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    What the Riff?!?

    Every week, “WHAT THE RIFF?!?” takes a look at a ROCK AND ROLL album that debuted or peaked on the U.S. Billboard charts during a random month between 1965-1995. Four friends discuss the artists and 4 tracks from the album as it plays in the background. Then we riff on 4 “staff picks” of other artists that were also in the charts during that month and year. You’ll hear some familiar tunes as well as some deeper cuts and entertainment tracks as we share a little look into the culture and happenings of that day— having fun recalling that “old time rock and roll.” We hope to bring back memories for you — and we encourage you to find and purchase the tracks and albums from iTunes, Spotify or your other favorite music service. You’ll find each episode with a short blog on this site. Please subscribe so you don’t miss any release! We also invite you to follow us and learn more about us @whattheriffpodcast on Facebook.
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    Episodes (305)

    1979 - June: Journey “Evolution”

    1979 - June:  Journey “Evolution”

    We've already covered a couple of Journey albums.  Episode 250 profiled "Infinity," the introduction of Steve Perry to the group.  And episode 26 delved into arguably the high water mark for Journey, the album "Escape."  Here we take a look at the band as they are in their transition into one of the world's biggest rock bands.

    The appropriately-titled album Evolution is Journey's fifth studio album.  Here we find Steve Perry settling in as front man while still sharing lead vocal duties with keybaordist Gregg Rolie.  They have also replaced drummer Aynsley Dunbar with Steve Smith, previously with Ronnie Montrose's band.  The band is continuing to explore a more radio-friendly sound.  The lineup for this band includes Perry, Rolie, and Dunbar, along with Neil Schon on guitar, and Ross Valory on bass.

    At the time, "Evolution" was the band's most successful album, and it reached number 20 on the Billboard 200 chart.  It also featured their first single to enter the top 20.  The album was actually released in March of 1979, but was recorded in the fall of 1978.  We're featuring it in January of 1979 because - well - that's where we were able to fit it in.

    Brian rejoins us in todays podcast to sub for an absent Wayne, and to profile this album. 

    Too Late
    A deeper cut written by Perry and Schon, this song was written about a friend from Steve Perry's hometown who was wrestling with addiction to drugs.  It was a plea to get out of town and the surroundings that fed his addiction before it was too late to break the chains of addiction.

    Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin'
    The biggest hit from the album is a slow rocker with a shuffle beat.  It hit number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 in November of 1979, the group's first foray into the top 20.  The song is based on a true story about a cheating woman who finds out that turnabout is fair play - and that cheating on a songwriter can result in your being memorialized in a song.

    City of the Angels
    While they were known as a San Francisco band, this album track pays homage to Los Angeles.  It was written by Perry, Schon and Rolie.  On the album, "Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin'" immediately leads into this track, and you will occasionally hear these played together on album-oriented stations and satellite radio.

    Just the Same Way
    This single finds Gregg Rolie taking turns with Perry on lead vocals.  It was written by Rolie, Schon, and Ross Valory, making it the only song on the album not written or co-written by Steve Perry.  It is an infatuation song, with a great call-and-answer in the chorus between Rolie and Perry.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    The Pink Panther Theme by Henry Mancini
    The Saturday morning cartoon show with a silent protagonist, "The Pink Panther," ended its run after 10 years.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Gold by John Stewart
    Lynch's staff pick is a top 5 hit from John Stewart's album "Bombs Away Dream Babies," his first solo top 40 hit.  Both Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks contributed to the album, and Nicks provides backing vocals on this song.  The vocals describe the dark, cynical side of the recording industry.

    Planet Claire by The B-52's
    Rob brings us a musical interpretation of a B-rated sci-fi movie.  Once the instrumental and sound-effects - with a Peter Gunn-inspired beat - give way to Fred Schneider's vocals, we find that the girl is from Planet Claire, drives a Plymouth Satellite, and "some say she's from Mars, or one of the seven stars that shine after 3:30 in the morning.  Well, she isn't!"

    Dance the Night Away by Van Halen 
    Bruce features the first US top 20 hit by Van Halen.  This song is unusual because it is the only song on the "Van Halen II" album that originated in the studio rather than as a song the group had honed on tour for a long time.  It also downplays Eddie Van Halen's guitar virtuosity and brings up the vocal harmonies.  Fleetwood Mac's "Go Your Own Way" was an inspiration for this single.

    Rock n Roll Fantasy by Bad Company
    Brian's staff pick was written by Bad Co. front man Paul Rogers, and reflects the truth that Rock music is escapism, a fantasy to take you away from the stress of the everyday world for a bit.  It was the lead single from the album "Desolation Angels."  While not their highest charting single, it is their best selling single.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Main Theme from the motion picture "Alien"
    The disturbing soundtrack was one element of what made this sci-fi horror film so creepy.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1982 - February: Duran Duran "Rio"

    1982 - February:  Duran Duran  "Rio"

    Did MTV make Duran Duran, or did Duran Duran make MTV?  Perhaps a little of both.  What is beyond doubt is that Rio, the band's second studio album, would propel Duran Duran into a worldwide new wave and dance phenomenon, and would be a major offensive of the Second British Invasion in the United States.

    Duran Duran had found success in the UK with their self-titled debut album in 1981, and expectations were high for the group.  Rio would find the band leaning heavily on upbeat tracks, a couple of synth-heavy ballads, and more experimentation with musical sounds and instruments than their first album.  Many tracks also had accompanying videos, leaning into the MTV market.  The photogenic appeal of the band also bolstered the popularity of their videos.

    Critics were neutral to negative on the album when released, but the commercial appeal was stunning.  Duran Duran would dominate American charts from the back half of 1982 throughout 1983, and the band would become an icon of 1980's music.

    The album was released in May of 1982, but was recorded in January through March of 1982, resulting in our placement of the album in this month. 

    Brian joins us in Wayne's absence, while Rob brings us this iconic New Wave album for today's podcast

    Rio
    The title track was the third single released from the album.  Bassist John Taylor came up with the title, reflecting optimism and an exotic feel for the album.  Sounds at the start of the song were created by throwing small metal rods onto the strings of a grand piano.  Andy Hamilton is the saxophone soloist on this track.

    New Religion
    This deeper cut leads off side two of the album, and is a dialogue between the ego and the alter-ego, featuring conflicting voices in the chorus.  The song is a bit darker than others on the album.  "I'm talking for free, I can't stop myself - It's a new religion.  I've something to see, I can't help myself - It's a new religion."

    Last Chance  on the Stairway
    Another deeper cut, the lyrics to this song talk about taking chances and testing limits.  "And please don't say leave till later, I've had my last chance on the stairway."

    Save a Prayer
    This ballad was Duran Duran's biggest hit in the UK at the time, though not originally released as a single in the US.  The lyrics depict two strangers falling into a one-night stand, living in the moment and letting the consequences wait for a later time.  The synthesizers create a beautiful but haunting sonic landscape.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main Theme from the motion picture “The Thing”
    Not to be confused with the Fantastic Four character, this John Carpenter film depicts a research team in Antarctica encountering a hostile extraterrestrial who can assimilate then imitate humans.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Leather and Lace by Don Henley and Stevie Nicks 
    Brian brings us a duet from alumni of the Eagles and Fleetwood Mac.  Stevie Nicks wrote this song about a relationship between two very different individuals, based on her own experiences in relationships with both Don Henley and fellow Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham.

    Love is Like a Rock by Donnie Iris
    Bruce features the second single from Iris's second album, "King Cool."  It has an infectious riff.  It went to number 37 on the Billboard Hot 100.  The song originated as an instrumental jam, with lyrics added afterwards.

    Physical by Olivia Newton-John 
    While Lynch takes some grief for bringing such a pop song into this rock broadcast, the single was a monster hit in the 80's.  While the video would portray scenes of exercise in the gym, the lyrics were considered much more sexual and controversial at the time.

    Addicted by Le Roux 
    Rob closes out the staff picks with a rocking hit lost in time.  Le Roux is a band from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  Roux is a cajun thickening base for gumbo.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    I Advance Masked by Andy Summers & Robert Fripp
    Police guitarist Andy Summers and long time King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp had this instrumental rock track out on which we end the podcast.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    What the Riff?!?
    en-usMarch 04, 2024

    1979 - February: “Saturday Night Fever” Soundtrack

    1979 - February:  “Saturday Night Fever” Soundtrack

    OK, it isn't rock music, but the Soundtrack to "Saturday Night Fever" was a tremendously successful album both commercially and critically, and it had a major impact in popular culture of the later 70's.  The theatrical release of the movie actually went back to December of 1977, but it was the winner of the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in February 1979, one of only three soundtrack albums to do so.  Composed by the Bee Gees and prominently featuring that band, this soundtrack is the second-best selling of all time behind "The Bodyguard."  

    The Bee Gees actually didn't get involved with the film until it was in post-production.  John Travolta was dancing to Stevie Wonder and Boz Scaggs when the scenes were filmed.  Columbia Records refused legal clearance for Scaggs material because they were pursuing another disco movie at the time, and the Bee Gees were commissioned to write the songs for the film.  The brothers Gibb wrote the songs primarily in a single weekend.  

    The resulting success would change the trajectory of both the Bee Gees and actor John Travolta.  The Bee Gees would become a group often compared to the Beatles in the late 70's.  Travolta, already well known for his role in the television series "Welcome Back, Kotter," would become an A-list celebrity and a household name.

    In 2013 the album was added to the National Recording Registry in the Library of Congress for preservation.

    Lynch is responsible for this travesty, as the other participants do so under protest.  Support your local rock band, folks!

     

    Night Fever
    This song was originally called "Saturday Night," but Robin Gibb was concerned about that name because of the number of songs already bearing the name.  "Night Fever" was inspired by Percy Faith's "Theme from 'A Summer Place'", and it spent 8 weeks at the top of the Billboard charts.

    How Deep Is Your Love
    This pop ballad was released in September of 1977, ahead of the movie.  It had hit the top of the Billboard Hot 100 by Christmas Day of 1977, remained there for 3 weeks, and spent 17 total weeks in the top 10.  Barry Gibb has commented that this is his favorite Bee Gees song.  It won Best Pop Performance by a Group at the February 1978 Grammy awards.

