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Posts Tagged ‘Olivia Newton-John’

Step back to 1978 – Part 3

March 24th, 2011 10 comments

By the second half of 1978 I was clearly done with punk “” much like the rest of the civilised world. Now the word was Grease, even if You”re The One That I Want became unbearably overplayed. Other than a really great roadtrip holiday, the latter part of 1978 seems to have been quite uneventful for me: I cannot remember anything interesting at all happening other than playing football in ankle-deep snow in winter.

John Paul Young – Love Is In The Air.mp3
I knew this track by the Australian singer who prompted two popes to adopt his name in 1978 for quite a while before the event I associate it most with: a summer holiday in what was then East-Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Austria. Love Is In The Air was on a K-Tel type sampler cassette we played ad nauseam on that road trip in a Volkswagen camper, mainly because we didn”t have much else with us by way of musical entertainment. The tape also included J.J. Cale”s Cocaine, Eric Clapton”s Lay Down Sally, and Eruption”s cover of I Can”t Stand The Rain. I think the latter might have followed Love Is In The Air, because when Young”s song ends, I expect to hear the opening synth notes from the Eruption number. It could be that we gave that tape away to an East German family we met in Prague, with whom we struck up a friendship that extended beyond the holiday (I met the daughter again last year, for the first time in 29 years). To East Germans, all forms of Western media were like golddust. On our later visits to our friends, I”d smuggle Bravo magazines over the border, and act that was regarded as quite audacious, indeed almost heroic.  Love Is In The Air was also the first song I ever sung at a karaoke.

Clout – Substitute.mp3
In this series I have reported on my barely pubescent crushes on Agnetha of ABBA and Debbie Harry of Blondie. They were joined by another blonde in the form of the Glenda Hyam, the keyboard player of South African girl group Clout. The thing is, I turned out have a greater preference for darker women (not that I am inclined to discriminate on the basis of excessive pheomelanin). Alas, Glenda soon left the group, to be replaced by two much less fanciable but more hirsute blokes (who would later joined Johnny Clegg in Juluka). The dudes, no less curly than the rest of Clout, turned up for the follow-up hit Save Me, which will feature in the course of this series. Substitute, a great unrequited love number, is a cover version of a song by the Righteous Brothers. If anyone has the original, I”d be most grateful to receive it.

Supermax – Love Machine.mp3
Austrian disco, long before Falco! Goodness, this played everywhere in Germany, and at the time I hated it. Now I actually like it. Imagine Pink Floyd going disco (in which case the lyrics, with gems like “I am a love machine in town, the best you can get 50 miles around”, would need to be read ironically). Long-haired, moustachoid Kurt Hauenstein”s band was multi-racial (though not as predominantly black as the single cover would lead us to believe), and as such it became the first international multi-racial band to tour South Africa in 1981. It was a thankless venture. The apartheid authorities were not exactly pleased at the racial mixing ““ just imagine the potential of miscegenation among these degenerate disco hippies! ““ especially since the Austrians were also playing in the “homeland” of Venda, which is so off the beaten track that it probably has not seen any international music acts since. And the international artistic community failed to see the humour in anybody touring apartheid South Africa, racial diversity notwithstanding. Even if just a few years earlier the likes of Percy Sledge and George Benson had done exactly that.

Umberto Tozzi – Tu.mp3
A year earlier, Umberto Tozzi had enjoyed a big hit with Ti Amo. I liked that song very much. In 1978, Tozzi had a hit with Tu. By then I was wary of Italian balladeers whose schlock lent themselves to German covers by Schlager singers with an excess of blow-dried hair. Oddly, I don”t recall this being turned into a Schlager. Perhaps the absence of a chorus deterred the Schlager industry. Or perhaps they didn”t know how to translate “ba-badda-darm” into German. A year later, Tozzi released Gloria, which in 1984 became, much to my astonishment, a hit for Laura Branagan. I must confess that I do have a bit of a weakness for the Italian San Remo festival kind of songs.

