Monday 24 December 2018

The Greatest 200 singles of the 1980s (130 to 121)

Welcome to a Not-at-all-christmassy edition of the greatest singles of the 80s list just in time for Christmas (only Fairy tale of New York makes the top 200 at 174) so if you're sick of Christmas songs, I can assure you that you're safe here.  In case you missed the video for this blog entry, here it is (Youtube blocked the video because it contained 13 seconds of a Duran Duran song and that's against the law or something)...


130 - Rio - Duran Duran

Nick Rhodes dropped a load of metal bars onto the strings of a grand piano and recorded it. He then reversed the tape and stuck it on the start of this song which gave it that weird metallic 'sshhllooooop' sound before John Taylor gives the performance of his life on the bass.  To my knowledge, this was the song that catapulted Duran into the stratosphere, more because of the video than anything else I think.  It epitomised the movement at the time. Gone were the ruffles of the New Romantics and in came the suits - not sure if Duran were first but Spandau were also very suity around this time. Robert Palmer of course was the king of the suit; not sure if it was this that made him collaborate with Andy and John in the Power Station after Duran's mid-80s demise?  Rio was an energetic cacophony of saxophones, guitar riffs, bass mayhem and odd synthesizer noises.  Rio was also one of the greatest albums of all time and this was the perfect kickstart.

You sure this is the only seat left on the boat?

129 - Straight up - Paula Abdul

Paula wanted you to tell her whether you wanted to love her forever or whether she'd been caught in a hit and run.  It's a sad state when you can't distinguish events in your love life from a road traffic accident but that's another story.  There were rumours at the time that Paula didn't sing her own stuff but have you heard her voice? Of course she did. She was a choreographer before releasing this song but the planets aligned and this landed her a singing career.  Thankfully, she suited this song perfectly which had everything that was great about the charts in 1989.  To think, her mother laughed until she cried when she heard the demo of this song, so bad was it; she then threw it in the bin.  Paula retrieved it and convinced her record company to let her record it. The rest, as they say, is geography.

Paula is a shadow of her former self


128 - The sun always shines on TV - A-ha

After 'that' video, A-ha had to come up with a way to follow it and not pale into the one hit wonder wilderness.  Take on me was such an amazing single, it was either, 'here's a group who can bang out hit after hit, Abba-style', or 'here's a band who happened on a great single and then ran out of ideas'.  'The sun always shines' cemented the image of the band and guaranteed a second album.  Morten out front, smouldering with his sonically pleasing chirps, Magne twiddling his synths and Pal driving the rhythm with guitar, all blended to take you on a pop journey which feels a lot like being on one of those rubber rings, being propelled down a water slide being smashed in the face by bags of grated cheese as you go.  By the time Morten sings the final 'to meeeeeeee' and you hear that last bass note on the piano, you're so exhausted, you need to go for a sit down and some therapy.

Ahh, Mr. Bond. I have been waiting for you.

127 - Baby Jane - Rod Stewart

I might be wrong but this wasn't a Rod style song at all. Not since 'Do ya think I'm sexy' (for the record, no - no I don't), had Rod had such a big hit - it went all the way to number 1 in fact.  I'm not a big fan of the Tina Turner look-a-like, although I did like Maggie May, so it was a surprise to me that I liked this song so much.  I think it has a lot to do with the synthesizer at the beginning and the flange on the vocals in the chorus.  I just loved the technology in music at the time and it was another mid-80s song to have a saxophone solo.  I'm guessing there wasn't a single Sax player in the 80s who was out of work.

I said where have you hidden my hairspray? Ey? Where?

126 - Push it - Salt 'n Pepa

This was actually a b-side to the group's 1987 song Tramp - released in its own right in 1988. The bass line at the start is the hook, two different synth bass sounds from different keyboards played together for the depth and a third and fourth lead saw from different keyboards over the top managing to mask the largely average rapping made the song a catchy little number. There was a nod to the Kinks in there too with 'you really got me going so I don't know what I'm doing', which was nice.  Timbaland sampled this song for one of my other favourite songs of all time 'The way I are' which came out in 2007-ish.

