Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Compilation! "Tom Waits - Wasted and Wounded"


TOM WAITS
WASTED AND WOUNDED

So Tom Waits has a new album out. Did you know? Oh, come on. Of course you know. For such a proudly 'non-commercial' artist, the proudly 'non-commercial' post-punk record label he currently calls home has certainly pulled out all the stops on marketing this one. And why? Does that mean they're expecting to turn a mighty profit from Tom Waits? There's certainly not much in almost forty years of professional work by this artist that would indicate such a thing is likely.

Jesus. Can it really be forty years? Yes, it can; Waits's début Closing Time came out in 1973, a remarkably long time ago now. So he must have a glut of retrospective compilations to his name, then, right? Well... no, as it happens. He's been compiled, yes, in a haphazard way down the years. But there's never been a compilation that spans his entire recorded output across the three record labels he's worked with, meaning there's never been a single compilation that looks back at more than a single decade or so of his work (with the sole exception of the odds-and-sods compilation Orphans, which is not at all what we're talking about here.

Apart from the whole 'who would buy it?' angle, I can kind of guess why this is. The three 'eras' of Tom Waits's career correspond not merely to record label affiliation but also to decade and to approximate musical genre. This 'Elektra Tom Waits' is seen as almost a different beast altogether to 'Island Tom Waits'. And 'Anti Tom Waits' serves as a kind of 'footnote' to the other two, this despite being the longest and most commercially successful of the three eras.

So I'm giving it a try. After all, the sonic templates may differ, the voice may regress year by year, but everything here is very clearly a singular vision, the work of one artist whose superficial ugliness belies a greater understanding and appreciation of beauty than almost anyone else out there. The nuts and bolts are this: an artist such as Tom Waits could never have a 'greatest hits' collection, but I've attempted both a subjective 'best of' and, in addition to that, a kind of down-the-years 'introduction' featuring his best-known songs. In many cases this means his best-known compositions, which might perhaps have been made famous after being covered by someone else. Though Waits himself has indulged in a handful of covers down the years, I've passed them over in favour of an all-original collection.

I make no attempt to dig through drawers and pull out curios. These are all 'album versions', taken from the standard issue versions of his main body of work. I tried to give each era approximately equal weight (and in fact if you consider the transitional soundtrack to One From the Heart as an 'Island era release', then I've included exactly twelve tracks from each of the three eras), but I didn't attempt to take from every album in his oeuvre and didn't worry about being overly well-rounded in stylistic range: I appear to have a very pronounced preference for the slower material, and my overall collection is noticeably slow in tempo.

Having said that, though, the album is more than adequately eclectic. So how to arrange it? Approaching the material in chronological order does little to 'integrate' the three eras - instead it presents three distinct 'greatest hits' collections stuck together on two CDs. And yet a purposefully mix-and-match approach would merely highlight the discrepancy between the piano-and-strings 'lounge lizard' early era and the rougher, more 'extreme' avant garde 1980s material. I actually spent a good long time working out a tracklist that went from era-to-era not in a jump-cut fashion but in a 'flowing' way, with mini-sets united by mood. In addition, there's a conscious attempt to frontload the package with those best-known tracks that the 'average consumer', if they know anything at all about Waits, is most likely to know.

In discussing inclusions, however, I'll be taking a chronological approach.

Note: in addition to a full tracklisting complete with original album cover and release details, I've included an embedded YouTube window to allow listening. So you can listen to this compilation in its entirety, but 36 embedded YouTube windows is a horrible strain on most browsers. To that end, I've hidden each CD tracklisting behind a 'spoiler tag'. Click on each CD in turn to hear its contents, and be warned that your browser might run a bit slow at first when you do so.
» Click here for the tracklisting of CD1, with embedded YouTube links. «

» Click here for the tracklisting of CD2, with embedded YouTube links. «


NOTES


Waits's first 'proper' album was Closing Time in 1973, on David Geffen's Elektra Records, home of the California singer-songwriter, something the not-very-gravelly artist certainly was at this point. I've taken three tracks from this user-friendly disc, the well-known 'Ol' 55', its neighbour 'I Hope That I Don't Fall in Love With You' and the lesser-known gorgeous piano ballad 'Martha'. Demos recorded before this first major release and collected on 'Early Years' compilations are overlooked here for the reason that Waits himself doesn't appear to approve of their release. And if someone who embraces the ugly and the incidental as much as Waits doesn't want these tracks seen as part of his body of work, well we ought to respect that.