Robert Palmer – Best Of Both Worlds.mp3
Much as I liked the song back then, it”s a bit of a mess, with its cod-Reggae beat and aggressively out-of-tune vocals. It was a fair hit in Europe, I think, but didn”t even dent the Top 75 in Britain. I think what I found most attractive about it are the minor notes 2:12 into the song. A year later Palmer had a bigger hit with Bad Case Of Loving You. At the bumper car rink at the local Rummel (as a travelling funfair is known in German) that year, the ticket-booth DJ held a name-the-artist competition when Bad Case Of Loving You came on. The prize was something like tokens for five free rides. Trouble was, I was already driving in a bumper car. To my frustration, nobody knew the answer, which I did. I called the answer out to my younger brother, but all I got in return was a deaf “heh?”. Of course, he wasn”t the idiot in that situation. I was. Obviously I should have abandoned my single ride in order to get five freebies ““ and the satisfaction of strutting to cash in my free rides knowing the answer to a tough question none of the assembled ignoramuses knew. File under “Regrets, I”ve had a few”.

Nina Hagen Band – TV-Glotzer.mp3
I must be honest: I don”t like Nina Hagen”s obnoxious vocals much. I bought this single (the cover of which seems to have been used for every Hagen release around that time) because it seemed the rebellious thing to do. There simply was very little of this kind of thing in German music at the time. The indictment of consumerism and the public”s passive, indeed mindless, acceptance of it appealed to my nascent leftist tendencies (translated lyrics are here). The consumerism must have been striking to Hagen, who had come from East-Germany only two years earlier after her singer stepfather, Wolf Biermann, was expelled by the communist regime. Backed by what would become the Neue Deutsche Welle band Spliff, TV Glotzer is a cover of The Tubes” far superior White Punks On Dope.  So Hagen and especially TV Glotzer were hugely influential in the rise of the German new wave movement.

Status Quo – Again And Again.mp3
For the first three years of my record-buying career, I bought loads of Status Quo records. Then I went off them, righteously repudiating the Quo. By the time I was a young adult, I joined the consensus that they were rather ridiculous and easily spoofed cliché mongering two-chord wonders. What utter foolishness! What deprivation did I subject myself to? No good case can be made for Status Quo being rock & roll”s equivalent of Dietrich Buxtehude, but, damn it, for pure energy and fun it”s hard to beat songs like Again And Again. Denims on, strike pose standing with legs apart (position of mirror optional), engage air guitar, stand shoulder-to-shoulder with imaginary fellow guitarist rocking forward and backward, jump in the air with final chord, look in panic at doors and windows to ensure that they were shut…

Olivia Newton-John – A Little More Love.mp3
Livvy”s career was stuttering to a bit of a halt before her appearance in Grease. On strength of that movie I bought her Totally Hot album, which contained rather too much disco-pop and too little by way of quality ballads, such as the wonderful Hopelessly Devoted To You from Grease. It really set the scene for the later Physical, the opening chord for the ghastly “80s. A Little More Love is one of those songs that suffers from a lack of direction. It”s not clear whether it”s supposed to be a West Coast rock number or a disco track. The pedestrian verses call to mind a b-side recorded under duress by Linda Ronstadt, but the glorious chorus sounds like it was written by the Bee Gees in their pomp, even though the song”s composer was John Farrar (who also wrote Hopelessly Devoted To You and You”re The One That I Want). As much as I hate Physical, I was pleased to see Newton-John appear on Glee last year; not as the sweet individual of her doubtless merited reputation, but as a bitch who outdoes the wonderfully ruthless Sue Sylvester.

Al Stewart – Song On The Radio.mp3
I had ended 1977 by buying singles by Harpo and The Runaways. I ended the following year by buying an Al Stewart album. I was staying with family friends in another city for a week or so over New Year”s Eve. They were quite different from my family. To begin with, they were communists. Not communists of the variety that had beards (even the men), carried Mao”s pocketbook and a displayed velvet poster of Che Guevara. These were proper activists, registered members of the German Communist Party, the DKP, and as critical of the corruption of communism in the East as they were of the capitalist society in the West. Communists of the ilk of Nina Hagen’s stepfather Biermann. I never adopted their politics, but I was influenced by them to see the word in a different way. So I was with them when I bought Al Stewart”s Time Passages album. When I asked them to play it, they appeared less than keen; much as I would feel if a 12-year-old asked me to put on their latest favourite record by what I would presume to be an autotuned muppet or derivative emo goon. When they finally relented, they liked what they heard and even asked if they could tape the LP (buying it would just have given profits to owners of the means of production, of course). I felt great validation that adults of intellectual character would like the music I bought.

