Showing posts with label Hall and Oates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hall and Oates. Show all posts

Friday, February 23, 2024

Counting down the Top 50 of '84 - Albums #5 - 1

(or, more accurately, my favorite albums released in 1984)



Difford & Tilbrook
Difford & Tilbrook

Produced by:Tony Visconti, E.T. Thorngren, Chris Difford, & Glenn Tilbrook
Billboard 200:55
CashBox 200:25
Rolling Stone 100:33



Top 3 Tracks
"Love's Crashing Waves"
"Action Speaks Faster"
"Man for All Seasons"

The songwriting duo from Squeeze put out this album after the group split up (temporarily) in the early '80s. Compared to the duo's usual fantastic writing, the songwriting on this release isn't that great, but even the best material couldn't hold up to the slick, flat production given here. However, this came out in the summer of 1984 and I listened to it non-stop, so I'm very familiar with all the tunes and arrangements. Difford & Tilbrook should have been more well known in the US, but this wasn't the release that would gain them that fame and recognition.





Big Bam Boom
Daryl Hall & John Oates


Produced by:Daryl Hall, John Oates & Bob Clearmountain
Billboard 200:5
CashBox 200:7
Rolling Stone 100:5




U.S. Billboard charted single: Hot 100 R&B Dance AC Rock
Out Of Touch124181
Method of Modern Love52115185
Some Things are Better Left Unsaid1885
1716
Possession Obsession3069208

Top 3 Tracks
"Some Things are Better Left Unsaid"
"Method of Modern Love"
"Out of Touch"

This album was a marked departure for the group as they updated their "blue-eyed soul" sound to match the times. Lots of synths, sequencing, echo, and dance beats in a louder and noisier setting than we were used to with these guys. Now it sounds like every other dance/hip-hop album from the late '80s, so I guess these guys were actually ahead of their time in terms of sonic originality.





Learning to Crawl
The Pretenders

Produced by:Chris Thomas
Billboard 200:5
CashBox 200:4
Rolling Stone 100:1


  • Rolling Stone: ★★★★
  • Trouser Press: "100 percent Hynde. And it's fine."
  • CashBox: "one of early 84's success stories"
  • Billboard: "strong songs, crack performances"
  • Smash Hits (5 out of 10): "a patchy comeback LP"
  • Robert Christgau (A-): 'I'm not the kind I used to be/I've got a kid, I'm thirty-three' is certainly a quotable quote, and whether rock-and-rolling her baby or growling at fat cats Chrissie Hynde backs it up."
  • High Fidelity: "contains some of the Pretenders' finest music to date"
  • Stereo Review: Best of the Month


U.S. Billboard charted singles: Hot 100Rock
Back on the Chain Gang54
My City was Gone
11
Middle of the Road192
Time the Avenger
6
Show Me288
Thumbelina
57

Top 3 Tracks
"Middle of the Road"
"Time the Avenger"
"My City was Gone"

This is The Pretenders' greatest album and a more complete album than any they previously released, including their spectacular debut (yeah, I said it). Plus, this music has aged well. The song My City was Gone is especially poignant to me now because it makes me think of the town I grew up in which has undergone significant changes and decay over the years.





Like a Virgin
Madonna

Produced by:Nile Rodgers, Steve Bray, & Madonna
Billboard 200:1
CashBox 200:1
Rolling Stone 100:1

  • CashBox: "a healthy dose of disco-rock"
  • Billboard: "This second album brings considerable muscle"
  • High Fidelity: "Madonna pulls off the neat trick of outstripping her own fast start."
  • Rolling Stone (★★★½): "Rodgers wisely supplies the kind of muscle Madonna's sassy lyrics demand."
  • Smash Hits (8 out of 10): "a good all-American dance album"
  • Stereo Review: "sounds thin to me - not terrible, but predictably commercial"
  • Robert Christgau: B 


U.S. Billboard charted single: Hot 100 Dance AC
Like a Virgin1129
Material Girl2138
Angel515
Dress You Up5332

Top 3 Tracks
"Material Girl"
"Like a Virgin"
"Dress You Up"

No sophomore slump here. Madonna brought in Nile Rodgers to produce, found a great bunch of dance tunes, put a sexy "Boy Toy" picture on the cover, and gave the whole package an ambiguous, suggestive, slightly controversial (at the time) title. With this album, Madonna moved from pop singer to pop icon. Madonna doesn't have a great voice, but she knows how to put together a package (e.g., the backing band for much of the album is freakin' Chic for chrissakes) and, with a few missteps, this album transcended the existing concepts of dance-pop and set the stage for dance music in the late '80s.