The 'last call' motif of that début album's title presents us with the key to Waits's 1970s output: the bar. Or perhaps the 'lounge' - Waits himself was a heavy drinker during these years, which no doubt contributed to the deterioration of his voice but also to the establishment of his main theme: bar culture, and the lives of those who populate them. The Heart of Saturday Night, Waits's 1974 follow-up, aims for a touch of vérité in its world-weary title track '(Looking for) The Heart of Saturday Night', while 'Shiver Me Timbers' maintains the confessional tone of the début. Both, it goes without saying, are gorgeous. A double-length follow-up recorded 'live' in a studio-cum-nightclub furthers the barfly theme, though I've taken nothing from it for inclusion here.

Small Change, from 1976, remains in all probability the peak of Waits's artistic accomplishment. 'Tom Traubert's Blues' may or may not be his best-known song, but all these years later it remains the single most effective introduction to the man, his most jaw-droppingly touching recording and in all likelihood his meisterwerk. I let it open the collection, a well-earned accolade for a truly incredible piece. 'Invitation to the Blues' similarly starts off my second disc, while for me the slightly-too-clever 'The Piano Has Been Drinking (Not Me)' might be a step down in quality, though I'm clearly a minority here as regards another of Waits's 'signature pieces'.

1977's Foreign Affairs, the follow-up, is perhaps less notable, though I've found room for 'I Never Talk to Strangers', a highly evocative duet with Bette Midler taken straight out of a musical stage production that exists only in the minds of listeners. Released a year later, Blue Valentine features the spare guitar-only almost-title-track 'Blue Valentines' in addition to 'Romeo is Bleeding', one of only two spoken-word hipster epics that I've included. Heartattack and Vine, from 1980, would prove to be Waits's last album for Elektra, amid whisperings that Waits had lost it creatively and was content to coast along with a predictable formula. I find that hard to believe, frankly, and 'Jersey Girl', my final Elektra-era inclusion, is one of those classics that mine such a rare beauty that it seems ridiculous to grumble about sonic diversity.

Homeless between labels, Waits recorded a soundtrack on CBS for a Francis Ford Coppola film called One from the Heart, with Crystal Gayle as foil for a series of beauty-and-the-beast duets. From the 1982 release, I've included the opening track, a medley of three different compositions that carries a particularly cinematic mood, even while tied down to the traditional 1970s instrumentation Waits was inches away from shucking off, permanently. To give its name in full: 'Opening Montage (Tom's Piano Intro / Once Upon a Town / The Wages of Love)'.

Swordfishtrombones was not only Waits's first album for major/minor Island Records. It was also his first proper album of the 1980s (1983, to be precise) and the first of a trilogy that took up most of that decade. It was also his first 'avant garde' piece, a collection of tiny compositions buried beneath junkyard percussion and non-rock instrumentation. Weird, yes. An acquired taste, yes. But worth the effort? Yes, absolutely. From this second début I've taken the confrontational '16 Shells from a Thirty-Ought Six' and the jokey two-minute 'poetry reading' 'Frank's Wild Years'.

Rain Dogs was the follow-up two years later, in the same vein but in my eyes even better, with the Rod Stewart-covered pop evergreen 'Downtown Train' alongside the beautiful ballad 'Time' as two of fully nineteen tracks on a single vinyl album. The 'trilogy' wound up with 1987's Franks Wild Years, home to the much-covered 'Temptation' and 'Way Down in the Hole', which in later years would serve as theme song to an HBO show called The Wire. The album also contained two versions of one of Waits's most beautiful-ever songs. 'Innocent When You Dream (78)' is the second, album-concluding rendition, done up like an old vinyl recording but still timelessly gorgeous.

Another live album I've overlooked follows, and then Night on Earth, a 1992 soundtrack to a Jim Jarmusch film. From it I've taken the relatively brief 'Back in the Good Old World (Gypsy)'. The same year saw Waits's most heavily promoted Island-era release, Bone Machine, a well-received song collection from which I've taken the single 'Goin' Out West' and the much-covered 'I Don't Wanna Grow Up', two songs that hide their genuine feelings behind highly unconventional (i.e. 'weird') instrumentation, such as has become Waits's signature sound. 1993's The Black Rider, a studio version of a musical stage play, would be Waits's last release for six years and his last ever on Island. I've taken the atypically baroque 'The Briar and the Rose' from it.