    You Should Be Dancing
    Prior to their involvement with the "Saturday Night Fever" soundtrack, the Bee Gees first released this track on their album "Children of the World" in 1976.  This is the song playing when Travolta takes over the disco dance floor. 

    Jive Talkin'
    Here is another song that had been previously issued before the soundtrack was released.  The lead single from the album "Main Course" was released in May 1975, long before "Saturday Night Fever."  The song was originally called "Drive Talking," and the rhythm was inspired by the sound the band's car made crossing the Julia Tuttle Causeway as they traveled to the studio in Miami.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Dancing Queen by ABBA
    A mockumentary called "ABBA:  The Movie" was in the theatres at this time in the U.S.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Is She Really Going Out with Him by Joe Jackson
    Wayne gets the staff picks going with a song that asks why good looking women date horrible men.  Joe Jackson is often confused with Elvis Costello, another artist releasing albums at the time.  This is Jackson's debut single from his debut album, "Look Sharp."

    The Gambler by Kenny Rogers
    Bruce brings us Kenny Roger's signature song.  Songwriter Don Schlitz wrote this song in 1976 and it was recorded by several musicians including Johnny Cash before Rogers took it to number 1 on the country charts and number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100.  The gambler looks through life through the lens of poker, knowing "every hand's a winner, and every hand's a loser," and of course "you've got to know then to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em."

    Stumblin' In by Chris Norman and Suzi Quatro
    Rob's staff pick is the sole top 40 hit by female rock pioneer Suzi Quatro, and Norman's only hit outside of his previous band, Smokie.  This duet made it to number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100.  Both singers have a smoky vocal sound.

    Do You Think I'm Sexy? by Rod Stewart
    Lynch notes Stewart's ability to surf the waves of popularity with this staff pick.  While Rod Stewart honed his craft in the rock genre, he achieved both popularity and notoriety with his polarizing choice of embracing disco music in the late 70's.  Today this song remains one of his most popular tunes.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Pegasus by The Allman Brothers Band
    The Allman Brothers were decidedly NOT a disco band in this instrumental jam.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1970 - October: Three Dog Night “Naturally”

    1970 - October:  Three Dog Night  “Naturally”

    By the end of 1970 Three Dog Night was in the middle of their most prolific and successful period of their career.  The group would land 21 Billboard Top 40 hits between 1969 and 1975 with three of these taking the top slot.  The group was formed by three vocalists in 1967 - Chuck Negron, Cory Wells, and Danny Hutton.  The other members of the band for this album are Mike Allsup on guitar, Joe Schermie on bass, Jimmy Greenspoon on keyboards, and Floyd Sneed on drums.  All of the instrumentalists in the band also provide backing vocals on at least one of the songs from the album.

    Naturally is the fifth album from the band and the second released in 1970.  Three singles from the album entered the Billboard top 20, with "Joy to the World" topping the charts.  As with contemporaries like the Beach Boys and Crosby, Stills, and Nash, you get an abundance of vocal harmonies with Three Dog Night.  Given the origins with three vocalists, perhaps this is not surprising.

    Three Dog Night takes its name from the Australian Outback, and how the Aborigines would keep warm at night by sleeping with a dingo - dogs native to the continent.  A very cold evening would be known as a three-dog night.  While the group was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2000, they have not yet been inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Much of their work was composed by others, and this has been used as an excuse for their lack of recognition.

    Three Dog Night continues to produce music today, though Danny Hutton is the only original member still with the group.  

    Wayne takes us through this album for today's podcast.

     

    One Man Band
    The first single released from the album went to number 19 on the Billboard charts.  The lyrics describe a man who wants to be the only one for his lover - her one man band.  There are great close harmonies and work on the Hammond organ in this one.

    Joy to the World
    The big hit from the album went to number 1 on the Billboard charts and remained there for six weeks.  It was not expected to be a hit, but was instead expected to just be a "filler" song for the album with nonsensical but catchy lyrics.  Singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor Hoyt Axton wrote the song.  Chuck Negron is the lead singer on this hit.

    Liar
    Russ Ballard of Argent wrote this song, and released it as Argent's first single off their self-titled album.  While that version did not chart, the Three Dog Night rendition went to number 7 on the Billboard charts, benefitting from its release after their number 1 hit with "Joy to the World."  The haunting lyrics describe a relationship in trouble.

    I Can Hear You Calling
    This song leads off the album and appears as the B-side to "Joy to the World," but was never released as a single itself.  The funky grooves feature heavy use of the Hammond organ and a big drum beat.  The lyrics reflect a person who keeps getting called on the phone by a lover he has left behind.  

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main theme from the television series “H.R. Pufnstuf”
    This odd children's show from Sid and Marty Krofft left the airwaves in October 1970. 

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Fire and Rain by James Taylor
    Rob starts off the staff picks with this soft rock hit.  Taylor wrote the song after the suicide of a friend.  It was the second single from Taylor's second album, "Sweet Baby James."   It peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    It Don't Matter to Me by Bread
    Bruce brings us another soft hit.  Bread was a soft rock group formed and fronted by David Gates, along with Jimmy Griffin and Rob Royer.  Gates, a native of Tulsa, Oklahoma, ran in the same circles as Leon Russell in Tulsa bar bands before moving to California.  The song reflects an openness in the singer's relationship, wanting only the best for his love.

    Knock Three Times by Dawn 
    Lynch features a group which would later be known as Tony Orlando and Dawn.  Orlando was working as an executive at April-Blackwood Music, and released the song without listing his name to protect his position from accusations of a conflict of interest.  The song went to number 1.  The lyrics reflect a secret romance between a man and his neighbor from the floor below.

    Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go by Bettye LaVette
    Wayne's staff pick is a bit of a James Brown song with a female voice.  Bettye LaVette came out of Detroit but was signed by Atlantic Records rather than their competitors in Detroit, Motown Records.  LaVette is a long time singer of blues, soul, and R&B starting in the early 60's and continuing today.  This song is about letting loose and having a good time living in the moment.

     

    COMEDY TRACK:

    Bridget the Midget by Ray Stevens
    We wrap up the podcast with the comedy stylings of Ray Stevens singing about Bridget the Midget, the Queen of the Blues.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1975 - October: E.L.O. “Face the Music”

    1975 - October:  E.L.O.  “Face the Music”

    The Electric Light Orchestra, also known as E.L.O., was formed in Birmingham in 1970 by multi-instrumentalists Jeff Lynne and Roy Wood, and by percussionist Bev Bevan.  Wood was in a band called the Move in 1968 and had the idea of a new band which would feature classical instruments more prominently than the guitars, hoping to "pick up where the Beatles left off."  He recruited Lynne to the cause in 1970.  Wood would leave the band in 1972 at which point Lynne would be the leader of the band, producing and arranging all the albums and writing most of the songs.

    Face the Music was ELO's fifth studio album, and the one which would be their real worldwide breakthrough.  The album moved away from the large-scale orchestral pieces and contained more single-friendly material.  It would be the first ELO album to go Platinum.   The band at the time consisted of multi-instrumentalist and creative heart Jeff Lynne, Bev Bevan on percussion, Richard Tandy on keyboard, Kelly Groucutt on bass and vocals, Mik Kaminski on violin, Hugh McDowell on cello, and Melvyn Gale on cello.  Louis Clark was the conductor of the orchestra and did some of the orchestral and choral arrangements along with Lynne and Tandy.

    We're catching ELO on their way up with this album.  The band would hit the pinnacle of their success with 1977's double album "Out of the Blue."  In 1986 Lynne would leave the group to pursue other projects, while Bevan would form the group "ELO, part II," eventually renamed "The Orchestra."  Lynne would reform the group as Jeff Lynne's ELO  along with Richard Tandy in 2014.

    Bruce presents this symphonic rock album in this week's podcast.

     

    Fire On High
    The opening track is a largely instrumental piece.  Drummer Bev Bevan is vocalizing the backward lyrics, "The music is reversible but time is not.  Turn back, turn back, turn back, turn back!"  Lynne had received criticism from some fundamentalist groups about backward masking on the El Dorado album, and this is his joking response.  The song's mix of symphony with rock and roll was played at home games for the Atlanta Thrashers hockey team.

    Strange Magic
    This was the second single from the album and features keyboardist Richard Tandy playing the guitar part while Lynne plays a 12-string acoustic fed through a phase shifter.  It went to number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Nightrider
    While this is a deeper cut, it actually was released as a single and just didn't chart.  Bassist Kelly Groucutt takes turns with Jeff Lynne to provide lead vocals on this song.  The title was also the title of Lynne's first major band prior to forming ELO. 

    Evil Woman
    This song about a bad woman is the first single and the big hit off the album.  As seems common with many hit singles, it was originally written as a filler track to give the album a longer runtime with no thought to its being a hit.  Lynne wrote it in about 30 minutes.  It went to number 10 on both the US Billboard Hot 100 and the UK singles charts.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To) (from the motion picture "Mahogany")
    Diana Ross stars in this film about a woman torn between a life in Rome as a fashion designer and life in Chicago with the man she loves.  Ross sane the theme as well.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Fool for the City by Foghat
    Wayne launches the staff picks with this rocking tribute to the city from the Platinum-selling album of the same name.  "I'm ready for the city, air pollution, here I come."  The album cover features the drummer fishing in a manhole in New York City.  New York City policemen on patrol stopped at the scene and jokingly asked if they had a fishing license.  Foghat came out of the remnants of a group called Savoy Brown. 

    They Just Can't Stop It (Games People Play)  by The Spinners
    Rob features a crossover success that hit the number 1 spot on the US Hot Soul Singles chart and number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100.  The song was recorded at Philadelphia's Signa Sound Studios, and the female vocals are provided by the studio backing vocal group called Sweethearts of Sigma - Carla Benson, Evette Benton, and Barbara Ingram.  Evette Benton is the lead female voice on the song.

