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    the smithereens

    Explore " the smithereens" with insightful episodes like "Jim Babjak (The Smithereens)", "1990 - January: They Might Be Giants “Flood”", "Let It Be - Part 2", "The Jamie Hoover interview" and "7 Nights to Rock" from podcasts like ""Chuck Shute Podcast", "What the Riff?!?", "Song Sung New. Uncovering Cover Versions.", "Spotlight Conversations" and "Debts No Honest Man Can Pay"" and more!

    Episodes (11)

    Jim Babjak (The Smithereens)

    Jim Babjak (The Smithereens)

    Jim Babjak is the guitarist and founding member of The Smithereens.  The band had several modern rock hits including "Blood & Roses" and "A Girl Like You",  as well as performing on SNL and with Tom Petty.  They have a new album out now called "The Lost Album" that was recorded in 1993 and features all new songs.  We discuss the new album, how Madonna almost recorded with the band, Kurt Cobain being a super fan and more! 

    00:00 - Intro
    00:45 - Library & Reading Books
    02:38 - The Lost Album
    06:11 - Juggling a Day Job
    13:35 - Coffee
    16:15 - New Single, Songs & Tour
    18:45 - Blood & Roses
    19:49 - Girl Like You & Say Anything
    20:45 - Madonna & Guests on Records
    21:50 - Kurt Cobain is a Fan
    23:30 - Don Dixon the Producer
    24:35 - Getting Signed to Capitol
    26:56 - Bruce Springsteen
    28:18 - Being Recognized & Music
    29:45 - Music Business, Money & Touring
    32:54 - Fan Mail & Power of Music
    33:45 - Monkey Man & Stop Bringing Me Down
    35:30 - Betty Babjak Memorial Fund
    36:25 - Ordering Physical Copies
    37:30 - New Christmas Music
    38:15 - Outro

    Jim Babjak website:
    https://www.jimbabjak.com/

    The Smithereens website:
    https://www.officialsmithereens.com/

    Betty Babjak Memorial Fund website:
    https://www.jimbabjak.com/betty-babjak-memorial-fund

    Chuck Shute website:
    http://chuckshute.com/

    Support the show

    Thanks for Listening & Shute for the Moon!

    1990 - January: They Might Be Giants “Flood”

    1990 - January:  They Might Be Giants  “Flood”

    They Might Be Giants is an alternative rock band that formed in 1982 by John Flansburgh and John Linnell.  They are known as an absurdist, surreal alternative band popular on modern rock charts and college radio.  They are also known in the DIY music genre and in children’s music.  Flood is their third studio album and has been certified platinum.  It is their best selling album, and considered their signature work. 

    During the 80’s Flansburgh and Linnell started recording their songs onto an answering machine and advertised the phone number in The Village Voice and other newspapers as “Dial-A-Song.”  The answering machine would play one track at a time, sometimes uncompleted work, sometimes mock advertisements.  It became quite popular, but it was an answering machine, so the quality wasn’t great.  One of their slogans was “Always Busy, Often Broken.” It was a local Brooklyn number, so long distance fees applied.  The band advertised it with the line, “Free when you call from work.”

    TMBG have released 23 studio albums, 10 compilations, 10 live albums, 8 EP’s 7 videos and 11 singles.  They have also released five children’s albums – Tiny Toon Adventures exposed them to a younger audience, and they leveraged it to expand their career. They made heavy use of the internet since the early 90’s, creating one of the first artist-owned music stores in 2004, and have made podcasts on a monthly basis from 2005 to 2014.

    Bruce brings us this unusual album.

     

    Istanbul (Not Constantinople) 
    This is a cover originally written in 1953 on the 500th anniversary of the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans.  Lyrics are by Jimmy Kennedy, music by Nat Simon, and performed by the Four Lads.  The TMBG version was featured in the first season of MTV’s Liquid Television and in an episode of "Tiny Toon Adventures."

    Your Racist Friend
    In discussing this song, John Flansburgh told Songfacts, “You can’t confront every person who’s making an ass of themselves.  But there are times when you want to.  So it’s really about a subtler idea than over-the-top expressions of race hate.  It’s more just about the culture.”

