 Part Two

The finish.

20 - "Mexican Girl," Smokie 
Their eleventh and last hit of this decade was this soft rock ode to a comely senorita.  All I'll say is that if you have "a heart as big as a stone," you should probably have that looked at.

19 - "Darlin'," Frankie Miller 
The biggest of the Scot's two hits was this countryish loneliness lament.  Solid wallowing material.

18 - "Dippety Day," Father Abraham and the Smurfs
The second of three hits for Dutchman Pierre Kartner and the fictional blue creatures is this jaunty nonsense.  Dippety don't bother.

17 - "Blame it on the Boogie," Mick Jackson 
This Englist singer co-wrote this tune about an uncontrollable urge to dance and took it to the Top 20.  It's okay, in a Leo Sayer disco-lite sort of way.  But the song also ended up in the hands of a group from across the pond, and you will soon find out who.

16 - "Hurry Up Harry," Sham 69
The Surrey punks' second hit was this simple rocker about trying to get a friend to come along with them to the pub.  Inconsequential fun.

15 - "Givin' Up, Givin' In," The Three Degrees 
Another Brit hit for the Philly trio.  Solid disco soul about finally dumping a duplicitous lover.  Always glad to see them again.

14 - "Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn'tve)," The Buzzcocks 
The Bolton boys' third and biggest hit.  A perfect encapsulation of angst and conflicted feelings.  Fine Young Cannibals missed the point entirely when they covered it.

13 - "Public Image," Public Image Ltd.
When not recommending songs about jerking off, John "Johnny Rotten" Lydon spent his post-Pistols year forming a new band with a slightly more musical sound.  And he was actually attempting to sing instead of just snarl aloud.  Their first single was this song about how his former band mates and manager cared more about style than substance.  Shocking, I know.  A very good record, and the beginning of a more than worthy second act.

12 - "Now That We Found Love," Third World 
The Jamaicans' first and best-known hit was this disco-reggae cover of a 1973 O'Jays song.  A sweet little groover.

11 - 'Talking in Your Sleep," Crystal Gayle 
The second and last hit here for Loretta Lynn's little sister with all the hair was this ballad about being cheated on in dreams, and possibly IRL, as the kids say.  Okay, but it won't change anyone's eye colour.

Ten times the tuneage.
10 - "I Can't Stop Lovin' You (Though I Try)," Leo Sayer 
Leo's last Top Ten of this decade was this ballad about accompanying a lover to the train that will take her out of his life.  A solid weepie.

9 - "Blame It on the Boogie," The Jacksons 
Yes, Mick Jackson's song ended up in the hands of Michael Jackson and his brothers, who sped it up and funked it over.  Yeah, they win on every level.

8 - "Love Don't Live Here Anymore," Rose Royce 
The L.A. funk crew's biggest U.K. hit was this sumptuous ballad about being left by your love.  Heartbreak encapsulated.

7 - "Rat Trap," The Boomtown Rats 
Their first of two Number Ones was this Springsteeny mini-epic about hopeless youth in a dead-end town.  This would be the first time a band identified as punk or New Wave topped the chart, and I would say it's worthy of that distinction.

6 - "Sweet Talkin' Woman," Electric Light Orchestra 
Their ninth Top Ten was this tune about chasing a loquacious lady.  Apparently, thetc first copies of the single were transparent purple vinyl, though the song came from the album Out of the Blue.  What a colourful anecdote.

5 - "MacArthur Park," Donna Summer 
Summer's cover of Jimmy Webb's bizarre song comparing a breakup to a cake being left out in the rain was denied a Triple Crown by the Brits, who only lifted it this high before it started flowing down the chart.  Donna definitely was an improvement on Richard Harris.  Maybe they should have asked her to replace him as Dumbledore.

4 -  "Lucky Stars," Dean Friedman 
The pride of Paramus, New Jersey, Friedman followed up his quirky U.S. hit of the previous year, "Ariel," with this duet with an uncredited Denise Marsa.  It's a ballad depicting a bedtime conversation between a husband and wife about the husband running into a former lover that day.  There is anger, doubt, and apology, leading to a seemingly tenuous resolution.  It's almost voyeuristic in its detail.  You feel like you've watched an entire one-act play when it's over.  I really need to explore more of Mr. Friedman's oeuvre to see if there's even more gold.

3 - "Sandy," John Travolta 
Only released as a single here , this is the song Danny Zuko sings in Grease after Sandy runs out on him at the drive-in movie after he comes on too strong with her.  Travolta sings it well, but every time I hear it I just think of the screen behind him with the cartoon of the performing snack foods.  I remember being thrilled seeing those cartoons actually being played between movies at a drive-in years later.  Those are gems of modern culture.