    Lyin' Eyes by the Eagles
    California country is the focus of Lynch's staff pick.  Lyin' Eyes appeared on the Eagles' 1975 album "One of These Nights," and was written by Henley and Frey.  Don Henley took lead vocal duties on this one.  It went to number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and won a Grammy for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.  The origin of the song was observing young attractive women in Hollywood dating older rich guys.

    Bad Blood by Neil Sedaka
    Bruce brings us a lost number 1 hit.  Sedaka was better known for his work in the 1950's and early 60's, but had a revival during the mid-70's.  This song about a woman who is trouble also features an uncredited vocal by Elton John.  Sedaka sings and plays piano on this song, while David Foster provides the keyboard work.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Will o' the Wisp by Leon Russell
    We finish off with a brief piano instrumental from singer-songwriter Leon Russell's album of the same name.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1985 - August: R.E.M. “Fables of the Reconstruction”

    1985 - August:  R.E.M.  “Fables of the Reconstruction”

    The year 1985 would find the band R.E.M. in transition between college band success and the mainstream powerhouse they were to become in future years.  The quartet of Michael Stipe on vocals, Mike Mills on bass and vocals, Peter Buck on guitar, and Bill Berry on percussion and backing vocals were moving towards a greater variety of instrumentation and a bit more experimentation with their third studio album, Fables of the Reconstruction.

    The album actually has two names, as "Fables of the Reconstruction" was the name if you held the cassette or album with one side up, and if you flipped it over the name appeared as "Reconstruction of the Fables."  The suggestion of the name "Reconstruction" came from Michael Stipes' father who was a carpenter.  It is also a loaded term in the American South from which the Athens, Georgia band hails —  “Reconstruction” is the period of time immediately following the American Civil War when the South was being brought back into the Union.  The songs on the album have a darker sound than earlier works, and the lyrics draw from Southern Gothic works.  This was the first album recorded outside the U.S., as the band traveled to London to work at Livingston Studios with producer Joe Boyd.

    While the singles from the album would not be considered hits in the United States, the album reached number 28 on the US Billboard 200 chart, and number 35 on the UK Albums Chart.  It would feature two singles, “Driver 8’ and“Can't Get There from Here,” which would become well known over time.

    Rob brings us this transitional album for today's podcast

    Driver 8
    The second single released from the album refers to the Southern Crescent train line.  It ran under the Southern Railway until 1979 when Amtrak bought them out, and continues as the Amtrak Crescent today.  “And the train conductor says take a break, Driver 8.”

    Green Grow the Rushes
    This deeper cut  was written as a pact between Michael Stipe and Natalie Merchant of 10,000 Maniacs, relating to the poor treatment of indigenous peoples and migrant workers.  “Green grow the rushes, go.  The compass points the workers home.”

    Maps and Legends
    Inspired by preacher and Southern folk artist Howard Finster, this song uses the reading of a map as a metaphor for reading a person.  Like the map reveals stories in little symbols on it, people are the accumulation of their experiences and stories.

    Can't Get There from Here
    This song was the lead single from the album and peaked at number 10 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart - meaning it peaked at about 110 in US popularity.  It is the first R.E.M. song to have a horn section.  You can sense the Soul inspiration in it.  The lyrics about “Philomath” refer to an unincorporated community just outside of Athens, Georgia.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Weird Science by Oingo Boingo (from the motion picture “Weird Science”)
    Two geeky high school students create the perfect woman in this sci-fi comedy partly based on Frankenstein, and largely based on the 1951 comic “Made of the Future” by Al Feldstein.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Drive by The Cars  Lynch brings us a version of the Cars single from the 1985 Live Aid concert.  Bassist Benjamin Orr takes on the lead vocal duties for this ballad which was written by frequent front man Ric Ocasek.  The studio version appeared on their 1984 album Heartbeat City,  and became one of the bands biggest hits.

    Take On Me by a-ha
    Bruce features the first US hit by a Norwegian band.  While a-ha released the song twice before without it becoming a hit, the third release with its video combining pencil sketch animation and live performance would propel it to the number 1 slot in the U.S.  Its 2 1/2 octave-spanning chorus makes it one of the hardest songs to sing.

    Summertime Girls by Y & T 
    Wayne's staff pick is a hair band rocker, the first and only hit by Y&T.  It went to number 55 on the Billboard Hot 100, but was played frequently on the television series “Baywatch.”  The Band Y&T was originally known as "Yesterday & Today," and although they don't have many hits they have sold over 4 million albums worldwide, and were an inspiration for Lars Ulrich of Metallica to become a musician.

    Dancing in the Street by David Bowie and Mick Jagger 
    Rob closes out the staff picks with a cover originally recorded by Martha and the Vandellas in 1964 (but we all agreed that the Van Halen cover is the best there is).Jagger and Bowie's version made it to number 7 on the US chart and number 1 on the UK chart.  This collaboration was their contribution to the Live Aid charity movement.

     

    NOVELTY TRACK:

    Tequila by The Champs
    We close out this week's podcast with the tune that helped Pee Wee Herman avoid catastrophe at the hands of a biker gang in “Pee Wee's Big Adventure.”

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1985 - April: Toto “Toto IV”

    1985 - April:  Toto  “Toto IV”

    Yes, you are right - Toto IV was released in March of 1982, not April of 1985.  However, the rock group Toto was a celebrity phenomenon in 1985, particularly in Japan.  In April of 1985 MTV broadcast a special episode showcasing a Toto concert from Japan.

    Toto IV was both a commercial and critical success.  Three of the singles would be top 10 hits, and the album would achieve triple Platinum status as it became known as one of the best albums of the year.  Critically, the group would earn six Grammy awards including Album of the Year, and Record of the Year for the single “Rosanna.”

    The group would spend much of 1982 and 1983 on tour, though there would be some changes in personnel.  Bassist David Hungate left the group shortly after the release of Toto IV, sensing that the success of the album and the fame of the group would negatively impact time with his family.  Lead singer Bobby Kimball was in and out of court fighting prosecution on drug-related charges.  Those charges would eventually be dismissed in late May 1983, but he would be released from the band after missing many recording sessions.

    The album is a soft-rock masterpiece, with balanced synth and keyboard sounds and soaring harmonies.  Songs have a jazzy feel, interspersed with piano-based ballads.

    Lynch has been lobbying for a long time to do this album, and we hope you enjoy it for this week's podcast.

     

    Rosanna
    The biggest hit from the album was often thought to be inspired by actress Rosanna Arquette who was dating keyboardist Steve Porcaro.  However, writer David Paich says the lyrics were based on various girls he had known in the past rather than a single individual.  The shuffle drum pattern is reminiscent of both Bo Diddley rhythms and John Bonham's groove on "Fool in the Rain."

    Make Believe
    This sunny-feeling single hit number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100.  It describes a time of looking back with an old lover, remembering the moments they shared.  It was the second US single from the album.  David Paich wrote the song, and Bobby Kimball is on lead vocals.

    I Won't Hold You Back
    The piano-oriented ballad peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, and held the number 1 spot on the US Adult Contemporary chart for three weeks.  It looks back on a failed romance as the singer lets go of what he had.  Guitarist Steve Lukather takes lead vocals duties for this track, and Eagles alumnus Timothy B. Schmidt provides backing vocals in the chorus. 

    Africa
    While this song did well as a single, it has grown into a cultural icon.  It did top the Billboard Hot 100 in 1983, but would see a resurgence in popularity over time, particularly after Weezer's cover in 2018.  The lyrics depict a man struggling between his love for the continent and returning to his relationship elsewhere. 

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main theme from the motion picture “Ladyhawke”
    This fantasy movie starring Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Matthew Broderick hit the big screen in April of 1985.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Walking on Sunshine by Katrina and the Waves
    Wayne starts us off with a popular and optimistic song that got the band Grammy-nominated for Best New Artist.  It is off their debut and eponymously named album.  It was first released in Canada, though the band was out of England.  It went to number 9 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Summer of '69 by Bryan Adams
    Bruce brings us this well-known song from Adams' album "Reckless," which was released in April of 1985.  The original name was going to be "Best Days of My Life," and in the first draft the lyric "summer of '69" only appeared once.  With the name change, "Summer of '69" replaced several appearances of the phrase "best days of my life," in the track.

    High On You by Survivor
    Rob's staff pick is an ode to the intoxication and infatuation of new love.  It is the first top 10 single from their album "Vital Signs," and arose from a jam during touring sound checks.  Mickey Thomas from Jefferson Starship and Peter Wolf from the J. Geils Band are supporting musicians on this track.

    Silent Running by Mike + the Mechanics
    Lynch finishes the staff picks with a synth-heavy song with science fiction lyrics.  The singer is a father who has journeyed into the future and is now communicating back to his son with instructions for mitigating the coming war and catastrophe.  This is the first single released by Mike + the Mechanics, and it went to number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Moments In Love by Art of Noise
    This largely instrumental piece is a signature song from the art rock group.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

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    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1993 - April: Porno for Pyros “Porno for Pyros”

    1993 - April:  Porno for Pyros  “Porno for Pyros”

    If you thought these songs were from Jane's Addiction, it is an understandable mistake.  Porno for Pyros was formed in 1992 after the first break-up of Jane's Addiction by members by lead vocalist Perry Farrell and percussionist Stephen Perkins.  They added Peter DiStefano on guitar and Martyn LeNoble on bass for their eponymously named debut album.  The inspiration for the band's name came from a fireworks advertisement that Perry Farrell saw in a pornographic magazine.  Inspiration was also connected to the 1992 LA riots which occurred in the band's hometown.

    The album Porno for Pyros benefitted from the success of Jane's Addiction and the buzz surrounding the new group.  Porno for Pyros began a nationwide tour to support the band prior to the release of the first album.  By the time the album was released in 1993 there was a pent-up demand for it, causing it to surge to number 3 on the Billboard 200 album chart.  With a blend of punk, psychedelic rock and alternative, the album gained both commercial and critical success.

    The band was impactful on the alternative rock scene, but was short-lived.  They would release a follow-up album in 1996 before disbanding in 1998.  They would have reunions in 2009 and 2020, and the original line-up has recorded new material as of 2023 to be released as an EP in 2024.

