Music Monday: September 30, 2024

Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

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Kris Kristofferson: June 22, 1936-September 28, 2024

My heart is so sad.

Over the weekend we lost one of the greatest artists this country ever produced. Kris Kristofferson was a poet, a songwriter, an actor, a singer, an entertainer, a Highwayman, a Rhodes Scholar & a veteran. His 1970 self-titled debut gave us four iconic tunes: “Me And Bobby McGee”, “Help Me Make It Through The Night”, “For The Good Times” and “Sunday Morning Comin’ Down”.

He was born June 22,1936 in Texas and except for having to watch him die in the 1976 version of “A Star Is Born”, I have loved-actually, adored-everything he has ever done. And don’t even get me started on those unbelievably gorgeous eyes, the hair, the beard and every part of his swagger that made him one of the most beautiful men I ever laid eyes on.

Rest in peace, Kris. Thank you for everything, especially some of the most beautiful songs I ever heard.

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Top: Kris Kristofferson circa 1990. Bottom: The artist circa 2015. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Tina Turner’s fifth solo album, Private Dancer, was released in May 1984. To say it was her breakthrough record is a remarkable understatement. It peaked at #3 on the Billboard 200 Albums Chart 40 years ago on September 29, 1984 and produced the following singles: “Let’s Stay Together” which peaked at #26 in March 1984, “What’s Love Got To Do With It” which was a #1 hit for three weeks in September 1984, “Better Be Good To Me” which peaked at #5 in November 1984 and the title track which peaked at #7 in March 1985. The international release included a cover of a Beatles 1965 hit that The Queen Of Rock & Roll made her own as well.   

The album’s success propelled her to superstar level fame. In 1985 she was one of the featured voices on the charity single, “We Are The World”, sang a few songs with Mick Jagger at the Live Aid concert in Philadelphia, was featured in the movie & soundtrack for “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome” and on a duet with Bryan Adams. A collaboration with Eric Clapton followed in 1986.

The singer-born nearly 85 years ago as Anna Mae Bullock on November 26, 1939 in Brownsville, TN-passed away in May 2023 at age 83. Her career began in 1956 and took off in the mid 1960’s as the lead singer for The Ike & Tina Turner Revue. But her 1984 album proved her massive talent was undeniably all her own.

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Top: Turner’s 1984 album cover. Bottom: Turner on stage circa 1988. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Kris Kristofferson: “Help Me Make It Through The Night” (1970, written by Kris Kristofferson).

Tina Turner: “Help” (1984, written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney).

Bryan Adams & Tina Turner: “It’s Only Love” (1984, written by Bryan Adams and Jim Vallance).

Eric Clapton & Tina Turner: “Tearing Us Apart” (1986, written by Eric Clapton and Greg Phillinganes).

Stay safe & well.

Music Monday: September 23, 2024

Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

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Happy 75th birthday to Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen!

Born September 23, 1949 in Long Branch and raised in the town of Freehold, he has been one of New Jersey’s (and America’s) most celebrated sons since his first album was released in January 1973. Five decades later, The Boss is still writing songs, performing his marathon concerts and proving why he is the word legend defined.

It is so fitting that his birthday coincides with the start of fall. The first time I bought one of his records-the masterpiece that is Born To Run-was in October following a very difficult summer. The world had become so dark I forgot what light was like.  But one listen to Springsteen’s album and suddenly all that changed.

Despite all the exquisite colors the autumn season already had to offer, in that moment of discovering BTR for the first time, fall suddenly had a new hue. It was so exquisite and grounding I never saw things quite the same way again.  That color gave me back a glimpse of hope that maybe I could look forward to a future after being in such a dark place. But even if it came for me again, I had Springsteen’s words to hold on to.  

I love him for many things, but giving me back my hope is the biggest reason why.  It is a debt I will never be able to repay.  The mantra of my life, even after all these years, is from the first track on BTR, “Thunder Road”: “What else can we do now except roll down the window and let the wind blow back your hair.”.  Those words, which carry me through my life, are the glorious ties that connect my heart to his.

Thank you for being the constant in my life, Bossman.  Happy birthday & happy Fall.

You sit and wonder just who’s gonna stop the rain
Who’ll ease the sadness who’s gonna quiet the pain
It’s a long dark highway and a thin white line
Connecting baby your heart to mine
“.

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Two outtakes and the final choice for the cover of Springsteen’s 1975 masterpiece, Born To Run. Photos by Eric Meola.

Bruce Springsteen: “The Ties That Bind” (1980, written by Bruce Springsteen).

Stay safe & well.

Music Monday: September 16, 2024

Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

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Barry White was born 80 years ago on September 12, 1944 in Galveston, TX. Below is from a post I wrote about him in 2020:

Barry Eugene Carter, better known to fans around the world as Barry White, is another example of someone being saved by music.  He went to jail for four months when he was 16 for stealing.  It was there he heard Elvis Presley singing “It’s Now or Never” on the radio which White took as an inspirational message to straighten out his life.  As if we needed another reason to worship Elvis.

In their obituary of White, the New York Times said his “deep voice and lushly orchestrated songs added up to soundtracks for seduction”.  Between the first of today’s songs, “You’re the First, the Last, My Everything” and “It’s Ecstasy When You Lay Down Next to Me”, White found his musical niche and ran with it.  And it was fantastic.  So was every episode of “Ally McBeal” that featured White’s songs, especially the one where White himself appeared in April 1999.  Watching the entire cast dance in front of him was one of the highlight’s of that show for me and anyone else who adores the magic of this Icon of Love.