2 - "Rasputin," Boney M 
At last, here it is, the German disco machine's incredible telling of the tale of Grigori Rasputin, a mystical con man who became a leading advisor to the ruling Romanovs I early 20th century Russia.  He claimed to be able to heal Nicholas and Alexandra's sickly son Alexei, but he seemed more interested in accruing power and bedding the ladies of the royal court.  He was killed in December 1916 by a group of aristocrats and politicians resentful of his influence on the Tsar.  The song succinctly (if not entirely accurately) tells the story enthusiastically and danceably.  It made no impact in the States, but it got this high here and went Top Ten in Canada, which is how it became a treasured earworm from my childhood.  It never fails to make me happy.  Ooooohhhh, those Russians!

And on top 39 years ago, we find..
1 - "Summer Nights," John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John 
More Grease, this time the song where Danny and Sandy tell their respective peer group's about their summer romance.  They have conflicting accounts of what happened between them, but both seem to agree that that the relationship is over due to distance.  Little do they know...Anyway, always a fun listen.

That's done.  But I'm not.  You'll see.

Friday, November 3, 2017

GATW: UKT40 October 28, 1978 Part One

Fall 1978.  Britain was about to experience a bakers' strike, which led to bakeries rationing bread to prevent panic buying.  There was no shortage of 45 rpm vinyl records, however, and these were the ones people were buying most.

40 - "Dreadlock Holiday," 10cc
Their third and last #1 was this bouncy tale of a tourist in Jamaica dealing with an attempted mugging and being offered drugs by trying to smonth things over with proclamations of love for cricket, reggae, and Jamaica itself.  Slick, smart, and singalongable, like they are at their best.

39 - "The Winker's Song (Misprint)," Ivor Biggun and the Red-Nosed Burglars
Comedian and musician Robert "Doc" Cox made several naughty comedy records under this suitably suggestive name.  Obviously he didn't get any radio play, but this ukulele-driven novelty about masturbation got as high as #22 when it was recommended by Johnny Rotten in an issue of the influential music publication New Musical Express.  It's not at all subtle; there's no pretending that the song is about anything else.  You know what your getting, so listen at your own risk.  And it seems very appropriate to give it this week's Uneasy Rider Award.  Just don't tell me what you do with it, Mr. Biggun.

38 - "Teenage Kicks," The Undertones 
The first and best-known hit for these Northern Irishmen is this power-pop blast of young lust.  It almost sounds like it's being sung through gritted teeth.  One of the best representations of the adolescent male libido in any artist form.

37 - "Hard Road," Black Sabbath 
Their last single of the first Ozzy era was this grinder about how life is hard, but there are good moments, so hang on in the times in between.  I think that's it.  Good song, but maybe only a 3 on the Headbangometer.  Oh, and I didn't rate "Paranoid" last time, but do I even need to say it's a 5?

36 - "Silver Machine," Hawkwind 
A reissue of their 1972 smash.  Still spacey Lemmy goodness.

35 - "Get it While You Can," The Olympic Runners 
There were no world-class athletes among these Britfunkers: they were named for the London studio where they first recorded.  The first of the three singles they scraped into the Top 40 was this boogie about taking advantage of opportunities.  It blends in, and not much more.

34 - "Summer Night City," ABBA
Their ninth Top Five was this whirly disco number about the appeal of hot urban evenings.  This is a track where you can hear how superior they were to imitators like Brotherhood of Man.  Only they could put white bread on a turntable and make it sound like something truly approaching funk.

33 - "Got to Get You Into My Life," Earth Wind and Fire 
EWF's authentically funky contribution to the soundtrack of the spectacularly failed Beatles tribute film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band went Top Ten at home but only this high here.  Maybe it was because the country was offended by the desecration of their national treasures this was a part of, I don’t know.  If they had been more open-eared, it might have done better.  It deserved to.

32 - "Part-Time Love," Elton John 
Sir Elton's first hit with lyricist Gary Osborne was this flirtation with disco about one-night stands.  It's all right, but he was always better with Bernie.

31 - "Kiss You All Over," Exile 
#1 at home, #2 in Canada, #6 here.  That seems just.  It's this perfect little disco-rock come-on.  I would never lock it out of my musical rotation.

30 - "Fool (If You Think It's Over," Chris Rea
The Middlesbrough man's debut hit got to #12 across the pond, but only this high here.  I think America had it right.  Very good pop song about the fleetingness of heartbreak.

29 - "One for You, One for Me," Jonathan King
A bland disco effort by this guy who pops up a lot but turned out to be a creep.  Nothing to linger on.

28 - "Instant Replay," Dan Hartman 
The disco smash and only U.K. Top Ten for Edgar Winter's former bassist.  A very good genre representative.

27 - "Bicycle Race/Fat Bottomed Girls," Queen 
Their double-sided,interconnected disc about butts and the vehicles they sit on.  Two classic rock songs about two different kinds of exercise.