    Wayne takes us through this alternative rock album. 

    Cursed Female
    This track was released as the first single as a medley with the song “Cursed Male.”  The lyrics reflect the abuse women face in life.  It reached number 3 on the Modern Rock charts.  “Cursed to be born beautiful, poor, and female, there's none that suffer more.

    Cursed Male
    Forming a medley with “Cursed Female” for the first single, this song turns to the difficulties males face in life.  “All the guys that really have the money are too old to have a good time with it...Too old to turn the women on, too old to have a fast car and drive it.”

    Pets
    This is the hit from the album.  It deals with dissatisfaction with the human race on the brink of destruction.  The song describes how aliens might take over the world and treat human beings as great pets.  It reached number 1 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.

    Packin' .25
    This track has the LA riots as its inspiration.  It reflects the idea of people carrying a handgun in order to achieve respect.  Interestingly, a 25-caliber pistol is not a very powerful weapon.  “I dreamt all yesterday how I might make a man feel with a gun up to his face!  Show respect to me.  I don't care what you're thinking, I'll wipe that thought away!

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles) by The Proclaimers (from the motion picture “Benny and Joon”)
    Johnny Depp and Mary Stuart Masterson star in this film about two eccentric people falling in love.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Daughter by Pearl Jam
    Lynch gets the staff picks rolling with the second single from Pearl Jam's "Vs." album.  It talks about a girl with severe dyslexia whose mother doesn't understand the condition.  The lack of understanding prompts the mother to abuse the daughter, thinking she is being deliberately lazy and disruptive. 

    Woman by Brother Cane
    Rob features a deeper cut from Alabama band Brother Cane off their debut album.  This grunge-tinted song has a slow, haunting, mournful feel that builds into a faster paced, minor epic by the middle of the song before returning to the slow theme at the end.  The singer discusses an unstable relationship.  “I used to know better, now I don't know what's worse - having it all maybe, or having nothing for sure.”

    Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat) by Digable Planets 
    Bruce brings us the first single from the debut album Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space).” The lyrics are a celebration of hip-hop, the Brooklyn underground scene, jazz, style, and the confidence of the group.  Digable Planets sampled “Stretching” by Art Blakley & the Jazz Messengers for the chorus.

    Lollipop Serenade by Insane Jane
    Wayne's staff pick is from a local Atlanta band with a female lead.  Insane Jane put out two albums, the first called “Each Finger” and the second called “Green Little Pill.” The lead singer was known as “Yellow.”  This may be a song that those outside of Atlanta may not have heard before.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Beer :30 by The Reverend Horton Heat
    Well, it is largely instrumental, if you don't count the occasional “beer” and “get naked” statements thrown in.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1967 - September: The Four Tops "Reach Out"

    1967 - September:  The Four Tops  "Reach Out"

    One of the groups that defined the Motown sound was the Detroit Quartet known as The Four Tops.  The group originally called themselves the Four Aims, but changed the name to avoid confusion with the Ames Brothers.  The group was composed of Abdul "Duke" Fakir, Renaldo "Obie" Benson, Lawrence Payton, and lead singer Levi Stubbs, four boys who met at Pershing High School and would remain in the same lineup as the Four Tops from 1953 through 1997.

    The quartet signed to Chess Records in 1956, but did not experience success with that label.  In fact they would not find significant success with multiple records including Red Top, Riverside Records, and Columbia Records for the next seven years.  What they would gain is a lot of opportunities to polish their act and stage presence with extensive touring.  Berry Gordy Jr. convinced them to move to Motown in 1963, initially to record jazz standards and sing backup.  At Motown they experienced success in their own right.

    Reach Out is their fourth studio album, and their biggest selling album.  The Four Tops had multiple hits, primarily through the writing of the Motown team known as Holland-Dozier-Holland.  Reach Out would be their last album with that songwriting team, as Holland-Dozier-Holland left Motown shortly after this album was recorded.  It went to number 11 on the Billboard Top LP's chart.

    The Four Tops were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, and still perform today, with Duke Fakir as the sole original member.

    Bruce presents this soulful album in this week's podcast.

     

    Bernadette
    This song was released in February of 1967 and reached number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100.  It would be the final top 10 hit for the Four Tops in the 1960's.  The song is a plea from the boy to Bernadette to stick with him.  

    Standing In the Shadows of Love
    This single is a heartbreak song about sleepless nights and soul searching for what went wrong.  It hit number 2 on the soul charts and number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967.  It is a bit of a reworked song, as the Supremes had a B-side in 1963 called "Standing at the Crossroads of Love."

    Last Train to Clarksville
    Reach Out was a mixture of original songs and covers, and this song made famous by the Monkees is one of the covers.  They also included "If I Were a Carpenter," "Walk Away Renee," and "I'm A Believer" on this album. 

    Reach Out I'll Be There
    Here is the signature song of the Four Tops.  It was released in 1966 and spent two weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100.  It alternates between a minor and major key, giving it a Russian feel in the verse and a gospel feel in the chorus according to Lamont Dozier.  The writers intentionally put Levi Stubbs at the top of his vocal range to make sure there was a hunger and wailing in his voice. 

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Light My Fire by The Doors
    The Doors appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show was their first and last when they promised to change the lyrics "girl we couldn't get much higher," only to leave them unedited in the live performance.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison
    Lynch launches the staff picks with this hit single off Morrison's debut album, which peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100.  The nostalgic lyrics which seem tame today were considered too suggestive for the time and were banned by some radio stations.  However, it remains popular today, and as of 2015 was the most downloaded and played song of the entire 60's decade.

    The Letter  by The Box Tops
    Rob features a short song with a blue-eyed soul feel.  The Box Tops took this song to number 1 on the charts, making it The Box Tops best seller.  Joe Coker would cover this in 1970, and take it to number 7 on the charts.  The producer overdubbed the song with an airplane sound he located at a local library.

    Testify by Parliament
    Wayne brings us an early hit from George Clinton and Parliament before their Funkadelic days.  Actually, George Clinton is the only member of Parliament who is recorded on this song.  The group was based in New Jersey and the other members were not able to travel to Detroit for the recording.  As a result, Clinton is joined by local session musicians and singers to complete the song.

    Funky Broadway by Wilson Pickett
    Bruce closes out the staff picks with a song that Pickett picked up from Arlester “Dyke” Christian.  Dyke Christian was living in Phoenix and playing with a group called Dyke & the Blazers.  Unfortunatley in 1971 Dyke Christian was shot to death at the age of 27.  This is the first charting single with the word "funk" in the title.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Groovin' by Booker T. & the M.G.'s
    We finish off with an instrumental cover of the ballad made famous by The Rascals.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1970 - July: Crabby Appleton “Crabby Appleton”

    1970 - July:  Crabby Appleton “Crabby Appleton”

    We may have an obscure album for your listening pleasure today.  Crabby Appleton was a short-lived band that was formed by the combination of musicians from an acid blues band called Stonehenge and singer-songwriter frontman Michael Fennelly.  The band is out of the Laurel Canyon counterculture, which produced many groups like The Mamas & the Papas, Jim Morrison, Carole King, and Jackson Browne.  The group gets its name from a character on the late 50's cartoon series Tom Terrific, which was a part of the children's television show "Captain Kangaroo."  Their debut album was eponymously named Crabby Appleton.

    In addition to Michael Fennelly, the group consisted of percussionist Felix "Flaco" Falcon, Casey Foutz on keyboards, Phil Jones on drums, and Hank Harvey on bass.  Phil Jones was the catalyst in the formation of the group after he met Fennelly in a club on the Sunset Strip and asked him to join Stonehenge as lead singer and guitarist.  The group signed with Elektra Records, and had a top 40 single with "Go Back."  Their second album was called "Rotten to the Core" and was recorded in 1971.  After experiencing disappointing sales with this sophomore effort the group split up.  They would get some mileage out of their initial success before this happened, and would appear on American Bandstand as well as opening for a number of groups including the Doors, Three Dog Night, ABBA, and the Guess Who.  

    Wayne takes us through this lesser known rock album.  Friend of the show Bill Cook sits in for Bruce on this podcast.

     

    Peace by Peace
    This song grooves with the Hammond organ and talks about getting back what you give.  If you lead with a gun others will respond in kind, while if you lead with peace others will respond with peace.  It has a sound similar to the Doors, or Emerson, Lake and Palmer.  

    Try
    The lead song from side two starts and ends with an upbeat groove with a Santana-esque percussion jam sandwiched in the middle.  The lyrics are about a relationship that could go several ways.  “We can try or we can throw it away.”

    Catherine
    A slower jam, this short acoustic-based ballad feels like Crosby, Stills, and Nash.  It is about a guy who longs for a woman who is in another relationship.  

    Go Back
    This is the hit from the record, which went to number 36 on the Billboard Hot 100.  This was called a proto-power-pop single.  The song is about a woman in a new relationship who can't give up her love for her ex.  “And you know it's not right when you kiss me tonight and you pretend his lips are mine.”

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main Theme from the motion picture “Chisum”
    You can't go wrong with John Wayne.  This western was set in 1870's New Mexico.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Ride Captain Ride by Blues Image
    Rob launches the staff picks with a song which got its initial lyrics from the number of keys that singer-guitarist Mike Pinera had on his keyboard.  “Seventy-three men sailed up from the San Francisco Bay.” The band is out of Tampa Florida, and this was their only top 40 hit, reaching #4 on the Billboard Hot 100. 

    Signed, Sealed, Delivered by Stevie Wonder
    Lynch brings us a grooving, soulful song that would be the anthem for Motown at the time.  It went to number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100.  The song itself is about a guy who has some back to his love, realizing that what he has is all he wants, never to roam again.

    The Long and Winding Road by the Beatles 
    Bill features  a song off the Beatles “Let It Be” album.  It was written by Paul McCartney and was released as a single the month after the group broke up.  The original recording was more sparse, and the orchestration was added by Phil Spector.  McCartney hated the Spector “wall of sound” arrangement, citing the treatment of the song as one of six reasons for justifying the dissolution of the Beatles partnership.