    Somebody Keeps Moving My Chair
    I think we can all identify with the premise of this song, that there’s a lot of unpleasantness that we have to deal with, and we can do that for the most part.  But when somebody keeps moving your chair that is beyond the pale. 

    Theme from Flood
    This brief piece starts off the album and leads into “Birdhouse In Your Soul.”  It seemed like a good addition to include, since most of the songs are short.

    Birdhouse In Your Soul 
    This is the lead single from the album, and is their highest charting single in both the US and the UK, hitting number 3 on the US Modern Rock Tracks chart and number 6 on the UK singles chart.  The lyrics are narrated from the perspective of a blue nightlight shaped like a canary.  We found it fascinating that there are 18 key changes in this song!

     

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    "The Simpsons Theme" by Danny Elfman (from the television series "The Simpsons”)
    Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie made their TV series debut in this month in 1990, though they had shorts on The Tracey Ullman Show prior to that.

     

    STAFF PICKS:

    I Remember You by Skid Row
    Brian starts off this week's staff picks with an acoustic/power pop hair ballad from the band fronted by Sebastian Bach.  Bassist Rachel Boland and guitarist Dave “The Snake” Sabo penned this song which was their third single from their debut album.  It is about the girl from days gone by that you just can't forget. 

    Fly High Michelle by Enuff Z'nuff
    Rob's staff pick was inspired by a tragedy caused by a drug overdose.  Donnie Vie wrote this song in remembrance of a friend who had passed, and it was the biggest hit of the group's career.  The band takes their name from their bassist, Chip Z'nuff.

    Pure by The Lightning Seeds 
    Wayne features this track from Liverpool's The Lightning Seeds.  The group is the product of producer Ian Broudie, and is really more of a solo project with musicians brought in to create a touring band.  The name comes from a misheard lyric from Prince's “Raspberry Beret.”

    Girl Like You by The Smithereens
    Bruce's staff pick is the first single from the Smithereens third album,  appropriately (?) named 11.  Madonna was supposed to sing the harmony vocals but didn’t show up for the recording session.  The band got Maria Vidal to do the vocals. It hit number 38 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 2 on the US Mainstream Rock charts.

     

    NOVELTY TRACK:

    Swing the Mood by Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers
    This mashup of swing and early rock songs was on the charts in January 1990.

    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.

    Let It Be - Part 2

    Let It Be - Part 2

    Which singer did Paul McCartney have in mind when he wrote The Long And Winding Road? Who did he offer it to to record and why didn't they? Which McCartney song did Lennon and Harrison play during the recording of their respective first solo albums? Join Stevie Nix as he answers all of these questions and more on this episode that tries to speak some words of wisdom. Plus, there's a quiz!
    WARNING: This episode contains traces of Leo Sayer.

    Featured songs [in chronological order]:

    I've Got A Feeling [Billy Preston, Pearl Jam]
    One After 909 [James Apollo, The Smithereens]
    The Long And Winding Road [Ray Charles]
    For You Blue [Dhani Harrison, Chase Cohl]
    Get Back [Ike & Tina Turner, Elvis Presley, Al Green]
    Don’t Let Me Down [Ben E King, Garbage]
    Old Brown Shoe [Gary Brooker]
    The Ballad Of John & Yoko [The Beatles]

    Hidden track: I've Got A Feeling [The Besnard Lakes]

    John, Paul, George & A Bit Of Ringo #6

    Join Stevie on Spotify
    www.songsungnew.com

    The Jamie Hoover interview

    The Jamie Hoover interview

    One of my fave places for original rock music is in North Carolina, and today I'm in the studio  with Jamie Hoover of The Spongetones! Jamie talks about the band's musical start in Charlotte (complete with the jangle pop riffs and their Beatlesque vocal style); to his current work in Nashville with Bill Lloyd (of Foster and Lloyd) and the rest of The Long Players. We also discuss nearly every reason why he loves the band XTC; The Spongetones getting that initial press from Rolling Stone magazine for albums Beat Music and Torn Apart; those days of touring with The Kinks and later with The Smithereens and Hootie & the Blowfish; and who really named his studio 'Hooverama'. It's a rock and roll cover story you don't want to miss!


