Thursday, June 25, 2020

The 1980 Listening Post - Paul McCartney - McCartney II

Paul McCartney - McCartney II


#192
by Aaron Conte
May 16 1980
Paul McCartney
McCartney II
Genre: Rock
Allen’s Rating: 3 out of 5
Aaron’s Rating: 4 out of 5

Allen’s Highlights:
Coming Up

Aaron’s Highlights:
Coming Up
Temporary Secretary 
Waterfalls 
Front Parlour 

 Before there were Snoop sized splifs, there were McCartney sized joints. "Macca" as he is known to his contemporaries and people of a certain age, was and is a proponent of the miracle drug; the wacky weed, the Mary G Wanna, dope, grass, sativa and indica, all of which make an appearance on this record. Calling it "McCartney II" already seems like a bit of a stoner move. Dude, you left The Beatles, made a self-titled solo album then released supposedly solo albums under the monikers "Paul and Linda McCartney" as well as "Wings", so...to call this your second solo album just makes me feel stupid and high. Wait... For anyone who knows some John Lennon solo stuff, this venture into new technological territory sounds tame. This is McCartney's first release of the eighties decade so I know it was highly anticipated as well as especially scrutinized. John had put his own primal scream therapy to vinyl! What would Paul do? A sound effects record that featured bong hits, coughing and sirens? Almost. Side one invites you in immediately with the classic sugary pop he does so well. "Coming Up" will always cheer me up, was the only song you would know, and I'll drop this in right here, is another instance where Paul plays every instrument on the record. So even if I hated this album, or even if you hate it, I think it must be respected as another great recording in Paul McCartney history. Just as the listener settles in after that lead off track, Paul pulls a hard left, careens off the road, throws a blindfold on you and blasts through the bumpy woods.  "Temporary Secretary", the infamous mind bender that was never played live until 2017, starts off with computer beeps and boops, odd base notes, a drum machine, acoustic guitar and that familiar off-sounding vocal used in some later Beatle tunes. Seems as though he plays around with a fairytale/kid song style here. You can almost hear the record label people, and his public relations team shifting uncomfortably in their seats. "On the Way" begins with him counting off the tune. This is where you may settle back down as it sounds like very familiar "Ram" era McCartney territory. In fact, all of side one could be out takes from that time. Studio driven, analog tape, simple and basic song structures, him playing all the instruments in his bathroom or bedroom. Intimate, short and sweet. "Waterfalls" just breaks your heart in the classic lovely McCartney way. Rhodes piano, synth strings, no new tech here. Whatever you conjure up in your mind as you listen, he takes you for the most gentle floating let down. This song gets four out of five tissues. TLC circa 1994 most certainly knew this. "Nobody Knows" is another simple homemade track. Mistakes left in, background noise, not a thrilling piece of musical art, but if you're a fan, you recognize the familiar old-timey tricks here. More evidence that he may have been pulling from early seventies back log of unused material. B-sides on the A-side routine that only a Beatle can pull off. Side two is where I'm positive he worried people. It begins with "Front Parlour" (English spelling 'natch). Pure newfound techno here and not to be redundant but it's good. Paul's accountants may have marveled at the amount spent at Radio Shack, and Sam Goodie. Just simple programming. Let's honest, he knew about Genesis, Kraftwerk, and most certainly Eno by this time. He had a road map even if we didn't think so. "Summers Day Song" is next. If a song on this record could be called air-less, this would be the one. Almost like an exercise in writing a very British introduction to maudlin funeral music. Fake flutes don't help either. Lyric, "Someone sleeping through a bad dream.." could be a clue to what was going on here. "Frozen Jap". Curious title Paulie. Not sure I appreciate it. Drum machine beats with a slightly far eastern melody. No lyric. Note to self: he was banned from performing in Japan since 1966 and January 1980 was going to be the first time since then that he would be allowed back in to play. If only they found a better hiding spot for the half pound of weed he was carrying, maybe this would have been called "I Love Japan". "Bogey Music". Stoned. Seems McCartney had a tendency to "bogart" the joint. Nothing to see here. "Darkroom". A room where one develops material. Two and half minutes of waiting really, and then you step out of the black and red room wondering why anyone would want to do that to themselves when you can just have some one develop your film for you. "One of These Days" finishes this "second solo record". A touch of "Blackbird" acoustic guitar melody, a surprisingly candid lyric, "one of these days when my feet are on the ground, I'm gonna look around and see, see what's right.." My Beatleologist, insider family friends have told me they were "off" Sir Paul back then and that he wasn't being a very good person to a few choice employees. I don't pretend to know what he was up to but it sounds like he was beginning to see it for himself. Everyone is always looking to knock down the king of the hill, and Paulie wasn't always the king but he did make many trips to the mountain to wind up on top. This is not a fantastic album, but it is fantastic that he is a man who has always always always remained open to possibilities and ideas to the point that it took him and three of his friends to become game changers in an industry that is notoriously stiff and surprisingly conservative. Pop music was changed forever by his first band. This record didn't help change pop music nor did it emerge as an example to follow; in fact it probably was more an example of someone following rather than leading, possibly accounting for the backlash and venom that was thrown at him from his base. This album still went to number one in the UK and to number three in the US so...put that in your peace pipe and smoke it boomer.