26 - "Respectable," The Rolling Stones 
Their last British hit of the decade was this balls-out rocker that may be about a trip to Washington which involves "talking heroin with the president" and finding a woman who's "the easiest lay on the White House lawn."  Apparently, this was the sound of them being influenced by punk, and it suited them.

25 - "Down at the Tube Station at Midnight," The Jam
The sixth hit for the Mod rockers was this tune about a man trying to get a late train home to his wife only to be robbed by skinhead hooligans.  It perfectly evokes the fear and helplessness of being in that situation.  I could make a case for it being their best song, easily.

24 - "A Rose Has to Die," The Dooleys
The third hit for this family pop group reinforces the point I made about ABBA above.  Acording to this, lies kill flowers.  It'd be kind of ironic if that was a lie, wouldn't it?

23 - "Grease," Frankie Valli 
Britain held this to #3, robbing Frankie of a Triple Crown.  That's okay.  And "Grease is the way we are feeling"?  That doesn't sound pleasant.  It sounds like you have a stomachache.

22 - "Brandy," The O'Jays 
The Philly soulsters with a ballad about sitting home alone hoping against hope for the return of a departed lover.  It's fantastic cry-in-your-cherry-soda music.  The discoveries keep piling up.

21 - "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)," Sylvester 
The disco legend's only Top Ten.  One of the genre's standards.  A boogie tornado.

In Part Two: two easily-confused versions of the same song, a punk's second chapter, and some forgivably fractured history. 

Saturday, October 28, 2017

GATW: UKT40 October 19, 1980 Part Two

Second half.

20 - "Trouble," Gillan 
The first and biggest hit for Ian's eponymous band was this cover of a song Elvis performed in the 1958 film King Creole, then Ten years later in his 1968 comeback special. Gillan gives a swaggering performance that reminded me a lot of Bad Company's Paul Rogers.  It's good, even if I still don't know what a "green-eyed mountain jack" is.

19 - "One Day I'll Fly Away," Randy Crawford 
The Georgia jazz singer's first and biggest solo hit here was this ballad about finding the courage to leave an unfulfilling relationship. It's nice, but I'm not sure what made it such a breakout for her.

18 - " Enola Gay," Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark 
OMD's second hit and first Top Ten was this synthpopper about the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.  It doesn't seem to take a side as to whether it was right or wrong, but it still conveys the importance.  One of their best.

17 - "Three Little Birds," Bob Marley and the Wailers
Their last hit during Marley's lifetime was this gentle song of optimism.  Yeah, I really hope every little thing's gonna be all right.

16 - "Searching," Change 
The second hit for this Italian-American group was a slinky funk number about looking for love, sung by the then-little-known Luther Vandross.  It's goodness that Luther makes great.

15 - "You're Lying," Linx
The Britfunk combo's first hit is decent deception disco.  Saying anything better about it wouldn't be telling the truth.

14 - "Gotta Pull Myself Together," The Nolans 
The second Top Ten for the Irish sisters was this jaunty dance pop track about recovering from a romantic mistake.  They hit my bubblegum sweet spot.

13 - "Casanova," Coffee 
The only hit for this Philadelphia girl group was a disco cover of a 1967 Ruby Andrews R&B hit about shutting down a playboy.  It exists.

12 - "Killer On the Loose," Thin Lizzy 
Lizzy's only Top Ten of the decade was this fast rocker in which Phil Lynott sings from the point of view of Jack the Ripper.  Effective, if a little on the nose when he flat out says "I'm a mad sexual rapist."  Um...you could have maybe couched that a little and still gotten the point across, Phil.

11 - "Amigo," Black Slate
The only major hit for this London reggae band was this loping number about how Jah is your friend.  Rastafarian worship music, essentially.

something something Top Ten.

10 - "When You Ask About Love," Matchbox 
The retro specialists had their biggest hit by covering Buddy Holly.  No need to bother with this.  A photocopy from a machine low on toner.

9 - "Woman in Love," Barbra Streisand
Babs grabs a Triple Crown with this big Gibb ballad.  Professional pop that still holds up.

8 - "My Old Piano," Diana Ross 
This single flopped at home, but gave Miss Ross a Top Five here.  It's disco-funk that compares a musical instrument to a reliable lover.  Kind of odd, but fine.

7 - "If You're Lookin' for a Way Out," Odyssey 
This New York disco trio only cracked the U.S. Top 40 with 1977's "Native New Yorker," but here they racked up five Top Fives, the third being this "I love you  enough to set you free of that's what you want" ballad.  Lillian Lopez's vocals knock it out of the park.  A surprise soul classic.

6 - "Master Blaster (Jammin')," Stevie Wonder 
Stevie pays tribute to Marley, funktasticness ensues.

