Archive for the 'chart attack' Category

CHART ATTACK! #35: 6/9/84

Friday, June 8th, 2007


Oh, 1984.  I can’t stay away from you for very long.  I love you too much.  And you looked pretty good this week - June 9, 1984, to be exact!

10.  Jump (For My Love) – Pointer Sisters  Amazon iTunes
9.  Self Control – Laura Branigan  Amazon iTunes
8.  Breakdance – Irene Cara  Amazon
7.  Hello – Lionel Richie 
Amazon iTunes
6.  The Heart Of Rock & Roll – Huey Lewis and the News  Amazon iTunes
5.  Sister Christian – Night Ranger  Amazon iTunes
4.  The Reflex – Duran Duran  Amazon iTunes
3.  Oh Sherrie – Steve Perry  Amazon iTunes
2.  Let’s Hear It For The Boy – Deniece Williams  Amazon iTunes
1.   Time After Time – Cyndi Lauper  Amazon iTunes


10.  Jump (For My Love) – Pointer Sisters 

I’ve already bitched enough about parentheticals in song titles, but I figure there’s always room for me to bitch some more.  When you say the title of a song to someone, how do you indicate the parentheses?  Do you have to act them out?  Doesn’t this put a lot of undue pressure on people who aren’t actors and just want to say the name of a song?  I’m just asking.  I don’t think these parentheses are really unnecessary, especially since Van Halen’s "Jump" had hit the charts earlier in the year, and I’m sure they didn’t want people to confuse the two.  Although wouldn’t a Pointer Sister’s version of Van Halen’s "Jump" be freaking awesome?  I can hear it in my head.  I can also hear Van Halen covering Pointer Sister’s "Jump."

Anyway, uh, yeah.  Big hit for the Pointer Sisters.

9.  Self Control – Laura Branigan 

"Self Control" opens with a fat guitar riff.  It’s actually kind of exciting.  I’m anticipating some big rocking!  But then, out of nowhere, guitar is abolished from the song.  Abolished!  Be gone with you, rocking!  You’ve been replaced by synth and drum machines - wave of the future!  The guitar does make an all-too-brief return during the middle section, accompanying of a bunch of guys singing "Woah-oh-oh" – in what I can only imagine was a HUGE call-and-response moment in the Laura Branigan concert.  I think my parents may have seen Laura Branigan in concert.  I’ll have to ask them.  She probably opened for Lionel Richie or something.

I admire Branigan’s earnest delivery of these lyrics.  She does say "I live among the creatures of the night," after all.  The wiki for this song is pretty serious, too.  Here’s how they describe "Self Control":

The song narrates the singer’s slip into the world of nightlife, the allure of which has her "livin’ only for the night" and deeming herself to "live among the creatures of the night". Rather than actually invoking control over herself, the singer repeatedly declares to a phantom protagonist that that "you take my self, you take my self control".

I shall name my next band Phantom Protagonist.

Just a few more words about this song:  Branigan’s version is actually a cover.  The song was written by Giancarlo Bigazzi (my band after Phantom Protagonist shall be named Giancarlo Bigazzi), Steve Piccolo, and Raffaele Riefoli.  Raffaele released the song in 1983 under the name Raf.  I don’t feel like anybody needs me to put the original version up, so here’s a short clip from iTunes.  Oh, and what the hell, here’s a sample from the Ricky Martin version - en Español.  Bigazzi, by the way, also wrote "Gloria" and released it as an Italian ballad before Branigan recorded it.  She sure loved herself some Italians.

8. Breakdance – Irene Cara  (download)

Okay, so I saw this one on the chart and had no idea what it was.  I figured the fine folks at Billboard meant to write "Flashdance" and just made a clerical error.  But after hearing the song – a crappy tribute to the breakdancing craze – I figured, this must have been on a movie soundtrack.  Like Breakin’.  Or Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo.  It just has that movie soundtrack sound.  I was wrong.  It’s not on Breakin’.  Or Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo.  Nope, somehow this song made it to #8 on its own merits.  How, I ask you?  How?  The chorus is the only thing that’s relatively catchy, and barely. 

Then, I figured it out.

If one writes a song about an actual dance, they stand a good chance of it cracking the top 10.  See songs like "The Locomotion" (a top 10 in 1962, 1974, and 1988), "The Jerk" (1965), and "The Twist" (1960 and 1962).  Irene Cara (and her co-writer, Bunny Hull) must have figured this out, because look at verse 2:

They used to do the locomotion, do the jerk and the twist
But there just ain’t never been nothing like this
Now popping and locking is a new way of talking
Things will work out for sure spinning out on the floor

How smart is that?  They referenced ALL THREE top 10 hits!  No wonder!

