Showing posts with label XTC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label XTC. Show all posts

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Bubbling Under 1981




The following songs didn't quite make Billboard's Hot 100 list in 1981, peaking at positions 101-110. Nevertheless, there's some good tunes here that deserve a second listen and at least one that has had some real staying power over the last 40+ years.

Below is a Mixcloud show containing 14 of the Bubbling Under tunes followed by an annotated playlist:




"Look Up!"
Patrice Rushen
From the album Posh
Written by Patrice Rushen, Charles Mims, Jr., Sheree Brown
Produced by Charles Mims, Jr & Patrice Rushen

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under102
 Dance2
 R & B13

Patrice Rushen put out a series of wonderful singles on Elektra from about 1977-87 yet only one song became a Top 40 pop hit. This fact absolutely baffles me. However, her singles did much better on Billboard's Dance and R&B charts. As this single illustrates, Rushen had a fantastic blend of R&B, pop, disco, and jazz in her music.



"Goodbye Elenore"
Toto
From the album Turn Back
Written by David Paich
Produced by Toto & Geoff Workman

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under107

For the guitar-heavy, arena-rock Turn Back album, the band seems to have come up with some great, aggressive riffs and then didn't do much with them. But the classic Toto chops are on full display, so it's got that going for it. The shuffle groove here reminds me a little of Boston's "Smokin'" so maybe that's what they were going for.



"Once in a Lifetime"
Talking Heads
From the album Remain in Light
Written by David Byrne, Brian Eno, Chris Frantz, Jerry Harrison, Tina Weymouth
Produced by Brian Eno

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under103
 Dance20

The band's signature tune wasn't the most successful on the charts, but even after 40+ years, I never tire of hearing it. Classic. A live version of the tune later peaked in the Hot 100 at #91 in 1985.



"Send a Little Love My Way (As Always)"
Stephen Bishop
From the album Red Cab to Manhattan
Written by Stephen Bishop
Produced by Mike Mainieri & Tommy LiPuma

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under108
 Adult Contemporary31

With a supporting cast that includes Steve Gadd, Dean Parks, and Mainieri, this single is a little piece of soft rock heaven yet it only hit #31 on the AC chart. Go figure.



"Generals and Majors"
XTC
From the album Black Sea
Written by Colin Moulding
Produced by Steve Lillywhite

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under104
 Rock28

I can't explain why XTC wasn't bigger in the US. Maybe they were a bit too quirky. The band's pop songwriting was always top-notch and this anti-war song is no exception. It did better in the band's native UK, peaking at #32.



"Time Heals"
Todd Rundgren
From the album Healing
Written by Todd Rundgren
Produced by Todd Rundgren

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under107
 Rock18

Daryl Hall once said, "I think [Todd Rundgren] writes great religious music. He just doesn't have very many members of his church." Well, I'm a member. This upbeat tune is typical Rundgren with all his familiar chord progressions and cadences. This tune sometimes gets a mention in the annals of pop culture as its video was the eighth music video to air on MTV during its launch on August 1, 1981.



"Two Lonely Nights"
Nielsen Pearson
From the album Nielsen/Pearson
Written by Reed Nielsen and Mark Pearson
Produced by Richard Landis

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under110

From the album that spawned the duo's only Top 40 hit, "If You Should Sail," this single doesn't quite meet that song's standard, but its a decent, smooth westcoast joint. Odd choice for single release - it's good album filler, but it's still filler. Is that Tom Scott on a lyricon solo?



"Second Choice"
Any Trouble
From the album Where Are All the Nice Girls?
Written by Clive Gregson
Produced by John Wood

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under108

The entire Where Are All the Nice Girls? is full of hook-laden power pop and is highly recommended for fans of Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe, Marshall Crenshaw, early Joe Jackson, etc.



"Summer Strut"
Spyro Gyra
From the album Freetime
Written by Jeremy Wall
Produced by Jay Beckenstein & Richard Calandra

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under108

Spyro Gyra hit the Top 40 in 1979 with "Morning Dance" and the MCA label spent the next few years releasing singles in an attempt to duplicate that success. Top 40 success never came again for the band, but they earned a lifelong fan in me, if that helps them any. If you watched the Weather Channel back in the '80s and '90s, you might have caught this tune in a "Local on the 8's" segment.



"One Step Ahead"
Split Enz
From the album Waiata
Written by Neil Finn
Produced by David Tickle

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under104

The best cut on the Waiata album (pronounced why-arter), this song's hook isn't immediate, but once it grabs hold, it's in my ears for days. Another early MTV participant, the video for this song was the 28th aired on the network.


