Category: Songs (Page 93 of 96)

The greatest song from the ’80s

All this talk around here about the most plastic decade ever got me to thinking about what I enjoy from those years. Truly, there are still too many box sets and compilations that constantly revolve around the same old one-hit wonder and New Wave tracks. Come on, there’s more to the ’80s than “Come On Eileen,” “Tainted Love,” “Don’t You Want Me,” “Centerfold,” “Mickey,” etc. So I’m going to lay down my favorite song of the ’80s here for you. A tune that is far and above much better than any of th aforementioned. One that should be included on all future ’80s compilations until it’s as familiar to everyone as “Our Lips Are Sealed.”

That song is “Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime” by the Korgis. It was used as the theme in a shitty remake in the otherwise excellent Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. My introduction to the song actually came through via its use in the ’90s techno/dance outfir N.R.G. who sampled it for their 1992 hit “I Need Your Lovin'”. I always loved the song, so I did some research on it and voila, it led me to the Korgis. Truly one of those “lost” bands, but they issued a few albums during their time. Anyway, that’s my vote for best song of the ’80s. If you disagree, feel free to write your local congressman.

From “Remember the Eighties” to “Lost in the ’80s”

The slogan of the webblog Lost in the ’80s is “Rescuing Music from Day-Glo Obscurity,” and you have to admire them for doing just that. The guy who runs it is named John…just John…and he’s a self-described “alternatively funny and grumpy short man with big biceps and a nice set of brains,” but his goal in life seems to be to revisit his favorite ’80s songs and, if they’re not readily available, post MP3s of them online. Sometime he’ll go with a major name, like Rick Springfield, but recent weeks have seen discussions on the Bolshoi, Rubber Rodeo, Mari Wilson, Donnie Iris, and…wait for it, Shep Medskerbone…Book of Love. It’s updated rather sporadically – the last new entry was Nov. 27th – but it’s always worth checking in once in awhile to see what’s new.

Here’s his most recent write-up, about the Human League’s “I Love You Too Much”:

“we spoke about the time and place of our first meeting / without a word i knew you knew that i cared about you”

There was a discussion over at Silence Is a Rhythm (scroll down about half a page) about the recent Human League reissues and how EMI have done an okay job with them. One thing I hated, though, is that they were so close to being perfect by only one or two tracks.

The Hysteria remaster is more than serviceable, including all the remixes of the era, but my main beef was that by including just two missing tracks from the U.S. Fascination EP, EMI would have sewn up the entire early Human League output. EMI halfway corrected these omissions by including one of the missing tracks, “You Remind Me of Gold”, on the new Human League Remixes and Rareities CD. So, I’m going to take the initiative to post the other missing track.

Fascination EP

“I Love You Too Much” was recorded for this EP (the other songs were all previously released singles or b-sides in the U.K.) and was later re-recorded for the Hysteria album. This original version is vastly superior, in my not so humble pinion. Where the Hysteria version just sorts of drones on, this version is quite the little funky number. Check out that bassline and the incredibly tone-deaf backing “Ahhhhhs” from the girls. No comparison.

But hey, good job anyway, EMI. Don’t think we Leaugeophiles don’t appreciate the effort. See? I didn’t even bring up the “EMI stands for Every Mistake Imaginable” joke!

Whoops.

Deep Cuts: R.E.M.

Statistics show – and please don’t ask to see the statistics, because someone set their coffee down on them, it spilled, and now the ink’s all smeared, so you can’t read them, anyway – that there are essentially only two types of R.E.M. fans: those who discovered the band prior to the release of their 1987 album, Document, and those who discovered them when the band’s single, “The One I Love,” unexpectedly began its stampede into the Billboard Top 10.

Me, I cut it pretty close. I discovered them with Dead Letter Office, a B-sides and rarities collection that showed up in stores scant months before Document… but, still, if there’s a fence, I’m on the side where I can wave over it and point and laugh like Nelson Muntz, saying, “HA-ha!”

