Adventures Through The Mines Of Mellow Gold, Pt. 2

mellowgoldlogo.jpg

Welcome back to another mining expedition, wusses!

Thanks to everybody who offered suggestions on other fantastic Mellow Gold songs. In time, I’m going to try and get to them. (Yes, all of them!) But first, I’m happy to present to you:

Adventures Through The Mines Of Mellow Gold
Part 2: Paul Davis Edition


We’ll talk about Paul Davis: The Man, The Myth, The Gentle in a minute. First, let’s get into the music.

Paul Davis – I Go Crazy (download)

Grab the song first, then we’ll talk.

What problem might I have with “I Go Crazy,” you may be wondering. It’s a valid question. After all, it’s pretty enough. Gentle vocal (and some unexpected ventures into the bass range). Light, unobtrusive strings. A 5-note riff on the keyboard after the chorus, stolen from Dennis DeYoung’s “Babe,” (update: reader Jhensy has pointed out that “Babe” came out after this single, so if anything, DeYoung is the dirty thief) that is guaranteed to become an earworm (or, near the end of the song, a buzzing fly). I don’t quite get the bluesy keyboard riffing at the end, but I’ll forgive it.

My problem is this.

Think of the songs you know that mention “going crazy” somehow in the title. I came up with “Let’s Go Crazy” by Prince, “I Go Crazy” by Queen (a b-side, but I’m a big Queen fan) and of course, who could forget the classic “Goin’ Crazy!” by David Lee Roth? (all of us, apparently.)

But here’s my point. All of these songs that mention going crazy have a sound reminiscent of someone perhaps, oh, I don’t know…going crazy. Not Paul Davis, however.

Here. Just for the hell of it, here’s a crude mashup of the four tracks. Excuse the sonic quality; I’m trying to prove a point. Tell me if one of these things is not like the others.

[audio:http://www.wwmmd.net/tunes/inline/crazymash.mp3]

At no point in “I Go Crazy” does Paul Davis actually sound like he’s really going crazy. Going Introspective? Maybe. Going Doubtful and Inquisitive? Sure. But we all know what this song should have been called. It should have been called “I Go Mellow.”

If Paul Davis is indeed going crazy when he looks in her eyes, then my friends, it’s the wussiest kind of crazy there could ever be. And that’s why it’s in the mines of Mellow Gold.

So listen back to those vocals. If you don’t already know what Paul Davis looks like, get an image in your head.

Whatcha got? Accountant? Small lil’ guy, neat, black hair? Maybe a suit? That’s what I’ve got. In fact, if you do a Google image search for Paul Davis, many of the images seem like they could be him.

This is Paul “I Go Crazy” Davis.

Motherfucker looks like Gregg Allman! This guy should be…I don’t know. Ripping a mean guitar solo? Smoking dope? Having his way with women? And instead, he’s approaching them gently, and giving them the message that he’d like to love them just a little bit, and if they’re not happy with it, then TOO DAMN BAD, WOMAN then it’s okay, they can leave, they don’t have to stay. He doesn’t want to offend anyone. (Looks down at the ground, shyly, shuffles his feet)

Which brings us to song #2.

Paul Davis – Cool Night (download)

I ask you this: do they get any smoother? Any more mellow? I seriously don’t think it’s possible.

Like “I Go Crazy,” this song is actually quite pretty. Gentle, unobtrusive backing vocals. This one actually has a drum beat to it, which means that it’s considered a Paul Davis “rock” song, I suppose. There are two main differences between “I Go Crazy” and “Cool Night,” however: the first difference is that “Cool Night” sounds exactly like you’d expect it to sound. Unlike track 1, we’re not expecting Paul Davis to go batshit insane on a song called “Cool Night.”

The other difference happens at 2:33. Paul Davis actually does go a little crazy. He lets his Gregg Allman-esque hair down and does something truly ballsy: KEY CHANGE!

I love the key change. When I sing this song to myself, I never have the patience to get to the chorus after the guitar solo. I always do the key change right away. That’s how much I love the key change.

I quoted him last week, but I’m repeating Mike’s quote in case you missed it. Mike sums up the emotion behind many of the Mellow Gold hits:

“I love you so much that I will never bother you again” or “come on baby, just allow me to be in your beatific presence and I will not even think of putting any kind of sexual move on you. I promise.”

That’s “Cool Night” in a nutshell. “If it don’t feel right, you can go.” I almost can’t believe he’s making the statement. A guy who looks like that? Come ON! I keep wondering if it’s a Jedi mind trick of some sort. Does the woman stay? Does she leave him to go find the guy from Firefall? (Whoa!) It’s a mystery, friends. A cool, mellow mystery.

I was going to end this post after two songs, but what the hell. Paul Davis had one more Mellow Gold hit in the ’80s.

Paul Davis – ’65 Love Affair (download)

Or as I like to call it, “The Boy From New York City.” I mean, come on. Right from the first few notes, I heard the similarities – and this was before the “doo-wop didddy-wop-diddy-wop doo” bit. Hmmm…the keyboard part in “I Go Crazy,” and now this…is Paul Davis pulling a Robbie Dupree?

If “Cool Night” was considered Paul Davis’ “rock sound,” “’65 Love Affair” features him firmly ensconsed in the “speed metal” phase of his career. Could we have done something about those drums? How about that awful 2-beat hit that’s supposed to sound like clapping or…something?