Thankfully, this song never went further than #8.  Eight was enough.  (You like that one?)

7.  Hello – Lionel Richie

Jeez, I haven’t covered 1984 in six weeks, and yet "Hello" is still on the charts.  I can’t find a damn thing to say about it that I haven’t said before, so if you’re new to CHART ATTACK!, check out #29, where you can see the video and even hear Mike and I perform a snippet as part of our Acoustic ’80s set.

6.  The Heart Of Rock & Roll – Huey Lewis and the News 

DETROIT!  Unhh!  Heart of rock & roll!  I’ll continue to defend Huey Lewis and the News for being a talented, unassuming bar band that wrote fantastic, thoughtful pop songs.  I use the word "thoughtful" because I am continually impressed by the chords these guys choose to use.  "Power Of Love," for example, has the kind of bridge that you weren’t hearing in pop songs at the time.  "Heart Of Rock & Roll" works, despite it being a sort of lyrical precursor to songs like "We Didn’t Start The Fire," because it’s fun.  Great harmonies, and unbelievable horns, and this one fantastic chord coming right out of the bridge into the last verse.  It definitely does not warrant inclusion on the "Awesomely Bad" song list.  I remember, as a kid, being slightly freaked out by the end of the black-and-white video, when Huey’s heart starts physically beating out of his chest.  I was a sheltered child.

Do yourself a favor and check out JB’s post about Huey Lewis and the News, who astutely puts their career into perspective, and offers a great defense of their covers disc, Four Chords And Several Years Ago.

5.  Sister Christian – Night Ranger 

Oh boy.

I wrote "Sister Christian" off for many, many years.  I didn’t really have any valid reason; I just ignored it whenever it was on.  I didn’t even pay much attention when Alfred Molina freaked the fuck out to it in Boogie Nights.  But sometime last year, it happened to come on the iPod, and I decided I kinda dug it.   I half-jokingly told Mike that we should consider performing it with our band, because it would clearly rawk.

Fast forward about seven months.  All I know now is that I have to sing "Sister Christian" next Friday night down at The Bitter End and I’m wondering if maybe I took this joke too far.  I mean, I can sing it, but I can’t really do it seriously.  I wind up making rawk faces and overenunciating my words and growling.  (You know, like the original.)  I’m fairly certain that this may be the only way to really approach this song.  Am I supposed to seriously convey the emotion behind "And mama’s worryin’ that you won’t last to say ‘let’s play’?"  I just don’t think I can do it.  Not without some serious fucking pyrotechnics behind us, anyway.

The saving grace to us playing this song live is Mike’s guitar.  He rocks it so hard.  Even if he refuses to use a whammy bar or wear a big-hair wig.

Enough about me.  "Sister Christian," live in Japan, 1983:

What a clip!  "Sister Christian" before the song was legendary! well-known!  The keyboard intro with the Styx "Babe" sound!  The cat burglar on keys!  Keagy’s pants, fer chrissakes!  Check out Keagy’s pants!  The way he sweats!  The tears that almost seem like they’re going to burst through his eyes during the last few notes!  That final ad-lib: "You know you’re motorin’."  You can almost hear his sister affirming it:  yes, Kelly.  I know.  I’m motorin’.  I’ll give credit where it’s due, however: he may look a little like the guy who helped install our above-ground pool in Long Island back in 1986 in exchange for a six-pack of Budweiser, but he sure as hell had the vocal chops.  I realize this now, as I die a little every time I hit those final notes.

It would behoove you to watch the original video.  There’s too much for me to snark on - CAPTAIN VIDEO!, please pick up the white courtesy phone - but it’s highly entertaining.

4.  The Reflex – Duran Duran 

I first heard "The Reflex" a number of years after it was released, when I was a DJ (and I use the term very, very loosely) at my summer camp.  We had "The Reflex" on 45.  I stole it at the end of the summer.  The record had two skips in it, and so eventually those skips just worked their way into my memory as part of the song.  Even now, when I hear it on my iPod, I wait for the skip.  And it never happens.  Damn memory.

There’s been a lot of speculation as to what "The Reflex" is really about.  I seriously don’t think I could possibly care less.  If we’re going to spend time pondering the Duran Imponderables, why don’t we question why the world tolerated Simon LeBon’s horrible, petulant whine during the final choruses of "The Wild Boys?"

If you are interested on some of the background of "The Reflex," though, I’d suggest checking out this article, featuring insight and memories from producer Ian Little on not only the recording of the single but also the general sessions behind Seven And The Ragged Tiger.  Fairly interesting stuff.

