Showing posts with label Blondie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blondie. Show all posts

Saturday, October 7, 2023

Promo posters as seen on "WKRP in Cincinnati" #87


Albums: The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Capitol, 1967), Blondie - Autoamerican (Chrysalis, 1980), Commodores - Heroes (Motown, 1980), Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon (Capitol, 1973), Eric Clapton - Another Ticket (1981, RSO)
Episode:  Season 3, Episode 21, "Till Debt Do Us Part"
Original air date: Sunday, April 5, 1981


Click here for more WKRP posters!

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Promo posters as seen on "WKRP in Cincinnati" #46


Albums: Gary Myrick and The Figures - Gary Myrick and The Figures (Epic, 1980), Blondie - Autoamerican (Chrysalis, 1980), ??????????, Eric Clapton - Another Ticket (RSO, 1981)
Episode:  Season 3, Episode 20, "Nothing to Fear but..."
Original air date: Saturday, March 28, 1981

Monday, April 8, 2019

Counting down my Top 79 of '79: Singles #79 - 62


A breakdown of my top singles from 1979




Title
Artist
Pop
AC
R&B
Disco
79
"Lady"
Little River Band
10
7


78
"Highway to Hell"
AC/DC
47



77
"Dance the Night Away"
Van Halen
15



76
"Hot Stuff"
Donna Summer
1

3
1
75
"Escape (The Pina Colada Song)"
Rupert Holmes
1
8


74
"Let's Go"
The Cars
14



73
"Heaven Knows"
Donna Summer with Brooklyn Dreams
4
17
10

72
"Suspicions"
Eddie Rabbitt
13
9


71
"In the Stone"
Earth, Wind & Fire
58

23




Title
Artist
Pop
AC
R&B
Disco
70
"I Will Survive"
Gloria Gaynor
1
9
4
1
69
"(not just) Knee Deep"
Funkadelic
77

1
43
68
"Driver's Seat"
Sniff 'n' The Tears
15



67
"Sad Eyes"
Robert John
1
10


66
"Still"
The Commodores
1
6
1

65
"You Can't Change That"
Raydio
9
25
3

64
"Ships"
Barry Manilow
9
4


63
"The Gambler"
Kenny Rogers
16
3


62
"One Way or Another"
Blondie
24







All chart positions are peak positions from Billboard charts. These are my personal top 79 singles of those that peaked on the Billboard charts in 1979. The list is solely my opinion. Using Joel Whitburn's book, Pop Annual 1955-1999, I started with the 475 singles that peaked on Billboard Magazine's Hot 100 chart in 1979. An initial pass through that list narrowed it down to 105 tunes, then listening, ranking, and editing began. The top 79 are presented here, in order.

Thursday, November 1, 2018

MFD Random Five #38


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. "High Society" by Norma Jean (1980, Bearsville)
    A Chic recording in all but name and, as such, is deserving of our respect.

  2. "Too Hot to Handle" by Heatwave (1977, Epic)
    The Too Hot to Handle album was featured on this blog a few years back. Here's what I wrote about it then: "A great opening track that gets me dancin'.  Sounds like a Michael Jackson or Brothers Johnson tune from around that time, complete with Earth Wind & Fire type horn licks." My opinion hasn't changed.

  3. "Disco Nights (Rock Freak)" by GQ (1979, Arista)
    With its synth-funk groove, this tune sounds more like early '80s R&B than disco.  I like it okay, but it pales in comparison to the follow-up, the wonderful slow jam "I Do Love You."

  4. "Be Ever Wonderful" by Earth, Wind & Fire (1977, Columbia)
    One of EWF's best-ever ballads, this is the perfect album closer for All 'N All which I'll now pull off the shelves and listen to in its entirety. Should I listen to Earth, Wind & Fire more often? Yes. Yes, I should.

  5. "Call Me" by Blondie  (1980, Chrysalis)
    A huge hit for the group. Rumor has it that writer Giorgio Moroder originally offered this to Stevie Nicks which woulda been a completely different tune. Although it was #1 for 6 straight weeks, I never hear it much anymore; radio stations usually opt for "Heart of Glass" instead. Shame. I never bought this single, but I bought another single from the American Gigolo soundtrack and it had an instrumental version of this tune on the b-side:

Thursday, August 2, 2018

AT40, August 4, 1979 [Part 2 of 4]

 

I'm breaking down the AT40 show of August 4, 1979 track by track.  For a look at #40-31, click here.

Casey introduces the next song by stating that ABBA's net income makes them the most profitable business enterprise in Sweden, clearing $12 million.

#30:  "Does Your Mother Know" by ABBA. I'm an ABBA fan and I don't care who knows it.  Those Swedes could write some hooks.  This song would spend 10 weeks in the top 40, peaking at #19. I have considered doing an ABBA bracketology series, but we all know that "Dancing Queen" would be the winner, so what's the point?

#29:  "I'll Never Love This Way Again" by Dionne Warwick.  The 25th (of an eventual 31) Top 40 record for Warwick. Produced by Barry Manilow and written by his songwriting team of Richard Kerr and Will Jennings, this sounds just like a Manilow record, right down to the key change at the end. (I'm not sure Manilow has the vocal chops to pull off the octave leaps in the chorus, so maybe that's why it was given to Warwick). This single was on its very slow ascent on this chart; it would peak at #5 on October 20th, more than two months later.

