Saturday, July 20, 2019

My Summertime Song Memories ... 1984




Each week, I am releasing a list of my 15 favorite songs from the first 15 summers I lived in my beloved hometown of Toms River, N.J. between 1974-88. That takes me from the summer I was 7 until the summer I was 21. Each song from each summer has a special meaning and I will try to convey them as best as I possibly can. So I will rank each summer's hit song memory from Nos. 15 through No. 1. Each song was a hit that peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 between Memorial Day Weekend and Labor Day Weekend.

This week, it's the Sounds of the Summer of '84:

15. She Don't Know Me—Bon Jovi (#48, July)

Jersey in da House!! Long before they became more appealing to a wider audience (translation: more women digging them!!), they were giving us rockers that could tell a story like this one about the guy trying his best to impress a girl who isn't paying attention. Sensational musical backdrop, especially the work done by David Bryan on keyboards, a smashing backbeat by Tico Torres and great guitar work from the one and only Richie Sambora. Place vocals on record like Jon Bon Jovi and you have a fantastic rocker. If only this song could have appealed to women more, it may have been a Top 20 hit for the band.



14. Legs—ZZ Top (#8, July)

Until the "Eliminator" album was released in 1983, no one would have paid much attention to these guys from Texas. But this was the music video age and everyone suddenly discovered Dusty, Billy and Frank. The best song from this album was this one, featuring a cool, geeky-guy-gets-girl music video. But video or not, this rocker with the driving guitar sound that made Z.Z. Top famous (like on songs such as "Le Grange" and "Tush") still would have been a hit. It's not necessarily Billy Gibbons' vocals that drive the record, but it's the guitars and Frank Beard's drumming that make this the band's landmark first Top 10 hit.

13. My, Oh My—Slade (#37, August)

This record is in the same vain as three classic Rod Stewart songs, "Sailing," "You're In My Heart" and "Rhythm Of My Heart." They all have the same thing in common -- great sing-a-long pub songs. It's a song of unity and hope and love for your fellow man and woman ... which we seem to be lacking of these days in our highly charged political world. Thanks to Quiet Riot re-recording the group's classic "Cum On Feel The Noize" the year before, a whole lot of people may never have heard of Slade. But after this song featuring Noddy Holder's emotionally powerful vocals and a great guitar played by David Hill. Try the song out in a British pub if ever you're there. The sing-a-long is not far behind!

12. Oh, Sherrie—Steve Perry (#3, June)

This record should have made Sherrys/Sherries/Sherris everywhere excited for life -- they had a song to call their own! Well, at least this generation's did. "Oh, Sherrie" is as simple a love song as it gets, one that Journey lead singer Steve Perry wrote about his then-understanding girlfriend Sherrie Swafford. You get the same to-the-max lead vocals on this one from Perry as you get on his Journey records and a great guitar solo played by Michael Landau. Love how the song starts slowly with co-writer Bill Cuomo's keyboard track, then builds into the rocker that it does, then finishes with the same keyboard pattern. Great early Summer of '84 hit song.

11. Self Control—Laura Branigan (#4, June)

Where most of her hit songs were keyboard- and synthesizer-driven, this one wasn't. Actually, it was more of a guitar-laden song, and like on "Oh, Sherrie," it's Michael Landau playing the hot guitar licks. One of Branigan's best songs ever, she paints the seedy side of nightlife and how it controls her where she "lives among the creatures of the night." Powerful echo at the bridge. And another powerful vocal by the woman who gave us so many great songs in the early-to-mid 1980s.

10. High On Emotion—Chris DeBurgh (#44, August)

The sad thing about this song is it didn't get any higher than No. 44 on the chart, but a hard-driving record from the man who gave us "Don't Pay The Ferryman" the summer before and the 1987 international smash "The Lady In Red." DeBurgh's vocals are high on emotion and that amazing chorus where he seems to ramp it up another few notes and the dramatic "You're love will find a way. Great sweeping instrumental track and super guitar work by Phil Palmer and keyboards by the song's producer, Rupert Hine. It's an amazing, rarely heard nugget from the 1980s, but I feel the power of that song each time I listen to it.