5 - "What You're Proposing," Status Quo 
The Quo's first hit of this decade was an energetic rocker about being unspecifically propositioned.  They seemed to like what was on the table, though.  It's okay, but I think using "runny nosin'" as a verbal is a bit dodgy.

4 - "Et Les Oiseaux Chantaient (And the Birds Were Singing)," Sweet People 
Well...this group was from Switzerland...they were led by a guy named Alain Morrison...and their hit here was an easy-listening instrumental literally featuring the sounds of singing birds.  I'm just hearing this now, so clearly I was premature in giving Kate Bush the Uneasy Rider.  Sorry Kate, but I've got to rescind the award and give it to these other songbirds.

3 - "Baggy Trousers," Madness 
Their fourth hit was a jumpy reminiscence of Suggs' schooldays, which apparently involved drunk teachers, fights with kids from other schools, and loose-fitting pants, among other things.  It was evidently written as a contrast to the rigid private-school upbringing detailed in "Another Brick in the Wall Part II."  And it is a good tonic to Floydian harshness.

2 - "D.I.S.C.O.," Ottawan
The first of the French group's two big hits was this song that describes a woman using the title as an acrostic device.  They didn’t come up with any adjectives beginning with O, though.  But I'll attribute that to English not being their native language.

And on top 37 years ago was...
1 - "Don't Stand So Close to Me," The Police 
Their third #1 was this tale of a teacher lusting after a student.  Between this and "Every Breath You Take," Sting did creepy surprisingly well.  I guess that role in Brimstone and Treacle fit him better than I thought.

Don't be sad, I have more.  Stay tuned.

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

GATW: UKT40 October 19, 1980 Part One

October 1980.  The Queen becomes the first British mornarch to visit the Vatican since Henry VIII decided to form his own church so he could get divorced.  What's 450 years between friends?  Meanwhile, the U.K.'s pop fans had married themselves to these tunes.

40 - "Eighth Day," Hazel O'Connor
Coventry singer-actress O'Connor scored her first and biggest hit with this song from the soundtrack of Breaking Glass, a film in which she starred as a rock vocalist trying to make it big while keeping her integrity.  It's apocalyptic punk/new wave about humanity's inventions eventually destroying life and the planet, sung in a Lene Lovich-style wail.  A cool little curiosity.

39 - "Paranoid," Black Sabbath 
A tenth anniversary reissue of Sabbath's biggest and best-known hit, this metal classic about a mental breakdown.  The beginning of the legend of Ozzy. Bat-biting, nu-metal festivals, and "Shaarrooonn!!" ensued.

38 - "Modern Girl," Sheena Easton
Her debut single.  She liked tangerines and television, apparently.  It still amazes me that she was the independent lady on this one and the devoted housewife on her very next release.

37 - "Dog Eat Dog," Adam and the Ants 
Their first hit established their template; the Burundi beat, the lyrics about non-conformity, and Adam's sneery vocals.  A solid start.

36 - "Why Do Lovers Break Each Other’s Hearts," Showaddywaddy 
The retro specialists had their first hit of the decade with a cover of a song co-written by Phil Spector for Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans.  They did what they did, and it was slowly falling out of favour.

35 - "Let Me Talk," Earth Wind and Fire 
The funk machine had another hit with this tune about the issues of the dawn of the decade, including inflation, nuclear disarmament, and reliance on Middle Eastern oil.  The groove helps the medicine go down smooth.

34 - "I Need Your Lovin'," Teena Marie
The second and final Brit hit by the Rick James protégé.   Still slick funk of the kind that made her an unlikely soul legend.

33 - "She's So Cold," The Rolling Stones 
Their second hit of the decade was this burner about how fiery Mick gets around an ironically chilly lady.  Should have been a bigger hit.  My country did the best by it by pushing it to #11.

32 - "Party Lights," The Gap Band
The second hit here for the Tulsa funk ensemble is just a groove delivery system with bare-bones lyrics.  Just dance and turn off the brain.

31- "It's Only Love," Elvis Presley 
This reissue of a 1971 single made it all the way to #3.  It's a big showy ballad that instantly makes you see the jumpsuit and the sideburns in your mind's eye.  Vegas headliner Elvis all the way, no trace of the libidinous Middle America-threatened.

30 - "I Owe You One," Shalamar 
Their third hit over here was this disco tune that compares love to a financial transaction.  As long as it isn't actually one, it's all good.

29 - "What's in a Kiss," Gilbert O'Sullivan 
After a five-year drought, old Gil managed a fourteenth and final hit with this typical trifle about love.  This time he compares himself to a delicatessen.  That's different.  Otherwise, it's just the standard fluff.

28 - "I Got You," Split Enz 
The Zealanders' only major hit here was this New Wave gem about romantic paranoia.  It gets on my nerves that this wasn't a worldwide Top Five smash.
Sometimes I get frightened about how much this matters to me.