Stop Making Sense
Talking Heads

Produced by:Talking Heads & Gary Goetzman
Billboard 200:41
CashBox 200:29
Rolling Stone 100:16

  • Rolling Stone (★★★★): "a solid artistic statement from a band that's starting to have as much as they've given their listeners."
  • Stereo Review: "a great live performance"
  • Robert Christgau (B+): "a soundtrack, albeit for the finest concert film I've ever seen"
  • CashBox: "an electrifying LP"
  • Billboard: "sustains remarkable polish"


Top 3 Tracks
"Found a Job"
"Once in a Lifetime"
"This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)"

Simply put, this album represents the best concert movie ever filmed.




These are my personal top 10 albums released in 1984. The following criteria was used on a very slippery sliding scale:
  • How often I enjoyed the album at the time of release
  • How often I've enjoyed the album over the years since release
  • My opinion of the overall quality of the album
The top tracks for each album are solely my opinion.



Other album charts from MFD (formats vary):


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

1980 Album of the Month: Voices

Released: July 1980 (RCA)
Produced by: Daryl Hall & John Oates

Side One Side Two
How Does It Feel to be Back
Big Kids
United State
Hard to Be in Love with You
Kiss on My List
Gotta Lotta Nerve (Perfect Perfect)
You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'
You Make My Dreams
Everytime You Go Away
Africa
Diddy Do Wop (I Hear the Voices)



Billboard 200 17
CashBox Albums 24
Rolling Stone 100 23



Billboard, August 2, 1980, p. 58
Stereo Review, November 1980, p. 114
Trouser Press, October 1980, p. 54
CashBox, August 2, 1980, p. 13


Allmusic ★★★★½
Robert Christgau C+



Record World, July 19, 1980, p. 1
Billboard, July 19, 1980, p. 80
CashBox, July 19, 1980, p. 18
Billboard, January 17, 1981, p. 55

Billboard, May 2, 1981, p. 75



Thursday, March 5, 2020

MFD Random Five #50


In which I shuffle through some music files and listen to the first five songs from the years 1976-85 that randomly pop up.


  1. "No Matter What I Do" by The Dishes (1985, Underwhere)
    When the album Hot Diggety Dog was featured on this blog in 2016, I wrote that this tune reminded me of Nick Lowe. I'm not hearing that so much today, but it's a fun, brief power pop tune with just the right amount of Farfisa organ.

  2. "Magic Man" by Herb Alpert (1981, A&M)
    Alpert still trying to reproduce the sound (and success) of "Rise." The melody here is a bit repetitive and that probably hurt sales, but most likely the reason this didn't succeed was the fall of disco and the rise of New Wave on the pop charts in '81. This tune, which incorporates some of Alpert's Tijuana Brass tropes in the bridge, only reached #79 on the pop charts, but climbed to #22 on the Adult Contemporary chart.

  3. "How Much I Feel" by Ambrosia (1978, Warner Bros.)
    I once ranked this as the 26th best single of 1978 and now I'm reconsidering that ranking as too low. Catchy melody, smooth background vocals, tasty piano and string arrangements - it's like a soft rock blueprint. This band put out some great singles in '78 and '80. I hear this thing and I'm immediately back in 7th grade.

  4. "Private Eyes" by Daryl Hall & John Oates (1981, RCA)
    Number one in 1981. Ubiquitous almost 40 years later. And deservedly so. As overplayed as it is, I'll be dadgummed if it still doesn't sound fantastic.

  5. "A Song from Under the Floorboards" by Magazine (1980, Virgin)
    I don't recognize this post-punk tune, but that doesn't necessarily mean I haven't heard it before although I can guarantee you I wasn't listening to post-punk in 1980. I don't hate it, but I wouldn't seek it out to hear. My files of this tune come from Left of the Dial: Dispatches from the '80s Underground, a 4 CD compilation set released in 2004 by Rhino.


