Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Rewind -- November 5, 1977

Here's another entry from this blog's first year, which has been rebooted to match the current format.

Seven songs debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 this week. However, although only five made the Top 40, the other two weren't exactly duds; one was a multi-week #1 on the country charts and the other was a song that had already gone to #1 three years earlier.

The first time around, I wasn't yet featuring any of the past issues of Billboard. So here's the November 5, 1977 edition. The full Hot 100 list can be found on page 108. An article on page 10 tells that the Electric Light Orchestra's LP Out of the Blue was "leaked" (the magazine's quotes, not mine) to radio a week early. On page 16, Paul Grein delves into the upsurge of songs by female soloists. And page 54 combines my two passions...Linda Ronstadt is shown singing the National Anthem before Game 3 of the World Series.

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Andy Gibb - "(Love is) Thicker Than Water" (Not available as MP3)

(Debuted #89, Peaked #1, 29 Weeks on the Chart)



Coming on the heels of his debut chart single -- and #1 smash hit -- "I Just Want to Be Your Everything," Andy Gibb was poised to ride this song to #1 as well. In Andy Gibb's case, having The Bee Gees as his brothers, his writers and his producers didn't hurt him at all. Neither did his record company, RSO, which held a hammerlock on Billboard's #1 position between December 24, 1977 and May 13, 1978. In that time, six consecutive songs from RSO held the #1 spot: Gibb's single, four tracks from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack and  Player's "Baby Come Back."

(Adding this part here and then moving on...there have been rumors that the manager involved in ranking the hits on Billboard during this era had a close relationship with RSO and may have "helped" the label's success. Whether it's truth or fiction doesn't change the official record, so I'll bring it up here for the sake of completeness and go back to the song).

All three of Andy Gibbs' first charted singles hit #1, and "Thicker" was probably the weakest of the three. Though it has great support from his brothers and sounds great, it lacks that rhythm that propelled his earlier hit "I Just Want to Be Your Everything" and the catchy bridge or orchestration that made "Shadow Dancing" one of the biggest hits of 1978. That said, it's a shame that much of his material isn't more available. His CDs are out of print (and expensive to pick up -- even used -- on Amazon).

Stevie Wonder - "As" Stevie Wonder - Songs in the Key of Life - As

(Debuted #81, Peaked #36, 14 Weeks on the Chart)



"As" preceded "Another Star" on Side 4 of Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life LP but followed it as a single. Like "Another Star," it only barely made the Top 40 (peaking at #36). Sometimes called "Always" by listeners because the word "As" really isn't prominent in the song (it appears at the beginning of two lines, but "always" punctuates many lines and "until" begins many more lines), the song featured a keyboard solo by Herbie Hancock.

This was the fourth and final single from Songs in the Key of Life, perhaps Wonder's most ambitious LP. One song from the album ("Isn't She Lovely") gained a lot of airplay but never was released as a single. After "As" was dropped from radio playlists fans would have to wait two more years for the next Stevie Wonder LP.


Tom Petty & the Hearbreakers - "Breakdown" Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers - Breakdown

(Debuted #90, Peaked #40, 17 Weeks on the Chart)



Tom Petty is now a very well-known figure in music, but he was a new face in 1977 and this was his debut chart single. Even though it only topped out at #40, the song was a solid entry and still gets play on classic rock stations today. As a song, it featured a stripped-down sound: the lyrics were simple ("it's all right in you love me, it's all right if you don't...") and Mike Campbell's guitar really stands out. While Petty has pointed to The Byrds, Bob Dylan and psychedelic music as his influences, "Breakdown" is more in line with roots rock (even if it was amped up). Though Petty's fame was still a couple years away -- the 1979 LP Damn the Torpedoes would be considered a breakthrough -- "Breakdown" was a way of announcing that Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers had arrived.


Santa Esmeralda - "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" Santa Esmeralda - Santa Esmeralda - Hits Anthology - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood

(Debuted #91, Peaked #15, 19 Weeks on the Chart)



I miss XM Radio's Channel 83 ("Chrome"). It disappeared right after the provider merged with Sirius and combined the two companies' lineups in November 2008. Though the channel sometimes was something of an acquired taste, sometimes there would be some great stuff streaming there. Once, I had to drive an hour away from home for a job interview. While I was on the long stretch of interstate that went through a National Forest (and had no exits for many miles), they played the extended version of Santa Esmeralda's "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" and I found myself literally out of the woods before I knew it.

For those who remember "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" as a 1965 Animals song might have found Santa Esmeralda's Latin twist to be odd, but the song had originally been written for Nina Simone to be played in a Latin style. By mixing the song's Latin roots with The Animals' urgency and setting it to a disco beat, the song was perfect for the dance floor. It would peak at the same #15 position that The Animals reached in 1965; however, a follow-up single remaking "House of the Rising Sun" (another classic best remembered from The Animals) wasn't as good or as successful.

Like many disco "acts," Santa Esmeralda was essentially a studio group fronted by Leroy Gomez (an American who was living in Europe). Despite sounding like they could be from New York or Miami, Santa Esmeralda called Paris home. The fact that their biggest hit doesn't sound a lot like standard Eurodisco has a lot to do with its continued popularity. Unfortunately, the available MP3s on Amazon are for re-recorded versions. A 10-minute version of the original is available as part of the Kill Bill, Vol. 1 soundtrack; however, the entire MP3 album must be purchased in order to get it. The video above features an extended version.

Diana Ross - "Gettin' Ready for Love" Diana Ross - Diana Ross: The Motown Anthology - Gettin' Ready for Love

(Debuted #82, Peaked #27, 13 Weeks on the Chart)



The 1970s were hit-or-miss for Diana Ross when it came to chart fortunes. After reaching the Top 10 consistently with The Supremes during the 1960s (and hitting #1 12 times), Ross's solo career was more uneven once she left the trio. Beginning in 1970, she would go through a decade-long stretch where her pop singles either hit #1 or missed the Top 10 altogether. The fourth and final 1970s #1 hit would be "Love Hangover," a song that gave Ross an entry into the burgeoning disco scene. When Motown released Ross's Baby It's Me LP in 1977, the first song on the record was "Gettin' Ready for Love," another chance to return to the goldmine exploited by "Love Hangover."