3. Oh Sherrie – Steve Perry  (download)

I know what you want out of me.  You want snark.  I can’t do it.  I like "Oh Sherrie."  There.  I said it.  In fact, I said it a while ago at The Week In Rock.  Here’s what I said then, and I stand by all of this:

Why does this song get such a bad rap?  It’s extremely catchy, it has a great chorus, and love it or hate it, you can’t deny that Steve Perry had unbelievable vocal power.  I like it.  And why is the video so awful?  As opposed to a lot of bombastic music videos of the mid-’80s, this one actually has a sense of humor (it seems to me like the only artists who weren’t taking themselves too seriously in music videso at the time were Steve Perry, Phil Collins and Huey Lewis).  Here’s what it has going for it:

1) False start
2) Hot model
3) Steve Perry playing guitar on a broom
4) "What about the flaming forest of doom, Steve?"

Here’s the part where I’d show you the video to illustrate the above four points.  But wouldn’t you know it, Viacom has taken it down sometime during the past month.  Fuckers!
 
2.  Let’s Hear It For The Boy – Deniece Williams 

1984 was a good year for Dean Pitchford.  Not only did the man write Footloose, the movie, but he wrote the majority of the songs on the soundtrack.  He’s involved in at least nine, including co-writes with Sammy Hagar, Jim Steinman, Eric Carmen and - yes - Kenny Loggins.  He was nominated twice at the 1984 Academy Awards, for "Footloose" and "Let’s Hear It For The Boy."  I can kind of understand "Footloose," but not "Let’s Hear It For The Boy."  It’s not a bad song, but is it Oscar material?  I think not.

(Recently Pitchford collaborated with Richard Marx on a song for Bambi 2: Electric Boogaloo, so you can draw your own conclusions regarding his current career status.

After choosing this week for CHART ATTACK!, "Let’s Hear It For The Boy" was stuck in my head for two days.  Imagine waking up at 3 AM only to hear Deniece Williams hitting that high note near the end.  You should thank me for not offering it up here for download.

1.  Time After Time – Cyndi Lauper 

Did you know that The Hooters were the backing band for Cyndi Lauper’s She’s So Unusual?  (Why do I feel like I’m the only one who doesn’t know this?)    Well, at least the core members - Eric Bazilian and Rob Hyman were involved - and Hyman went on to co-write "Time After Time" with Lauper, essentially guaranteeing that the man never needed to release a successful song ever again.  "Time After Time" has been covered by hundreds of artists, including Eva Cassidy (beautiful), Willie Nelson (terrible), Miles Davis (just reminds you that the song is essentially three chords over and over again), Uncle Cracker (you don’t expect me to comment, do you?), Sugar Ray (fuck you), and even The Hooters themselves (instrumentally sound, vocally meh).  I like the original, despite the fact that I’ve never quite been able to fall in love with Lauper’s voice.  I had a slew of covers to choose from here, but in the end I went with Everything But The Girl’s version - mainly because I love me some Tracey Thorn.

Everything But The Girl - Time After Time (download)

That’s it for this week!  Have a great weekend, and we’ll see you next Friday for another edition of CHART ATTACK!

CHART ATTACK! #34: 6/4/88

Friday, June 1st, 2007

Happy Friday, everybody!  It’s time for another fun-filled edition of CHART ATTACK!, this time from one of those weeks where I heard every one of these songs on the radio on a daily basis.  Ahh, those were the days.  It’s June 4, 1988!  Let’s start attackin’!

10.  Anything For You - Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine  Amazon iTunes
9.  Make It Real – The Jets   Amazon iTunes
8.  I Don’t Want To Live Without You – Foreigner   Amazon iTunes
7.  Foolish Beat – Debbie Gibson   Amazon iTunes
6.  Piano In The Dark – Brenda Russell   Amazon iTunes
5.  Together Forever – Rick Astley   Amazon iTunes
4.  Everything Your Heart Desires – Daryl Hall & John Oates   Amazon iTunes
3.  Naughty Girls (Need Love Too) – Samantha Fox   Amazon iTunes
2.  Shattered Dreams – Johnny Hates Jazz   Amazon iTunes
1.  One More Try – George Michael   Amazon iTunes
 

10. Anything For You - Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine

I am finding it hard to believe that this is the first time these guys have appeard on CHART ATTACK!.  It makes no sense to me.  I must admit to you that I have a soft spot for anything sung by Gloria Estefan between 1985 and 1990.  I listened to my Let It Loose cassette more times than I care to mention, and I’m pretty sure I own 45s of at least three songs from that album.  And I especially love the ballads, despite the fact that they’re the John Williams equivalent of pop tunes.  You know how it always takes you a second to remember the themes from Superman, Indiana Jones and Star Wars without confusing them?  Yeah.  "Anything For You" is "Don’t Wanna Lose You" is "Cuts Both Ways" is "Here We Are," etc.  "Anything For You" is one of the few to hit #1, and the only #1 while the band was still receiving name-billing: although Miami Sound Machine has remained her backing band, Estefan essentially became a solo artist following this album.

