Little known fact: even though MTV played their videos a lot - including the one we're featuring today - Missing Persons never had a Top 40 hit in the US. This song made it to #42 on the Billboard Hot 100, but wasn't a big hit.
And yet, their songs and videos endure. Everyone remembers Dale Bozzio's fishbowl bra. But this keyboard/drum driven sound, complemented with Dale's quirky, emotive vocal, draws me in every time, more so than her boobs under clear acrylic.
They're back together, too. And Dale - who co-wrote the song - calls it one of her favorites. Mine, too, Dale. Mine, too.
12 August 2013
08 August 2013
8 August 2013 - Electronic - Feel Every Beat
It’s kind of hard to believe that a band featuring members of New Order, The Smiths and the Pet Shop Boys could be considered a guilty pleasure, but here we are. I actually liked Electronic back in the day, but their debut album sounds really dated in 2013, especially on the songs that New Order’s Bernard Sumner “raps.” I thought that kind of thing was sort of cool at the time, but now . . . eh, not so much. Anyway, it’s still fun to check out those tunes again. Here’s the video for Feel Every Beat.
07 August 2013
7 August 2013 - R.E.M. - Stand / Throwing Muses - Dizzy
A odd pairing of songs for this post? Not really. Let me explain.
In September 1989, Mark Whittier and I went to see R.E.M. at the Hartford Civic Center. It was my first concert. They opened the show with this song. And a lot of people left right after. Which I thought was odd. It ended up being a great show. A GREAT show. We had a fantastic time.
There was a time I was really sick of this song. But I don't know why. It's a great pop/rock song, no matter how much airplay it got in 1989. And it got a LOT of airplay in 1989!
Actually.... this is pretty much how I remember it.
Those who know me know I really went to see the opening act, Throwing Muses. They were, and remain to this day, my favorite band. And they were really awesome live. I also saw them in 1995, in Northampton, MA. And like 1989, I knew the only way to get people into a Throwing Muses song was to entice them with R.E.M. However, I can safely say I have gotten a lot of people into this great, underrated band, Give them a chance. You won't be disappointed.
(Also, Kristin Hersh and Michael Stipe did do a little duet together later.... which was a bigger hit than anything Throwing Muses ever did)
And actually.... this is pretty much how I remember it.
In September 1989, Mark Whittier and I went to see R.E.M. at the Hartford Civic Center. It was my first concert. They opened the show with this song. And a lot of people left right after. Which I thought was odd. It ended up being a great show. A GREAT show. We had a fantastic time.
There was a time I was really sick of this song. But I don't know why. It's a great pop/rock song, no matter how much airplay it got in 1989. And it got a LOT of airplay in 1989!
Actually.... this is pretty much how I remember it.
Those who know me know I really went to see the opening act, Throwing Muses. They were, and remain to this day, my favorite band. And they were really awesome live. I also saw them in 1995, in Northampton, MA. And like 1989, I knew the only way to get people into a Throwing Muses song was to entice them with R.E.M. However, I can safely say I have gotten a lot of people into this great, underrated band, Give them a chance. You won't be disappointed.
(Also, Kristin Hersh and Michael Stipe did do a little duet together later.... which was a bigger hit than anything Throwing Muses ever did)
And actually.... this is pretty much how I remember it.
06 August 2013
6 August 2013 - Morcheeba - Trigger Hippie
I saw Morcheeba at a music festival shortly after their second album came out in the late 90s. I have no idea which festival though. Could be Lilith Fair. Or maybe it was a radio station show. It doesn't really matter. I do remember that they had a very cool trip-hop/jazz vibe to them so I picked up both of their albums (at the time) shortly after the show. This video is from their first album Who Can You Trust?.
05 August 2013
5 August 2013 - The Dandy Warhols - Not If You Were The Last Junkie On Earth
By now, you probably know that I love a song with a good title. There's a reason for that. These songs are usually lyrically complex and interesting, the songs constructed brilliantly around these lyrics.
Take this 1998 song by MTV darlings The Dandy Warhols. This straight-ahead pop-rock song so deeply and smoothly moves from Verse 1 to chorus to Verse 2 to chorus to bridge to chorus. The (video) performance by the band is very emotionless, even with the excitement and chaos of the video around them and the gratuitous shots of a seemingly ambivilent Zia McCabe.
Now, let's talk about the title for a moment. This is one of those songs in which the title is frequently misquoted. The song is not called "Heroin is So Passe", contrary to popular belief. It was a song written for a friend of theirs - an appeal of sorts.
As an added bonus, here is the band performing the song live in 2012. It's important to note that this is the original lineup - they are still together. And they are still rockin' this song!
Take this 1998 song by MTV darlings The Dandy Warhols. This straight-ahead pop-rock song so deeply and smoothly moves from Verse 1 to chorus to Verse 2 to chorus to bridge to chorus. The (video) performance by the band is very emotionless, even with the excitement and chaos of the video around them and the gratuitous shots of a seemingly ambivilent Zia McCabe.
Now, let's talk about the title for a moment. This is one of those songs in which the title is frequently misquoted. The song is not called "Heroin is So Passe", contrary to popular belief. It was a song written for a friend of theirs - an appeal of sorts.
As an added bonus, here is the band performing the song live in 2012. It's important to note that this is the original lineup - they are still together. And they are still rockin' this song!
02 August 2013
2 August 2013 - Of Monsters and Men - Little Talks
For weeks, I heard this song. I found it annoying. I found it even more annoying that I didn't know who it was.
And then it kept eating at me. Why is this song stuck in my head and who the hell is performing it? It was driving me batty.
So I pulled out Soundhound one day. Usually, that app is brilliant, but on this day, it was failing me.
And finally, on the third try, one of my co-workers walked by. And said just four words.
"Of Monsters and Men."
WHERE THE HELL WERE YOU THREE WEEKS AGO?!???!?!
Anyway, it's a sweet song that probably wouldn't be getting as much airplay as it does if not for the Mumford and Sons effect - atypical pop song, horns - but it's a good thing that it does. It's a real gem that I no longer find annoying. And I hope you don't, either.
And then it kept eating at me. Why is this song stuck in my head and who the hell is performing it? It was driving me batty.
So I pulled out Soundhound one day. Usually, that app is brilliant, but on this day, it was failing me.
And finally, on the third try, one of my co-workers walked by. And said just four words.
"Of Monsters and Men."
WHERE THE HELL WERE YOU THREE WEEKS AGO?!???!?!
Anyway, it's a sweet song that probably wouldn't be getting as much airplay as it does if not for the Mumford and Sons effect - atypical pop song, horns - but it's a good thing that it does. It's a real gem that I no longer find annoying. And I hope you don't, either.
01 August 2013
1 August 2013 - Hoodoo Gurus - Come Anytime
I learned two things while "researching" this post: The Hoodoo Gurus are Australian AND they are still playing together. Not that it matters one way or another, but I always thought they were from the mid-west (clearly, I had the Violent Femmes on the brain). As for the second lesson, good for them, they were always a lot of fun. Here's one of their more well-known songs from 1989's Magnum Cum Louder.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)