While the song isn't terrible, it is another way of pointing out how Diana Ross was becoming less of an important part of Motown's universe. While she still possessed a great voice, her material wasn't the more edgy stuff her labelmates Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder were putting out. And the results were evident: Gaye and Wonder enjoyed #1 hits in 1977 and this song peaked at #27. For Diana Ross, the next important part of her career came after she left Motown in 1980, paired up with producers Nile Rogers and Bernard Edwards and recorded the material her fans knew she was capable of all along.


The Kendalls - "Heaven's Just a Sin Away" The Kendalls - The Kendalls: 20 Greatest Hits - Heaven's Just a Sin Away

(Debuted #87, Peaked #69, 7 Weeks on the Chart)



The Kendalls were a father-and-daughter duo who enjoyed a handful of Top 10 hits on the country charts during the 1970s and '80s. Three of those hits reached #1 and this one was the biggest, spending 4 weeks on top in an era where multi-week country #1s were becoming rare. The massive country success didn't cross over to the pop side, as "Heaven's Just a Sin Away" peaked at #69 and was the group's only chart entry.

Without focusing on the "creepiness" factor of hearing a father and daughter sing "cheatin' songs" together, this song is absolutely catchy. Daughter Jeannie has a great voice, father Royce handles the harmony well and a funky-sounding clavinet drives the song from the speakers into the deepest recesses of the listener's brain. Even for people who don't care much for country music, this song offers a lot.


Olivia Newton-John - "I Honestly Love You" Olivia Newton-John - Gold: Olivia Newton-John - I Honestly Love You

(Debuted #85, Peaked #48, 9 Weeks on the Chart)



The last song to debut this week was familiar to listeners, since it had already been a #1 hit back in 1974. When Olivia Newton-John's American label MCA released her Greatest Hits LP, they re-released what had been her most successful single to that point. This time around, the single stalled at #48. Fortunately for "Livvy," her fans would get more chances to hear her sing. The movies Grease and Xanadu and a monster hit called "Physical" would ensure that for the next five years.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Rewind -- October 23, 1971

Here's another entry from this blog's first year that has been revisited and reworked. In fact, an egregious error the first time around has been fixed...it's part of what made me go back and revisit some of these older entries.

Remember the old Schoolhouse Rock song "Three is a Magic Number"? It applies here; Of the ten new songs that first appeared on Billboard's Hot 100 this week, only three made it into the Top 40. All three were Top 10 hits, and all peaked at...Number 3!

The first time around, I wasn't yet featuring links to the archive of Billboard magazines over at Google Books. Here's the October 23, 1971 edition The full Hot 100 list can be found on page 66. A couple of front page articles laud new legislation aimed at curbing piracy. I am sure glad to see how well that worked...

MP3's at CDUniverse.com

Bread - "Baby, I'm-a Want You" Bread - Baby I'm a Want You - Baby I'm-a Want You

(Debuted #77, Peaked #3, 12 Weeks on the Chart)



Bread is one of those those 1970s acts that fans either enjoy or loathe. Despite their well-crafted studio work, their top-notch musicianship and solid pop- and country-influenced writing, there are a lot of people who see the group as a product of the huge "middle of the road" sound truck (with Chicago, The Carpenters and others taking turns driving) that rolled over a lot of late 1960s groups that were experimental and progressive. Their penchant for soft, heart-felt love tunes didn't really endear the band to music fans who were more enamored of blues-based rockers.

This tune, which reached #3, is familiar as one of Bread's best-known hits. While many make fun of the title and its poor grammar, it's managed to find a niche on oldies radio, adult contemporary and also as a staple of "elevator music." It's inoffensive and blends well into the background, which is probably the way it was intended to be. That's probably why it's called "middle of the road."


Jimi Hendrix - "Dolly Dagger" Jimi Hendrix - First Rays of the New Rising Sun - Dolly Dagger

(Debuted #89, Peaked #74, 7 Weeks on the Chart)



Jimi Hendrix was considered to be a musical genius. His death on September 18, 1970 may have stopped him from creating any new songs but it didn't end his career. Though he only issued a few LPs during his lifetime, he had recorded a lot of stuff that hadn't made it onto those albums and much of it was placed onto a series of posthumous records. The second, called Rainbow Bridge, appeared in 1971. Among the standout tunes was "Dolly Dagger," which was released as a single but only reached #74. That said, many fans don't place a great deal of importance on peak hits of chart singles and in Hendrix's case they're right: despite all his influence and his legend, he only charted one Top 40 hit ("All Along the Watchtower" in 1968).

"Dolly Dagger" is a lot more accessible than much of Hendrix's late-period (that is, after the breakup of The Jimi Hendrix Experience). It has a great guitar line and less of the bluesy groove and experimentation that is found in much of Hendrix's later work.


The Bee Gees - "Don't Want to Live Inside Myself" Bee Gees - Trafalgar - Don't Wanna Live Inside Myself

(Debuted #83, Peaked #53, 7 Weeks on the Chart)



Today, fans know that The Bee Gees were the most successful act of the 1970s. With nine #1 singles, multiplatinum success and their picture on the top-selling LP of the 1970s, it's easy to forget that most of that success began with 1975's Main Course LP and the single "Jive Talkin'." From 1970-'74, the brothers Gibb were still trying to repeat the success of the late 1960s.