I don’t want to harp on this, since I mentioned it in regards to Kim Wilde last week, but Gloria Estefan is still quite hot.  And she really wasn’t that hot when her career first started.  She’s like the Alison Krauss of pop music.  (Two!  Two analogies in one entry!)

9.   Make It Real – The Jets 

Oh, The Jets.  How I loved The Jets.  I actually saw The Jets in concert.  Westbury Music Fair.  Stacey Q opened.  She came out to sign autographs at intermission and fainted.  Anyway, great show, at least to my 10 year-old ears.  Here’s what I never understood about The Jets.  They were a Polynesian family group, right?  Here’s a picture of them:

Okay, everybody who’s not an illegitimate child or adopted, raise your hand.  NOT SO FAST, WHITE GUY IN THE MIDDLE!  I swear, I never could figure out why this guy looked absolutely NOTHING LIKE the others guys and girls in the band.  My theory is that he was just hanging out near them one day, back when they were just performing at county fairs and stuff, and snuck in – and because there are so many damn people in the band, nobody ever picked up on it.  "What?  Oh,  yeah, I’m your brother.  Seriously, I am.  There’s like 17 of us.  Trust me, I’m one of them."

And here’s why I think I’m on to something – this guy, known as Eugene Wolfgramm, eventually must have been found out, because he left the band, changed his name to Gene Hunt, and formed the group Boys Club.  I am not making this up.  Doesn’t everybody see?  There’s a family scandal going on here, and I’m the first to pick up on it!  You’ll all thank me one day when the truth comes out.

Shit, I’m only on #9.  Gotta move on.  No time to actually, you know, talk about the song in question.

8.  I Don’t Want To Live Without You – Foreigner 

It’s true.  I don’t want to live without you, Chart Attack! readers.  Live without your (blog) love.  You see, I’m lost without your (blog) love.  I repeat this line because it took me about 20 minutes to remember which of the testicularly challenged Foreigner songs this was.  I do remember the video for this one getting heavy rotation on MTV.  You remember how beautiful it was, right?  Not only because of the time-lapse nature footage, or the romantic clips of people falling in love, but because Foreigner don’t appear in the video at all?  That’s the most beautiful part!

All that 6/4/88 is doing so far is revealing what a pussy I am.  I like Gloria Estefan ballads, and I think the pre-chorus to this song ("I’m longing for the time…") is pretty.  In fact, I might learn this one on piano or guitar and see if it scores me any points with the wife, who I’m relatively certain has given up on this website.  I’m guessing that performing it on melodica is not going to do me any favors, though.

Foreigner are touring this summer with Def Leppard and Styx.  Great: two bands with new lead singers, and one band who has lowered every song down about four steps.  Where do I sign up?

"I Don’t Want To Live Without You" was Foreigner’s last appearance in the Top 40, ever.  And don’t pull that "never say never" bullshit because I can say pretty confidently that Foreigner are not making a comeback.

7.  Foolish Beat – Debbie Gibson 

When I was 10 years old, I had a huge crush on Debbie Gibson.  I just watched the video for "Foolish Beat" and the whole thing just came flooding back.  Even the big hair didn’t bother me.

I know this argument is null and void now that she’s posed for Playboy, but is it not amazing how clean-cut you could be at 16 and still have a hit back in 1988?

So then I went looking for other Debbie Gibson clips.  The best clip I found was her performing "I Wanna Destroy You" with the Circle Jerks at CBGBs in 1990.

I’m like two seconds away from going into a tangent about "Electric Youth," but I’ll restrain myself.  Instead, I’ll just say that I think we should give Debbie some props.  This is the week that "Foolish Beat" entered the top 10.  Three weeks later, it hit #1, and at 16 years old, she became the youngest person ever to write, record AND produce a #1 hit.  Beat THAT, Tiffany.

6.  Piano In The Dark – Brenda Russell (download) 

Guilty pleasure alert!  Guilty pleasure alert!  If you don’t immediately remember this one, just imagine this:  if the drum beat from "No One Is To Blame," the bass line from "Sign Your Name," the finger snaps from "Father Figure" and the keyboards from just about every ’80s ballad ever released had some kind of orgy, the love child would clearly be "Piano In The Dark."  I like this track, but I know for a fact that Mike absolutely adores this track, so maybe he’ll talk about it in the comments.  I don’t have too much to say about it, except for the fact that for a song called "Piano In The Dark," there’s very little piano.  There’s a short little piano solo in the middle, but the rest is synth.