9. What's Love Got To Do With It—Tina Turner (#1, September)

I'll always remember this song as the culmination of arguably the greatest comebacks in music history, hitting No. 1 on the Hot 100 the weekend of Labor Day. This record permeated the entire Summer of '84 and just grew on me the more I heard it. The impassioned vocals of 44-year-old Turner and that wandering harmonica-sounding guitar lick by song co-writer and producer Terry Brittain are what this song is always going to be remembered by … oh, and that movie with the same title starring Angela Bassett as Turner. It was a shock that by Labor Day Weekend, it was the No. 1 song in the country, but that only added to the story of the great comeback story Turner weaved.

8. The Reflex—Duran Duran (#1, June)

Thank you, Nile Rodgers! The original version of "The Reflex" from the "Seven And The Ragged Tiger" album/cassette was hard to listen to and just boring. But the former Chic guitarist and producer to acts such as David Bowie and Diana Ross showed up to mix and edit the song for single release and though it may not have been great, it was tons better than the original on the album. The synthesizers of Nick Rhodes still star on this song, but at least it gave it an energy that miserably lacked on the original. And the music video featuring the act doing the song in concert (I saw them in concert do this song … in its original, bleh form) made this an international smash, hitting No. 1 on both sides of the Atlantic, here in late June for two weeks. The Reflex … what a game!

7. Dancing In The Dark—Bruce Springsteen (#2, June)

In 1980, Bruce Springsteen recorded a song with mass appeal in the Top 5 hit "Hungry Heart," but stayed true to his rocker, Jersey roots to make songs that sounded personal and not make pop records. He wrote "Dancing In The Dark" because his co-producing mates, Jon Landau, Chuck Plokin and E Street Band member Steven Van Zandt, didn't think there was a good first hit from the "Born In The U.S.A." album, so Springsteen wrote the driving "Dancing In The Dark." Voila! A great first single. Featuring Max Weinberg's drumbeat, a great narrating lead vocal from Springsteen and a rousing closing saxophone outro by the Big Man, Clarence Clemons, the song became Springsteen's biggest hit ever, peaking at No. 2 as summer officially took off. Great music video directed by horror film maven Brian DePalma and featuring a great dance scene at the end featuring Springsteen and concert-goer and then-unknown Courteney Cox.

6. Borderline—Madonna (#10, June)

"Holiday" may have started Madonna's chart run of hits, but "Borderline" really started her career. Great record co-produced and written by Reggie Lucas, it's a low-key dance record as anything Madonna has ever done. It worked for the pop appeal and wider audience and it worked as the weeke I graduated high school was the week it became her first Top 10 hit. Superb strings playing behind her at the chorus and whatever obstacles there are in this song "keep pushing" Madonna. Better music video featuring future Top 40 one-hit wonder Louie Louie as the boyfriend and directed by up-and-coming director Mary Lambert. A memorable summertime song for generations. 

5. Eyes Without A Face—Billy Idol (#4, July)

To appreciate this one, you have to hear the full album version that's almost 5 minutes long. It's a synthesizer-built record with Idol's vocals hauntingly great throughout and his girlfriend, Perri Lister, delivering the French-laden line "Les yeux sans visage," translated into the title of the song. But the highlight of the song is the guitar solo by longtime Idol compatriot Steve Stevens with Idol singing over it. It's a dramatic song from start to finish and the handclaps really punctuate its solid, hypnotic sound that made this a great record in the Summer of '84 from his "Rebel Yell" album and his first huge Top 10 hit. 

4. State Of Shock—Jacksons (with Mick Jagger) (#3, August)

So who out there thought the Jacksons could rock out the way they did on this guitar-powered hit that features Michael Jackson and Rolling Stones front man Mick Jagger on co-lead vocals and who deliver back-and-forth exchanges. It's a hot one, as hot as the heat was during that Summer of '84. David Williams' guitar stars from start to finish and is the true backdrop of this song that Michael was supposed to do with Queen lead vocalist Freddie Mercury in a duet for the "Thriller" album, but scheduling conflicts ended that hope, so Jackson did it with Jackson, a huge fan of Jackson's and his brothers. I'm sure Mercury could have given the same energy as Jagger did, but we have Mick Jagger and as far as I'm concerned, that's all you really needed.


