Jul 202010
 

Last night the family and I drove over to Weber’s, an old-fashioned, American Graffiti-style drive-in near us for after-dinner milkshakes and root beer floats. I recently loaded The Cars‘ first album on my iPod to please my wife during summer drives. It’s on of her high school favorites, and I figured it would be a good time to introduce our boys to the album on our short drive. A massive thunderstorm broke out, so the normally 5-minute drive took a good 20 minutes. We ended up letting the album play out as we enjoyed our desserts. The boys warmed up to the album after our oldest son’s initial “What’s this music?!?!” as “Let the Good Times Roll” kicked things off. My wife loved every minute of it, and I got to thinking about the days when commercial radio stations played more than one track from a new album – and more than one track from an artist, for that matter.

Long before I bought a used vinyl copy of the first Cars album and long after having seen them at Philadelphia’s soon-to-be-demolished Spectrum, at my first-ever rock concert (Greg Kihn Band opened, playing “Roadrunner,” which at the time I had no idea was connected to Cars’ drummer David Robinson – and yes, I can see how the fact that this connection came to me while sucking down a root beer float last night might be seen as pathetic) I knew every song on that first album. Late on a Sunday night, FM radio stations in the late-’70s occasionally featured a new release in its entirety, but that’s not how I knew every song on this new album, The Cars. Rather it was because, in those days, there were occasionally new albums, over the course of the album’s first few months on the market, radio stations would incorporate into their playlists almost in their entirety. I don’t know what kind of payola system was in place for this to happen, how much coke satin-clad DJs snorted off the nipples of hookers, or what, but older heads will recall: there was a time when a new album often resulted in three or four tracks being played on the radio. As in the case of the first Cars album, there were even albums that DJs felt confident dropping the needle down at any point. I’m not dreaming, am I? As I listened to The Cars last night it occurred to me that the album contained not a single deep cut in its time!

I was trying to remember other albums on which every song was regularly played on the radio during the first few months of the album’s release. Only counting albums that I would have heard when they were fresh (ie, classic Beatles, Stones, and Who albums from the ’60s and early ’70s, which had been featured in whole on the likes of A-Z Weekends [remember them?] do not count for me), I thought of The Rolling Stones’ Some Girls, The Cars, and then two albums that probably mark the tail-end of this phenomenon – and that may have each spawned an album’s worth of songs that charted, Michael Jackson’s Thriller and Bruce Springsteen’s Born in the USA. I’ve never owned the last two albums and I was already too-cool-for-school when they invaded the airwaves, but there was no getting around hearing every track on those albums played to death on commercial radio.

Are there other albums like that from your experience? Again, weed out any Classic Rock albums that you’ve heard on the radio years after they were released; keep it fresh. Has there been an album since the MJ and Boss records that reached this status? Maybe Nirvana’s Nevermind was the last to come close, but what do I know about albums that have been released and played on the radio since? Could you ever imagine anything like this happening again? Are the days of DJs doing coke off a hooker’s nipples that far in the past?

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Jul 202010
 

Side topic to an ongoing discussion about the days when a new release could generate a half dozen or more songs for airply: If coke off a hooker’s nipples is no longer an option, how does one bribe a music blogger or internet radio host?

The best answer will receive a Rock Town Hall Prize Package! Entries must be submitted no later than Thursday, July 22. Feel free to test me with actual bribes.

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Jul 192010
 

Whatever song this guy’s playing ain’t cutting it!

Taxpayer, Super-Patriot, and Townsman hrrundivbakshi‘s recent tale of walking out on a poorly executed and inappropriate performance by a US Army rock and soul band raised the obvious question: What would be the appropriate setlist for proper, rocking execution by a US Military rock and soul band?

Here’s an excerpt of HVB’s super-patriotic rant:

ESPECIALLY since the band showed no taste or common sense at all in their repertoire. I mean, come on — having (for example) a curvy female sergeant in camo pants, jungle boots and tight T-shirt singing “Walk This Way” — I mean the whole lyric, with all the references to schoolyard pussy and what-not — to a room full of teenage boys? With Sam Ash guitars screaming in the background? I’m no prude, but… wha? What does that have to do with love of country, or the caissons rolling along?

Read the whole thing to see what this taxpaying cat’s getting at, then contribute to a setlist worthy of our armed forces! Don’t be some namby-pamby kiss-up and suggest non-rocking songs like “This Land Is Your Land.” Don’t show your hatred for the Middle America that our troops protect by cynically suggesting Toby Keith numbers. This is YOUR US MILITARY ROCK AND SOUL BAND (at least for our US readers, but we invite readers from all nations to help construct this setlist). You’ve got 15 songs plus an encore. Make your setlist suggestions count! This set needs to represent all that is rocking about our armed forces and the United States of America!

Taxpayer and Super-Patriot hrrundivbakshi will decide all final set selections. Thank you.

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Jul 182010
 

I just finished reading Simon Reynolds’ Rip It Up, which documents the Postpunk movement. In the afterword, Mr. Reynolds says, “What changed in the mideighties was that bands increasingly soundposted their reference points and that spotting these allusions became an integral part of the listener’s aesthetic response and enjoyment.” He goes on to discuss the C86 movement, REM, Husker Du, and The Smiths as bands that clearly reference back to the “guitar chimes and folk-styled vocals” of the ’60s.

Today’s bands also seem to be very transparent about their sonic influences. Fleet Foxes has been posting videos of older songs (mostly from the ’60s and ’70s) and commenting on how these songs or bands direct their current sound. I think the clearest recent example is LCD Soundsystem. Their most recent album, This Is Happening, is very overt about it’s Berlin-era Bowie references. But I think the best example is an earlier LCD Soundsystem’s song, “Losing My Edge,” which includes a long rant/list of the bands James Murphy considers to be the foundation of his sound.

Which other bands or artists are very clear about their musical influences?

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Jul 172010
 

There is one thing that bums me out the most about the legacy of The Clash: that the song “London Calling” is generally considered their anthem and stock song for modern-day artists to cover.

It’s not that I don’t like the song “London Calling”; it’s a keeper, but I consider it most valuable as a set up for what follows on the band’s breakthrough album by the same name. I also consider it a song that only The Clash have the right to play. Of course, maybe that’s why the song has taken such a high place in the band’s legacy, but musically the song leaves me wanting a lot more that I typically expect from a Clash song. If I could erase one thing from The Clash’s legacy it would be this song as the go-to song for artists like The Boss to cover. If a blowhard like The Boss (with or without Elvis Costello, a blowhard I love) must cover a Clash song, I wish it could have been a song with a little more to it, like “Death or Glory.”

How about you, what would you most like to see wiped clean from the legacy of a favorite artist?

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