You may be wondering: who’s the guy in the middle who sounds suspiciously like Michael McDonald, and subsequently just makes me wish that the song really did feature Michael McDonald?  Why, it’s none other than Joe "Bean" Esposito, the star of our very first LOST SOUNDTRACK CLASSICS series!  Yes, the man who sings "You’re The Best" also is featured on "Piano In The Dark," and was even nominated, along with Russell, for Best Pop Duo at the 1988 Grammy Awards.

Other than a minor hit in the early ’80s, "Piano In The Dark" was Brenda Russell’s last appearance on the charts.  She also wrote "Get Here," which was eventually a hit for Oleta Adams, and is a co-writer of the current Oprah-produced musical The Color Purple.  Beat THAT, Tiffany.

5.  Together Forever – Rick Astley 

Man, do I long for the days where I could just turn on the Lite-FM station and hear this one.  Oh, wait, I forgot - I can hear this song every single day of my entire life on the Lite-FM station.  This is yet another song that I always seem to specifically hear when I’m sitting in a dentist’s chair.  "Never Gonna Give You Up" is considered the more popular of Astley’s two #1 hits, but I swear that I hear this one more often.  Or you know what, maybe I’m just confused, since they’re pretty much the same damn song.

4.  Everything Your Heart Desires – Daryl Hall & John Oates

I was a big fan of Hall & Oates when I was a kid.  Big Bam Boom was one of the first records I bought with my own money.  And maybe it’s because I was so young, but the time between Big Bam Boom (1984) and Ooh Yeah! (1988) seemed like an eternity.  Furthermore, as a highly astute 11 year-old, I felt that H&O had effectively sabotaged their career by taking a hiatus, as they would never be that big again.  I guess I was right on that front - "Everything Your Heart Desires" was their last appearance in the Top Ten.  ("So Close" came, uh, so close.)  However, as an 11 year-old, I also wasn’t taking into account the duo’s long history and tireless climb that got them to the point where they deserved a break.  All I knew was that "Everything Your Heart Desires" was a significant disappointment to me, and seemed somewhat anticlimactic after four years away.

Do yourself a favor: if you haven’t already, go read Jefito’s Idiot Guides to Hall & Oates (Part 1 and Part 2 - ) for the definitive career review on the original Ambiguously Gay Duo.

3.  Naughty Girls (Need Love Too) – Samantha Fox

Are you shitting me?  This song made it to #3?  Really?

I guess I’m just getting lazy, but I don’t feel like I have much to say about "Say It Loud (I’m Trashy And I’m Proud)" or whatever the name of this song is.  But here’s something interesting about Samantha Fox.  I just looked at the tracklist for her Greatest Hits (of course she has a greatest hits disc!  Snow has a greatest hits disc!  Hilary Duff has a greatest hits disc!), and 7 out of 18 songs have needless parentheses.  I will allow her one exception, as she covers "(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction," but it must be understood that this exception is only in regards to parentheses, not the actual cover itself, which frightens me based on concept alone.  The others, however, are unacceptable.  And I’m not even discussing songs with parentheses that didn’t make it onto the Greatest Hits disc!  You know, songs like "Hurt Me! Hurt Me! (But The Pants Stay On)".  Hey, wait a minute…that one’s pretty good!

Samantha Fox "live", y’all:

2.  Shattered Dreams – Johnny Hates Jazz (download) 

…and this is pretty much as good as it was ever going to get for Johnny Hates Jazz.  Frankly, I don’t know what happened: good song, creative band name…this is it?  I know they broke the Top 40 with "I Don’t Want To Be A Hero," but I wouldn’t recognize it if you put a gun to my head.  Even Breathe had more than one recognizable hit. 

Here’s the video.  Check out that George Michael stubble!

I know what you’re dying to know:  where are Johnny Hates Jazz now?  Good question.  I don’t know about most of the band, but I can tell you that if you call lead singer Clark Datchler by his God-given name, he’ll most likely punch you in the face.  No, he’s now known as (are you ready for this?) NIGHTFOXX.  NIGHTFOXX!!!  I love it.  If you check out his website for long enough, you’ll eventually hear a sample of a NIGHTFOXX cover of "Shattered Dreams."  I can’t believe I stuck around long enough to hear it, actually.