Salt 'n Pepa about to enter the intra-rap-group gymnastics contest 1988

125 - Train of Thought - A-ha

Another entry from A-ha's first album here (the 4th to be released from that album in fact).  They went back to the pencil sketch video for this even though the concept was now a bit done as Take on Me had been played to death everywhere.  The lyrics were based on guitarist Pal's favourite existentialist poets - the song being all about going to work and coming home again, seeing strangers everywhere and seeing nothing but the black and white emptiness of carrying out methodical tasks for eight hours a day to make someone else's dreams come true.  Quite bleak but the driving bass and 'train like' rhythm managed to lift the mood to the level of a pop song that was rather enjoyable.

Morton wasn't well in this video.  Here he is looking rather drawn.

124 - Seven Seas - Echo and the Bunnymen

Ian McCulloch singing like no other here.  It's a mystery how this masterpiece only reached number 16. The lyrics are masterful, the guitars delightfully clangy and the chime bars are very christmassy and so out of place they come back round the circle and just nudge back into place.  Kissing tortoises (pronounced incorrectly of course) and burning witches, it all you could ever want in a 3 minute pop song and more.  Wonderful.

We are smiling. This is us in a brilliant mood.
123 - One better day - Madness

I loved Madness.  I loved their attitude and their bravery, or was that just a lack of will to conform? Their songs stood out from the crowd so much, you didn't even have to ask 'Is this Madness?'.  However, they began to mature as they neared their first break up. Their songs took on more serious matters in a more moribund tone but I loved that.  There's a B-side called 'Maybe in another life' and it's glorious but so full of regret and sadness, it saps your soul right out of your body.  One better day is based on that phrase, 'he's seen better days' and when I hear it I always picture an elderly woman sitting on a bench at the bus stop outside Kwik Save with a few bags of shopping. It's quite sad really but the chorus is very Abba with the same motif as Dancing Queen and Suggs actually sounds like a serious pop singer for once.  Not in-keeping with their previous work at all, which is probably why it didn't make a large dent in the chart. I got the feeling they weren't on the best of terms with their record company at the time either as they were forced to release 'The Sweetest Girl', a cover of a Scritti Politti song which included the line 'the maddest group in all the world, how could they do this to to me?' - that sounded like a veiled dig to me.

Some of Madness looking a bit stressed by a canal, as usual

122 - I don't wanna talk about it - Everything but the girl

There was a moment in the summer of 1988 when I was so in love with music, I would just listen to the radio from the moment I came home from school until about 2 in the morning when I fell asleep (with the radio still on).  There were so many brilliant songs in the charts that I couldn't believe it could get any better.  I remember four songs in particular which were all in the top 20 at the time, three of which will be in the top 20 of this list (when we eventually get there) and this one makes up the quartet.  I don't wanna talk about it was a cover of a song written back in 1971 and I'd never heard the Rod Stewart cover version before Everything but the girl brought their version out.  I wasn't used to an acoustic guitar driven song at that time; I'm struggling to think of one that doesn't use chords in fact in an 80s song.  I'd started writing songs in 1989 having just acquired a keyboard with an 8 track memory and I longed to have someone like Tracey Thorn to sing my tunes.  I still do in fact.

99... 100... coming ready or not


121 -Word up - Cameo

Some people have no sense of sentiment or sanctity.  Especially Scottish band 'Gun', Mel B or Little Mix!? A song like this needs to be in a museum, protected by armed guards and the only person allowed to touch it is Larry Blackmon, but only if he's wearing those special gloves that snooker referees wear.  Nobody should be allowed to go near this song.  That synth snare, that bass line, those weird backing vocals and yelps at the end, Larry's voice, the saw solo in the middle, the spaghetti western whistle - everything.  Admittedly, most Cameo songs which followed this number 3 hit sounded more or less the same without reaching the majesty of this absolute classic.