When their Trafalgar LP came out in 1971, they were still trying to find a sound that would lead to better sales. The first single was "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?" and became the group's first #1 hit. However, beginning with the Robin Gibb-sung "Don't Want to Live Inside Myself," they would wait another four years and a move to Miami before their next Top 10 record and the burgeoning disco movement, which helped propel their phenomenal success for the rest of the 1970s.


Traffic - "Gimme Some Lovin' Part 1" Traffic - Welcome to the Canteen (Live) - Gimme Some Lovin'

(Debuted #90, Peaked #68, 7 Weeks on the Chart)



Traffic was between contracts. After success with John Barleycorn Must Die, they had recorded The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys and were convinced it was a hit. However, their old contract (which paid them less) was still in effect for one more LP. Rather than letting their new LP be burdened by an old arrangement, the group toured and recorded songs for a live LP to fill out their contractual obligation. That LP was Welcome to the Canteen, which is considered a Traffic album even though the cover lists the individual band members instead.

The LP closed with a 9-minute rendition of "Gimme Some Lovin'," a song Traffic vocalist Steve Winwood had popularized during the 1960s as a member of The Spencer Davis Group. For the 45, the song was cut into two parts. Considering the fact that Traffic was making their "live" record to get out of a contract, the sound quality is lacking -- the vocals are nearly drowned out by instruments -- but the music is exceptional.


The Chi-Lites - "Have You Seen Her" The Chi-Lites - Brunswick Top 40 R&B Singles 1966-1975 - Have You Seen Her

(Debuted # 60, Peaked #3, 13 Weeks on the Chart)



Though "Oh Girl" was the group's only #1 pop hit, "Have You Seen Her" may have been their best tune. Both songs are excellent, but in my mind, "Have You Seen Her" gets an edge because of its story. With doo-wop vocals behind him, the song's narrator tells about how he spends days sitting around and keeping himself occupied after his love walked out on him. Painting a picture of sitting on a park bench telling jokes to neighborhood kids, he's really convincing himself that his lady is coming back to him and he simply needs to wait for her return. Rather than resorting to the gut-wrenching, big-throated vocals often employed by R&B singers who are dealing with lost love and broken hearts, singer Eugene Record employs a matter-of fact, low-key delivery but the sadness is still there. It's one of those songs that doesn't grow old even after 40 years.


Glen Campbell & Anne Murray - "I Say a Little Prayer/By the Time I Get to Phoenix" Anne Murray & Glen Campbell - Anne Murray-Glen Campbell - Medley: I Say a Little Prayer / By the Time I Get to Phoenix

(Debuted #88, Peaked #81, 5 Weeks on the Chart)



Glen Campbell and Anne Murray were both artists who successfully crossed over between country and pop. Doing an LP together, they recorded a duet medley of the Bacharach-David tune "I Say a Little Prayer" (made popular by Dionne Warwick) and Jimmy Webb's "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" (which Campbell himself enjoyed as a smash hit). However, the medley was blended: Murray sang "I Say a Little Prayer" while Campbell's handled his lines from "Phoenix" at the same time. Not a big hit (#81, though it did reach #40 on the country chart) but an interesting concept.



Rose-Colored Glass - "If it's Alright With You" (Not Available as MP3)

(Debuted #97, Peaked #95, 4 Weeks on the Chart)



When I first wrote this entry, I committed two errors. First, I explained that I hadn't yet hear this song, and corrected that rather quickly. Second, I said this:
Rose-Colored Glass was a group produced by the man who popularized the comic "break-in" record, Dickie Goodman.

This is wrong...I confused Rose-Colored Glass with The Glass Bottle. I never got around to correcting that, so I'm doing that now. The group was a short-lived group led by Bob Caldwell, who enjoyed two hits on the Hot 100 before breaking up. This was the second and has a real 1970s sound to it that should have been a bigger hit than it was.

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band - "Imagine" John Lennon - Imagine (Remastered) - Imagine

(Debuted #20, Peaked #3, 9 Weeks on the Chart)



A lot has been written about "Imagine." I can't say anything here that can add to what's already out there, and to call it a classic tune would be an understatement. It was certainly Lennon's best-known solo record, one that was equal to anything he wrote for The Beatles. Despite lyrics that are often considered simplistic and utopian, the song (accented by its simple piano line) is optimistic and forward-looking. Coming at a time where the Vietnam War was winding down and the dissent and violence that marked the late 1960s was running its course, the suggestion to imagine a better place for the future was refreshing.


James Brown - "My Part/Make it Funky (Part 3)" James Brown - The Singles, Vol. 7: 1970-1972 - My Part/Make It Funky, Pt. 3

(Debuted #93, Peaked #68, 6 Weeks on the Chart)



James Brown was the most prolific singles artist of the 1970s. With 38 songs making the Hot 100, he had more than any other act (Chicago, the act in second place, had only 27). What's even more amazing is that the vast majority of those songs hit during the first half of the decade. Had Brown's career on the pop charts not declined after 1975, there's no telling how many hits the man could have had. Despite the large number of Hot 100 hits, Brown's name isn't often mentioned among the top hitmakers of the 1970s because only 19 of those songs made the Top 40 and none reached the Top 10. However, as an influence, his legend is undisputed.

"My Part/Make it Funky (Part 3)" was one of nine Hot 100 singles the Godfather of Soul charted in 1971. It's undeniably James Brown, with the signature sound, Brown's vocal interaction with the music, Fred Wesley's horns and Bobby Byrd interjecting. There's even a tip of Brown's hat to B.B. King, which is a great compliment indeed.


Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - "You've Lost That Loving Feeling" Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway - You've Lost That Loving Feeling

(Debuted #96, Peaked #71, 6 Weeks on the Chart)



"You've Lost That Loving Feeling" was no stranger to the charts (it had been a #1 hit for The Righteous Brothers in 1965). For Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway, however, fans were just getting to know them. As "Loving Feeling" was spending its short six-week stay on the Hot 100, Flack was a relative unknown and Hathaway was best known for an earlier hit called "The Ghetto." As a low-key version of a well-known song, the duo didn't pick up a lot of fans with this single, but that was about to change.