It wouldn't be until 1999 that Tom Waits released a new album, on Bad Religion's Epitaph Records, or rather their Anti subsidiary. Defiantly indie at last, Waits put out Mule Variations, a critically-lauded album from which I've taken the midtempo ballad 'Hold On' and the lengthy blues song 'Get Behind the Mule' - in each case the instrumentation is just as rough and ragged as in the Island era, but the template is less self-consciously 'experimental'; the instrumentation strictly in service of these out-of-time songs.

Waits followed his 'comeback' in 2002 with two simultaneously-released albums that were in fact, like The Black Rider, studio recordings of stage projects, dating as far back a decade before. From Blood Money we've taken the 'single' 'God's Away on Business', which returns a bit to the Bone Machine Island era, and the softer 'Coney Island Baby', which could have been recorded in the 17th century, if they had had recording media at the time. From Alice, the other 2002 collection, I've taken two gorgeous ornate and terribly sad ballads, 'Alice' and 'Poor Edward', desolate and desperate songs of a rare beauty.

2004 saw Real Gone, a surprisingly guitar-based collection. From it, I've taken the delicate ballad 'Dead and Lovely', and a rather surprising seven-minute political piece called 'Day After Tomorrow', a touching heartfelt piece from an artist whose concerns have tended to be interpersonal rather than international. A 3CD 'grab-bag' collection of older pieces from here and there mixed with new recordings, Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards was a surprising commercial success, and from its 56 tracks I've taken only two soundtrack contributions, 'Little Drop of Poison' from Shrek 2, and 'Long Way Home' from Big Bad Love.

Which takes us to... well, to today, after skipping a third live album (one per era), and that soon-to-be commercial breakthrough Bad as Me. So far I haven't fallen in love with it, but like every other Anti release it gets an allotment of two tracks, the title track 'Bad As Me' and the tiny little 'Get Lost' - something that Waits seems entirely unable to do, even as he's spent decades now wandering without a map, far removed from convention. That he's managed never to get lost all these years despite trying seemingly so hard explains how Anti has managed to launch such a pervasive advertising campaign behind him some forty years on from his début.

Monday, July 18, 2011

One Night in Bangkok

How can I prove to you that 'One Night in Bangkok' is an awesome song? Well, where to begin...
  • It mentions both Yul Brynner and Somerset Maugham.
  • It rhymes 'tourist' and 'purist', 'waistline' and 'sunshine', 'witness' and 'cerebral fitness', and 'Buddha' and 'would a'.
  • Those rhymes are all delivered by Murray Head in a horribly insincere American accent.
  • There are a handful of female voices serving as a Greek chorus.
  • It starts with a quasi-orchestral introduction that lasts a top-forty-scuppering 1:45. Wikipedia helpfully informs us that this part of the song "cannot be confused with Thai folk music".
  • The song proper is mid-eighties post-disco camp at its finest.
  • It has a solo played inevitably ona keyboard but in imitation of a breathyt flute that I'd call a shakuhachi if I had the first clue what a shakuhachi was.
  • The whole mess is a track from a musical called Chess, which is about... chess. In Bangkok.
  • The musical, and thus the song itself, was written by the two male members of ABBA, and this served as their immediate follow-up to that record breaking band, following the departures of their respective exes.
  • It was banned in Thailand for misrepresenting Thai culture.
  • It toppled do-gooder song 'Do They Know It's Christmas?' from the number one position in Germany and Switzerland.
  • A song this ridiculous made it to number one in Germany and Switzerland. And number three here in Canada.
  • Could only have been the eighties, right?

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Compilation!: Malcolm McLaren: "The Bad, the Good, the Simply Boring"


MALCOLM McLAREN
THE BAD, THE GOOD, THE SIMPLY BORING

So I'm trying a new thing here. I love making compilations - you know, mixtapes, playlists, etc. The problem is that I'd love to be able to include them here to be heard, and that's just not very easy, legally.

Here's an attempt at a way around: a compilation made up of songs that exist on YouTube, where I link to the uploaded YouTube files. I'm not uploading them, no harm no foul? I think... I hope. I don't know.

First kick at the can is the recently-deceased 'imp' Malcolm McLaren, more famous perhaps for his managerial role and for his dabbling in politics than what he's produced as a musician - largely because he very clearly couldn't care less about having a musical 'career' and was content to periodically release music whenever he felt like it - in pretty much any ol' genre he preferred, with a wild variance in quality.