27 - "Feels Like I'm in Love," Kelly Marie
This song was originally written by Mungo Jerry leader Ray Dorset for Elvis, but after the King died, it wound up going to a Scottish newcomer born Jacqueline McKinnon, who took it to #1.  It's decent enough disco, but nothing that would make you think a major star was emerging.  And it wasn't, as she picked up just two more sub-Top 20s before fading into obscurity.

26 - "Army Dreamers," Kate Bush 
Kate's sixth hit was another cool little oddity, a mournful waltz sung from the point of view of a mother who loses a son in a war.  On the strength of her Kateness alone, she edges Hazel O'Connor for the Uneasy Rider.

25 - "Special Brew," Bad Manners 
The first of two Top Fives for Buster Bloodvessel and his boys was this sweet little ska love song.  "All I want is a barrel of you," he sings.  Um...I guess he doesn't mean that in a creepy way...right?

24 - "All Out of Love," Air Supply 
I am surprised to learn that this was the Aussie duo's only Top 40 here.  Well, at least it was one of their better efforts.

23 - "Another One Bites the Dust," Queen
Another surprise:  Britain kept this from the Triple Crown, only lifting it to #7.  You'd think the combination of Freddie and funk would have been a top spot shoo-in.  Funny old world, isn't it?

22 - "Stereotype," The Specials 
The fifth Top Ten for the Coventry 2 Tone kings was this portrait of a young man who has a dead-end existence of drinking, shagging and fighting.  Although one wonders if this is a cautionary tale or a criticism of mainstream society's view of the youth of the day, with the latter suggested by the title and the fact that the lyrics twice state of the protagonist "He doesn't really exist."  One you have to think about, and I always appreciate that.

21 - "Love X Love," George Benson 
The second British Top Ten for the jazz guitarist was this smoothie about affection multiplication.  It's a very good example of the continuing influence of disco after it's supposed death.  I'd still boogie along.

In Part Two: Deception!  Murder!  Insanity!  Lust!  And also birds.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Bobby Goes Home: Canadian Top 50 October 15, 1988

Before we start, I would like to pay tribute to the recently passed Gord Downie.  The Tragically Hip are a phenomenon that is hard to explain, but all I can say is that when I hear them, I hear a different little piece of what makes Canada Canada.  They have so many songs that are so popular here (and so ignored everywhere else) that not only do they have over a dozen songs I could name Certified CanCon Classics, I might has well give that title to their whole career.  RIP, Gordie baby, I knew exactly what you meant, I swear to God.

Now to October 1988.  Canada was in a funk.  After one of the biggest trades in sports history, we were now watching Wayne Gretzky play hockey in a Los Angeles Kings uniform.  Sprinter Ben Johnson's triumph at the Seoul Olympics was squelched when he tested positive for steroids and his gold medal was stripped.  And while all that was going on, we had to pay attention to a federal election campaign.  Good times.  Well, we could always try to escape through music, and here are some of the more popular distractions of the time.

Bonus Track: 57 - "Slow Turning," John Hiatt
Born in Indianapolis in 1952, Hiatt got his first music business attention when his song "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here" became a hit for Three Dog Night in 1974.  This got him a major label recording contract, and he bounced around a few label's for over a decade until his 1987 LP Bring the Family garnered him his first significant sales and airplay.  This title track from his next album became his biggest hit.  It's a banjo-driven folk rocker about adjusting from making noise with your guitar in your youth to being an adult and wanting your children to stop "banging like Charlie Watts" in the back seat of the car.  Rootsy goodness.  Hiatt has continued performing and writing ever since, with his biggest pop success coming in 1989 when Canada's own Jeff Healey took a cover of "Angel Eyes" to #5 in America.

49 - "Into the Night," Big Bang (CanCon!)
This Scarborough, Ontario trio hasn't left much of an online footprint with their only hit.  Couldn't find lyrics, and all I could find of the song is a clip on YouTube of a profile of the band from a show on YTV (the Canadian version of Nickelodeon) that contained parts of the video and a snippet of a live performance.  From that I vaguely remember the song as being kind of Simple Minds-ish, but nothing special.  They were pretty much done after this, and there clearly isn't much nostalgia for their one moment.

48 - "Talkin' 'Bout a Revolution," Tracy Chapman
After her smash debut single "Fast Car" topped the charts here and went Top Ten in the U.S. and the U.K., Cleveland native Chapman could do not better than this position with her follow-up, a folk-rocker that essentially warns of/encourages an uprising by the world's lower economic classes.  Probably not surprising that commercial radio didn't want to embrace it.  Nor is it surprising that it was adopted last year by the presidential campaign of left-wing populist Bernie Sanders last year.  A good addition to any protest playlist alongside the Woody Guthries, Phil Ochs, and Billy Braggs of the world.