3. Sister Christian—Night Ranger (#5, June)

As I think of the final days of my high school life in June 1984, I think of two songs. The other song is coming much later. The other is this one, written by drummer-singer Kelly Keagy as a warning to his younger sister about growing up much too fast. I always remember the piano played by Alan Fitzgerald of the band and how powerful that opening was, building up to the dual guitar work of Jeff Watson and Brad Gillis. You can't help but turn this one all the way up while riding with the windows down in your car on a spring/summer day. It resonates with my generation … and future generations forever, especially if you remember the song near the end of the movie "Boogie Nights." The quintessential power ballad of the '80s!

2. When Doves Cry—Prince (#1, July)

One of the 1980s greatest songs ... and it's without a bass. Imagine that -- a great record without a bass track! But that's the genius that was the late and great Prince. From the movie and soundtrack of "Purple Rain," everytime you hear that musical keyboard backdrop, you are a prisoner of that song for the next four-plus minutes or nearly six minutes if it's the album version of the song. It's electric without being over the top. That electronic drumbeat will last the tests of time and Prince's vocals make this record what it was. A record with that kind of background doesn't need a whole lot but a lot of TLC and Prince purely provided that on what would be his first No. 1 hit.

1. Time After Time—Cyndi Lauper (#1, June)

Everytime this song comes on the radio, I will always remember this as the song that was No. 1 on the Hot 100 the day I graduated high school. It's an appropriate song with the friendships that were built over the years in school -- "if you're lost, you can look and you will find me, time after time." The song was beautifully written by Cyndi Lauper -- her second single release form her "She's So Unusual" album after the iconic "Girls Just Want To Have Fun" -- and Rob Hyman of the Hooters. Any slow song has to have a mood that will make you smile or turn you into a blubbering puddle, and this song surely does both. It is Lauper's beautiful approach that does the job as she puts every ounce of emotion into this song, the song that highlighted an album, a song about friendship, whether near or from afar. No matter who recreates this song on tape, vinyl, electronically, they can't capture the pure power and emotion that Lauper put forward on the original. There's no questioning that.






Saturday, July 13, 2019

My Summertime Song Memories ... 1983


Each week, I am releasing a list of my 15 favorite songs from the first 15 summers I lived in my beloved hometown of Toms River, N.J. between 1974-88. That takes me from the summer I was 7 until the summer I was 21. Each song from each summer has a special meaning and I will try to convey them as best as I possibly can. So I will rank each summer's hit song memory from Nos. 15 through No. 1. Each song was a hit that peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 between Memorial Day Weekend and Labor Day Weekend. An interesting final note here: "Let's Dance" by David Bowie is NOT in this countdown because it was a hit in the Spring of 1983, hitting No. 1 then, so I did not include it among the summertime memories. 

This week, it's the Sounds of the Summer of '83:

15. Wishing—A Flock Of Seagulls (#26, July)

Still get chills when I hear that opening and then the end when that sound effect clicks itself to an end. It's my favorite Flock song and the song progression is just so cool and easy to follow thanks to the synthesizers used to accompany lead singer/leader Mike Score's emotional plea of being with a woman that turns his world upside down. It's a record that the music drives the record, not the vocals. And it's awesome!

14. 1999—Prince (#12, July)

If not for the fact my radio stations played this song to death in the Summer of '83, I'd probably rank this Prince classic much higher. Another great song where the music drives the song, though the narrative about end days doesn't hurt either. If we all were going to die, "1999" was a great way to do it as we wanted to all "party like it's 1999."

13. Don't Pay The Ferryman—Chris DeBurgh (#34, July)

Most people think Chris DeBurgh is a one-hit wonder because of "The Lady In Red" in 1987, but that's far from the truth. DeBurgh puts the dramatics into a great song called "Don't Pay The Ferryman." From the start, this feels like a chase to "get to the other side." The object is not to pay the ferryman and have that leverage in that chase. This song should have served as every movie's theme song that involves a chase to the finish. Dramatic, yes. Should've been a bigger hit than No. 34.