#28:  "She Believes in Me" by Kenny Rogers. What should have been a Bread song (and maybe it was originally?) recorded by The Gambler. This tune had all sorts of crossover appeal: #1 Country, #1 Adult Contemporary, and would peak at #5 on the pop chart.

Before a commercial break, Casey teases a story about Arthur Fiedler by playing a snippet of his only pop chart appearance, an arrangement of "I Want to Hold Your Hand," which peaked at #55 in 1964. "Special tribute" coming up.
#27:  "Suspicions" by Eddie Rabbitt. Like the earlier Kenny Rogers tune, here's another smooth rock tune marketed as a country tune. Good stuff, right down to the flute solo. And like, Kenny, this did well on multiple charts: #1 country, #9 Adult Contemporary, and #13 pop.

Casey offers up a very brief tribute to Arthur Fiedler, who had passed away on July 10, 1979. I can't think of Fiedler and the Boston Pops without thinking of my father, who may be their biggest fan. The number one artist in his CD collection is the Boston Pops and its not even close. Sadly, Dad doesn't have the last album Fiedler recorded with the orchestra, Saturday Night Fiedler.


Now, on with the countdown...

#26:  "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" by Charlie Daniels Band. Three country tunes in a row, such was Top 40 music in 1979. Loved this tune much more in '79 than I do now. I always thought the devil was the winner of the contest and enjoy the "band of demons" guitar riff that leads into his solo, which is butchered in this AT40 edit. #1 country, #30 Adult Contemporary, and would peak on the Hot 100 in the #3 spot on September 15.

Listener question: "A listener in Idaho wants to know if any number one song has ever fallen right off the chart from the number one position. Well, that did happen - once - to a singing cowboy who owns the pennant-chasing California Angels baseball team. Details coming up."

#25:  "Is She Really Going Out With Him?" by Joe Jackson. "One of eight British acts in the countdown." I love this tune and have absolutely no memory of hearing it on the radio in 1979, so a hearty "screw you" to the Houston station program director of 1979. Shame. This song only spent 8 weeks in the Top 40, peaking at #21.

Answer to listener question: "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" by Gene Autry in December, 1949.

#24:  "One Way or Another" by Blondie. Tomorrow may be different, but today, this is my favorite Blondie tune. I'm sure 13 year old me would listen to these lyrics and think, "Please come and get me, use me, and lose me, Debbie." This single would peak here at #24.

Casey returns from the break by telling us that American Top 40 is heard in the 50 states and around the world every week on great radio stations like:
  • WENK - Union City, Tennessee
  • WFJA - Sanford, North Carolina
  • DYXI - Iloilo, Philippines
#23:  "People of the Southwind" by Kansas. This song has already been featured here on MFD. It spent 8 weeks on AT40, peaking here at #23.

AT40 Archives: "Angie Baby" by Helen Reddy.  Casey's counting down the #1 songs of the 1970's, this is the second of three in this show. This tune was #1 for one week, December 28, 1974.

--end of hour two--

#22: "After the Love Has Gone" by Earth, Wind & Fire. ♥ EWF is one of my all-time favorite groups and this is my fifth favorite song by the group. Of course I've given that some thought, why do you ask? What are the other four, you say?

My top 5 EWF songs:
  1. September
  2. Got To Get You Into My Life
  3. Shining Star
  4. Fantasy
  5. After The Love Has Gone
Anyway, this smooth tune written by David Foster, Jay Graydon, and Bill Champlin won two Grammy awards: Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group & Best R&B Song. This single spent 13 weeks on the chart, spending two weeks in the #2 spot behind "My Sharona."

Casey mentions that seven different countries are represented in this week's countdown: England, Sweden, Canada, Australia, Japan, France, and the U.S. He goes on to say that's the most since July, 1978.

#21: "I Can't Stand It No More" by Peter Frampton. While I like the chorus, the rest of the song doesn't do much for me.  The verse chord progression reminds me of AC/DC's "Big Balls" (a favorite of mine as a teenager).  This isn't a song I'd seek out to listen to.  Frampton's final Top 40 single, it had peaked at #14 in late July.

"There's a drummer in our survey who says he never wanted to be anything but a musician, but his father didn't approve. So in order to play his first professional gigs, he had to sneak out of his bedroom window four nights a week for two years. That story, and his band's latest single, are coming up."

Billboard, August 4, 1979, p. 56

More to come...

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Vintage Music Pinbacks #5


Fifth in a series.

Buttons, badges, pinbacks - whatever you call 'em, I've got a shoebox full. Here's a few of my vintage music pinbacks from the '70s and '80s:

  1.  1.25" Frankie Goes To Hollywood (pinback dated 1984)
  2.  1.25" Kate Bush, ca. 1978
  3.  1.25" Heaven 17 (pinback dated 1983)
  4.  1" The Alarm, ca. 1983
  5.  1" Pretenders (pinback dated 1980)
  6.  2" Deborah Harry, ca. 1979
  7.  1.25" Haircut 100, Pelican West, 1982
  8.  1.25" Madness, One Step Beyond..., 1979
  9.  1.25" Adam and the Ants, Ants Invasion Tour, 1981

Friday, February 19, 2016

Classic album cover art #20

Blondie - Parallel Lines (1978)

Design by Ramey Communications,
photograph by Edo Bertoglio