I first heard R.E.M. when “Fall On Me” scored some minimal mainstream radio airplay in 1986, but, on a field trip with my high school journalism class, I ended up hearing Lifes Rich Pageant – the album from which “Fall On Me” originates – in its entirety, which piqued my interest enough to invest in a cassette copy of the aforementioned Dead Letter Office. I must’ve read Peter Buck’s liner notes about the origins and histories of that album’s contents a hundred times – no small feat, given the tiny type in that tape cover – and I decided that I was definitely going to be picking up more of the band’s recorded output.

So I did.

It’s almost 20 years later now, and I’ve got all of the band’s studio albums, as well as a handful of CD singles, a best-of collection, a rarities disc, and – shhhhhhh, don’t tell anyone! – even a bootleg or two. I’ve seen them live three times, and even had a close encounter with Bill Berry as he wandered the campus of the College of William and Mary, in Williamsburg, before the band’s show – with openers 10,000 Maniacs, no less – at William and Mary Hall. You may be familiar with the concert in question; Peter Buck immortalized it in the pages of Rolling Stone when he bitched about getting nailed in the head by a wet sweatsock…which, come to think of it, would explain why our encore got cut short.

So armed with that knowledge and experience, here are my picks for some of R.E.M.’s best deep cuts:

1. “Carnival of Sorts (Box Cars),” Chronic Town EP – From the get go, it was obvious that Michael Stipe was not going to be going out of his way to have his lyrics understood, but you can at least make out that this is where the title of the band’s first EP came from. Dig the creepy circus music that starts the song; it makes for a great mix disc opener.

2. “Perfect Circle,” Murmur – One of the loveliest songs in R.E.M.’s catalog, it remains a favorite of many fans…and, apparently, of the band themselves; even 22 years down the road, they still break it out in concert once in awhile.

3. “We Walk,” Murmur – It’s an inconsequential little number buried near the end of the album, but damned if your head doesn’t bob every time you listen to it.

4. “7 Chinese Brothers,” Reckoning – Peter Buck’s chiming guitar, with a little helping from the occasional plinking of a piano, is what drives the song. The track was revisited on the flip side of “So. Central Rain” in the form of “Voice of Harold,” where Stipe recited all new lyrics over the same music. But it’s the original that’s “a must.”

5. “Second Guessing,” Reckoning – It’s a pop song, pure and simple, coming in at under three minutes in length…2:50, to be precise. Stipe spends most of the time asking, “Why are you trying to second guess me,” but it’s the bit where he and Mills harmonize on the line, “Here we are,” that makes the track.
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To see the entire R.E.M Deep Cuts list, click here, and check out Bullz-Eye’s R.E.M. profile.

Time for bed

So my wife has been working late this week, and the duty to put our four-month old daughter to bed has fallen to yours truly. When 8:00 PM rolls around, it’s time to take her into her nursery, put on a CD, and rock her to sleep to the music. Normally, I’ve been sticking to the tried and true – Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson – but, this week, I’ve tried to branch her out. The soundtrack thus far has been…

Monday: XTC, Skylarking. She was out by the time “The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul” came on.

Tuesday: Colin Hay, Man @ Work. Somewhere around “Looking For Jack,” I felt the telltale twitching of sleep.

Tonight: Tears for Fears, The Seeds of Love. Clearly, the kid was tired; we weren’t even all the way through “Sowing the Seeds of Love” before she had passed out enough for me to carefully transition her from my arms to her crib.

I don’t think Jenn works late tomorrow, so I probably won’t have daughter duty…but, if I do, I’m considering The Blue Nile‘s Hats.

The Teardrop Explodes: “Count To Ten And Run For Cover”

Man, I’ve forgotten how many mix tapes I made for people that had this song as their title cut.

The Teardrop Explodes are mostly remembered for being Julian Cope’s baby, but most of the songs on Everybody Wants to Shag…The Teardrop Explodes were as much the work of one David Balfe, who co-founded Zoo Records with Bill “The KLF” Drummond. The material on Everybody Wants To Shag was originally recorded back in the early ’80s, but it didn’t see release until 1990. “Count to Ten and Run for Cover” is one of those songs that charges out of the gate and doesn’t stop until…well, until it’s over. A lot of the tracks on this disc have been described as “New Wave synth rock,” and that’s as good a description as any. It’s a right fist pounder.

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