That's it for this installment but if you fancy a 'laugh' then you could always buy my book 'The Worst Pop Lyrics in the World Ever' off of Amazon here :  https://www.amazon.co.uk/Worst-Pop-Lyrics-World-Ever/dp/1530279186/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1545671900&sr=1-12




 

Monday 13 August 2018

The Greatest 200 singles of the 1980s (140 to 131)

We're at a point in the list where you're going to think - hang on, if that's at number 137, then what's at number one???  The 80's was such an amazing decade for music; more for the range of genres than anything else.  You could look at any top 40 in the 80s (more towards the beginning of the 80s than the end) and find a good 15-20 different genres.  This part of the countdown contains a lot of pop music, a bit of rock, a smidge of soul, a sprinkling of funk and Cliff Richard.  Yes.  Sir Clifford of St. Richardton. I have no apology.



140 - It's a Sin - Pet Shop Boys

Neil Tennant mastered the talk-sing genre.  His 'rapping' on West End Girls is something to behold and on this song, he makes sounding bored an art form.  When I first heard this song I didn't think music could get any better.  The lightning, the synth brass hits, the religious nods and admission of depravity all tied up in a glistening pop parcel fronted by the two most sour faced pop stars of all time.  On the cover of the album, Neil is yawning his head off whilst Chris just sits there, staring into the lens thinking about all the bad choices he made in life.  The endless ennui they no doubt experienced in the recording studio bleeding from song lyrics such as 'I love you; you pay my rent' and 'What have I done to deserve this'.  This song however is a timeless classic that could well have been recorded yesterday.  Simply brilliant.

As the excitement in Neil's flat built, the doorbell finally rang and they both dined on pizza with anchovies and quinoa


139 - When I think of you - Janet Jackson

"This is a song about control... and I have lots of it!", croons Ms Jackson in the opening track to her 1986 album, 'Control'.  A lot was made of the video for this song, supposedly shot in one take - if you take out all the pans to dark flooring and back up again to a completely different location.  You can recognise Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis' influence a mile away and that clicking synth bass is present all over this song with the glossy piano tines that hung over into Alexander O'Neal's 'Hearsay' the following year.  'When I think of you' doesn't actually go anywhere; it just repeats the same two chords all the way through and apart from the weird noises in the middle eight which sound like they've left the tape running whilst some people have a fight in the car park, Janet just flits through with her angelic pixie-like voice, pulling you along like you're on rollerblades - or, those roller skates you had to tie to your shoes and could make longer or shorter with an unscrewable bolt in the middle.  My point being, if you can make two chords repeating over and over sound this good, you're probably Jam and Lewis.

'Would you like to buy a massive violin?'

138 - Alive and Kicking - Simple Minds

I've said it once and I'll say it again, Jim Kerr is what Bono could have been if he'd stayed in college.  However, he left and became a massive global superstar and Jim remained famous only in the UK.  I love Simple Minds.  I really wanted to put 'Sanctify Yourself' in the top 200 but it just fell short - however, that's one way of getting more than 200 songs in this list... I love the power of Simple Minds' songs - She's a River, Waterfront, Let the Day begin, Stars will lead the way and Glittering Prize.  They all get a listen at least once a month with the volume RIGHT up.  Alive and Kicking is an absolute gem of a song. An undeniable classic that never fails to get the blood coursing around your eyeballs.  The video with them standing dangerously close to the edge of a cliff is also particularly scary and only adds to the gravitas of the song.

We're raising awareness of cliff erosion through the power of song


137 - Our Lips are Sealed - Fun Boy Three

I didn't really get Terry Hall when I was growing up.  I first saw him when I was probably six years old, standing on stage with a really thin microphone, his fluffy hair at huge odds with the facial expression of a person who lost all their money on a one horse race.  He just sort of stood there. Sort of singing. Looking like he sort of wanted to be there but not really.  Like he'd just wandered in off the street to stand in for the real singer, looking a bit shifty and looking forward to the whole Top of the Pops thing to be over so he could go get a chicken from ASDA, go home and make tea for the cousin he stupidly allowed to stay over 4 months ago and never left.  I should really Google this but I'm sure 'Our lips are sealed' was written by Hall with one of the Go-Gos, probably Jane Wiedlin.  This song has stuck with me throughout the years and I've always enjoyed it when I've heard it accidentally on the radio or something.  It's so jolly - for Terry Hall anyway.