1.  One More Try – George Michael 

1988 pretty much belonged to George Michael.  "One More Try" was the third of four consecutive #2 singles from Faith, and stayed at #1 for three weeks.  These days, three weeks isn’t anything impressive, but in 1988, it was the second longest-running #1 single of the year, tied with "Every Rose Has Its Thorn."  Of course, being a big George Michael fan, I knew that already, but I learned something new while writing this entry:  "One More Try" was the last single to hit $1 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart by a white male artist until this year, when Robin Thicke released "Lost Without U."

I always liked "One More Try," but the live version greatly improves upon the original.  The song’s tempo was slower, which may sound a bit like torture, but is saved by an excellent gospel feel.  Take a listen:

George Michael - One More Try (Live Gospel Version) (download)

And that brings us to the end of another chart attackin’ week!  As always, thanks so much for reading and commenting - your comments are the best part of each entry.  Have a great weekend and see you next time!

CHART ATTACK! #33: 5/23/87

Friday, May 25th, 2007


Hooray!

I didn’t think it’d be possible to churn this out for today, but right after writing that "Chartless" post, I had the idea that maybe I could take a Top 10 and split it between a few of us.  And that’s what I did.  I’m brilliant, I know.

Yesterday morning, I requested some help, and received great entries from:

Kurt, recently retired blogger, but who will continue to make appearances at many sites, thankfully;
Robert, who will be displaying his comedic talents as part of The Fowler Family Radio Hour over Memorial Day weekend in South Carolina; (holy cow, I feel like Leno!);
Mike, of the snarky Down With Snark, who exclaimed "This is a great week!" after only hearing #9 and #10;
Me, who is seriously thinking about delegating these entries on a regular basis.

All three got back to me in record time with their insightful and witty comments, and made this CHART ATTACK! possible.  So without further adieu, here we go, collectively attacking May 23, 1987!

10.  Talk Dirty To Me - Poison  Amazon iTunes
9.  La Isla Bonita - Madonna  Amazon iTunes
8.  Always - Atlantic Starr  Amazon iTunes
7.  Big Love - Fleetwood Mac   Amazon iTunes
6.  Heat Of The Night - Bryan Adams  Amazon iTunes
5.  (I Just) Died In Your Arms - Cutting Crew  Amazon
4.  You Keep Me Hangin’ On - Kim Wilde  Amazon iTunes
3.  The Lady In Red - Chris de Burgh  Amazon iTunes
2.  Looking For A New Love - Jody Watley  Amazon iTunes
1.  With Or Without You - U2  Amazon iTunes

10.  Talk Dirty To Me - Poison

Kurt:  I was working at a record store when this was released. I’ll never forget the day we opened the box of albums and the cover of Look What The Cat Dragged In was staring back at us. My co-worker picked it up, studied it for a second or two and pronounced that, "these chicks are pretty hot!" It was only after we cut open the shrink rap and gave that sucker a spin did we realize that these were dudes! True story.

Anyways, once this single hit, there was no stopping this album. It’s everything arena rock was supposed to be: big, dumb and catchy. They were the modern day Cheap Trick (even though Cheap Trick was still around, no one paid attention to them until they hooked up with outside songwriters for "The Flame" later in the decade). We didn’t listen to Poison for CC Deville’s woeful guitar playing or because they wanted to save fly ridden African children. Nope, we listened to Poison while we drank warm Schlitz beer and tried to get with whatever girl looked appropriate depending on how much Schlitz we drank. In essence, this is true "cock rock."

9.  La Isla Bonita - Madonna

Michael:  I wasn’t sure what I was going to say about this. It’s one of my favorite Madonna songs. It was the 5th consecutive top-5 single off True Blue (it hit #4 in the US and #1 all over the world). The video features a young Benecio Del Toro. That was all I could think to say.

Then I checked Wikipedia.

You know why I love Wikipedia? Here’s the first sentence of the Wiki for La Isla Bonita:

"La Isla Bonita" (The beautiful island) is a 1987 single by Madonna. The composition was written by Patrick Leonard and Bruce Gaitsch, and originally intended for Michael Jackson for his Bad album, who, according to Gaitsch, turned it down.

!!!

I cant even get my head around that. What about Michael Jackson’s prior work made the authors think that a latin song, about heterosexuals, with nylon string guitar and spanish lyrics would appeal to el rey de la música popular? I guess it makes sense though. Every songwriter on earth was probably trying to get Michael to sing their song in the post Thriller years. It begs the question, how many of Billboard’s top 100 pop songs from 1987 were actually intended for Michael Jackson? I would conservatively guess 57, including "I Wanna Dance With Somebody," "Always," "I Want Your Sex," "Little Lies" and "Keep Your Hands To Yourself."