It turns out he does have enough 'greatest hits' for a full 70-minute CD, and one that's really quite listenably as it flits from genre to genre. This material probably belongs to a dozen different record labels, which would make it pretty difficult to have a physical form as a CD you can buy in HMV. And I'm not too sure who would buy a CD of Malcolm McLaren's greatest hits. Which is a pity, since it's quite a good listen. Don't take my word for it listen for yourself. Click on each song below and a window will open with the YouTube viewing screen for the song in question.

» #1 - Buffalo Gals (3:43) «

» #2 - Aria on Air (4:09) «

» #3 - About Her (4:50) «

» #4 - Double Dutch (3:50) «

» #5 - Deep in Vogue (4:03) «

» #6 - Madame Butterfly (6:23) «

» #7 - Revenge of the Flowers (Todd's extended mix) (5:07) «

» #8 - Magic's Back (4:35) «

» #9 - Carry On Columbus (3:49) «

» #10 - Eiffel Tower (3:44) «

» #11 - Something's Jumpin' in Your Shirt (4:53) «

» #12 - Chinatown (4:10) «

» #13 - Paris Paris (5:24) «

» #14 - Carmen (4:57) «

» #15 - Waltz Darling (4:29) «

» #16 - Operaa House! (5:54) «

» #17 - Duck for the Oyster (2:55) «

1983's Duck Rock was Malcolm McLaren's first kick at the can as a solo artist - and to a real extent his greatest accomplishment, not just because of legendary early hip-hop/square-dance 'crossover' Buffalo Gals (track 1) but also because of the amazing African-sourced jumprope song Double Dutch (track 4) - two brilliant songs the equal of anything else out there. Duck for the Oyster (track 17) is a silly little take on straight square dance music - a joke, really, but good fun. McLaren followed his début up with the modern-opera concept of Fans (1984), the source here of the magnificent Madame Butterfly (track 6) and Carmen (track 14). This 'situationist' reimagining of premodern music in a modern environment is the signature McLaren trick, something he'll return to again and again throughout his career. Swamp Thing, from 1985, is his last 'early years' release, and it's from this that we get McLaren's reworking of a Bow Wow Wow track, Eiffel Tower (track 10), sung by a pre-fame Neneh Cherry.

In 1989, McLaren released Waltz Darling, perhaps his hast attempt at 'chart success' the conventional way. It's a lush album, a perfect soundtrack to Paris fashion week, and we take three tracks from it: Deep in Vogue (track 5), Something's Jumpin' In Your Shirt (track 11) and Waltz Darling (track 15). The next year saw Round the Outside, Round the Outside, a kind of return to past hip-hop glories, but the lead single Operaa House! (track 16), a track less awesome than its title suggests it should be, was completely outshone by its b-side (and significant source material) Aria on Air (track 2), perhaps the most recognisable song on this disc due to its usage in British Airways marketing.

At this point, McLaren seems to have realised that conventional albums were not the way to go. The next two tracks we have here are both from soundtracks: 1991's Magic's Back (track 8), featuring Alison Limerick, from 'The Ghosts of Oxford Street' and 1992's Carry On Columbus (track 9), from the 'Carry On' film of the same name and released under the alias Fantastic Planet.One last 'normal CD' release in 1994 was called Paris, and featured Paris Paris (track 13) with Catherine Deneuve, and also the original version of the song that I include here in a Todd Terry remix: Revenge of the Flowers (Todd's extended mix) (track 7), featuring Françoise Hardy.

A few random releases here and there followed before McLaren showed up, mysteriously, on the 'Kill Bill Volume 2' soundtrack in 2004 with the odd version of the Zombies' 'She's Not There', retitled About Her (track 3), which also showed up a year later on a rare CD Tranquilize, from which I've also taken the very strage mashup Chinatown (track 12), a fittingly bizarre 'final song' from the man, a track which was never a single but which I felt added more than a little to this most curious of compilations. Available here for your listening pleasure, until YouTube takes them down...

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Chart-Broiled: The UK Number Ones 1980 (3.44)


1980

What's this? Well, I've decided to look at the songs down the years that have hit number one. I chose the UK rather than the USA because I think it's by and large a more interesting chart, and it's the one I'm less familiar with. Having said that, though, a lot of these 'unknown in North America' songs entered my subconscious somehow, because many of the seemingly unknown songs I in fact definitely recognised.