Thursday, December 26, 2019

Promo posters as seen on "WKRP in Cincinnati" #53


Albums: Daryl Hall & John Oates - Private Eyes (RCA, 1981), Little Feat - Hoy-Hoy! (Warner Bros., 1981), [see note below], Commodores - Heroes (Motown, 1980), Rickie Lee Jones - Pirates (Warner Bros., 1981)
Episode:  Season 4, Episode 6, "Who's on First"
Original air date: Wednesday, November 11, 1981

It takes a village: eagle-eyed reader Herc suggests that the photo next to Bailey's lovely head is a promo shot of Bruce Springsteen used for the cover of the February 5, 1981 issue of Rolling Stone magazine. I agree.


Monday, December 23, 2019

Album ad #74

RCA Christmas Ad (1983)



  • Kenny Rogers - Eyes That See in the Dark
  • Daryl Hall & John Oates - Rock 'N' Soul, Part 1
  • Eurythmics - Touch
  • Lionel Richie - Running with the Night
  • Daryl Hall & John Oates - H2O
  • David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust - The Motion Picture
  • Elvis Costello - Punch the Clock
  • JoBoxers - Like Gangbusters
  • Eurythmics - Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
  • Bucks Fizz - Greatest Hits
  • Lionel Richie - Lionel Richie

Thursday, July 4, 2019

American Top 40 - Fourth of July 1983 Special: "The Forty Top Acts of the Eighties - So Far"



For the American Top 40 episode of July 2, 1983, Casey counted down "The Forty Top Acts of the Eighties - So Far." Casey never mentions the methodology for determining this list (he rarely ever did), but the way he repeatedly mentioned the number of Top 10 hits in the 1980's for artists, I'm guessing that statistic weighed heavily in the algorithm.


Rank
Act
Representative Song(s) Played
AT40 debut
Eventual '80s Rank*
40Fleetwood MacHold Me6/19/82-
39Joan Jett & The BlackheartsI Love Rock 'N Roll2/13/82-
38Donna SummerOn the Radio1/26/80-
37The PoliceEvery Breath You Take6/4/83-
36Elton JohnBlue Eyes8/14/828
Little Jeannie5/10/80
35ForeignerWaiting for a Girl Like You10/17/82-
34The Pointer SistersSlow Hand6/27/81-
33The Little River BandNight Owls9/5/81-
32Pat BenatarHeartbreaker2/9/80-
31The J. Geils BandCenterfold11/28/81-







30TotoRosanna5/8/82-
29The Rolling StonesStart Me Up8/29/81-
Waiting on a Friend12/12/81
28Barbra StreisandWoman in Love9/13/80-
27John Lennon(Just Like) Starting Over11/1/80-
26StyxThe Best of Times1/24/81-
25Men at WorkWho Can It Be Now?8/7/82-
Down Under11/27/82
24REO SpeedwagonKeep On Loving You12/27/80-
23QueenCrazy Little Thing Called Love1/12/80-
22Dan FogelbergLonger1/19/80-
21Lionel RichieTruly10/23/826


Rank
Act
Representative Song(s) Played
AT40 debut
Eventual '80s Rank*
20Kool & The GangCelebration11/22/8012
19Billy JoelIt's Still Rock and Roll to Me5/24/807
Allentown12/18/82
18Paul McCartneyComing Up (Live at Glasgow)5/10/8021
17John CougarHurts So Good5/22/8210
16Kim CarnesBette Davis Eyes4/11/81-
15Eddie RabbittI Love a Rainy Night12/6/80-
14BlondieCall Me3/8/80-
The Tide is High11/29/80
13Bob SegerAgainst the Wind5/10/80-
12Neil DiamondLove on the Rocks11/1/80-
11Stevie WonderThat Girl1/30/8215







10Juice NewtonQueen of Hearts6/20/81-
9Rick SpringfieldJessie's Girl5/9/8117
8JourneyOpen Arms1/23/8218
Any Way You Want It3/29/80
7Christopher CrossRide Like the Wind3/1/80-
6Michael JacksonBillie Jean1/29/831
Rock with You11/24/79
5Olivia Newton-JohnPhysical10/17/8122
4Kenny RogersLady10/4/8013
3Air SupplyLost in Love3/8/8023
2Diana RossUpside Down8/9/8019
1Daryl Hall & John OatesManeater11/6/823