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More Stepping Back

Music For Bloggers: Vol. 8

September 11th, 2008 5 comments
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Oh, my week was made by the lovely responses I received to my lament about not getting enough comments. I really wasn”t angling for compliments, but those that came really built me up, buttercup. People reading my semi-coherent ramblings to their computer-illiterate aunts in Canada… Wow! So I”m deeply touched and very grateful for all the nice comments. Don”t be shy, shower me with comments. Comments are fuel for the blogger. But, as I admitted, I”m guilty of not always commenting myself, so this series is probably as much about assuaging my own feelings of Catholic guilt by giving props to bloggers whose work I appreciate as it is about promoting them. As always, if your blog has not been featured yet, it might do so in the future.

dustysevens
The name gives it away: another blog dedicated to the glories of crackling vinyl. A few weeks ago, when choosing songs for my contribution to the Vinyl Record Day blogswarm, I was torn between uploading the clinical CD rip of Je t”aime”¦moi non plus, or a vinyl rip I got from who knows where. I went for the CD rip, but the crackling of the latter recreated the memory of growing up with the song in ways the digital version couldn”t. ally of dustysevens has some pretty rare stuff, and some that”s fairly easy to find . Take Sad Sweet Dreamer by the Sweet Sensation. If you need to have the digital version, it”s HERE. But if you grew up with it, you might want to capture what I might call the Birkin Effect, where the crackle is part of the instrumentation and, indeed, atmosphere of the song. For that, visit dustysevens (and other vinyl blogs). And if you don”t really dig vinyl rips, you can still visit to sample ally”s lovely, slightly off-beat humour and some of the surprising illustrations she finds (hand shadow tips, anyone?). The song dedication to ally’s blog is a vinyl rip I made last night, from the apparently rare-on-the-Internet Save The Children soundtrack of a docu on the 1972 PUSH Expo concert in Chicago featuring the cream of African-American musicians, including Sammy Davis Jr singing one of my all-time favourites.
Sammy Davis Jr – I Gotta Be Free (live) (vinyl rip).mp3

All Eyes And Ears
This is a blog I discovered after its owner commented to my No-Comments lament. What made me check out All Eyes And Ears was Dane”s remark that she was thinking of chucking the blog biz because of low hit and feedback rates. So I wanted to see if she should do so. Oh, but she shouldn”t. There are, of course, a lot of photography blogs about, and quite a few that combine photos and music, as Dane”s does. The excellent Art For Art”s Sake springs to mind. What I really like about All Eyes And Ears is the subject matter of photos: apparently unremarkable landmarks in humdrum Ohio brought to life with a keen eye for atmosphere, structure and symmetry. Who knew that a washed-out sign on a filthy wall next to a horribly dull building could be so beautiful? Dane’s art has style. And the songs she selects to illustrate her illustrations are so well-judged: Monkees, Brigitte Bardot, Glen Campbell, Carly Simon, Chuck Berry and so on. But hurry, it”s all on YouSendIt. I am still looking for a good pic of a financial institution located at a riverside in Dane”s homestate”¦ (thangyooverymuchfolks, I’ll be here all week)
Olivia Newton-John – The Banks Of The Ohio.mp3