The 1980 Listening Post - Gary Moore - G-Force

Gary Moore - G-Force

#191
May 30 1980
Gary Moore
G-Force
Genre: Guitar Hero
2.5 out of 5



I loved G Force the tv show. It was like Voltron. Actually, it was more like Power Rangers and I think one stole the idea from the other. Only G Force was a bunch of action pilots who dressed like birds and converge their vehicles to make giant…you get the picture. 
We used to watch it after school.
It was anime trash but we loved it. 
This G Force is more trash by the ego that is known as Gary Moore. 
It’s what Paul Stanley would sound like if he went pure Power Rock and Gene Simmons wasn’t around. 
Except that I believe Paul would sound better than this pap. 
Everything on this screams that it should be better than it is but it’s so bloated and self important that it’s impossible to enjoy.
The band can play. “Dancin’” proves that. But it’s a lot of no there there. 




The 1980 Listening Post - The Distractions - Nobody's Perfect

The Distractions - Nobody's Perfect

#190
May 1980
The Distractions
Nobody’s Perfect
Genre: New Wave
3.5 out of 5


Highlights:
Waiting for Lorraine
Untitled


If I had a record player, the kind with the long stem that encouraged us all ruin our records by stacking them, I would put this platter right on top of New Clear Days by The Vapors. 
This is a neat little collection of pained love songs of dejection (among others) with tight hooks and great arrangements. 
It’s actually got a bunch of surprising turns, it never falters and was constantly surprising me. I could hear the future in a lot of it, like “Leave You to Dream” but also that angular post-punk Rezillos sounding “Paracetamol Paralysis”, but all too often the album falls either lyrically or melodically short. Too bad, there’s a lot of potential here. Trouble is, they don’t know if they are Paisley Revival, Jangle Pop, New Wave, or what. And I’m left wondering if I’m listening to a playlist of a bunch of bands. 
Sigh. 

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfcKOJrXCTM&list=PLlvn8uktX5LsUZM2GoTxWdNTRWsTrvMWy

The 1980 Listening Post - Devo - Freedom of Choice

Devo - Freedom of Choice


#189
May 1980
by Steve Caisse
Devo
Freedom Of Choice
Allen’s Rating: 4.5 out of 5
Steve’s Rating: 4 out of 5

Allen’s Highlights:
Girl U Want
It’s Not Right
Whip It
Ton O’Love
Freedom of Choice

Steve’s Highlights:
Whip It
Gates Of Steel
Freedom Of Choice
Girl U Want

“Freedom of choice Is what you got … Freedom from choice Is what you want”

Reviewed by Steve Caisse

I have a distinct memory of exercising my freedom of choice when I bought a K-Tel album for the purpose of getting a copy of “Whip It”.  I still think it’s a fantastic piece of pop craft.  It has a great hook, ear candy in the arranging, it makes you want to move, and it has lyrics that are easy learn and fun to mimic.   It’s got it all going on.  That being said, I never explored Devo beyond this song.  I casually know a few others but do not have a proper Devo album in my collection.  And that’s a shame because all the things that make “Whip It” such a great record can be found throughout the rest of the album. 

Other highlights include “Girl U Want”.  It has a similar feel to “My Sharona” with choppy, angular rhythms and an octave bounce in the main riff.  It is the next most obvious radio hit on the album.  The title track is also a real standout with a driving rhythm and a good guitar to synth ratio.  The lyric perfectly sums up the Devo aesthetic with a critique of Americans relinquishing their freedom for consumerism.  But the song that really caught my ear is “Gates Of Steel”.  It’s Devo meets power pop and was an immediate add to my regular playlist.  It’s also the one song where the guitar really takes the spotlight from the synthesizer.  I wish more of the album let the guitar shine. When it does it brings life to the mechanized synth work that dominates the arranging.