The duo's follow-up "Where is the Love" was a major hit in 1972 and Flack ran off a series of successful singles after that. Hathaway's chart fortunes were different; he wasn't racking up the hits on his own and was fighting a personal battle with depression. After scoring again with another big duet in 1978 called "The Closer I Get to You" Hathaway lost his battle in 1979 when he hell from his hotel apartment in New York City. The death was ruled a suicide and silenced the voice of a young artist who had been poised to become a bright star.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Rewind -- October 14, 1978

Once again, here's an entry from this blog's first year, polished off and given a newer shine. And a few things have been added, as I've learned some more over the past few years.

Eight songs debuted on Billboard's Hot 100 this week, including one that was returning to the chart after falling off a few weeks before. Although only two were Top 10 hits and a couple dropped from sight quickly, all have stories and several had a more lasting influence than chart success (or lack of it) would indicate.

There is a larger archive of Billboard magazines over at Google Books. However, the October 14, 1978 edition is not among the issues there.

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Andy Gibb - "(Our Love) Don't Throw it All Away" (Not Available as MP3)

(Debuted #70, Peaked #9, 18 Weeks on the Chart)



Andy Gibb was on quite a roll. Beginning in 1977 and continuing into the next year, his first three U.S. chart singles made it all the way to #1. All five of his 1970s chart hits made the Top 10, including this one. Being the younger brother of The Bee Gees certainly didn't hurt his career, especially considering that his famous siblings made up one of the hottest acts in the business during that time. Aside from their own music, the Brothers Gibb were prolific writes and producers for other acts as well.

"(Our Love) Don't Throw it All Away" was co-written by Barry Gibb and recorded as a Bee Gees track before being given to Andy for his Shadow Dancing LP. After his version peaked at #9 and was eventually dropped from radio stations' recurrent rotations, the Bee Gees' version would eventually show up late in '79 on their Greatest LP. Listening to Andy Gibb's version followed by that of his brothers, it almost sounds like they used the same track to provide music and backing vocals and merely replaced Barry Gibb's lead with Andy's rendition. However, it's merely a guess on my part since they sound very similar.

Walter Egan - "Hot Summer Nights" Walter Egan - Fundamental Roll / Not Shy - Hot Summer Nights

(Debuted #84, Peaked #55, 7 Weeks on the Chart)



"Hot Summer Nights" was Egan's follow-up to "Magnet & Steel," a song that was all over the radio during the Summer of 1978. Like much of the material on his LP Not Shy, Egan received help from Lindsay Buckingham (his guitar solo on the song is instantly recognizable) and Stevie Nicks. The 45 was a disappointment, only reaching #55, but the song was remade by the group Night in 1979 and was a Top 20 hit. Despite its untimely exit from the chart, "Hot Summer Nights" is worth a listen.



Dan Hartman - "Instant Replay" Dan Hartman - Club Epic, Vol. 3 - Instant Replay

(Debuted #88, Peaked #29, 17 Weeks on the Chart)



The records show this as Dan Hartman's first chart single, but Hartman had been no stranger to the music business. As a member of The Edgar Winter Group, he played on the #1 hit "Frankenstein" and wrote the Top 10 hit "Free Ride." Going solo in 1976, he released a couple of LPs that didn't have any hit singles. In 1978, Hartman decided to jump on the burgeoning disco bandwagon and recorded the Instant Replay album. 

"Instant Replay" was a cross-genre smash. Besides reaching the Pop Top 40, it was also a #1 disco hit, a moderate R&B hit and a Top 10 in the UK. After a few more hits in the 1980s, Hartman went on to write and produce, making records until his death in 1994.

I should also point out that the video above features both future Kiss member Vinnie Vincent and soon-to-be Hall & Oates sideman G.E. Smith on the guitars. This is a little different than what the 1980s would hold in store for them, but when you're a musician you take whatever gigs you can.


Journey - "Lights" Journey - Infinity - Lights

(Debuted #86, Peaked #77, 4 Weeks on the Chart)



A re-entry, one that appeared in the write-up I did on August 16, 2009. The second trip up the charts wasn't as successful as the first; it only reached #77 and dropped off after four weeks. Here's what I wrote the first time it charted:

Before Journey made their mark as 1980s arena rock deities, they were a San Francisco-based band started up by a couple of guys who left Santana. Like Santana, the early incarnation of Journey was a progressive band that experimented with different genres and tended toward extended instrumental breaks. Also like Santana, the group had a revolving door of members with the guitarist (Neal Schon) being the only real mainstay. By the end of the 1970s, the group began putting the pieces together that would lead to multi-platinum success in the next decade: lead singer Steve Perry was brought on board in 1977 and immediately lent his skills to the group by co-writing this song with Schon.

"Lights" is something of a love letter to Journey's home city, with its mention of their beloved "City by the bay." At the time, Journey hadn't yet hit the Top 40 and this wouldn't be the tune to get them there (it peaked at #68). However, it indicated that the jazz-fusion days of the band were over and they were aspiring to make their way via the corporate rock that was beginning to burgeon at the time. They were a couple of LPs, another band member (Jonathan Cain in '81) and an MTV launch away from the Big Time.


Ace Frehley - "New York Groove" Ace Frehley - Kiss: Ace Frehley - New York Groove

(Debuted #87, Peaked #13, 21 Weeks on the Chart)



Hey, while I was mentioning a future Kiss guitarist a couple of songs back...here's the guy he replaced.

How's this for excess? Take an immensely popular group...have all four members record their own "solo" albums...issue all four LPs on the same day (with similarly-themed covers) knowing that fans will buy them. Then, watch only one of the roughly 40 new songs make the Top 40. That's right, only "New York Groove" made the cut; Gene Simmons' "Radioactive" and Paul Stanley's "Hold Me Touch Me" didn't break the Top 40, while Peter Criss's two singles didn't chart at all.

