Friday, October 27, 2017

MFD Random Five #25


In which I click the shuffle icon on the iTunes app and listen to the first five songs that pop up from the years 1976-85.


  1. "Sweet Body" by Airplay (1980, RCA)
    The backing band are members of Toto so this song sounds exactly like a Toto song and that's a good thing.  From one of the great West Coast albums, 1980's self-titled Airplay. If you like Toto, David Foster, Jay Graydon, West Coast music, etc. and haven't heard that album, block out an hour or two this weekend to do that. 

  2. "Take Me to the River" by Talking Heads (1982, Sire)
    I'm treated today to the live version from The Name of This Band is Talking Heads. I'm at a loss for words to describe how great this cover is. I've already written about it here. As the lovely Kate Pierson of The B-52's once said about this cover: "It's a rare thing that a band can do a cover song and make it their own. Simply put, they made Al Green's 'Take Me to the River' into a Talking Heads song." Bonus points for the background vocals by Nona Hendryx and Dolette McDonald.  Note to self: put this CD in the truck pronto.

  3. "I Can't Wait" by The Cretones (1980, Planet)
    Fantastic early 80's California power pop. The singer/songwriter Mark Goldenberg wrote some great tunes. So good, that Linda Ronstadt used three of his tunes on her Mad Love album, which is how I came to find The Cretones. I'm 3-for-3 in this Random Five, let's see if that streak can continue...

  4. "When I Grow Too Old to Dream" by Linda Ronstadt (1978, Asylum)
    Speaking of lovely Linda and she appears! (if only). The second track from the Living in the USA album, this is an old standard from 1934. Ronstasdt sounds fantastic, natch, and there's a tasty vibes solo from jazzer Mike Mainieri, who arranged the piece. Ronstadt liked the song so much she sang it with Kermit and Rowlf on the keys - no lip-synching. This song has devolved me back into a teenage fanboy with googly eyes for Linda. Give me a minute before I proceed.


  5. "Hot Child in the City" by Nick Gilder (1978, Chrysalis)
    Coming from an androgynous glam-rock background, it's hard to tell the gender of the singer and 12 year old me had no idea what was going on for a while. With a great bass line, a catchy chorus, and better-than-average guitar solo, it's as good as a song about child prostitution can get. 

3 comments :

  1. I've always enjoyed these random/shuffle type of posts and your Random Five series certainly ranks among the best.

    This particular post is the pinnacle, the poster child of such posts, a testament to the choices you made in stocking your iTunes library and the wonderful serendipitous way the shuffle logarithm works.

    Others dump everything they got into their digital libraries in an effort to show off their "diverse tastes" whereas you choose to focus on your favorite decade 1976-1985 and this post hits the sweet spot with a subset from 1978-1982. Not a weak track in the bunch.

    Would it be asking too much for a Random Five every day of the week? How 'bout just the days that end in a "Y"?

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    Replies
    1. Thanks! If I had the time, I'd certainly consider it.

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  2. These 5 - the next 5 played on shuffle in my library - seem positively wimpy compared to your starting 5:

    "The Boys Are Back In Town" by Thin Lizzy
    (Apr 1976, Mercury)

    "Give It Up" by KC
    (Dec 1983, Meca)

    "Breakin' Away" by Al Jarreau
    (Oct 1981, Warner Bros.)

    "Love On Your Side" by Thompson Twins
    (Apr 1983, Arista)

    "Back Together Again" by Hall & Oates
    (Apr 1977, RCA)

    ReplyDelete