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Barry White circa 2000. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Paul Carrack is currently on tour for the 50th anniversary of today’s second featured song and it is one of my absolute favorites. The original 1974 version has an incredible baseline, a great story told in succinct and clever lyrics and literally causes whiplash as it catapults you to the mid 1970’s from the first note in a simply timeless way.

For decades I thought it was about a guy finding out his girlfriend was cheating on him. But in actuality, Carrack wrote it after finding out a member of his band at the time, Ace, was secretly playing with two other groups as well. The track peaked at #3 on May 31, 1975. Ace-which was formed in 1972 in Sheffield, England-released their debut album, Five-A-Side, in 1974 with today’s second pick as the first single. They may be a one hit wonder, but probably have the best song to ever place in that category. And lucky for us, Carrack went on to sing on his own along with Squeeze and Mike & The Mechanics.

He also recorded a solo version for his 1995 album, Blue Views, and he changed it up a little to where the baseline is replaced with a slowed down version of the first verse. And it works unbelievably well. I actually think it is stunning.

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Top: Paul Carrack (L) with the rest of Ace circa 1970. Bottom: Carrack circa 2020. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

The Jeff Healey Band released their debut album, See The Light, in September 1988, the same year the blues/rock/pop group were signed to Arista Records. It peaked at #22 on the Billboard 200 chart, a great showing for any first record. A year later, the second single from that record peaked even higher-at #5-in September 1989. It put the group on the map and four other albums followed over the next decade. After that Healey, who started playing guitar at age three, focused more on a jazz sound and toured with esteemed performers like B.B. King, The Allman Brothers, Eric Clapton and others before Healey died of cancer in 2008 at only 41 years old.

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Jeff Healy circa 1988. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Barry White: “Can’t Get Enough Of Your Love, Babe” (1974, written by Barry White).

Ace: “How Long” (1974, written by Paul Carrack).

Paul Carrack: “How Long” (1995, written by Paul Carrack).

The Jeff Healey Band:  “Angel Eyes” (1988, written by John Hiatt and Fred Koller).

Stay safe & well.

Music Monday: September 9, 2024

Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

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The Cars released their fifth studio album, Heartbeat City, in March 1984. It peaked at #3 on the Billboard 200 four months later. My favorite track is the third single which features lead vocals by bassist Benjamin Orr, who died in 2000. It became the band’s highest charting single, peaking at #3 on Sept 29, 1984. I loved the video, too, which was directed by actor Timothy Hutton and featured Ocasek’s girlfriend at the time, Paula Porizkova (the couple married in 1989 and separated two years before Ocasek’s death in 2019). My other favorite song by the group, “Good Times Roll”, peaked just outside the Top 40 at #41 in May 1979.

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Top: The Cars 1984 album. Bottom: The band circa 1984 (L-R): Benjamin Orr, David Robinson, Ric Ocasek, Elliot Easton and Greg Hawkes. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

One of my favorite movies is turning 40 years old. “All Of Me” starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin-who just celebrated birthday #85 on September 1-was released Sept 21, 1984. Directed by Carl Reiner, the film is named for the 1931 pop & jazz standard that was first made famous by Billie Holiday in 1941. Frank Sinatra and Willie Nelson also recorded well known covers of the song-1948 and 1978, respectively-but for the film, it is Joe Williams version recorded specifically for the movie (he previously recorded it with Count Basie in 1953) that plays during the closing credits while Martin & Tomlin share a fabulous dance together. Their enjoyment & fun in that moment comes across in what is probably the best scene in the entire movie.

Lily Tomlin and Steve Martin in All of Me


Lily Tomlin and Steve Martin in “All of Me”. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Another of my favorite songs is from 30 years ago but was one I did not discover until probably a decade or more later. I was on a road trip to New England and at the part of I-95 when I was losing my NY radio stations, I scanned around and discovered The Gin Blossoms. Specifically the track I heard that day was the second release from their second studio album, 1992’s New Miserable Experience. They may be better known for the first single, “Hey Jealousy”, which peaked at #25 in October 1993. That is the same position the second release reached on the Hot 100 in February 1994, two months after the song’s writer & band cofounder, Doug Hopkins, died by suicide more than a year after being dismissed by the group for addiction issues. The Gin Blossoms may be another rock & roll band with a tragic story but one of their best songs endured to find me that day in the car.

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Gin Blossoms in a circa 1992 publicity photo for A&M Records (L-R): Robin Wilson, Bill Leen, Douglas Hopkins, Jesse Valenzuela and Phillip Rhodes. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

The Cars:  “Drive” (1984, written by Ric Ocasek).  

Joe Williams: “All Of Me” (1984, arranged by Billy May. Written by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons).

Gin Blossoms: “Found Out About You” (1993, written by Doug Hopkins).

Stay safe & well.

Music Monday: September 2, 2024

Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

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It is Labor Day here in the U.S. For all of us working for a living, I hope it is a day of rest for you. If not, I hope you have one as soon as your schedule allows because it is not just the linemen who can use a small vacation.

I know I need a small vacation
But it don’t look like rain
And if it snows that stretch down south
Won’t ever stand the strain
“.

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A lineman circa 1940’s. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Glen Campbell: “Wichita Lineman” (1968, written by Jimmy Webb).

Stay safe & well.