"New York Groove" is a great song and had a respectable chart run, reaching #13 and sticking around for 21 weeks. While it was obviously written as a salute to Frehley's home city (note: it was written by Englishman Russ Ballard and originally recorded by the U.K. band Hello), its guitar riff accents a driving beat provided by the bass and drums. It was an "almost" disco song but had enough guitar to keep Kiss fans from dismissing it as such. Sadly, Kiss's next LP Dynasty didn't do as good a job of hiding the disco beats, especially with "I Was Made For Lovin' You." Fans still shake their heads about Kiss' "disco album."

Frehley would leave Kiss in 1982, but never had any of the solo success that his LP Ace Frehley seemed to suggest.


Eric Clapton - "Promises" Eric Clapton - Backless (Remastered) - Promises

(Debuted #85, Peaked #9, 18 Weeks on the Chart)



"Promises" was the first single off Clapton's forthcoming LP Backless. The LP followed Clapton's highly successful '77 offering Slowhand (and the hits "Lay Down Sally" and "Wonderful Tonight") with a similar style and tone but the material of the new record was considered to be slightly inferior. That wasn't necessarily a problem for "Promises," though. It reached #9 early in 1979.

"Promises" is one of Clapton's less-regarded singles for some odd reason. Perhaps the laid-back shuffle doesn't translate as well with classic rock fans as much as "Layla" or "I Shot the Sheriff," nor does it fit in with adult contemporary types as "Wonderful Tonight." It's a shame, since the song is well-done and the slide guitar hook that matches the chorus is rather catchy.



Michael Henderson - "Take Me I'm Yours" Michael Henderson - The Essential Michael Henderson Vol. 1 - Take Me, I'm Yours

(Debuted #90, Peaked #88, 3 Weeks on the Chart)



"Take Me I'm Yours" is the only single Michael Henderson took into the Hot 100. It didn't stay long either, reaching #88 in its three-week run. Regardless, Henderson was no stranger to music fans. As a bass player, he played with many of Motown's road shows of the 1960s and spent much of the 1970s in Miles Davis's band. Both of Norman Connors' chart singles in 1976 featured Henderson on vocals. One of those tunes, "I Am Your Starship," made the Top 40.

"Take Me I'm Yours" was an effort to lead Henderson (singing here with Rena Scott) into a smooth R&B singer in the burgeoning "Quiet Storm" radio format. As the song starts up, it sounds much like a George Benson tune until Henderson's vocals take over. While he was moderately successful on the R&B charts through his retirement from performing in 1986, success on the pop charts eluded him. However, his bass work has shown up in numerous samples over the years. Henderson's stature as a bassist in the R&B, funk and jazz fusion genres are solid, even if many casual fans aren't aware of his work.



Dan Fogelberg & Tim Weisberg - "The Power of Gold" Dan Fogelberg - Twin Sons of Different Mothers - Power of Gold

(Debuted # 82, Peaked #24, 14 Weeks on the Chart)



As a contradiction to Michael Henderson, Dan Fogelberg is an artist many 1970s music fans are familiar with. His 70s chart success was just as sporadic as Henderson's; Fogelberg had several hit LPs through the decade but only charted two 45s (note: "Longer" was making its way up the charts at the end of 1979, but peaked in 1980). For Fogelberg, the bulk of his success on the Hot 100 came in the early 1980s but he's considered a 1970s artist as well.

After a series of albums in a folk- and country-influenced vein, Fogelberg became interested in learning more about jazz. Rather than simply hiring a jazz band for the studio sessions of his next LP, he collaborated with jazz flautist Tim Weisberg, who co-produced the record. The resulting LP was Twin Sons of Different Mothers, which solidified Fogelberg's musical clout. Even though "The Power of Gold" was the only hit single from the album, it set up the string of hits Fogelberg had with his next releases.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Rewind -- October 14, 1972

Once again, I'm taking an entry from this blog's first year and setting up in a more familiar format. When I first wrote this out, there was no chart information, nor YouTube videos, so I fixed that. I also fixed a few typos I made, too.

Eight songs debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 this week. While two died quick deaths on the chart, four made the Top 40 (and two came close), two made the Top 10 and one was a #1.

Another thing missing the first time around was a link to the Billboard archive over at Google Books. Here's the October 14, 1972 issue for you to read. The full Hot 100 list can be found on page 74. Page 12 has part of an interview with radio icons Don Imus and Robert W. Morgan. It's the middle of a three-part series spread out over several issues, but gives the idea that radio has changed a lot over 40 years, but the personalities really haven't. Especially if you've been part of the industry.

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Betty Wright - "Baby Sitter" Betty Wright - The Essentials: Betty Wright - Baby Sitter

(Debuted #89, Peaked #46, 10 Weeks on the Chart)



This was the follow-up to Wright's big hit "Clean Up Woman," with a similar topic about the "other woman" who was ready to slide in and pounce when her back was turned. Beginning with a lullaby tune played with a guitar (repeated with a harmonica later in the song), the song told about a hot-to-trot 16-year old...which just goes to show that even in 1972, there were songs about promiscuity among teens.

The song has a great soul feel to it, much like a female version of songs Wilson Pickett was doing at the time. It was fun to listen to and better song than a fan would expect from the #46 peak it eventually earned.


National Lampoon - "Deteriorata" Norman Rose - Greatest Hits of the National Lampoon - Deteriorata

(Debuted # 96, Peaked #91, 4 Weeks on the Chart)



You may have remembered the Top 10 hit from 1971 by Les Crane called "Desiderata." It was essentially a spoken-word recording, with Crane reciting a Max Ehrmann poem from 1927 over "inspirational" music while a gospel choir took over the choruses. Some found the song to be a product of a positive-thinking optimism brought about after some scary years in the late 1960s, while others found it to be pretentious garbage that would be a poor excuse for New Age material if it were released today. The people from National Lampoon thought it deserved a send-up.