Overall you get 12 short and punchy new wave tunes that encapsulate what most people associate with Devo – geeky synth pop, often with a satirical or ironic message, and played by guys donning red flower pots. It’s not as guitar driven as I like my music, but had more guitar than I expected.   There are no obvious bad tunes, but the four highlighted really stand out among the others. The rest are standard Devo fare so your mileage will vary depending on your love of listening to synthesizers.  One other note – the mastering on this album is real uneven.  Some tracks are loud and crisp and others dull and lifeless.  I checked a few sources and it was that way everywhere.   Someone should whip that – and whip it good. This album is more than worthy of sounding the best it can.

https://open.spotify.com/album/6UsP4NQ9K4L4Nqxj0Qis41?si=cclom-FiTAeTe4SzGW23qA

The 1980 Listening Post - Telex - Neurovision

Telex - Neurovision


#188
May 1980
Telex
Neurovision
Genre: SynthPop
2.75 out of 5


Requisite 80s cover: “Dance To The Music” by Sly Stone. I’ll say this: it sounds like it was done by robots and makes me think of “We Are the Robots” by Kraftwerk and I like this better than that song. 


There are a handful of bands that perfectly exemplify what people think the 80s are all about. The sound of day-glo and pastel shapes. Completely impractical glasses with slits like window shades that are imPOSsible to see through. Rudimentary computer graphics and cut up sweat shirts and sweatbands. So many sweatbands. 
M’s “Pop Muzik” sounds like that. The Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star”. Devo. The Cars. 
And Telex. 
Telex SMELLS like “80s”. When it was pretending to not be disco but it really was disco. 
I’ve said it before: It’s impossible to hate Telex. I can’t see myself ever loving them, but hate them? No. I want to shoot them into space as an example of a small window into a smaller window of pop culture that came to represent an entire decade when it really only represents a couple years. 

The 1980 Listening Post - Graduate - Acting My Age

Graduate - Acting My Age


#187
May 1980 LISTENING POST DISCOVERY
Graduate
Acting My Age
Genre: Power Pop
4.25 out of 5



Highlights:
Acting My Age
Shut Up
Watching Your World
Love That is Bad
Julie Julie


Graduate was the opening band for Judie Tzuke in 1980.
Oh and..what else…? 
Lemme check my notes…

Oh, yeah. 
Graduate is Roland Orzibal and Curt Smith’s first band! Umm..wha…?
I was not expecting to learn that Tears for Fears basically started off as a New Wave Power Pop outfit. 

Ok, how are the songs?

Umm…great? I even like the sole Smith penned track, “Sick and Tired”. I’m not versed enough in T4Fs to know what his contribution was to their oeuvre but it’s a fine little angular New Waver with a terrific synth solo instead of a lead guitar which suggests the direction he and Roland might be headed in a couple years. 
In fact, the whole album is like two sounds fighting each other for dominance as I could expect, sometimes sounding like Housemartins (Which I hear on “Ever Met a Day”), then like Cheap Trick with keyboards (“Shut Up”) and then other times like Beatles adherents. This makes sense, these guys are 19 years old and still finding their voices. If you’re 19 in 1980 you had the Beatles injected into your veins but came of age during the prog-rock 70s. And that’s what is coming out here. A bit confused but also pretty damned self-assured. 
This is one of those records that you think is about to let you down and, dammit, it just doesn’t. I thought it might mete out at 3.75 but, then after, “Love That is Bad” and “Julie Julie” it vaulted into the 4s. 


the 1980 Listening Post - Elton John - 21 at 33

Elton John - 21 at 33


#186
By Hector Marin
Elton John
21 at 33
Genre: Pop Rock

Allen’s Rating: 3 out of 5
Hector’s Rating: 2 out of 5


Allen’s Highlights:
Little Jeannie 


Elton John's 21 at 33 could easily have just been called "B sides" Or let’s jam 21 albums down your throat in a short period of time. The fact that he was on his 21st album by the age of 33 lends to the belief he was just churning out albums to satisfy a record company but not his fans. Elton has been brilliant with many of his songs over the decade, but tis fell short , by a lot. I couldn't even find one song worthy of hearing a second time. The melodies were unmoving and the lyrics pedestrian. We are lucky to know this was not his norm. I would be more forgiving if this was just him being experimental with his style and going outside his comfort zone, but again, to me this seemed like the B side of his more enjoyable hits we've grown to love and appreciate. Rating it a 2. I found not one song worthy of being distinguished as the best of the album

https://open.spotify.com/album/6di4cgOMxTkS0tUx5l07WW?si=J3i1BzhVSiecHnNfO4xnQQ

The 1980 Listening Post - Judie Tzukie - Sports Car

Judie Tzukie - Sports Car


#185
May 5 1980
Judie Tzuke
Sports Car
Genre: MOR Pop
2.5 out of 5



Not quite the songstress like Carole King, nor possessing the pipes of Linda Ronstadt or the personality of Kim Carnes, the wispy sultriness of Olivia Newton-John is Judie Tzuke. But that’s where she lives. Infinitely better than Grace Slick, not as good as Stevie Nicks. 
I have nothing else to offer. 
This isn’t “soft rock” until it is and then it’s what I would expect a Kiki Dee record to sound like. 