    About the Spotlight Conversations podcast:

    Tune in as I invite friends inside my cozy linoleum free recording studio to talk about all things media - radio, television, music, film, voiceovers, audiobooks, publishing - if guests know media, we're talkin'! Unscripted and nearly always entertaining, each guest gets real about their careers in the entertainment biz; from where they started to how it's going. Join us in my swanky studio where drinks are always on ice; music + media are the conversation starters. New episodes every other Tuesday.

    Social media links, website and more
    here
    Follow and subscribe to my podcast here

    A very special thank you to friends who helped bring the Spotlight Conversations podcast together:
    Booth Announcer: Joe Szymanski ('Joe The Voice Guy')
    Theme Song Composer: Mark Sparrow, SongBird Studios

    7 Nights to Rock

    7 Nights to Rock

    On this week's show, we...

    • spin a bunch of songs about the days of the week
    • take over 3 hours to do so
    • have a really good time in the process  

    All this & much, much less!

    Debts No Honest Man Can Pay is over 2 rock-solid hours of musical eclectica & other noodle stories. The show started in 2003 at WHFR-FM (Dearborn, MI), moved to WGWG-FM (Boiling Springs, NC) in 2006 & Plaza Midwood Community Radio (Charlotte, NC) in 2012, with a brief pit-stop at WLFM-FM (Appleton, WI) in 2004.

    1986 - June - The Smithereens - Especially for You

    1986 - June - The Smithereens - Especially for You

    Especially for You is the debut full-length album from “The Smithereens.” This platinum-selling album was almost a "greatest hits" because the New Jersey band had been playing for 5 years before releasing this album. The Smithereens filled a void in the mid-80's pop scene that would become categorized as Alternative Rock or College Rock, and there are a number of hits from the group that hold up well today. In retrospect, the album is just solid, straightforward rock-and-roll.

    Friend of the show Doug Aiken joins us for this, Episode 57 of our What the Riff podcast as we musically travel back to the mid-80's.

    Mr. Eliminator
    This instrumental song wasn't on the album, but was a bonus track on the CD and was on the B-side to "Blood and Roses." It was completed in one take.

    Groovy Tuesday
    This co-written song was inspired by "The Who Sell Out." The initial title of the album was going to be "Groovy Tuesday."

    Behind a Wall of Sleep
    This track is a "crush song," about a girl in another band in the area.

    Blood & Roses
    This is one of the big hits from the album. The bass line was inspired from a riff heard while passing by the club. The lyrics are a poetic tribute to a woman who committed suicide.

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    “Oh Yeah!” by Yellow
    Bueller? Bueller? This became a classic after appearing on the film “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”

    STAFF PICKS:

    “Hyperactive” by Robert Palmer
    This was the follow-up to "Addicted to Love" and remained in the charts for about 12 weeks. Rob shares that shortly after this album Palmer formed The Power Station with members of Duran Duran.

    “Suzanne” by Journey
    Brian brings one of the hits off "Raised on Radio." It was one of three to hit the top 40 from the album. The follow-up to "Frontiers" would be the last Journey album with Steve Perry. Randy Jackson played bass on the tour.

    “Something About You” by Level 42
    Bruce's staff pick is the only top 10 hit by the group in the US. There are surprisingly complex lyrics for a pop song "drawn into the stream of undefined illusion, those diamond dreams, they can't disguise the truth that there was something about you."

    “Locked In” by Judas Priest
    Doug Aiken's pick takes the intensity up a notch...or three. The album "Turbo" from which the track comes was promoted using spoofs of commercials from the day.

    “Home” Public Image Limited
    Wayne's pick keeps the intensity up, but from a more punk genre than heavy metal. Johnny Rotten from the Sex Pistols is the lead singer of this group, Ginger Baker from Cream is the drummer, and Steve Vai is on guitar.

    INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:

    “Chase the Ace” by AC/DC
    We exit the podcast with this instrumental from the heavy metal stars from down under.