Their parody version was called "Deteriorata" and was written by comedian Christopher Guest (of Spinal Tap fame, among other achievements). The "song" begins with Melissa Manchester singing the off-kilter take from the original: You are a fluke of the universe, you have no right to be here... The "spoken word part" not only lampoons the original but also tosses offbeat humor into the lyrics: "Know what to kiss...and when"..."For a good time, call 606-4311, ask for Ken"...and finally, "And reflect that whatever misfortune may be your lot, it could only be worse in Milwaukee."

Since hit radio is not always a humorous place despite AM jocks trying to convince us otherwise, the song was only listed for four weeks and never got higher than #91. According to Wikipedia, Les Crane preferred the National Lampoon version over his own hit recording.


The Stylistics - "I'm Stone in Love With You"  The Stylistics - Round 2 - I'm Stone In Love With You

(Debuted #92, Peaked #10, 13 Weeks on the Chart)



If you're a 1970s music fan, you pretty much know what you're going to get with a Stylistics record. Part of the Thom Bell-produced "Philadelphia Sound," all of their hits were ballads featuring the smooth voice of Russell Thompkins, Jr. and were sugar-coated pop confections (made specifically as ear candy to the record-buying public). There was a formula involved: a soaring falsetto over studio musicians, with lyrics that extolled a blissful relationship. Thom Bell's production technique allowed the music to accent Thompkins' vocals without either overpowering the other. Interestingly, once the band split from Bell after 1974, the balance between music and vocals was offset and their U.S. hits suddenly stopped.

There really isn't much to add to the last paragraph that will explain anything additional about "I'm Stone in Love With You." It fit the Bell/Stylistics formula and was a #10 hit. I like it, but I definitely see where others might find it to be way too "syrupy sweet" for their tastes.


Bulldog - "No"  (Not available as an MP3)

(Debuted #91, Peaked #44, 15 Weeks on the Chart)



From the hopeful lyrics of the Stylistics, Bulldog's "No" is an entirely different kind of song about male/female relationships. For all the nostalgia about the "anything goes" aura that was prevalent during the Sexual Revolution, "No" is a song that told the other side of the story: the song's narrator is rejected after a long night of trying to score. It spent 15 weeks on the Billboard chart -- an eternity in '72 unless the song was a huge hit -- but barely missed the Top 40. It really deserved to be a bigger hit than it was. Sadly, Bulldog (founded by two former members of The Rascals) never managed to get another 45 on the national charts again. By 1978 the band's two main members returned as part of the powerpop group Fotomaker and notched a couple more low-charting hits.

Jim Croce - "Operator (That's Not the Way it Feels)"  Jim Croce - You Don't Mess Around With Jim - Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)

(Debuted #78, Peaked #17, 12 Weeks on the Chart)



Last week, I mentioned how Jim Croce's music affected me when I was a kid. A few tears back, as I was playing "Operator" while writing down the rough notes I use when I type out these reviews, my then-11-year old daughter asked me about something she didn't quite understand. She asked why somebody was talking to an operator when he could've just dialed 411. And then she asked about what the line "you can keep the dime" meant. There are few things that make somebody feel older than trying to explain something to somebody who doesn't have the same frame of reference...like the UHF/VHF dials on a TV set, or a TV that didn't come with a remote control, or the spindle adapter that allowed a 45 RPM record to play on an LP player, or even a rotary dial on a telephone. At least she understood that he was at a pay phone.

The thing I love about this song is the story it tells. A man is hoping to contact his former lover after she left him for a friend of his and moved to L.A. Despite asserting he's overcome his pain and moved on with his life, it's obvious he still hasn't come to grips with what happened. At the end of the song, he hangs up the phone without having the courage to make the call. It's a bit of reality that didn't always find its way into Top 40 radio in 1972 (even if it did appear around the same time as Dr. Hook's "Sylvia's Mother," another song that played out over a telephone conversation). As I mentioned last week, it's another case where fans might feel cheated that Croce was taken so young because he had the potential to do so much more.

Considering that "Operator" has been a radio fixture for much longer than Croce's own lifespan, it might surprise fans to know the song wasn't a Top 10 hit. His second chart single, it only reached #17.


The Temptations - "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" The Temptations - My Girl: The Very Best of the Temptations - Papa Was a Rollin' Stone

(Debuted #83, Peaked #1, 16 Weeks on the Chart)



Of all the songs I've reviewed here since beginning this weekly excursion, a few have made me pull out a personal story. Yes, I just finished relating something about Jim Croce (as I did last week); however, "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" has another significance to me. I was born on December 2, 1972, which was a Saturday. Since Saturdays are the "week ending" dates of Billboard charts, that was a day that appears on their charts. And the very day that I was born, the #1 song was "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone."

The song is memorable for its lengthy instrumental opening. Starting with the rhythm section (bass and hi-hat percussion) and soon followed by drums and then a great guitar break, the music builds and sets the song's tone for two minutes until Dennis Edwards is ready to begin singing. Motown's house band, The Funk Brothers, were laying down some grooves that were inspired by both Curtis Mayfield and Miles Davis. The lyrics about an absentee father who was also a fraud and a womanizer didn't sit well with Edwards (whose own father had passed away of "the Third of September," even though the song wasn't written for him originally). The friction between Edwards and writer/producer Norman Whitfield over the song likely helped set up the gruff, almost spiteful vocals. The LP version of the song was twelve minutes long; the single edit was just under seven minutes and still long for many pop stations at that time.

It's a classic, despite the timing.


The Guess Who - "Runnin' Back to Saskatoon" The Guess Who - Live At the Paramount - Runnin' Back to Saskatoon

(Debuted #97, Peaked #96, 3 Weeks on the Chart)



This was one of the few live records to make the Billboard Hot 100. Taken from their LP Live at the Paramount, it was the group's lowest-charting single of the 1970s. Only reaching #96, it was gone from the survey after only three weeks.