12. Is There Something I Should Know—Duran Duran (#4, August)

I first came across this song the previous spring when it debuted at No. 1 on the UK chart. The pounding opening with Simon Le Bon exclaiming, "Please, please tell me now!" gets this song going and it's some super guitar work by Andy Taylor and the usual synthesizer sound of Nick Rhodes that ties this one up with Le Bon's vocals. Great bridge musically and even greater line by Le Bon, "Don't say you're easy on me, 'cause you're about as easy as a nuclear war." Interesting times in our world between our country and the mighty Soviet Union in 1983 to even bring that subject up. Still great Duran Duran from their early days without question.

11. Puttin' On The Ritz—Taco (#4, September)

Every so often, you get a song that just stands out and you never allow yourself to let it go from your childhood. Indonesian-born and Dutch-raised Taco's interpretation of the 1930 composition "Puttin' On The Ritz" turned out to be as interesting as Gene Wilder and Peter Boyle's interpretation of it from "Young Frankenstein" in 1974. It's a techno-wizard's dream to put an Irving Berlin song to a synthesizer sound and let it sound hypnotic with Taco sounding all Rudy Vallee-like. Interestingly, Berlin was 95 years old and able to enjoy its success, while Vallee was 82 and could enjoy the flattery of Taco sounding like him. I always loved the longer version in which Taco improvises near the end and does the "Gotta dance!" fading into a mono-sounding vocal where he sings, "If you're blue and you don't know where to turn to, why don't you go where fashion fits … puttin' on the ritz."

10. China Girl—David Bowie (#10, August)

It would not be for a long time until I found out that Iggy Pop, who co-wrote this song with David Bowie, did the original back in 1977. Great sound effects to give it that Far East feel to start the song and a great pumping bass guitar by Carmine Rojas gets this song going and Bowie's vocals are forever haunting. Always loved the hush part when Bowie sings, "And when I get excited, my little China girl says, 'Oh baby, just you shut your mouth.'" The legendary Stevie Ray Vaughn's guitar plays this song out to its outro. Another great memory from my all-time favorite summer of music.

9. Too Shy—Kajagoogoo (#5, July)

The first time I heard this song was in the previous winter when it was a No. 1 hit in the UK from some band with the baby-sounding name of Kajagoogoo. The song was infectious and was able to wash over me from the start, from the opening fade-in to Limahl demanding, "Hey girl … move a little closer! 'Cause you're too shy-shy, hush-hush, eye to eye." Great musicianship among Limahl, bass player Nick Beggs, keyboardist Stuart Neale all wrapped up in the production of Duran Duran's Nick Rhodes and Colin Thurston. A great song from the early part of the Summer of '83.

8. Rock Of Ages—Def Leppard (#16, August)

"Oonta gleeben glouten globen." If you don't take anything else out of this amazing record, you surely can take that opening up, followed by the percussive drumming of Rick Allen, the vocals of Joel Elliott and the crashing guitars of Phil Collen and Steve Clark. Nobody knew that a generation later, this song would be the title of an '80s-style classic rock Broadway play and then movie starring Tom Cruise, but in 1983, it was just a record that permeated the rock clubs and radios all over that summer. And that sound of the match striking up a fire at the end … evil! Very evil! Man did I love that sound at the end of "Rock Of Ages."

7. (Keep Feeling) Fascination—Human League (#8, August)

Loved this song so much, I went out and bought the cassette tape it came from. It also had "Mirror Man" on it and I loved that song, too. I always was "fascinated" by the number of singers on this record -- four, exactly. But it's that party-sounding synthesizer that steals the show throughout and Oakey narrating this interesting meeting going on. "And so the conversation turned until the sun went down. And many fantasies were learned … on that day!" Ian Burden's bass comes through in the bass guitar and you can't help but hand-clap at points of the song. Human League were part of the second British Invasion of 1982-84.

6. Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)—Eurythmics (#1, September)


Another great act to come from that second British Invasion was David Stewart and Annie Lennox, who formed the hit-making duo Eurythmics and stormed the charts for the first time with the No. 2 British hit "Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)," a haunting-sounding record given an evil-sounding backdrop from the synthesizers Stewart set up behind it. Lennox's lead vocals match the evilness of "Sweet Dreams" and part of the reason why this record became the fabric of the musical backdrop of the Summer of '83 … as was that amusing and interesting music video in which I would never see cows chewing ever again.

5. Flashdance … What A Feeling—Irene Cara (#1, May)

Maybe the production of this record was a tad bit over the top, but it never fails to put a smile on my face to hear about the struggles of the narrator, in this case Cara, who co-wrote this Academy Award-winning record, and hear what started as a dream and then becomes exultation as the music pulsates faster and becomes more a celebration … a wonderful "feeling," one where she says, "Keep believing." The record is really a party and one to celebrate the joy of doing something special. We should all celebrate and sing and dance to songs like this.

4. It's A Mistake—Men At Work (#6, August)

Imagine a world in which the button is pressed and it was done wrongly and we can kiss our collective asses goodbye? Yeah, this was done in a very anti-war way by the Australian band Men At Work, who could not go wrong on the charts with song after song between the Summer of 1982 through the Fall of 1983. The anti-war record hit a chord during the struggles of what was the frayed relationship between Ronald Reagan's America and Yuri Andropov's Soviet Union. It was a tense time for our nation and for the world. The music video at least put some humor into the song, but the message was "war is never the best answer." Colin Hay, who wrote the song, narrates as lead vocalist. And it's Ron Strykert with a very heavy guitar solo near the song. Heard this song plenty of times on the beach that summer.

3. Electric Avenue—Eddy Grant (#2, July)

Speaking of topical records -- Eddy Grant sang about the street where the 1981 Brixton riots took place. And he has some heavy thoughts on his mind: "Who is to blame in what country? Never can get to the one. Dealing in multiplication, and they still can't feed everyone." Also there's "Now in the street there is violence, and a lots of work to be done. No place to hang out our washing, and I can't blame it all on the sun, oh no!" The sounds of motorcycles revved up are memorable and Grant's vocals paint a dark tale of what was happening when Brixton's riots divided a country. If not for a song a little higher in this countdown hogging up No. 1 that entire summer, this should have easily been a No. 1 hit here.

2. It's Inevitable—Charlie (#38, August)

Radio stations WPST-FM in Trenton and WJRZ-FM in Manahawkin, New Jersey, would play this song periodically and I would turn the radio up anytime. The record had a feel of what the Jefferson Starship was doing at the time, most notably the songs "Be My Lady" and "Winds Of Change," especially the backing vocals -- very similar. Terry Thomas delivers a terrific lead vocal about getting a girl who is doing all she can to avoid him, but the pull is irresistible. Fantastic guitar solo in the middle by Thomas and always loved Thomas' intensity on vocals from start to finish. Equally as much I loved the music video that turns from the flirtation of a pair of wannabe chefs in a cooking school into a pie-throwing episode. Too bad it only got to No. 38 on the chart because it was a better song than that.

1. Every Breath You Take—The Police (#1, July)

Simply put, you couldn't go ANYWHERE in the Summer of 1983 without hearing this song, whether on the radio or on the beach or on the Boardwalk or to a game. It was everywhere! Sting's tale of obsession for a woman became as irresistible on the charts and radio. It's dark and brooding in its narration and its presentation, but there are shiny parts of this record. There's the strings that make this song really cool. There's that part Sting changes the mood of the song for that one moment when he sings, "Since you've gone, I've been lost without a trace. I dream at night, I can only see your face. I look around, but it's you I can't replace. I feel so cold and I long for your embrace. I keep crying, 'Baby, baby, pleeeeeeeeeeeease.'" Andy Summers' piano is polarizing in the bridge before Sting comes back. And how can you can not think of this song without Sting continually promising, "I'll be watching you." Possession never sounded quite so good on the radio or during any summer quite like the greatest musical summer of my life..