47 - "Don't Go," Hothouse Flowers 
From the Monkstown section of Dublin, this band got its start with a single on the U2-owned Mother Records label, then they were signed to a major label and hit #11 in Britain and this high here with this rollicking mix of folk, rock, and soul.  Urgent and inspiring, it seemed to promise a big career, but they wouldn't go beyond a cult following outside the British Isles.  But this one still reaches out and grabs me.

43 - "Come Back to Me," Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts  (CanCon!)
This Vancouver band first garnered attention when the video for their indie single "Something to Live For" gained significant airplay on MuchMusic.  They would then sign a major label deal and become a steady CanCon provider for several years.  Their second hit was this bar-rocker on which Bentall tells an old flame that he's better than her flashy new guy.  The theme and the sound are very much junior Springsteen, but they pull the sound off better than, say, John Cafferty's band.  And in case I don't get to it, I'm going to take the time to induct "Something to Live For" into the ranks of my Certified CanCon Classics.  That one you should definitely track down if you don't know it.

41 - "My Girl," Myles Goodwyn (CanCon!)
Between the breakup of April Wine in 1982 and their reunion in 1992, leader Goodwyn recorded a solo album that contained this ballad about wanting to get his lady back.  Blah, drowning in synths, and not up to his band's legacy of okayness.  He was right to get back with the boys and return to jamming out "Roller" and "Could've Been a Lady" for the cottage crowd.

40 - "Nothing Can Come Between Us," Sade
The Nigerian-Briton and her band hit bigger here than in those two bigger countries with another bit of slick jazz-pop about the galvanizing power of love.  Not super distinctive,  but nice.

38 - "Spot You in a Coalmine," Corey Hart (CanCon!)
The Montreal heartthrob had the fifteenth of his whopping 30 Top 40s at home with this soulful rocker about being able to know where his lover is at all times, no matter what.  There's a Dylan reference in the lyrics and some good guest vocals from British singer Ruby Turner.  He was maturing as an artist, and while that didn't help him from fading commercially in the States, it helped him weather the future at home.

37 - "Endless Night," Eye Eye (CanCon!)
This Toronto band's biggest hit was this nondescript rock song about getting through the night with someone special.  Synths and sax are present and correct, as they should be on this sort of 80s blandness.

34 - "Bring Me Some Water," Melissa Etheridge 
In the States, the raspy Kansas rocker didn't get much airplay beyond rock radio until the mid-90s, but here she was having pop hits right from her debut album, the first being this intense howl of jealousy and desperation.  For me, it's her best hit by quite a margin.

33 - "My Song," Glass Tiger (CanCon!)
While they were months removed from their last U.S. Top 40, the hits continued at home, including this jaunty collaboration with Irish traditionalists The Chieftains.  Not bad, but a little out of their depth.

32 - "Smile Me Down," Andrew Cash (CanCon!)
Torontonian Cash started in the punk band L'etranger in the early 80s, then went in a folk-rock direction for his solo career.  His second hit was this jangly number about people who intimidate and belittle others in the guise of friendliness.  Which is something I'm sure he became familiar with during his recent four-year stint as a Member of Parliament.

31 - "Dream On," Blvd. (CanCon!)
The third of five hits for these Calgarians was this...well, see my entry on Eye Eye, minus the sax.

29 - "Don't be Afraid of the Dark," The Robert Cray Band 
Georgia blues guitarist Cray had scored a surprise pop hit the year before with "Smoking Gun," and Canada gave him another one with this invitation to a lady to come over for what today might be called "Marvin Gaye and chill."  Pretty good.

28 - "When I Fall in Love," Natalie Cole 
For some reason, this R&B cover of a song that was a hit for Doris Day in 1952 and Natalie's father four years later made it's biggest chart impact here.  I don't get it. It's blandly modernized and overly sung.  But it does serve as foreshadowing of her 90s turn to traditionalism.

26 - "Dancing Under a Latin Moon," Candi  (CanCon!)
This Toronto group started as a band specializing in Italian weddings, but after getting a major label deal, they had a brief string of hits, the best-remembered being this dance-pop tune about fantasizing about falling in love in Brazil.  Why the location was so important is unclear, but singer Candi Penella sells it with her personality.  She's someone I thought could have been a bigger star, but instead she married her drummer and became a high school teacher. Nothing wrong with that.

25 - "Levity," Ian Thomas (CanCon!)
Though Hamilton native Thomas had little international success after his 1973 hit "Painted Ladies," he would be a CanCon staple for the next couple decades.  His last solo hit was this okay rock track about wanting more lightness in his life. Though the song's serious tone kind of blunts that message.  If you want more of him, I'd suggest tracking down "Pilot" or "Right Before Your Eyes" instead of this.