*according to the table found on page 819 of The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits (7th ed.) by Joel Whitburn:

Thursday, May 16, 2019

MFD Not-So-Random Five #15


In which I select five songs from 1976-1985 based on an arbitrary theme. (Not to be confused with this blog's Random Five feature, a different exercise in arbitrariness). Today's theme: songs written by Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil


  1. "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" by Daryl Hall & John Oates (1980, RCA)
    The duo adds just a little something extra to the cover - enough that I actually favor this to the Righteous Bros original. It seems to be propelled forward while being laid back, if that dichotomy makes any sense. But it's difficult to mess up material this good.  This #12 single was one of four top 40 singles released from the platinum-certified Voices album. Always reminds me of a school bus ride to a One Act Play competition in early 1981. I have no recollection, but maybe I busted out my own definitive rendition for my classmates on that trip. If they were lucky. Or, more likely, it was just on the radio as it moved down the charts.

  2. "Here You Come Again" by Dolly Parton (1977, RCA)
    In '77, I was more likely to have a Dolly Parton poster than a Dolly Parton record, but this crossover hit was all over the radio during the fall of 6th grade, so I know all the words. Not really a country tune, it's a well-crafted pop song with slide guitar. Nonetheless, the song earned Parton the award for "Best Female Country Vocal Performance" at the Grammy Awards. And when Dolly starts with "all you've gotta do is smile that smile," the song goes to another level and I could care less what genre you want to label this with. #1 country, #3 pop, and #2 easy listening. NOW that's what I call a hit!

  3. "Just Once" by Quincy Jones (1981, A&M)
    Hard to believe this classic ballad from the platinum album, The Dude peaked at only #17 on the pop chart. It's a fantastic tune - I like everything about it, from James Ingram's soulful vocals to Quincy Jones' production, from the tasty flugelhorn licks to the soaring strings. Lots of familiar names on the call sheet, too: Patti Austin, Abraham Laboriel, David Foster, Steve Lukather, Paulinho Da Costa, Jerry Hey, Ernie Watts, among others. I was about to claim "Just Once" as the best tune of this five, but we move on to...

  4. "Never Gonna Let You Go" by Sergio Mendes (1983, A&M)
    Heck, I could listen to this one all day and just might. I can't sing the high notes along with Joe Pizzulo and Leza Miller but that don't keep me from trying. Every time. For me, the self-titled album, Sergio Mendes, is one of those albums that is just okay, but you first heard it at just the right time and place in your life that makes it a life-long favorite. 

  5. "We're Going All the Way" by Jeffrey Osborne (1983, A&M)
    Another ballad from the songwriting duo, but man-oh-man what a beautifully written verse melody handled masterfully by Mr. Osborne (there's been some fantastic vocals in this not-so-random 5). This single peaked at only #48 on the pop chart and shame on you, America.


Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Daryl Hall & John Oates - Some Things Are Better Left Unsaid (1985)

 Some Things Are Better Left Unsaid
b/w All American Girl

Released: March, 1985 (RCA)
Written by: Daryl Hall
Produced by: Daryl Hall, John Oates, Bob Clearmountain
Album: Big Bam Boom

 U. S. Billboard Charts:
 Hot 100 18
 Adult Contemporary 17
 R&B 85


My favorite song from the Big Bam Boom album, this thing is typical Daryl Hall blue-eyed soul.  The big difference here is the production: there's a lot going on behind the vocals and it's all been heavily layered and run through an echo chamber.  So much that I don't know exactly how to categorize it.  It starts off as a sparse, moody ballad with light electronic percussion and a heavily processed, chugging guitar part. Then the drums and background vocals kick in at the chorus, turning it into a mid-tempo pop song without changing tempo.  There's a instrumental break full of production tricks then bridge after the second chorus, right where you'd expect it to be.  The bridge is over a heavy half-time backbeat drum solo, then, instead of going back to the chorus like it should, it rocks all the way to the end with a lot of power chords while the drums are brought way up in the mix. The whole Big Bam Boom album has been criticized for being over-produced, but even with all the chorus and reverb thrown at the mix, I love the overall sound of this single.