    Ohio by Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young
    Wayne's staff pick takes a political turn with a protest song inspired by the shootings at Kent State.  Neil Young wrote and sang lead on this song.  Student protests of the expansion of the Vietnam Wars led to a standoff at Kent State in which the National Guard killed four people and wounded nine.  

     

    NOVELTY TRACK:

    Killer Joe by Quincy Jones
    We finish up the podcast with a jazzy number that was popular at the time in 1970.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1993 - December: Ian Moore “Ian Moore”

    1993 - December:  Ian Moore “Ian Moore”

    Ian Moore may have been born in Berkeley, California, but the sound from his eponymously named debut studio album reflects Austin, Texas, the place he called home.  Moore began playing violin at a young age, but switched to guitar as a teen under the influence of artists like Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan.  Moore's influence runs well beyond the blues genre, however, from Curtis Mayfield to Stevie Wonder, and from Sly & the Family Stone to the Rolling Stones.  

    Moore's debut album is based in the blues and roots rock.  Comparisons to Stevie Ray Vaughan, another Austin guitarist, come naturally with Moore's songwriting lyrics and his obvious guitar skills.  The album's success was a testament to Moore's ability to bridge the gap between traditional blues roots and contemporary rock sounds.

    While Ian Moore got his start in blues rock, he has been hard to pigeonhole into a single genre.  The record company wanted Moore to be a continuation of Stevie Ray Vaughan's legacy, but Moore had other ideas.  After his third album submission reflected a more power pop and roots rock sensibility, Capricorn Records dropped him.  Moore would continue a career as a touring musician and singer-songwriter, giving up greater fame for greater freedom as an artist to pursue his own path.    

    Rob brings us this lesser known blues album for this week's podcast

    Nothing
    The bluesy southern rock opening track to the album is a call back to a far-away love, perhaps reflecting life on the road.  “Miles and miles from nowhere but it's always someplace new.  My time is spent with strangers but my mind is spent with you.”

    Revelation
    This funky song reminds us of the Black Crowes. Even the background singers are eerily similar, but beautiful. It chronicles the discovery that the singer's girl is lying to him, and the revelation of her true character.  Unlike other lovers, the singer is going to break free of her trap.

    Harlem
    Inspired by the energy of Harlem, Moore's lyrics explores the ways we are separated from each other by neighborhoods and experiences, even through physical barriers when you're “riding through Harlem in my bulletproof car.”

    How Does It Feel
    This song tells a story about a girl who continues to break up with a guy only to come back over and over.  It was one of the songs that received airplay at the time the album had been released, along with “Nothing.”  It starts slowly and builds to the chorus.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main Theme from the motion picture “Wayne's World 2”
    “Party on, Wayne!”  “Party on, Garth!” This second outing from Mike Myers and Dana Carvey dropped in December 1993.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Good by Better Than Ezra  Wayne kicks off the staff picks with a hit from the indie band Better Than Ezra.  The band came out of Baton Rouge where they attended LSU.  The song is about the positive things that come from the end of a relationship.  While there is always drama and hurt feelings, there are also good things on which to reflect when the dust settles.

    She Hates Me by Puddle of Mudd
    Lynch was able to find a clean version of this song for the podcast.  Wes Scantlin wrote this song along with Jimmy Allen, the original guitarist.  By the time the demo tape was heard and a decision was made to sign the band, the original group had broken up.  Scantlin was set up with new bandmates when signed to Flawless Records, and people didn't hate the song or the band.

    Purple Haze by The Cure 
    Bruce brings us a cover of a famous piece by Jimi Hendrix.  A tribute album called “Stone Free: A Tribute to Jimi Hendrix” was released in 1993, and The Cure provided this take on Purple Haze.  It went to number 2 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.

    Like the Weather by 10,000 Maniacs 
    Rob closes out the staff picks with an acoustic rendition of this song recorded for “MTV Unplugged.”  The song originally came out in 1987 on their third album.  Natalie Merchant would leave the group for a solo career shortly after this live performance.

     

    NOVELTY TRACK:

    (I Know I Got) Skillz by Shaquille O'Neal featuring Def Jef
    Celebrity rap songs were in vogue at the time, but we think Shaq's skills were better exhibited on the basketball court.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1983 - July: The Police "Synchronicity"

    1983 - July:  The Police  "Synchronicity"

    Synchronicity would be the most commercially successful, fifth, and final studio album from the Police.  The trio of percussionist Stewart Copeland, guitarist Andy Summers, and bassist and front man Sting would be known as “The Biggest Band in the World” after the release of this album but would never produce a studio album again.

    Like “Ghost in the Machine,” the Police's previous album, Synchronicity drew its name from the works of Artheur Koestler, an author of whom Sting was an avid reader.  Unlike that album, Synchronicity toned down both the reggae influences and the overdubbing.  The resulting album increased the use of synthesizers and utilized a sequencer for the first time.  It also drew on world music influences on several songs.  

    The album hit number 1 on the Billboard 200 album charts in late July and would spend 17 total weeks at the number one position on the chart, an achievement that meant it had to interrupt the reign of Michael Jackson's Thriller.  It would also produce the number 1 song of the year with “Every Breath You Take.”  

    Sting was beginning both his solo work and becoming more involved with film at the time, and between this and contentious egos of the members, the Police would not record another album after this.  An attempt was made at a sixth studio album, but Stewart Copeland broke his collarbone just before they entered the studio and progression to the album was scuttled.

    Lynch features this iconic trio at the height of the Second British Invasion for this week's podcast.  Friend of the show Bill Cook sits in for Bruce in this episode.

     

    King of Pain
    Sting wrote this second US single from the album when considering the effects of his separation from his wife.  The psychological effects are inspired by thoughts from Carl Jung and Arthur Koestler.  It went to number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Synchronicity II
    The final song on the first side of the album went to number 16 on the US charts as a single.  The lyrics toggle between a man's increasing anxiety and paranoia and the symbolic rise of the Loch Ness Monster in parallel.  "and every single meeting with his so-called superior is a humiliating kick in the crotch."

    Wrapped Around Your Finger
    The fourth US single was written by Sting as a dark song about turning the tables on someone who had been in charge of your life.  There is a Faustian feel in the lyrics, which also feature references to Greek mythology like Scylla and Charybdis - from which we derive idioms like "between a rock and a hard place," and "between the Devil and the deep blue sea."

    Every Breath You Take
    Despite its beautiful music, this single is actually quite dark in its obsessive and controlling lyrics.  Sting wrote the song after his separation from his wife and the beginning of a new relationship.  The lyrics came to him in the middle of the night, and he wrote the song on piano in a half hour.  It would be biggest commercial single he ever wrote, hitting number 1 on the US charts for 8 weeks, and becoming the best selling single of 1983.  Interestingly, it was the only number 1 hit by the Police.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Stayin' Alive by the Bee Gees (from the motion picture "Staying Alive") 
    John Travolta starred in this sequel to the 70's Disco hit "Saturday Night Fever."  It was directed by Sylvester Stallone.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Our House by Madness
    Wayne brings us a group from Northern London that was a bigger hit in the UK than the US.  It has a lot going on musically between the piano, violins and saxophone.  Lyrically it hearkens back to childhood days, slices of mundane domestic life in England.  Madness performed this song as a part of the closing ceremonies for the 2012 Olympics

    Big Log by Robert Plant
    Rob's staff pick is the first hit for Plant as a solo artist.  As he often did in Led Zeppelin, the title of the song does not appear in the lyrics.  It was written in the middle of winter, and the artists had run out of fuel for the fire.  They found a large tree trunk and burned one end of it in the fireplace, pushing the "big log" in as it burned.  Drum programming was provided by Phil Collins. 

    Rock and Roll is King by ELO
    Bill Cook features the Electric Light Orchestra in a 50's rhythm and blues throwback that would be their last top 20 hit.  It was written by Jeff Lynne for their album "Secret Messages."  

    Electric Avenue by Eddie Grant
    Lynch closes out the staff picks with a song time stamped in the early 80's.  It was inspired by an area of Brixton, South London, called Electric Avenue because it was the first area of the city to be lit by electricity.  Guyanese-British singer-songwriter Eddie Grant sings about the tension of unemployment and racism experienced by the primarily Caribbean immigrants who lived there at the time.

       

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    An Ending by Brian Eno
    Brian Eno wrote this instrumental piece in 1983 for the documentary "For All Mankind." 

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1974 - November: Linda Ronstadt "Heart Like a Wheel"

    1974 - November:  Linda Ronstadt  "Heart Like a Wheel"

    Linda Ronstadt's fifth solo studio album would be her breakout one.  Heart Like a Wheel is a folk/country/rock mixture of covers and originals, and was the last album Ronstadt released on the Capitol Records label after she had moved to Asylum records.  It would reach the top of the Billboard 200, spend 51 weeks on the chart, and fuel Ronstadt's rise to the first "arena class" female rock star.

    Linda Maria Ronstadt is the third of four children born to a family of Mexican and German descent and a long history in Arizona.  Her professional start is considered to be the folk rock trio called the Stone Poneys, who had a hit in 1968 with the song "Different Drum."  Ronstadt is famous for touring in the early 70's with a backing band that included Don Henley, Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon, and Randy Meisner - artists who would go on to form the Eagles.  Her four earlier albums produced only moderate success before her fortune turned dramatically upward with "Heart Like a Wheel."

    While Ronstadt's style is often referred to as country rock, she called it "Mexican bluegrass" in 1968.  Over time she would record songs in a variety of styles from rock to folk and country, including some Spanish language songs and even rock songs reimagined as lullabies.  Her ability to cross genres contributed both to her success and her share of criticism from those expecting something different.  Success did not always agree with her, as she felt she was encouraged to project a tough rock image that did not accurately reflect her true self.  

    Linda Ronstadt was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014, shortly after her retirement from music in 2011.

    Bruce presents this breakthrough country rock album in this week's podcast.