19 - "Round and Round," Frozen Ghost (CanCon!)
This Toronto band's featured two members of the band Sheriff, who broke up in 1985 but would see their 1983 domestic Top Ten "When I'm With You," top the American charts in '89.  These guys had a handful of hits, including this soft-rocker about the cyclical nature of relationships.  It's just okay CanCon, nothing more or less.

16 - "Voodoo Thing," Colin James (CanCon!)
From Regina, Saskatchewan, James got his first break in 1984 when Stevie Ray Vaughan came to town and tapped James and his band as a last-minute replacement opening act.  A major-label deal followed, and James scored his first of several hits with this bluesy tale of an encounter with a Southern lady who practices black magic.  It's a well-worn trope, but James sounds authentic and enthusiastic enough to make it work.  And to make it another Certified CanCon Classic.

15 - "Better be Home Soon," Crowded House 
The New Zealanders only reached #42 in the States with the first single from their second album, never coming close to another Top 40 hit there.  But here, this sweet countryish ballad hit the Top Ten, and they would do so four more times.  This is why Canada is cool.  These guys are a Hall of Fame calibre pop band.

Out at the speedway, some kind of Top Ten thing.
10 - "It Would Take a Strong Strong Man," Rick Astley 
This pleading midtempo ballad became the Roller's third of four #1s here.  And it's probably the best showcase his talent ever got.

9 - "Never Tear Us Apart," INXS
The fourth hit from Kick, and probably my favorite 80s ballad.  It hits all the sweet spots, and Michael Hutchence sings the hell out of it.  Nothing short of classic.

8 - "Forever Young," Rod Stewart 
Rod's maudlin wishlist for a child was so close to Bob Dylan's identically titled 1974 song that Dylan got a writing credit and the chunk of the royalties that came with it.  Good for him.  His song was much better, but this one sold more.  Best of both worlds.

7 - "Groovy Kind of Love," Phil Collins 
Buster failed to launch him as a movie star, but the soundtrack gave him this Triple Crown-winning cover of Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders 1966 hit.  Blah.

6 - "Love Bites," Def Leppard 
The Leps were at their commercial peak on this power ballad about the pitfalls of romance.  One of the great examples of the Mutt Lange template.

5 - "Don't be Cruel," Cheap Trick 
The Tricksters followed up their cross-border #1 "The Flame" with an Elvis cover.  They clearly had fun doing it, but I didn't need to hear it.

4 - "Don't You Know What the Night Can Do," Steve Winwood 
The Woodman followed up the throwback soul of "Roll With It," with this slick pop that sounds like it belongs in a beer commercial. And wouldn't you know it, it was used in one.  Between Genesis, Clapton, and this guy, American beer and aging British rockers were the hot combo at the time.

3 - "One Good Woman," Peter Cetera 
Ugh, we made this pukey Ceteramush #1?  And America didn't?  Wow, we really screwed that one up.

2 - "True Love," Glenn Frey
And we made this crap a #2 too?  When America had the good sense to keep it out of the Top Ten?  Wow.  My fellow Canadians, repeat after me "Glenn Frey is not a soul singer.  He is an Eagle, and an Eagle only."

And 29 years ago, Canada loved best...
1 - "Don't Worry, Be Happy," Bobby McFerrin 
Ah yes, that moment when this one-man a capella band went from a jazz curiosity to a pop sensation when he took two thirds of the Triple Crown (only Britain held it to #2) with this reggae-flavored ode to unfettered optimism.  It didn't age well (less than a year later Public Enemy were angrily decrying it on "Fight the Power"), but it still has some charm, and it's hard not to be amazed by the technical ability.  And maybe Bobby would be happy to know that I'm giving him an Uneasy Rider.

The journey continues soon.

Friday, October 13, 2017

GATW: UKT40 September 25, 1982 Part Two

End.

20 - "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," Boys Town Gang 
This group was founded by a San Francisco DJ in 1980 to perform in the city's gay clubs, and they first attracted attention with an explicit club hit called "Cruisin' the Streets."  Then they had their biggest international success with this disco take on a Four Seasons perennial.  I don't heare much in it, but I am curious to find out what "Cruisin' the Streets" sounds like.

19 - "Just What I Always Wanted," Mari Wilson 
Not to be confused with ex-Supreme Mary Wilson or "Telephone Man" novelty act Meri Wilson, this beehive-sporting Londoner had her first and biggest hit with this number about needing love more than the material things she'sacc surrounded with.  It has a cool little hybrid sound, like if Phil Spector had access to synths and drum machines in 1963.

18 - "Leave in Silence," Depeche Mode 
The Mode's fifth hit was this moody tune about a relationship that cannot no longer be saved by talking.  They were definitely sounding like the mope music purveyors we would come to know and love.