I’m not saying that Davis didn’t do a semi-respectable job of resurrecting the golden-oldie soul sound. However, the lyrics leave a little tons to be desired: “Well I asked you like a dum-dum/You were bad with your pom-poms/You said, ‘ooh wah go team ooh wah go!’ Ooh-ee baby I want you to know/” And he does mention in the chorus:”’65 love affair, we wasn’t getting nowhere.” I wonder if it’s because he told the girl she could leave if it didn’t feel right?

“I Go Crazy,” “Cool Night,” “’65 Love Affair.” I’m using all of these songs to make a point. That point is this: Paul Davis is a sissy.

I kid, I kid. I give Paul Davis credit, actually: the pop sensibilities of both “’65 Love Affair” and “Cool Night” were a departure from his previous country sound, and Davis was so disgusted with the commercialization of his music that he essentially quit the business altogether. Can you blame him? Look at those “’65 Love Affair” lyrics again. Also, here’s a crazy fact: Paul Davis was shot in 1986…and survived! (No word on whether he was shot by the woman who left because it didn’t feel right.)

Paul Davis seems to be doing just fine these days. He lives in Mississippi and likes to fish.

You have to wonder, though: did Paul Davis kill the fish? Did he catch it and tell it that it could go back in the water with the other fishes if it wasn’t happy? When the boat stalls, does he mutter “I Go Crazy?”

Hope you enjoyed this expedition into the Mines of Mellow Gold. Let’s do it again next week!

16 Responses to “Adventures Through The Mines Of Mellow Gold, Pt. 2”

  1. Py Korry Says:

    Seriously…can I have my balls back?

  2. Michael Says:

    That mashup is straight up brilliant. Which one of these is not like the other? Well Done.

  3. Py Korry's Wife Says:

    My only problem with this is that Py played me "I go crazy" from your post, and now it’s stuck in my head.  Thanks a lot.  Looks like I may have to go stick my head in the oven, though I’m not sure what good that will do, since it’s an electric oven.

  4. Jason Says:

    Mrs. Py Korry,

    While I certainly would never wish you harm of any kind, I think this might be the best website comment I’ve ever received.

  5. jefito Says:

    I’m not sure exactly how or why, but I think attempting to gas one’s self to death with an electric oven is an incredibly apt metaphor for the music of Paul Davis.

  6. Bob Says:

    Is “I Go Crazy” one-half of the amulet that also contains Dan Hill’s “Sometimes When We Touch”?

  7. David Says:

    The “I Go Crazy” vs. “Babe” comparison was a stretch. Even so, I’d love to see the Davis/DeYoung smackdown had theft occurred. Because you know who would win that fight to the death? All of us, my friend. All of us.

  8. Jhensy Says:

    "I Go Crazy" hit the Billboard Hot 100 on August 27, 1977, "Babe" by Styx on October 6, 1979 — over two years later. Hackmeister Dennis DeYoung is the thief, not ol’ Paul. "I Go Crazy" is a flat-out beautiful song, a longtime guilty pleasure of mine. The rest of his catalogue does suck.

  9. Jason Says:

    My hat is off to you, sir.  I incorrectly lumped "I Go Crazy" in with the other two songs, which were 80s tunes.  I have corrected the entry.

  10. BD Says:

    For some reason, I have fonder memories of the Spanish version of that particular DLR song, if only because it predated Livin’ La Vida Loca by a decade and change.Which reminds me of one of the funniest culture clashes I ever heard — on the radio in Ireland in 1999, we heard Livin’ La Vida Loca about 10 times. But it was always some remixed version that stripped it of the horns, the Latin percussion, most of the guitar — in other words, everything that gave the song character. It was just the voice over a generic synthesized Eurodance beat. Yet the Irish DJs, perhaps unaware of how de-Latinized the song had become, took particular pleasure in calling him "Ricky Mar-TEEN." Yeah — get on with your bad self, Sean O’Gonzalez.

  11. Jason Says:

    bdure!

    Thanks for commenting (even though your comment has absolutely nothing to do with Mellow Gold).  I love your website – in fact, why haven’t I linked to it?  I’m fixing that right now.

  12. Elaine Says:

    I can’t disagree with any of the Paul Davis comments.  Not only does he look like he ought to be in Lynyrd Skynyrd, if a man in all seriousness said to me, "I go crazy, when I look in your eyes," I’d probably either laugh, or seek a restraining order.  That ain’t romantic. 

  13. Robert Says:

    I love all three of these songs. Maybe I shouldn’t, but I don’t care. Thanks for the downloads.

  14. mike Says:

    I always heard "’65 Love Affair" as an evil mix of Daryl Hall, "Summer of ’69," and the theme from an Entertainment Tonight-type TV show.  But it never occurred to me until now that Paul Davis spends the entire song singing about NOT getting any, while telling himself in the choruses that he could’ve.

  15. JasonHare.com » Blog Archive » Adventures Through The Mines Of Mellow Gold 7 Says:

    […] (I assume you’ve got it, but if you don’t, you need to re-read Mellow Gold #2.) […]

  16. Jeff B. Says:

     
       What’s with the exclusion of "Do Right"? Does it rock too much??