Still, here's the idea: I take every song ever to hit the number one in the UK (starting with 1980 because you have to start somewhere, and the 1980s are kind of my forté) and rate it, giving it a rating somewhere from one to five stars. This, by itself, is a worthy exercise, since both wonderful songs and horrid ones hit number one. This will let me see what the very best UK chart toppers are. And the worst.

The other thing that's cool, though, is it'll let me 'compare years'. I've taken an average of all of the ratings for the year, so we'll be able to see which years had great charts in the UK and which didn't. Notice that in calculating the overall yearly score, I calculate the average of weeks, not of songs. 1991, for example, saw the KLF's '3 a.m. Eternal', a personal favourite of mine, hit number one, as well as Bryan Adams's execrable '(Everything I Do) I Do It For You'. You might call that a draw - a great song and a piece of rubbish. But the KLF managed two weeks at the top while Bryan Adams was there for 16 painful weeks. It's tough to call that equal, is it? Clearly Bryan Adams drags 1991 down much further than the KLF can bring it back up. So I would multiply Adams's score by sixteen and the KLF's score by only two, dividing the ultimate end result in each case by 52.

Anyway... 1980, a year of loose ends. Look at the strange mix of disco, new wave, American country, MOR and God knows what else here. You can see the 1980s beginning, but the 1970s are musically very much alive here. There are embarrassments, but by and large these are decent examples of really diverse genres. And it all starts off with the words "Hey teacher! Leave those kids alone!"


1. Another Brick in the Wall (Part II) 
Pink Floyd (2 weeks in 1980)
 

Quite a song to ring in the new decade on. It's tough to find something to say about this song: it's barely even a song at all, really, just a few simple slogans, really, with a guitar solo. And aren't Pink Floys 'pieces' always meant to be consumed within their album context and not on top-40 radio? But it's Pink Floyd-meets-disco with a kids' choir shouting at their teachers, and that's just shy of perfection, isn't it?


2. Brass in Pocket
The Pretenders (2 weeks)

What do you suppose was more difficult: being Chrissie Hynde in 1980 and having to bear the crushing weight of your awesomeness, or being her ever since and carrying the disappointment of faded ambition? After all, being this swaggeringly-awesome carries a lot of responsibility with it.


3. The Special AKA Live!
The Special AKA feat. Rico (2 weeks) 

Ah, the Specials. They were pretty great, you know, even if this live EP, with 'Too Much Too Young' the 'a-side', not quite showing them at their best. it's pretty silly 'message' stuff, even if the message, about contraception, is perhaps not political correctness at its finest. It's good fun, but it's not 'peak' Specials.

4. Coward of the County
Kenny Rogers (2 weeks) 
 

So much for pacifism. This story song seems to be taking a 'higher road' until the end, when it craps out in spectacular fashion. it's Nashville 'countrypolitan' at its sleekest, which is to say it'd be intolerable were it not for that singalong melody and Kenny Rogers's inherent likability. It's not really enough though.

5. Atomic
Blondie (2 weeks)

This is probably the absolute pinnacle of 'the art of Blondie', with its disco-meets-new wave groove absolute perfection. This still sounds like the future, thirty-one years later. But Debbie Harry brings this down, unfortunately. It's the vocals that are the weak part here. As an instrumental it would have been an easy five stars.

6. Together We are Beautiful
Fern Kinney (1 week)

This is pretty obscure - a 'midtempo disco' track that was a forgotten b-side in Kinney's native USA but somehow topped the pops in the UK. It didn't merit it, though, being competent but forgettable.

7. Going Underground 
The Jam (3 weeks)

Their first number one, and it's pretty good stuff. Does what it says on the label, really: post-punk 'mod' stuff teeming with change-the-world energy and passion. Maybe not the Jam's absolute finest, but it's more than fine enough, really.

8. Working My Way Back to You
The Detroit Spinners (2 weeks)

This is just a great song, and it has to be said that it fits a disco format. The Spinners are a great soul harmony group, and it seems strange to long for Frankie Valli's dog-whistle voice, but I'm more familiar with the Four Seasons' original, and this is ultimately just a discofied cover. Well done, though, and enjoyable from start to finish.

9. Call Me 
Blondie (1 week)

This was a hell of a year for Blondie. This was apparently the biggest hit of their career. It was from a soundtrack, and it's the pinnacle of their 'thumping disco' ambitions. It's pretty great stuff, really, with Debbie Harry on fine hollering form.

10. Geno
Dexys Midnight Runners (2 weeks)

Over here, they were one-hit wonders. Our loss... Kevin Rowland's band made some brilliant music. For a little stretch, anyway. This is pretty uncategorisable stuff: is it retro soul? Or is it ska? It's not Irish fiddle music, for sure. But it's still exciting stuff.