17 - "Zoom," Fat Larry's Band 
Formed by corpulent singer/drummer Larry James, this Philadelphia funk band were more successful here than at home, reaching their peak by hitting #2 with this midtempo ballad about being taken aback by romance. It's pretty good, and reminds me more than a little of Stevie Wonder.

16 - "Today," Talk Talk 
Their first hit was this speedy New Wave track about not being sure how to achieve real happiness.  I think that's it.   It's in the same solid class of the rest of the stuff I've heard from them,

15 - "Love Come Down," Evelyn King
Champagne's only U.K. Top Ten.  Simply superlative.

14 - "Come on Eileen," Dexy's Midnight Runners 
The 80s standard was their second #1 here, and it nearly got the Triple Crown, but it only hit #2 in...Canada.  Yeah, we were the stingy ones.  Damn.

13 - "Hi Fidelity," The Kids from Fame
As we saw in Part One, the TV version of Fame was huge over here, to the point where some of its young cast members got a substantial music career out of it, scoring two Top Fives, the first of which being this peppy number about either monogamy or stereo sound.  Could be either, really.  Just too sugary for my taste, right down to the stage musical style "everybody shout the title in unison" ending.

12 - "Why," Carly Simon 
Carly wasn't as big here as she was athis home, but while there she didn’t hit the Top Ten in the 80s, she did that here twice, first with this synth-reggae song about romantic betrayal, produced by Chic's Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards for the soundtrack of the romantic comedy Soup for One, starring...uh, the woman who played Mr, Kotter's wife.  Carly did better than I would have thought in this setting.  This is another nice little discovery.

11 - "Give Me Your Heart Tonight," Shakin' Stevens 
More from Shaky, this time a romantic plea withave a bit of a tangoish touch.  That makes it stand out.  One of the better things I've heard from him so far.

Oh yeah, all right, take it easy baby, make it last all night, this was...the British Top Ten.

10 - "Friend or Foe," Adam Ant
The head Ant's second solo hit is a bouncy declaration that he wants people to love him or hate him, nothing in between.  It's...okay.  Sorry, Stuart.

9 - "Saddle Up," David Christie
Under various anglicized names, Frenchman Jacques Pepino helped write songs for artists such as Gloria Gaynor and Grace Jones, but his only hit as a singer came with this disco-funker about letting go of adversity and moving on.  Infectiously inspirational.

8 - "The Message," Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
Formed in 1976, DJ Joseph "Grandmaster Flash" Saddler and five rappers led by Melvin "Melle Mel" Glover made a pivotal moment in hip-hop history when they released this document of inner-city reality that showed that rap could be much more than boasts and party records.  It could talk frankly about crime, prostitution, economic inequality, ignorance, and any other issue that needed addressing.  It didn't go much beyond black radio at home, but Britain made it Top Ten, and it has since been recognized as one of the most significant records of any genre ever released.

7 - "Save a Prayer," Duran Duran 
This floaty synth ballad was the Duranies' biggest hit to this point, reaching #2, higher than even such classic predecessors as "Girls on Film" and "Hungry Like the Wolf."  That seems wrong, but this is still pretty nice proof of their versatility.

6 - "There it Is," Shalamar 
Their third Top Ten of 1982 was this funk tune about finding love at long last.  Maybe a bit derivative of Chic, but it's good enough to be forgiven.

5 - "All of My Heart," ABC
The Sheffield smoothies' fourth hit was this midtempo ballad about wanting a former lover back.  I think this is the period where they were at their perfect slickness level, and they would overdo it later to their detriment.

4 - "Walking on Sunshine," Rockers Revenge featuring Donnie Calvin 
The biggest hit for Arthur Baker's studio project was this cover of a 1978 Eddy Grant track about how love makes the drudgeries of life worthwhile. It's catchy electro-dance, and no, it isn't the same song that Katrina and the Waves did.  Which was kind of a relief.

3 - "Private Investigations," Dire Straits 
The first of the band's two #2s was this six-minute acoustic-guitar-and-synthesizer ballad on which Mark Knopfler talks (not sings) in the voice of a cynical, world-weary private detective.  It's their most ambitious and interesting work.  Look it up if your sick of only hearing "Money for Nothing" and "Sultans of Swing."

2 - "The Bitterest Pill (I Ever Had to Swallow)," The Jam
The group's penultimate single was this seething song about seeing an ex find love with someone else.  More mature and soulful than their early stuff, and a good indication of where Paul Weller was heading in his future endeavours.

And on top 35 years ago was...
1 - "Eye of the Tiger," Survivor 
Rocky III theme, Triple Crown winner, and immoral pump-up jam.  You don't love it or hate it, you just listen to its inevitability.  You're paying attention no matter what.

Thanks, more, see ya soon.