Bob Evans Recording Album #3 in Nashville
I”m a great fan of Bob Evans” second album, Suburban Songbook, which I picked up at a gig he played in Cape Town (supporting the excellent Farryl Purkiss) last year. So I am very much looking forward to the Australian singer-songwriter”s third album, which he is currently recording in Nashville, where he also made Suburban Songbook. My anticipation is tickled further by his blogiary (is that a word for a blog-diary? Hey, in the cyberworld you can make up your own words), his account of how the recordings are going, where he gets drunk and who paid for supper. Even if that sounds a bit mundane, it”s not boring, because our man Kevin ““ for his Mom does not call him Bob ““ is quite an amusing chap, in a self-deprecating manner. I think it”s great to read about the process of recording an album from the first-person perspective of a normal musician, rather than the tales of excess involving groupies, drugs and debauchery. Not that Mr Mitchell ““ for his parents are not Mr and Mrs Evans either ““ would necessarily object to those elements of stardom. Bob/Kevin doesn’t read my blog, I don’t think, so I shall dedicate one of his own songs to him.
Bob Evans – The Great Unknown.mp3

Retro Kino
Do you remember the “80s film The Legend Of Billie Jean? Oh yeah, now that I mention it, you do. Helen wotserface was in it, right? We all thought she’d be a big star. Yeah. OK, Summer School? No? Mark Harmon teaches a bunch of proto-slackers in a summer camp? Ring a bell? Did you fancy Kirsty McNichol or Tatum O”Neal (or, indeed, Matt Dillon) in Little Darlings? Nah, I preferred Kirsty ““ though she probably wouldn”t prefer me (alleged and rumoured lesbians are funny that way. Anyway, probably for the better we didn”t get married). Andrew McCarthy. Whatever happened to him? I quite liked him, y”know, but I reckon Weekend At Bernies II killed his career flat. He was in Weekend At Bernies II, wasn”t he? Ah yes, if you were young in the “80s, then Retro Kino is going to bring back memories, some good and some perhaps unwelcome. A fairly new blog ““ just two months old ““ it provides well-written and informed comments on the almost forgotten piece of “80s cinema, plus posters and some video clips. A splendid trip to some kind of wond

erful nostalgia destinations. The dedication is from a film which surely will feature on Retro Kino at some point.
David Foster – Love Theme From St. Elmo’s Fire.mp3

Retro Music Snob
Retro Music Snob surfs the blogs so you don”t have to. The blog”s deal is to highlight posts of interest from other blogs, with a summary of said post. For the reader it is, of course, a great way of discovering new blogs, and for the blogger it”s a useful exercise seeing at a glance what other bloggers are up to. Earlier I said that comments are fuel for bloggers. Spare a thought then for RMS whose gig is quite unlikely to involve a fusillade of reaction. As a regular visitor and one who really appreciates this wonderful and well presented service, I hope to say “thank you” with this tenuously-linked song dedication:
Wings – Listen To What The Man Said.mp3

Previously featured:
Music For Bloggers Vol. 1: Totally Fuzzy, Not Rock On, Serenity Now (RIP), Stay At Home Indie Pop, The Late Greats, Tsururadio, 200percent, Jefitoblog (RIP), Television Without Pity, Michael’s World
Music For Bloggers Vol. 2: Fullundie, Mr Agreeable, Greatest Films, Peanut’s Playground, Just Good Tunes, Csíkszereda Musings, Mulberry Panda, The Black Hole, Secret Love, Hot Chicks With Douchebags
Music For Bloggers Vol. 3: Girl On A Train, Maybe We Ain’t That Young Anymore, Earbleedingcountry, Spangly Princess, Ill Folks, Deacon Blues, One-Man Publisher, CD Rated
Music For Bloggers Vol. 4: Pop Dose, Todger Talk, Holy Goof (RIP), Echoes In The Wind, Sunset Over Slawit, The Hits Just Keep Coming, The Ghost of Electricity, Guitariotabs
Music For Bloggers Vol. 5: The Quietus, Barely Awake In Frog Pyamas, The Great Vinyl Meltdown, Fusion 45, Inveresk Street Ingrate, The Songs That People Sing
Music For Bloggers Vol. 6: my hmphs, Visions of Wrong Terrence, Don’t Burn The Day Away, Mine For Life, 3 Minutes 49 Seconds
Music For Bloggers Vol. 7: Uncle E’s Musical Nightmare, Jens Lekman, Ain’t Superstitious, AM Then FM, Psd Photoshop Disasters, SIBlingshot on the Bleachers, Dr Forrest’s Cheese Factory, NME & Melody Maker

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