"Talk to Ya Later"
The Tubes
From the album The Completion Backward Principle
Written by The Tubes, David Foster & Steve Lukather
Produced by David Foster

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under101
 Rock7

Reportedly, the album was lacking a clear cut single. So, producer David Foster, well known for bringing in session musicians if the band isn't meeting his standards, brought in Toto guitarist Steve Lukather was brought in to co-write and do the guitar work here. Nevertheless, it's the lead track on the album and, as such, grabbed my attention immediately when Jim, a high school buddy, loaned me his cassette of The Completion Backward Principle, a tasty collection of catchy, high gloss power pop. I wore that tape out. And then returned it. Sorry, Jim.



"Beautiful World"
Devo
From the album New Traditionalists
Written by Gerald Casale & Mark Mothersbaugh
Produced by Devo

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under109

The lyrics of this song start off as positive and upbeat then turn cynical and darker in short order. But I dig the simplistic music. Along with "Through Being Cool," this single is certainly one of the top two tunes on New Traditionalists.



"Tube Snake Boogie"
ZZ Top
From the album El Loco
Written by Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill & Frank Beard
Produced by Bill Ham

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under102
 Rock4

I grew up in the Houston area, so I heard a lot of ZZ Top on the radio and friend's tape decks. I was 14 years old when this song was released and, because of the sexual innuendo or double entendres throughout, me and my friends knew all the lyrics. Typical sex-crazed teenage mindset - it amused me much more as a teenager than it does now as a grandfather who is recently retired. But I guess that's to be expected.



"Going Back to Miami"
The Blues Brothers
From the album Made in America
Written by Wayne Cochran
Produced by Bob Tischler

 U.S. Billboard charts peaks:
 Bubbling Under108

The Blues Brothers weren't actually brothers, didn't play much actual blues music, and weren't particularly funny other than in their 1980 movie, which is fantastic. However, they were able to put together a stellar band (the likes of which hasn't been seen since) and that made all the difference. The band constantly steals the show and in this piece, Tom Scott rips off a reed-melting tenor solo that should have placed this live single in the Hot 100 all on its own. 

SEE ALSO:

Monday, March 2, 2020

Rolling Stone #1 College Albums of 1985



In 1985, Rolling Stone began publishing a College Albums chart, a bi-weekly list of the 10 "college rock" albums (whatever that means).  Here's a chart of the albums that hit the #1 spot on said chart that year:


Issue Track Artist
January 17
Issue 439
The Big Express XTC
January 31
Issue 440
February 14
Issue 441
February 28
Issue 442
How Will the Wolf Survive?
Los Lobos
March 14
Issue 443
The Age of Consent Bronski Beat
March 28
Issue 444
April 11
Issue 445
Meat is Murder The Smiths
April 25
Issue 446
May 9
Issue 447
May 23
Issue 448
Songs from the Big Chair Tears for Fears
June 6
Issue 449
June 20
Issue 450
July 4
Issue 451
Be Yourself Tonight Eurythmics
July 18
Issues 452 & 453
No chart
August 15
Issue 454
Fables of the Reconstruction R.E.M.
August 29
Issue 455
September 12
Issue 456
September 26
Issue 457
October 10
Issue 458
October 24
Issue 459
The Head on the Door The Cure
November 7
Issue 460
November 21
Issue 461
December 5
Issue 462
December 19
Issues 463 & 464
No chart




Tuesday, January 15, 2019

MFD Not-So-Random Five #12


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 that include the word "snow" in the title.


  1. "I Sit in the Snow" by Andy Partridge (1980, Virgin)
    This cut is an experimental reconstruction of XTC music that I'll just call "interesting" and leave it at that. But I'll be doggone if it doesn't kinda grow on you by the end.

  2. "Snowbird Fantasy" by Bob James (1980, Tappan Zee)
    The lead track from James' "H" album, it starts off in a New Age vein, but eventually settles into a Latin-flavored groove with a mess of horn licks. Reminds me Earl Klugh's stuff from that time period, except the acoustic guitar solo comes from Bruce Dunlap. It's about 90 seconds too long, but I can't say I don't like it.

  3. "Rider in the Snow" by The Cult (1984, Beggar's Banquet)
    A deep cut from the group's debut album. Not fully formed with their own thing, we're nonetheless treated to the characteristic sounds of Ian Asbury's voice and Billy Duffy's guitar doing it's best U2 imitation. The lyrics are shite.  

  4. "Snowblind" by Styx (1981, A&M)
    One of the edgier cuts on Paradise Theater, this tune about cocaine addiction gives us a tasty guitar solo from James Young. As a 14 year old knucklehead in 1981, I didn't know from cocaine and thought this song was about actual snow blindness (photokeratitis), so there ya go.

  5. "Snow Girl" by Haircut 100 (1982, Arista)
    Fantastic track from one of my all-time favorite albums, Pelican West. Nick Heyward writes one in the vein of the early Beatles. I could listen to this feelgood tune all day long and just might.


Friday, February 7, 2014