     

    I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)
    This cover was originally written and recorded by Hank Williams back in 1951.  It went to number 2 on the Billboard country singles chart back then.  A bunch of people have covered this song, but Ronstadt's cover is the most successful, going to number 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and winning her a Grammy in 1976 for Best Female Country Vocal Performance.

    You're No Good
    The first single released from the album went to number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.  It is a cover of a song written by Clint Ballard Jr. and first performed by Dee Dee Warwick in 1963.  The success of this "glad to be broken up" song would set the template for Ronstadt over the next five years of doing remakes of classic rock and roll songs.

    Faithless Love
    An original recording rather than a cover, this deeper cut was written by J.D. Souther, who wrote or co-wrote songs for both Ronstadt and the Eagles.  It would hit number 10 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart when Glen Campbell covered it in 1984. 

    Willin'
    This song was first performed by Little Feat and was written by their front man, Lowell George.  Ronstadt's cover was used in James Cameron's film "The Abyss" in 1989.  Lowell wrote this song while he was a member of the Mothers of Invention.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Dance of the Reed Flutes (from the nature documentary "Animals Are Beautiful People")
    In addition to its frequent use in the Christmas ballet "The Nutcracker," this piece was also used in the nature documentary

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Whatever Gets You Through the Night by John Lennon
    Lynch kicks off the staff picks with a song originally inspired by Lennon's habit of late night channel surfing.  He caught the phrase from Reverend Ike, an evangelist on TV, and turned it into this song.  It went to number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.  Lennon got Elton John to provide the vocal duet for this song, and in return Lennon appeared onstage with John during his Thanksgiving concert at Madison Square Garden - one of his last major live appearances.

    I Can Help  by Billy Swan
    Wayne brings us a song we all thought was performed by Ringo Starr.  Billy Swan was better known as a country songwriter than a solo artist, but this single would be his sole number 1 hit.  It is a particularly positive song, with a nice reprise at the end of the album cut.

    Must of Got Lost by the J. Geils Band 
    Rob features an early hit from the J. Geils Band, reaching number 12 on the charts.  It has a funky hook, and a grammatically incorrect title, with lyrics that explore why a relationship went wrong.

    Wishing You Were Here by Chicago
    Bruce closes out the staff picks with a song off the Chicago VI album.  Chicago gets some assistance from the Beach Boys, who contribute to the backing vocals on this song about missing the one you love while on the road with a touring band.

     

    COMEDY TRACK:

    Wildwood Weed by Jim Stafford
    We finish off with a story in song about that whacky tobackey in a country setting

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1983 - September: Eurythmics “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)”

    1983 - September:  Eurythmics  “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)”

    One of the iconic British new wave bands from the MTV era was the pop duo of Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart, known as the Eurythmics.  Lennox and Stewart began playing together in the punk scene in 1976, first as a part of the band the Catch, and later as the Tourists.  The duo were drawn to electronics and synthesizer music, and became the Eurythmics in 1980.  While their first album, “In the Garden,” was not a commercial success, they exploded in popularity with their second studio album, Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This).

    Surprisingly, the album was made with limited means.  They recorded in an attic in north London where the duo both lived and worked.  They also recorded in a room in the Church Studios in London.  Most tracks were recorded on an 8-track tape machine.  Much of the instrumentation consisted of synthesizers and drum computers.  Costs for the album ran around 5,000 pounds.

    The synth heavy music pairing with Lennox's almost operatic voice found a receptive audience.  The power of video was a noticeable contributor as well, with Lennox's striking red hair and androgynous look.  The title track was particularly successful, becoming one of the iconic songs of the '80's.  

    The Eurythmics would be a mainstay of early 80's rock.  While Lennox and Stewart would split in 1990, with Lennox moving on to studio work and Stewart transitioning into a record producer, they would reunite from time to time to release new material and compilations.

    Lynch features this synth-pop powerhouse for this week's podcast.

     

    Love Is a Stranger
    The opening track to the album was the second single released, but was actually a re-release.  It originally came out in late 1982 but did not receive much airplay at the time.  It would rise to number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US, and to number 6 on the UK Singles chart.

    This Is the House
    This song has the appearance of a deeper cut because it did not achieve the same commercial traction as some other songs.  It was also released ahead of the album, then re-released after the success of the title track.  It utilizes some more traditional instruments, with Dave Stewart playing harmonica.  The lyrics are ambiguous, discussing aspirations, opportunities, and the fickle nature of success.

    The Walk
    The use of piano and string arrangements paired with an unusual time signature give this deeper cut a greater depth than some other tracks.  The lyrics have a melancholy feel, with existential questioning and disillusionment.  It is a nice contrast to some of the more synth-heavy pieces on the album.

    Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)
    The iconic title track is easily the group's most famous song, reaching number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.  Despite it's lasting impact on music, the song itself was written in a single evening.  The surreal video received heavy rotation on the MTV music station, solidifying the band's success.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    On the Dark Side by John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band (from the motion picture "Eddie and the Cruisers") 
    John Cafferty contributed this song to the 60's-era music drama.  He is often confused with Bruce Springsteen.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Trashed by Black Sabbath
    Wayne brings us a Black Sabbath song with a punk rock tempo.  Ian Gillan, the original lead singer for Deep Purple, was on tap as the front man for the group at this time, a position he would hold for only one album and tour.  The tour for this album featured a mock-up of Stonehenge, which would go on to be lampooned in the mockumentary “This Is Spinal Tap.”

    Walking In Your Footsteps by the Police
    Bruce features a deeper cut from the Synchronicity album.  This song compares the human race to the dinosaurs, and takes a lot of influence from world music.  The science is more questionable, with lyrics referencing dinosaurs living “50 million years ago,” when they actually went extinct over 65 million years ago.

    Don't Cry by Asia
    Rob's staff pick is from the supergroup's second album, Alpha. It reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100.  While critics panned the album, it was a commercial success, reaching number 6 on the Billboard 200 chart.  The song was a last-minute addition to the album for a stronger commercial appeal.

    Total Eclipse of the Heart by Bonnie Tyler
    Lynch closes out the staff picks on a melancholy note.  Jim Steinman, who was the writer for Meat Loaf's “Bat out of Hell,” also penned this one.  Although the song had to be shortened for the single edit, it became Bonnie Tyler's biggest hit, spending four weeks at the top of the charts.

       

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Stonehenge by Black Sabbath
    This instrumental piece is considered the inspiration for the “Stonehenge” skit in “This Is Spinal Tap.”

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    Christmas Songs that Rock part VI

    Christmas Songs that Rock part VI

    What the Riff!?! delves once again into the great (and not so great) Christmas songs to add a little cheer as you rock around the Christmas tree this year.

    “Carol of the Bells” by Mannheim Steamroller
    Mannheim Steamroller covers a Ukrainian carol from 1922.  They highlight a 3 against 2 polyrhythm that is present in the original song, and add a major key change that is not present in the original.  This is off their second Christmas album released in 1988 entitled "A Fresh Aire Christmas."  

    “O Come O Come Emanuel” by Bad Religion
    This fast-paced rendition takes an 8th century song and puts a punk twist to it.  It is a quick song, like most bad Religion tracks. 

    “Yellin' at the Xmas Tree” by Billy Idol
    Rocker Billy Idol reminisces about times with his drunk father yelling at the Christmas tree.  "Oh the Christmas bells are ringing and the carolers are singing, but Daddy, he don't hear 'em, he's yellin' at the Christmas tree."

    “Space Christmas” by  Shonen Knife
    This Japanese punk-pop band was inspired by the girl groups of the 60's and the Ramones.  This sci-fi Christmas track has a "bubblegum pop" sound with a punk edge.  

    “Taking Care of Christmas” by Bachman Turner Overdrive
    When Rob covered "Bachman Turner Overdrive II" earlier this year we discovered this Christmas remake of their classic single.  It is surprisingly catchy for a song overhauled for Christmas.  Randy Bachman did an all-Christmas album in 2008 including this song.

    “Christmas All Over Again” by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
    This original song was penned by Tom Petty on a ukulele in 1992.  It was used in the motion picture "Home Alone 2:  Lost in New York," and also appeared in "Jingle All the Way."  Jeff Lynne co-produced the song, played bells, bass, timpani, sang background vocals, and wishes for a Chuck Berry Songbook in the song.

    “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” by the REO Speedwagon
    REO Speedwagon keeps the original feel of the carol in their rendition of this classic.  It was released on their 2009 album, "Not So Silent Night...Christmas with REO Speedwagon."  The original English carol dates back to the 1650's.  

    “Santa Claus” by The Sonics
    This song with a fuzzy guitar appeared on the debut album from The Sonics back in 1965.  The Sonics were a garage band out of Tacoma, Washington in the 60's, and influenced the punk and grunge movement.  They are likely best known for their party song, "Louie, Louie."

    “Santa's Messin' with the Kid” by Eddie C. Campbell
    Blues guitarist and singer Eddie C. Campbell was well known in the Chicago blues scene and learned guitar from Muddy Waters.  This song was released on his 1977 Christmas album.

    “What Christmas Means to Me”  by Stevie Wonder
    This original song was released on Tamla records in 1967 on Wonder's eighth studio album entitled "Someday at Christmas."  It was the final track on the album which consisted of a mix of Christmas standards and original music. 

    “Merry Christmas Darling” by the Carpenters
    No Christmas playlist would be complete without Karen Carpenter's voice.  This song was originally recorded by The Carpenters in 1970.  The lyrics date back to 1946 when songwriter Frank Pooler wrote it about a love interest at the time.  He had The Carpenters perform it when they were his music students at California State University, Long Beach.

    “White Christmas” by Bing Crosby
    Bing Crosby originally performed this song composed by Irving Berlin in 1940.  It was performed for the first time in December 1941, and appeared in the motion picture "Holiday Inn" in 1942.  

    (and there might be a bonus song...)

    We at What the Riff?!? wish every one a blessed and Merry Christmas!