The 1980 Listening Post - Dalek I (aka Dalek I Love You) - Compass Kum'pas

Dalek I (aka Dalek I Love You) - Compass Kum'pas


#184
May 24 1980 LISTENING POST DISCOVERY
Dalek I (aka Dalek I Love You)
Compass Kum’pas
Genre: Technew Wave
4.25 out of 5

Highlights:
The World
Dalek I Love You
A Suicide
Heat


Requisite 80s Cover: “You Really Got Me” by The Kinks. A terrific, stripped down, minimalist sketch that is a prefect representation of what the era was about. Put it in the books with Devo’s “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”. It’s nearly perfect. 


I loved Doctor Who. Well, I loved Tom Baker’s Doctor. An then I never keyed back in. I also really loved the opening theme. That theremin sounding Synth that took us to other worlds and inside the TARDIS, which is the greatest science fiction invention of all time. 
That’s right here on the opening track, “The World”. And it’s delicious. Listening to this on the heels of Suicide…this is what that record should have sounded like but, obviously Rev and Vega have about as much sense of humor and awareness of a sense of ridiculousness as Ric Ocasek does. 
It was on “Trapped” that I realized that these guys are working from a larger picture. When they shout “You really got me!” they are advancing the cover of what’s coming and it’s amidst a weirdly lovely relationship song of failure. Which renders the Kinks song a…memory? It’s out of time with the album and Doctor Who was a Time Lord. 
This album is a kick. And once again Chris Hughes, the secret sauce that made Adam and the Ants what they were, is on this thing. Where’s his biography? I wanna know more about that guy. 
I didn’t know this but, the Daleks would go on to help found The Teardrop Explodes. 

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSC6Qucfp2k&list=PLlvn8uktX5LtJbFO54cuISLbRapj5Wu6m

The 1980 Listening Post - The English Beat - I Just Can't Stop it

The English Beat - I Just Can't Stop It

#183
by Brian San Marco
The English Beat
I Just Can’t Stop It
Genre: Ska, Mod – I was never really sure what that meant.  Modern?  Wasn’t New wave modern at the time?
Allen’s Rating: 4.5 out of 5 After group consideration, it has been bumped to a 5
Brian’s Rating 4.75 our of 5 stars – minus .25 for being a victim of 80’s recording styles
**

Allen’s Highlights:
Mirror in the Bathroom
Best Friend

Brian’s Highlights: 
Hand’s Off She’s Mine
Ranking Full Stop
Whine and Grine/Stand Down Margaret

I feel like there are two types of people in this world.  Those who like Ska and those who don’t.  I happen to be one that does.  At least most Ska.  At least THIS Ska.  The English Beat came around when there was magic in the air for reggae and Ska. These sounds started influencing rock music in the years prior, but it was the English Beat who took it to the next level.  They influenced a generation of 80s kids and were a trailblazers who along with KROQ radio influenced those same kids to dress a certain way and listen to a whole new wave of music.
As soon as I heard Hand’s Off, She’s Mine”, I was taken back to the beginning of the KROQ days in Los Angeles.  The English Beat helped build KROQ into a powerhouse of modern music and then sustain them as the influence of The Beat grew and redeveloped into acts I loved almost equally: General Public and The Fine Young Cannibals.

Songs like “Mirror In the Bathroom”, “Hand’s off, She’s Mine”, and “Can’t Get Used to Losing You” tent pole an album that makes you move one way or another.  These are real players and real instruments through and through.  “Hand’s Off” reminds me of being a kid, steel drums and all.  But honestly, it’s the second half of the record that really spotlights the intricacy and diversity of their sound.  The 4-on-the-floor Ska of “Twist and Crawl” and The Tears of a Clown” lead into the backbeat reggae of “Rough Rider”.  By “Whine and Grine”, I’m passing the doobie, and then the dance party starts all over again.  Looking back on it, I understand the influence it had on me as a player and a stoner.

https://open.spotify.com/album/08zjJfP4f6cXGxscvztbvh?si=Q_LdKVO1TNGrznrWmVj_gw