A 'Dazzling' performance from Terry's washing powder


136 - The look of love - ABC

I never got the joke.  The song was titled, 'The look of love - part 1' and on the album 'The Lexicon of Love' there was a 'part 4'.  Still not sure what that was all about.  However, I'd not been exposed to a lot of pop/funk/soul before I got into Prince.  It didn't surprise me that ABC later did a song called 'Minneapolis' from where their sound was derived.  They had the lush synth basses of Human League and the wonderful soaring vocals of Martin Fry but they mixed in sweeping strings, tom toms, bell synths and powerful deep grand pianos too. What a lovely combination.  It was grand pop opera at it's absolute greatest.  I still can't believe 'All of My Heart' was written and recorded in 1983.  More on that later though.

I'm sure I parked my Ice Cream van round here somewhere


135 - Intuition - Linx

Having a bad day?  Stick this on.  What happens if you put David Grant and Norman Junior 'Mama Used to Say' Giscombe in a room?  Everything that's great about British soul/funk.  I liked everything both these guys did in the 80s - especially Junior's collab with Kim Wilde.  Listen to the intro to this song and then play the arcade game 'Out Run'.  Can't believe they didn't sue Ocean!! 

These glasses will be all the rage in 1983


134 - I just don't have the heart - Cliff Richard

I was pretty down on Stock, Aitken and Waterman in the late 80s.  They'd come along and taken over the charts with songs which all used the same formula, drum machine and vibe.  They seemed to just take the same song, use different lyrics and stick someone pretty at the front.  That wasn't the case with this Cliff track however.  Not that he's not pretty in his own way but it was a bit left field for both of them to get involved together.  Donna Summer had her moment with SAW, as did Bill Tarmey (Jack Duckworth), La Toya Jackson, Sinitta, Pat and Mick and Roland Rat but they did kinda make Siobhan Fahey leave Banarama and form Shakespears Sister so they weren't all bad.

We're all going on a...


In my old age, I've come to realise that although they squeezed a lot of good stuff out of the charts, they did write 'You'll never stop me loving you', 'Say I'm your number one' and 'Hand on your heart'.  And Mike Stock was responsible for the amazing recent Bucks Fizz album 'The A-Z of Pop'.  I'm not ashamed to admit I was (kind of) wrong about them.

133 - Alone - Heart

As you might have already guessed, power ballads get me right there.  Not that you can see where I'm pointing right now... The piano led verse is lovely in itself but the song bursts into life with the chorus.  It's been ruined (as most songs are) by that stupid loan advert.  I realise these people need money and if they've got something they can sell to fund their next packet of Wotsits, then fair enough but it's taken the gloss right off this song for me.  However, it still tickles the part of me that likes raw energy in songs so it sits here in the upper 100s which is no shameful place to be in such a decade of amazing tunes.  Well played.

Why does the room look all lacy?


132 - What's love got to do with it - Tina Turner

I was in Middlesbrough when I first heard this song.  That was bound to make anything I heard that day sound amazing.  Hearing a seagull in it's final death rattle after trying to swallow a scotch egg whole would probably have made it into my top 10 songs that day.  Anyway, it was the six weeks holidays from school and this song came on the radio.  The strange pipey flute thing at the start caught my attention.  Probably not the instrument of choice for most songwriters but that was the hook - never mind Tina's gravelly interpretation of singing making me instantly fall in love with a woman I'd not previously heard of.  I saw her live in 1996, a concert I will never forget and this song will always be the one that reminds me of the day I first heard her sing. 

This is what happens when you let people do their own hair and make-up


131 - Hold me Now - The Thompson Twins

I have to admit that I thought this was just OK at the time.  I was more into Human League and Paul Young; Thompson Twins were a bit weird singing about Detectives and Doctors and they had this woman at the back with an explosion in a mattress factory on her head playing xylophones and shaking odd percussion instruments.  I heard this song again in 1999 on the soundtrack to the Wedding Singer and was all like 'Woah, no way dude' or whatever the kids were saying back then.  There's no denying the quality of this song - despite the lyrics - it represents a period of the 80s when everyone was starting to get their production together.  Warm. Fuzzy. Joyful. Perfect.

I'm not sure what this is but I'm going to hit it repeatedly with a stick. See what happens.

Check out the rest of the top 200 videos here :
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8C2p97n8SmX5qmS8asB7YWWuu2GCDq_o