11. What's Another Year 
Johnny Logan (2 weeks) 
 

Oh, Eurovision. That explains it. Johnny Logan won Eurovision three times, a record. This was his first, and if definitely sounds like a Eurovision weeper. Which is to say it makes you weep in disappointment.

12. Theme from M*A*S*H (Suicide is Painless)
M*A*S*H (3 weeks)

A ten-year-old movie/TV theme hitting number one is just one of those things that makes the UK charts so strange... I'm more familiar with the instrumental version, and listening to this makes me realise why. It's a sparkling melody, but the lyrics are a bit overwrought and the mass vocals wooden. They should have stuck with the instrumental.

13. Crying
Don McLean (3 weeks)
 

This is just a great song. Beautiful from start to finish. Don McLean doesn't actually do anything with it other than stick faithfully to it and perform it exquisitely. But what more could you want, really? Gorgeous whoever performs it.

14. Xanadu 
Olivia Newton-John and Electric Light Orchestra (2 weeks) 

This is why disco died, right? Olivia and ELO were about to disappear into the ether as the 1970s truly became the 1980s. And let's admit it - this is why. Cheesy with little to redeem it.

15. Use It Up and Wear it Out 
Odyssey (2 weeks)
 

This is a strange #1 (it didn't even reach the Hot 100 in Odyssey's native USA). Not because it's bad - it's a pretty good party groove, a deeply funky polyrhythmic jam. The thing is that it's not exactly a song but more like a five-minute excerpt from a really good party. Whistle test not applicable, though.

16. The Winner Takes It All 
ABBA (2 weeks)

Probably more than even 'Dancing Queen', the single song that best shows what was great about ABBA. There's nothing bad you can say about this moving piece of popular art.

17. Ashes to Ashes 
David Bowie (2 weeks) 

David Bowie was about to get really horrible. This is meant to be a sort of 'comeback', but I find I like it better theoretically than viscerally. It's just unloveable somehow, pipped quality-wise by both part one ('Space Oddity') and part three ('Major Tom (Völlig losgelöst)' by Peter Schilling). It gives me no joy. And what is Bowie if not a giver of joy?

18. Start!
The Jam (1 week) 

A cover of the Beatles' 'Taxman', done and dusted in 135 seconds. It's good enough fun, I suppose, but it has no real reason to exist. It's just... there.


19. Feels Like I'm in Love
Kelly Marie (2 weeks)

One of the coolest things about disco was the sheer anonymity. Who, pray tell, was Kelly Marie? It matters not. This is her sole three minutes in the sun, and she does what she can with it - which is quite a bit, actually. She's no Donna Summer, but she's capable of imparting more than her fair share of dance-floor 'release'. Good fun.


20. Don't Stand So Close to Me 
The Police (4 weeks)

The year's biggest hit. Everything the Police ever was, writ large: beautiful atmospheric pseudo-reggae music, ridiculous lyrics. Give Sting some credit, though. The poor English teacher is trying. Perhaps not autobiographical. Like always, Sting is the weak point here, but it's still a sturdy little tune, deserving of its fame.


21. Woman in Love 
Barbra Streisand (3 weeks)
 

Damned song. I want to hate it, hate its MOR arrangement and Babs's tastefully precious vocals. But the melody is just so strong you find yourself forgiving its mushy excesses.


22. The Tide is High 
Blondie (2 weeks)
 

The faux-Caribbean 'feel good' vibe of this song fills me with nothing but despair for the human condition.


23. Super Trouper 
ABBA (3 weeks)

ABBA at their least compelling are still good craftwork, but they don't stop traffic. This is merely generic.

24. (Just Like) Starting Over 
John Lennon (1 week)

A retro pastiche that is difficult to discuss critically - after all, it's not the song's inherent charms that pushed it to number one but the events that occurred the week before it rose to number one. We'll see a lot of John Lennon in January of 1981, but this was the initial eulogy: bitterly ironic, right? I love listening to it, but the emotional response I get from it is intimately connected with the 'experience' of it all, even if at five years old I barely comprehended what was happening.

25. There's No-One Quite Like Grandma
St Winifred's School Choir (1 week in 1980) 

Horrid.

That gives a total of 3.44 for the year 1980. Since this is the first year I've done, I don't know if that's going to count as a good finish or now. We'll see...

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