    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 - April - The Godfathers - Birth, School, Work, Death

    1988 - April - The Godfathers - Birth, School, Work, Death

    Sometimes classified as alternative rock or new wave, London band The Godfathers has a British punk feel to it with their stark lyrics and cynical style — one that Wayne loves and appreciates! Peter and Chris Coyne formed this five piece group, and dressed in mafia-style suits with skinny ties. When they toured the United States, Living Colour was their opening act. Their sound is "brass knuckles punches," and "body slamming production." Join us on this journey as we explore Birth, School, Work, Death​ - a rough and tumble yet melodic album.

    S.T.B.
    This song was the first one that Wayne thought really rocked.

    Cause I Said So
    How many of us heard this phrase when we were young? You sense the angst of their working class background. Lots of their songs have a "worst case scenario" feel to it.

    If I Only Had Time
    This is Wayne's favorite Godfather's song. "If I only had time, I would come up with the perfect crime." Front man Peter Coyne was in six of the seven "Harry Potter" movies.

    Birth, School, Work, Death
    This title track is definitely the hit off the album. This describes life as it is - though perhaps quite summarized. The video to this song received considerable airplay on MTV at the time.

    ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:

    “Pump Up the Volume” by M.A.R.S.S.
    This song was a track off the Michael J. Fox movies "Bright Lights, Big City."

    STAFF PICKS:

    “Electric Blue” by Icehouse
    Rob digs this song by Australian synth-pop band Icehouse that was actually co-written by John Oates, giving it a definite "Hall & Oates" feel. The video features a prominent mullet and Paris Jefferson, best known as Xena, Warrior Princess.

    “Shattered Dreams” by Johnny Hates Jazz
    Bruce's staff pick features some minor key angst. Interestingly, the group was discovered while performing in a jazz club. The video was produced by David Fincher of "Fight Club" fame.

    “Kiss Me Deadly” by Lita Ford
    Brian's rocking staff pick features the queen of heavy metal/glam rock. Sharon Osbourne produced the album.

    “Only A Memory” by The Smithereens
    Continuing the angst theme, this great break up song was released in April. "I search the room but you're not there, your perfume lingers everywhere."

    COMEDY TRACK:

    “Eat It ” by "Weird Al" Yankovic
    Although this spoof was originally released in 1984, it also appeared on Yankovic's Greatest Hits album, released in 1988.

    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.

    [BLOCKED] Episode #118 - Hour One

    [BLOCKED] Episode #118 - Hour One
    Kickin' off with “Top Of The Pops” by The Smithereens. Rockin' tracks from Garland Jeffreys, and Frank Zappa & The Mothers (feat. Tina Turner & The Ikettes!). Birthday celebrations for Don Was, Pretender Chrissie Hynde, and Smithereens’ main man Pat Dinizio. #1 records from Gary Numan, Siouxsie & The Banshees. The debut LP’s from Max Webster, Paul McCartney, & John Lennon. DEVO covers Lee Dorsey/Allen Toussaint. David Bowie unplugged. And brand NEW music from Fearing & White, Coves, and U2.

    [BLOCKED] Episode #111 - Hour One

    [BLOCKED] Episode #111 - Hour One
    Kickin' off with the debut from Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels. Rockin' tunes from Chér, Led Zeppelin, and The Guess Who. Birthday celebrations for Sonny Bono, and Feist. The debut of Beady Eye. Leonard Cohen backed by U2. John Lennon covers B-day boy Gene Vincent, The Beatles cover Carl Perkins, Cheap Trick covers Slade, The Smithereens cover Bruce Springsteen, Morrissey covers Lou Reed. NEW music from Beck, and Jamestown Revival.

    [BLOCKED] Episode #008 - Hour One

    [BLOCKED] Episode #008 - Hour One
    Kickin’ off with Bob Dylan’s “Thunder on The Mountain” from his #1 Long Player, Modern Times. Rockin’ tracks from Warren Zevon, The Smithereens, R.E.M., The Guess Who, The Beach Boys, Squeeze, and Simple Minds. Birthday celebrations for Van Morrison. Debut records for Joe Cocker (covering The Beatles). #1 records with The Verve, and Culture Club. Brand new music from African band, Tinariwen.