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1965 - April: The T.A.M.I. Show

    1965 - April:  The T.A.M.I. Show

    A concert was held at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on October 28th and 29th, 1964 which would be released as a concert film called the T.A.M.I. Show.  Free tickets were provided for local high school students to provide the audience.  T.A.M.I. stands for either “Teenage Awards Music International” or “Teen Age Music International,” as both were used by the show's publicity team.  The show included many of the top rock and roll and R&B musicians of the time, including the Beach Boys, the Rolling Stones, James Brown, Chuck Berry, and The Miracles.  Jan and Dean were the emcees for the event.  

    Motown Records was represented by three of its biggest acts in the Miracles, Marvin Gay, and the Supremes.  The Rolling Stones were featured as the grand finale.  However, the performance by James Brown and the Famous Flames is perhaps the highlight of the show, as it features his dance moves at the height of his career.  

    Steve Binder and his personnel from The Steve Allen Show shot the film, and the legendary session musicians of The Wrecking Crew provided most of the instrumentation.  The go-go dancers in the background were choreographed by David Winters and his assistant, a young Toni Basil.

    This is a difficult film to locate due to copyright disputes on the show over the years.  You'll need to go to YouTube to find the performances.

    Wayne takes us through this concert footage of the early days of rock and roll.

     

    (Here They Come) from All Over the World by Jan and Dean
    The film starts with a song from Jan and Dean which is played over the credits.  Jan and Dean co-hosted the concert and contributed this anthem written for the show.  It has a surfing vibe and is easily confused for The Beach Boys who also participated in the concert.

    Hey Little Bird by The Barbarians
    The Barbarians were a precursor to the Punk movement, and their style was called garage rock in the day.  The Barbarians had a one-handed drummer who utilized a drum stick in his left arm with a hook prosthetic.  The group sported a pirate look with leather sandals, open necked shirts, and bloused sleeves.

    Out of Sight by James Brown and the Famous Flames
    Many consider the highlight of the show to be James Brown's performance, as it showcases his dance moves.  The energy shown by Brown and his backing singers clearly influenced future acts like Michael Jackson and Prince.

    Around and Around by The Rolling Stones
    While the Rolling Stones were the final act, Keith Richards claims that choosing to follow James Brown on stages was the worst decision of their careers, because no matter how well they performed, they couldn't top him.  They performed a cover of Chuck Berry's song - an interesting choice since Berry was also a performer for the concert.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Do the Clam by Elvis Presley (from the motion picture “Girl Happy”)
    Elvis was making movies at the time, and would almost always be expected to sing songs in the picture.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Nowhere to Run by Martha & the Vandellas
    Bruce leads off the staff picks with a group which would see a name change to Martha Reeves & the Vandellas later on.  This Motown hit written by the legendary team called Holland-Dozier-Holland went to number 8 on the US charts.  The song is about a woman trapped in a downward spiraling love affair that she just can't give up.

    Land of 1000 Dances by Cannibal and the Headhunters
    Rob features an iteration of a frequently covered song.  Chris Kenner originally recorded it in 1962, but it was more successful as a cover by Cannibal & the Headhunters, going to number 30 on the Billboard chart.  They also added the "na na na na na" hook to the original when front man Frankie Garcia forgot the lyrics.  Sixteen dances are mentioned in the lyrics of the song.

    Eight Days a Week by The Beatles 
    Lynch brings us an early hit penned by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.  It would be the seventh number one single for the Fab Four in the United States, despite Lennon's feeling that it was a failed attempt at writing a single.  The title is attributed to a statement Ringo Starr made regarding how busy the Beatles were at the time.

    Satisfied by Lulu and the Luvvers
    Wayne wraps up the staff picks with a high energy party song from a Scottish band.  Lulu would go on to a successful solo career that included film songs like "To Sir With Love," and the title song for "The Man with the Golden Gun."  Lulu was 17 at the time this song came out.  She would go on to marry Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees.  

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Cast Your Fate to the Wind by Sounds Orchestral
    This week's podcast ends with an instrumental song

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1985 - July: Phil Collins “No Jacket Required”

    1985 - July:  Phil Collins  “No Jacket Required”

    Phil Collins wrapped up his commitments as front man and percussionist for Genesis and collaborative work with Eric Clapton in 1984, then commenced work on his third album, No Jacket Required.  It was released in February 1985, and had hits on the charts in July.  The name of the album was inspired by an incident where he was not allowed into The Pump Room restaurant in Chicago because he did not have the proper dress code jacket.  His friend, vocalist Robert Plant, did have the correct attire and was let in.  After he relayed the story in appearances with late night hosts David Letterman and Johnny Carson, restaurant management sent Phil a complementary sport jacket and apology letter, inviting him to come back wearing “whatever he wanted.”

    Unlike previous albums Collins decided to make this third solo album more upbeat with several dance-oriented singles.  Collins was also able to recruit a number of musicians to the effort, including former Genesis bandmate Peter Gabriel and Police front man Sting.

    The result was a huge commercial success, reaching number 1 on the US albums chart for seven consecutive weeks and on the UK albums chart for five.  The four singles released all went into the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 charts, with two topping the charts.  It was a critical success as well, bringing home three Grammy awards including “Album of the Year.”  Collins would move from a successful musician to a celebrity on the strength of this album, which would be his highest selling solo effort.

    Rob brings us this album for our podcast

    Only You Know and I Know
    Rob starts us with a deeper cut co-written by Phil Collins and Darryl Stuermer.  Stuermer played bass for Genesis tours, and lead guitar for Collins' solo tours.  The lyrics contain a number of contradictions.  “When I ask you, what you see in me you say, 'Our love is blind.'”

    Don't Lose My Number
    While this song was not released as a single in the UK, it went to number 4 on the US charts.  The lyrics were created in a stream-of-consciousness improvisation session, and Collins himself doesn't really know what they mean.  The video is a comedic look at the decision process on theming the video, with Collins in multiple parodies of other videos popular at the time.

    Inside Out
    This track has a feel similar to some of the slower Genesis pieces.  The lyrics  describe a person who faces a crowd of people telling him what to say and what to do without regard to what is authentically himself.  Collins uses a combination of drum machine and drum kit on this song.

    We Said Hello Goodbye
    This song was not originally on the album, but was a B-side to the single release of "Take Me Home" and "Don't Lose My Number" as well as a bonus track on the CD.  The lyrics discuss leaving an old home and moving to a new one, but the emotions may reflect things left behind in life more broadly.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main Theme from the motion picture “Back to the Future”
    Marty McFly made his journey back from 1985 to interact with his 1955 parents in a tricked out DeLorean  for this iconic picture released in 1985.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    You Spin Me Round (Like a Record) by Dead or Alive  We're a bit concerned about Wayne as he abandons his punk and hard rock sensibilities to bring us this danceable hit.  Dead or Alive were a foursome from Liverpool, England.  Lead singer Pete Burns would later be on the TV reality show “Celebrity Big Brother.”

    The Confessor by Joe Walsh
    Bruce brings us the title song from Walsh's seventh studio album.  It is heavier and darker than many of Walsh's singles.  “If you look at your reflection at the bottom of the well, what you see is only on the surface.  When you try to see the meaning hidden underneath the measure of the depth can be deceiving.  The bottom has a rocky reputation.”  

    Raspberry Beret by Prince and the Revolution 
    Lynch features a song about young romance and a summer fling.  Although this song was released after Prince's success with “Purple Rain,” Prince still played most of the instruments, making the song primarily a solo effort.  It is off off the album “Around the World In a Day,” and reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    And She Was by Talking Heads 
    Rob finishes the staff picks with a song penned by David Byrne from the Talking Heads, off the album “Little Creatures.”  It is an unusual song about a girl levitating over everything, and the guy who loves her and wishes she would come down to the ground.  It reached number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100.

     

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Fundance by Stanley Jordan 
    Finger tapping jazz guitarist Stanley Jordan would set a record when his album “Magic Touch” spent 51 weeks at the top of the Billboard jazz charts.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

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    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1990 - April: The Black Crowes "Shake Your Money Maker"

    1990 - April:  The Black Crowes  "Shake Your Money Maker"

    The Black Crowes got their start as “Mr. Crowe's Garden” when Chris and Rich Robinson formed the band while attending Walton High School in Marietta, Georgia.  The name comes from the children's book “Johnny Crow's Garden” by Leonard Leslie Brooke.  They changed their name after moving to New York City where they met producer George Drakoulias who introduced them to music like The Faces and Humble Pie, and signed them at Def American.  

    Their debut album, Shake Your Money Maker, gets its name from an old Elmore James blues song, though that song does not appear on the album.  It was recorded in the summer of 1989 in Atlanta and Los Angeles.  This debut turned out to be a rocket of an album, peaking at number 4 on the Billboard 200, and it has sold over 5 million copies.  Readers of Rolling Stone magazine voted the Black Crowes “Best New American Band” at the end of 1990.

    The Black Crowes are often compared to late 60's and early 70's acts like the Faces and the Rolling Stones.  The group at the time consisted of Chris Robinson on vocals, Rich Robinson on guitar, Jeff Cease on guitar (the only Black Crowes album for which he would be a member), Johnny Colt on bass and Steve Gorman on drums.

    The group would break up a couple of times, and reformed for a third time in 2019.  They released an EP of newly recorded tracks called 1972 which consists of covers of songs released in 1972.  They released a double live album in 2023 called Shake Your Money Maker Live.

    Bruce presents this album which reinterprets the blues.

     

    Jealous Again
    The debut single from the band and the album would reach number 75 on the Billboard Hot 100, and number 5 on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks charts.  The song is about jealousy and the inner turmoil that it causes.  There was a lawsuit against Gretchen Wilson for her song “Work Hard, Play Harder,” which was settled out of court.  Chris and Rich Robinson were given songwriting credits for the track, along with an undisclosed sum in the settlement.

    Struttin' Blues
    This deep cut will be unfamiliar to those who haven't played the album or CD, but it gives you a good flavor for the album as a whole.  It is pretty much a straightforward blues piece.  “My baby got her engine hummin' Struttin' blues gonna' find me again.”

    Twice As Hard
    This is the starting track to the album.  The lyrics are about the difficulties of leaving a relationship for the second time, or perhaps about getting off drugs.  One theory is that it is a little of both, with the first time being when the guy leaves his love over her use of drugs, and the second time when he says goodbye at her funeral. 