Austin Roberts - "Something's Wrong With Me" (Not available as an MP3)

(Debuted #98, Peaked #12, 16 Weeks on the Chart)



Upon first listen, this tune sounds very much like a product of its times. It has that melodramatic "sound" that was a hallmark of '70s pop, complete with the requisite "wah-wah" guitar and brass-and-strings orchestration behind him. If the voice sounds familiar, that may be because Roberts had an association with Hanna-Barbera and was heard in Saturday-morning staples Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? and Josie and the Pussycats when they used generic music to accompany the animated chase scenes.

The song was a respectable hit, reaching #12. Although this single was the first one to chart under Roberts' name, he was a member of the studio group Arkade, who had two minor hits in 1970-'71.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Rewind -- October 6, 1973

Throughout 2012, I'll be bringing back the entries from this blog's first year and formatting them properly. As I do that, I'm getting back to listening to songs that I missed the first time around.

There were ten new singles debuting on Billboard's Hot 100 this week. Half would reach the Top 40, four made Top 10 and two were #1 singles. Among the stories: a sad epitaph for a man who'd just died in a plane crash, two songs that had been remade by their performers a hit by an ex-Beatle and a duet by two Motown superstars.

When I originally wrote this, I wasn't yet featuring the issues of Billboard over at Google Books. Here's the October 6, 1973 edition, with the full Hot 100 list on page 92. There are a pair of articles on the first page that describe a potential problem the current gas shortage might present to the music business, with problems seen with the supply of materials to make LPs. Fortunately, those fears never became reality, but it was a real concern at the time. There are even suggestions for what to do when the crisis arises.

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Todd Rundgren - "Hello it's Me" Todd Rundgren - Something/Anything? - Hello It's Me

(Debuted #97, Peaked #5, 20 Weeks on the Chart)



Todd Rundgren had already recorded "Hello it's Me" when it appeared on the first LP of his former group The Nazz in 1968. The original was a slower ballad, but when Rundgren worked on his 1972 Something/Anything? LP he decided to rework the piece. Using the production chops he developed in the studio for his post-Nazz projects (both as part of the "group" Runt and his solo work), he turned the song into a radio-friendly piece that is considered to be his best song by many.

Even though "Hello it's Me" has been a radio staple for more than 35 years, it has found its way into other pop culture. For instance, the pilot episode of That 70s Show had the gang sneaking out to attend a Rundgren concert and "Hello it's Me" was the song played at the end of the show. The song eventually peaked at a respectable #5. Not bad for a song that took over a year to be a hit (or 5, if you consider its Nazz version).

Trivia: in "Hello it's Me" you'll hear female voices in the background. One of those voices belonged to Vickie Sue Robinson, who would hit the charts herself later in the 1970s with "Turn the Beat Around."


Foster Sylvers - "Hey, Little Girl" (Not available as MP3)

(Debuted #95, Peaked #92, 5 Weeks on the Chart)



Here's a song I hadn't heard yet when I first wrote this review. I've been able to alleviate that in the years since...and the song is a Calypso-flavored slab of Bubblegum pop that if you thought it was Michael Jackson in his pre-teen years, you probably wouldn't be too far off. It sound like the record company was targeting his fans when they released it.

"Hey, Little Girl" was a remake of Dee Clark's 1959 hit and sung by one of the members of the 9-person group of brothers and sisters called The Sylvers. Foster Sylvers was enjoying the follow-up to his hit "Misdemeanor" but after peaking at #92, Foster never again reached the Top 100 chart as a solo act.

By the way...when recording the LP that contained both of his Hot 100 singles, Foster Sylvers was 11 years old.

Jim Croce - "I Got a Name" Jim Croce - I Got a Name - I Got a Name



(Debuted #76, Peaked #10, 17 Weeks on the Chart)

I was 17 years old. I had just graduated from high school and was waiting for the day I was supposed to report for Army basic training. That summer, I picked up some LPs at a yard sale cheaply and one was Jim Croce's I Got a Name. I had been familiar with the title song but at that point in my life -- just as I was about to set off on my own -- the lyrics definitely resonated with me. In a way, Jim Croce was explaining with words and an acoustic guitar exactly how I was feeling.

For Jim Croce, the song was a reminder of just how short life can be. As his song was appearing on the charts, his fans were learning the sad news of his death in a plane crash on September 27th. He was 30 years old. As a title, "I Got a Name" was striking considering the fact he had passed. The song would reach #10, the LP would top out at #2 and another prophetic tune ("Time in a Bottle," from the earlier LP You Don't Mess Around With Jim) would become the third posthumous #1 single in Billboard's rock era.

While it will never be known how many more hits Jim Croce had in him, the body of work he left in his few LPs displayed a versatility and understanding that still sounds real even after many years have gone by. It's something that hit me as a 17-year old who was hoping the road I was about to travel would lead me toward a better place. "I Got a Name" is timeless in that regard.


Betty Wright - "Let Me Be Your Lovemaker" Betty Wright - The Essentials: Betty Wright - Let Me Be Your Lovemaker

(Debuted #98, Peaked #55, 6 Weeks on the Chart)



Betty Wright is best known for "Clean Up Woman," a song she recorded at the age of 18 but was memorable because of a guitar lick played by another young prodigy, Ray Parker, Jr. With "Let Me Be Your Lovemaker," she was still looking for the next hit that would return her to the Top 40. This wouldn't be the one; it peaked at #55 and only managed five weeks on the survey. It was more subdued than her earlier hit, with more muted instrumentation in the background.