Leonard also co-wrote "Cherish," "True Blue," "Like a Prayer," "Live to Tell" and "Who’s That Girl." Impressive.

Bonus: here’s a live version from the "Confessions" tour:



8.  Always - Atlantic Starr

Robert:  This song was made for wedding receptions. I may have even been to some receptions where it was played, but I can’t remember.  It just feels like it was intentionally created for that special day when two people exchange vows and promise to stay together for the duration of the final trimester. Lo and behold, when I looked up the lyrics for "Always" on the Internet, the first search result I got was from a site called weddingvendors.com. (Right above the lyrics was a banner ad with the following headline: "Is your wedding at risk?" Not if you play "Always"!)

Matthew Bolin talked about Atlantic Starr’s "Secret Lovers" in Chart Attack #21, and I talked about the group’s "Masterpiece" in Chart Attack #23, which means together we’ve covered all three of Atlantic Starr’s Top 10 pop hits. (This baffles my mind.  - JH)   Now let us never speak of them again.

7.  Big Love - Fleetwood Mac

Jason:  I can’t be positive, but I believe this song might have been my first introduction to Fleetwood Mac.  (Oh, stop raising your eyebrows at me.  I was 10 at the time.)  This was the first summer that I went to sleepaway camp, and I remember taking an acting class (I was a hit with the ladies) that began each session with a meditation-type warm-up.  It was supposed to be a time of quiet reflection, deep breathing, tranquility, all that jazz.  Only problem was that our warm-up occurred at the exact same time as the warm-up for the dance class in the studio next door.  That class - every session, without fail - did their warm-up to "Big Love."  So my very first meditation sessions - 10 years old - included that oddly synthetic "oh/ah/oh/ah" from this track.  (Both voices, by the way, are Buckingham.)  I think I may even have a cassette tape lying around somewhere from when I recorded the meditation session…with "Big Love" playing, muffled, in the background.

"But Jason," I hear you saying.  "I don’t give a shit about the first time you heard ‘Big Love.’" 

That’s a good point.  But this is what you get when I’m rushing around, people.  What can I tell you.

The studio version of "Big Love" is nothing special (although awesome for its lack of Stevie Nicks), and I’m not sure that many people would have ever given it a second thought had Lindsey Buckingham not released his blistering solo version on Fleetwood Mac’s reunion live album.  I’m sure you’ve seen this already, but you should watch it again.

6.  Heat Of The Night - Bryan Adams

Kurt:  A few years prior, there was almost no bigger pop/rock star than Bryan Adams. His "Reckless" disc pumped out single after single and they all were hits (six of the ten tunes hit the Top 15). Even the non-singles were getting significant radio play leading me to believe that it rivaled "Thriller" in this department.

So when you’re on top of the arena rock world, what would you do in advance of your next album? If you said, "release a slow, plodding and ultimately boring track as the first single," you would be correct. In fact, the whole album of Into The Fire was like Evil goateed Spock as compared to Reckless being the clean-shaven and logical Spock. I mean, when you’re singing songs about the plight of Native Americans, no longer do the "Kids Wanna Rock." I think this one hit the Top 10 on Bryan’s name alone. There’s no other way to explain how a song THIS boring was successful.

5.  (I Just) Died In Your Arms - Cutting Crew

Michael:  Look Jay, your favorite, a ridiculous parenthetical in the title!  (Grrrr. - JH)

This is a great song. It totally encapsulates the late 80s. It has staccato synths, whammy-bar heavy, pointy-headstock guitar histrionics and completely unintelligible lyrics.  (Seriously: "she’s loving by proxy?" "the cat’s in the cradle?" What?) This was the Cutting Crew’s only US hit, going all the way to number 1 and hitting the top 5 in the UK as well.

Here’s the video:

The lead guitar player, Kevin MacMichael, ended up playing with Robert Plant after EMI dropped Cutting Crew. One hopes Robert made him lose his Cutting Crew era hair, though. How would one describe it? Mushroom cloud mullet?  All kidding aside, I think the guitar in this song is great, especially the harmonies at the end. 

Kevin passed away in 2002, and the lead singer, Nick Van Eade reformed Cutting Crew recently. For more information about Cutting Crew than you probably ever wanted to know, please go here(Also, check out Jefito’s recent Cutouts Gone Wild! on Cutting Crew - JH)

4.  You Keep Me Hangin’ On - Kim Wilde (download)

Jason:  This song is one of the few in Billboard chart history that have reached #1 twice by different artists.  (There have been nine in total, and only one instance this decade - anybody wanna take a guess?)  The song first hit #1 in November of 1966, yet another Holland-Dozier-Holland smash hit for the Supremes (this single was immediately following "You Can’t Hurry Love"), and reached the top of the charts again for Wilde in 1987.  In 1968, it was also a #6 hit for Vanilla Fudge.  But fuck them.  We’re here to talk about Kim Wilde.