    She Talks to Angels
    One of the bigger hits from the album, this song reached number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 1 on the Albums tracks.  The riff and the lyrics are older, going back to their early days.  The picture of the girl is an amalgam of girls they saw at clubs in Atlanta who would dress goth.  Much of the lyrics were written early in Chris and Rich Robinson's life when hey really hadn't lived the drug lifestyle that they talk about.  The song inspired Hootie and The Blowfish's song “Let Her Cry.”

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main theme from the television series “Twin Peaks”
    David Lynch's quirky show got its start in this month.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Big Blue '82 by Daniella Dax
    Wayne gets the staff pick party hopping with this deep but danceable cut.  Danielle Dax is an experimental musician from England who tells a simple story of being newly in love with this song.  Although not as well known in the States, Dax was big in the club circuit in Europe before switching to a career in interior design in 1996.

    Nothing Compares 2  by Sinead O'Connor
    Lynch brings us the unmistakable sound of O'Connor's biggest hit and cover of a song originally penned and performed by Prince.  While the original was a funk and soul ballad, O'Connor strips the ballad down to a raw, emotional piece focusing on her powerful vocals.

    Big Love by Robert Plant 
    Rob features Led Zeppelin's vocalist on a track from his third album, “Manic Nirvana.”  This was the playful first single, and is filled with double entendres.  Sexual innuendoes were common in Led Zeppelin songs, so this continues the tradition.  It is about an affair with a flight attendant when it references “free air miles.”  

    Kiss This Thing Goodbye by Del Amitri
    Bruce closes out the staff picks with a shuffle beat song off Del Amitri's second studio album, “Waking Hours.”  Del Amitri will be better known to U.S. listeners for their 1995 single, “Roll to Me.”  This song tells the tale of a love that has been over for a while, and the couple need to make the decision to move on.

     

    LAUGH TRACK:

    Heartbreaker (At the End of Lonely Street) by Dread Zeppelin
    What do you get when you cross Led Zeppelin with an Elvis impersonator?  Find out as we leave this week's podcast. 

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1988 - May: Cinderella "Long Cold Winter"

    1988 - May:  Cinderella  "Long Cold Winter"

    One of the big acts on the 80's glam metal scene was Cinderella.  Singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Tom Keifer and bassist Eric Brittingham formed the band in suburban Philadelphia.  Gene Simmons of Kiss tried to get the band a deal with PolyGram, but was unsuccessful at getting the label to take interest.  Jon Bon Jovi was more successful with getting them a contract with Mercury/Polygram Records.  Keifer and Brittingham added guitarist Jeff LaBar and drummer Jim Drnec to the band.  Their debut album entitled Night Songs was released in 1986, and it achieved triple platinum status.  Shortly after the recording of that album, Jim Drnec left the group.  

    This, their follow-up album Long Cold Winter, would continue the band's progression in the glam metal genre, but would see a subtle shift towards more blues rock.  It would also see the introduction of Fred Coury as drummer for the group, though this would come after the album was recorded utilizing percussionist Cozy Powell for almost all tracks on the album.  This second studio album would be a commercial success as well, reaching number 10 on the US charts and achieving double platinum status before the end of the year.  The album included the rock ballad “Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone),”which would reach number 12 on the Billboard charts, the highest charting single for the band.  Video was a significant factor in the success of the band, and they released a video compilation in 1990 called “Tales from the Gypsy Road” featuring their promo videos and live medleys.

    Cinderella would be predominantly an opening band through the late 80's and early 90's, touring with Poison, Bon Jovi, and David Lee Roth.  Unfortunately the band would decline by the mid 90's due to various setbacks and drama with personnel as well as shifting popularity in the music industry.  Their last performance was in 2014.

    Break out the hair spray as Wayne leads us through this album.

     

    Bad Seamstress Blues/Fallin' Apart at the Seams
    The leading track to the album starts with an acoustic blues number paired with a heavier blues song, complete with slide guitar and harmonica.  The lyrics are of a life that has come full circle.  No regrets, but a mixture of success and sorrow.  “Look in the mirror at what I found, It's just the past and it's over now.”

    Gypsy Road
    These lyrics discuss perseverance to achieve success, but also the loneliness and doubt that come with realizing that dream.  The song is a composite of a life on the road, complete with hotel rooms and overnight rides on the tour bus.  This song hit number 51 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Take Me Back
    The final song on the album features blues instrumentation including the slide guitar and more cow bell!  The lyrics reflect on a younger life from a distance.  The singer reminisces about how he was raised and wanting to be reminded of what he left behind.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Axel F (Main Theme from the motion picture “Beverly Hills Cop”)
    This movie from the mid-80's made its debut on network TV this month.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Electric Blue by Icehouse
    Lynch gives us a cool start to the staff picks with Australian band Icehouse's biggest US hit.  The lyrics tell the tale of a man pursuing the love of a woman who seems above his station.  “Icehouse” is an Aussie slang term for an insane asylum.  This song was written by lead singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Iva Davies, and Jon Oates of Hall & Oates fame.

    Heaven Tonight by Yngwie Malmsteen's Rising Force
    Bruce features neoclassical metal guitar virtuoso Yngwie Malmsteen paired with the vocals of former Rainbow and Deep Purple front man Joe Lynn Turner.  This is off Malmsteen's fourth studio album, “Odyssey.” This album went to number 40 on the Billboard 200 charts, the highest charting Malmsteen album to date.

    Wait by White Lion 
    Rob brings us a power ballad that peaked at number 8 on the US charts in May 1988.  It was originally released in June 1987, but did not enter the charts until February 1988, based on the strength of their video on MTV.  The video featured Christie Muhaw who died at the age of 24 in a car accident less than a year after the video was released.

    Damn Good by David Lee Roth
    Wayne's staff pick continues the blues focus  with a power ballad from Roth and 12-string work by virtuoso Steve Vai.  The lyrics were inspired by an encounter Roth had with an old high school friend who had some high school pictures.  It is a wistful song remembering friends and good times from the past.  

     

    NOVELTY TRACK:

    Killer Klowns by The Dickies
    We close out this week's podcast with a track of punk rock's The Dickies.  This is off their EP and the movie "Killer Klowns from Outer Space. "

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

    1989 - December: Nine Inch Nails "Pretty Hate Machine"

    1989 - December:  Nine Inch Nails  "Pretty Hate Machine"

    The industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails is the creation of singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Trent Reznor.  While living in Cleveland in 1987, Reznor worked as an assistant engineer and janitor at Right Track Studios.  He had free access to the studio between bookings, and took inspiration from Prince to play all instruments himself to produce his material.  The name Nine Inch Nails comes from a quote by Al Jourgensen, lead singer of the metal band Ministry - "Listening to Ministry is like having a nine inch nail hammered into your head like a hole."  

    The debut studio album entitled Pretty Hate Machine was released by TVT Records in October 1989.  It has an industrial synth feel, with dark lyrics driven by angst, despair, and betrayal.  Unlike much of the industrial rock of the time, songs on Pretty Hate Machine feature catchy riffs and hooks, and the song structure employs a traditional verse and chorus approach rather than continually repeating electronics.  The result would prove to be both a commercial and critical success, reaching number 75 on the US album charts.

    Although Reznor produced and performed all the instrumentation on the album, he soon found himself in need of a touring band, particularly when he was brought in to open for Guns N' Roses on their European Tour.  Many musicians have been brought into the Nine Inch Nails over the years, but Reznor remained the only permanent member until his frequent collaborator, Atticus Ross, was brought in as a member in 2016.

    Lynch brings us this pioneering industrial rock album for this week's podcast.

     

    Head Like a Hole
    The opening track to the album was the second and most commercially successful single, reaching number 28 on the US Alternative Airplay charts.   It also took inspiration from the quote from Al Jourgensen of Ministry.  The song is about the control that money has over people and the pain and suffering associated with it.  

    Terrible Lie
    This song reflects the anger and despair of a person going through a bad time in their life and blaming it on God.  "(Hey god) why are you doing this to me?  Am I not living up to what I'm supposed to be?  Why am I seething with this animosity?  (Hey god) I think you owe me a great big apology."

    Sin
    When we give in to our darker impulses, perhaps driven by desire or betrayal, we can find ourselves in a spiral of self-destruction and sabotage.  The song is about the pain and destructiveness that can lurk below the surface.

    Down In It
    This is the debut single from the album.  During the making of the video, a camera attached to a weather balloon became detached and flew 200 miles away.  When found in a farmer's field the FBI was called in to investigate what appeared to be a gang or cult slaying of Reznor.

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    Main theme from the motion picture "Christmas Vacation 3" 
    The success of "Christmas Vacation" inspired a number of sequels.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    Higher Ground by the Red Hot Chili Peppers
    Rob's staff pick is  a cover of a song Stevie Wonder originally released in 1973.  While the original went to number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, the energetic remake by the Red Hot Chili Peppers also achieved commercial success, reaching number 26 on the US Mainstream Rock chart.  It was the first RHCP song to chart.

    Bad Love by Eric Clapton
    Bruce brings us the second single from Clapton's eleventh solo studio album.  This is a comeback album, as Clapton had recently become sober after dealing with alcoholism.  It hit number 16 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.  This song features Phil Collins on percussion and backing vocals.  and would be awarded the Grammy for Best male Rock Vocal Performance in 1990. 

    Good Work by the BoDeans
    Wayne features a rockabilly party song from a Wisconsin group.  The BoDeans have been called roots rock, heartland rock, and alternative, but their retro 50's sound and driving live performance makes them a great band to see.  They performed extensively with U2 on The Joshua Tree tour, and remain popular in the US Midwest.

    The Last Worthless Evening by Don Henley
    Lynch closes out the staff picks with a hit from Henley's album "The End of the Innocence" that went to number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.  The lyrics are a plea from an ex to just move on.

       

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    Pacific 202 by 808 State
    This Manchester electronic music group takes its name from the Roland TR 808 drum machine.

    Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?” 

    NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.

    Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock worthy memes we can share.

    Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!

    **NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.