Donna Fargo - "Little Girl Gone" Donna Fargo - The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A. - Little Girl Gone

(Debuted #93, Peaked #57, 10 Weeks on the Chart)



Another artist trying to find her way back to earlier heights was Donna Fargo. After two big pop hits in '72-'73 ("The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A." and "Funny Face"), she hadn't been able to break the pop Top 40. While she never did make it, she was still successful on the country chart throughout the 1970s, with 6 #1 hits. "Little Girl Gone" stalled at #57 on the pop side but reached #2 country. In fact, Donna Fargo was one of the few female country artists to sustain crossover success on the pop side as well as one of even fewer to write her own material.

Upon listening,"Little Girl Gone" definitely sounds like a Donna Fargo song. It has all the conventions: the instruments, the phrasing and -- most of all -- the vocals. Told from the perspective of a woman who's returned to the home where she grew up after several years away, it recalls the old adage that you really can't go back once you leave.


The Dells - "My Pretending Days Are Over" The Dells - The Dells: Ultimate Collection - My Pretending Days Are Over

(Debuted #87, Peaked #51, 8 Weeks on the Chart)



The Dells were a well-established R&B/soul group who'd been charting fairly regularly since the 1950s. "My Pretending Days Are Over" is a decent song from that genre despite a falsetto vocal at the beginning; however, by 1973 the sound was being done better by groups like The Stylistics, The Spinners and even Gladys Knight & the Pips. The song -- a gentle ballad -- didn't get any higher than #51 before it disappeared. Considering they never managed to get any higher on the pop chart again, it appeared The Dells' hitmaking days were over as well.


Ringo Starr - "Photograph" Ringo Starr - Ringo - Photograph

(Debuted #74, Peaked #1, 16 Weeks on the Chart)



With "Photograph," Ringo Starr became the third ex-Beatle to notch a #1 single. Surprisingly, the only member of the Fab Four left who hadn't scored a #1 single was John Lennon (who'd get there in '74 but not before Ringo and George had two each and Paul three). In fact, from 1970-'73 it could be argued that Ringo Starr and George Harrison were enjoying better solo careers than their more famous Beatle cohorts. However, Lennon's music was often experimental and political (which meant it was less radio-friendly) and McCartney was just beginning to gel with his new band Wings (which would propel him to a long series of hit throughout the 1970s).

"Photograph" was from the LP Ringo, which contained both his #1 singles ("You're Sixteen" was the other) and is often considered to be his finest solo LP. Additionally, it was the closest Beatle fans would get to a reunion of the group: all the ex-members contributed even though no track has all four together. George Harrison assisted with "Photograph" by co-writing the song with Starr and contributing guitar and vocals to the track.


Hank Wilson - "Rolling in My Sweet Baby's Arms" Leon Russell - Hank Wilson's Back! - Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms b/w "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" Leon Russell - Hank Wilson's Back! - I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry

(Debuted #86, Peaked #78, 5 Weeks on the Chart)



Here's a video of the B-Side as well:



Despite the name printed on 45 copies of this single and an LP titled Hank Wilson's Back, there was no singer named Hank Wilson. The alter ego of singer Leon Russell (pictured on his LP with his back turned), Wilson was a country singer whose name was meant to evoke Hank Williams. The entire LP consisted of covers of 1950s and early '60s country music that Russell listened to while growing up in Tulsa, Oklahoma and Williams was the writer of one of the songs on this two-sided single.

While the songs were solidly in the country vernacular, Russell did them in his own style. The result was a reverent, respectful take on the music of his youth. Between the songs of Hank Williams, bluegrass, honk-tonk, trucker songs and Americana, Russell's LP was one of the few instances where popular music helped bridge the generation gap and helped introduce country music to an audience that may not have ever considered listening to it.

Even though the Wilson project exposed Leon Russell's country roots, the singer would sometimes return to country music afterwards. He recorded three more albums as Hank Wilson over the decades and hit #1 on the country charts in 1979 with Willie Nelson when they remade "Heartbreak Hotel."


The Carpenters - "Top of the World" Carpenters - The Singles, 1969 - 1973 - Top of the World

(Debuted #80, Peaked #1, 20 Weeks on the Chart)



"Top of the World" had been originally recorded for The Carpenters' LP A Song for You in 1972. Despite its popularity as an album track, a cover version sung by Lynn Anderson reached #1 on the country charts and the song never was considered for single release. In 1973, A&M Records issued a greatest hits compilation called The Singles 1969-1973 and Richard Carpenter decided "Top of the World" could be a single from the new project. Remixing the instrumental track and re-recording Karen Carpenter's vocal, the "new" version was issued to radio.

The song was a huge hit. It would become The Carpenters' second #1 single, after a string of near-misses that included five songs that reached #2 and two more that stalled at #3 since their first #1" (They Long to Be) Close to You." The greatest hits compilation would also reach #1 on the LP chart -- the only LP they'd ride to the top of that chart -- and became one of the biggest selling albums of the 1970s.


Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye - "You're a Special Part of Me" Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye - Diana & Marvin - You're a Special Part of Me

(Debuted #66, Peaked #12, 12 Weeks on the Chart)

(I simply cannot believe there is no Youtube video for this song. A shame, really.)

In 1973, Motown Records was a much different place than it was 5 years before. They had left Detroit for Los Angeles, their hitmaking machine no longer resembled a highly efficient assembly line, some of their stars had left the label and others had stopped hitting. Two of their biggest stars at the time were Diana Ross and Marvin Gaye and even those two were moving in different career directions: Ross had settled into her post-Supremes era as a megastar and actress, while Gaye was pushing new boundaries and broaching subjects like social issues and sexuality that weren't often found in Motown music before the 1970s.

However, the two artists had a great deal of affection for one another and recorded a duet LP called Diana & Marvin. They sounded great together, and "You're a Special Part of Me" was the first of their three singles from that album. Even though both artists would leave Motown by the early 1980s, they still had a tremendous respect for each other; after Gaye was senselessly shot to death in 1984, Ross would sing a tribute song for him called "Missing You" that was among her last big hits.