I was all set to apologize (or, at the very least, hang my head in shame) for not knowing initially that this was a Supremes cover.  But two points in my defense:  first of all, I was just a lil’ Hare going in circles at the roller rink (which is where I’m convinced I first heard this song), and second of all, the cover has been adapted so accurately to the sound of the ’80s that it legitimately sounds like it could be an ’80s original.  At least that’s the story I’m going with.

Other than 1982’s "Kids In America," this was Kim Wilde’s only U.S. hit.  She still remains quite popular in Europe, and is still quite attractive.  (A little Ripa-ish, no?)

3.  The Lady In Red - Chris de Burgh

Robert:  Two years ago I was in a sketch show in Chicago called Absence of Absence; one of the sketches centered on a foul-mouthed University of Wisconsin football fan wearing a red UW Badgers sweatshirt. The scene begins with the female fan screaming some obscenities at the Badgers’ coach after a bad play. The man sitting next to her instantly falls in love. Cue "The Lady in Red."

That sketch was the one thing most people remembered about the show. (I didn’t come up with it, so I’ll admit I was jealous.) The payoff of Chris de Burgh’s romantic ballad being played over an otherwise silent, slow-motion scene, which ends with the obnoxious fan and her admirer accidentally inciting violence in the stands, had people laughing throughout. Comic juxtaposition can be a hoot.

Wikipedia says "The Lady in Red" went to #1 in 25 countries, but it peaked at #3 on the U.S. pop chart (it may have gone to #1 on the adult contemporary chart; I wouldn’t be surprised). The song was inspired by de Burgh’s wife, and I like the sentiment of it, which boils down to this: "Because I’ve been taking you for granted recently, I’ve forgotten what a knockout you are. Please kick me in the face the next time I forget. Thanks, sweetie!"

2.  Looking For A New Love - Jody Watley (download)

Jason:  "Looking For A New Love": released 1987.  Terminator 2: Judgment Day released 1991.  So you tell me: is the cold, hard truth that the famous Arnold line "Hasta la vista, baby" was a direct quote from a Jody Watley song?  I mean, I know Jody Watley wasn’t the first to say it…or was she?  Was she the first one to use it in a way that would affect popular culture?

As I mentioned in a previous Attack, Watley left the group Shalamar (isn’t that the last word in the Family Ties theme song?) in 1984 and began her solo career with this track in late 1986.  Although the song peaked here at #2 (damn you, U2!  Damn you, Cutting Crew), it still remains one of the biggest hits of 1987, and I love it.  I pretty much love anything Jody Watley released on her first two solo albums.  However, I gotta be honest - she’s looking kinda freaky these days.

1.  With Or Without You - U2

Jason:  See the stone set in your thighs, see the blah blah blah zzzzzz.  I’m betting I’m in the minority here, but I just can’t bring myself to like U2 as much as I want to, or as much as I’m supposed to.  This would probably make for a pretty good discussion all by itself, separate from this post.  I own U2 albums, I have the hits collection, but yet when a U2 song comes on my iPod or the radio, I skip or change the dial.  That pretty much includes this song.  I’m not saying it’s not a pretty song.  I’m not saying the lyrics aren’t great lyrics.  I’m just saying that I think it’s overrated.

Either way, when "With Or Without You" reached #1 the week prior, it became the first U2 single to do better in the States than in Europe, where it stalled at #4.  It also was the band’s first #1 in America.  The follow-up single, "I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For," also reached #1, but they haven’t had another chart-topper on the Hot 100 since.  The closest they’ve come is "Desire," peaking at #3.

And that’ll do it for this week!  Thanks again to Kurt, Robert and Mike for jumping in at the last minute and making this entry possible!  Have a great holiday weekend and see you next time!

Not Chartless!

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

Scratch that, reverse it:  we’ll be Chart Attackin’ this week!  Look for it to go live a bit later - either Friday afternoon or Saturday morning at the latest - and featuring some guest attackin’ from a few people who stepped in to assist during my busy week.

Tomorrow!

Chartless!

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

It pains me to say so, but there will be no CHART ATTACK! this Friday.  Long story short:  busy week at work, rehearsals for two different bands and a play, and any free nights this week were spent listening to Christopher Cross and that god-awful Lou Reed song.  See?  When Lou Reed’s involved, we all get punished.

Have a wonderful Memorial Day weekend, and I’ll see you next week for more Mellow Gold and CHART ATTACK!-y goodness!