1981 = year of 70s dino rockers w modren/wavo comeback LPs

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"Mad Love" by Linda Ronstadt is perfect to mention here because of the backing band, the Cretones.

This is a good example; "How Do I Make You" is snotty EL Lay punk. But wasn't it 1980?

has anyone mentioned Rosanne Cash's Seven Year Ache?

The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:09 (fifteen years ago) link

awesome! didn't know Lester Bangs was one of the lawyers at the end of the vid.

xp

I Want to Edit My Profile... (Ioannis), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:20 (fifteen years ago) link

information got talked around upthread, geir. good record.

guess i've gotta check out mad love & the cretones. plus more tubes, cuz all i've heard = 1st lp, & "outside inside" era - neither of which i like. do like "talk to you later" tho.

prince was mixing up new wave and funk circa 80/81. maybe zapp, too, though that's a stretch. any evidence of this influence on older funk/disco acts at this time? cameo didn't go this way til 85/86. mentioned george clinton's computer games upthread, but the influence is subtle there. rick james' street songs?

"lawyers in love" ist rad! falsetto vocals & "ooh-sha-la-la" whistling bit = SO GREAT, then spooky organ gives u chills. "the russians escaped while we weren't watching them, like russians will."

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:09 (fifteen years ago) link

Shalamar made a blatant (post-Prince) new wave move (incl haircuts) on The Look, from 1983, featuring their great funk-rock hit "Dead Giveaway" but (like Kool and the Gang's "Misled" and Phils Bailey and Collins's "Easy Lover") the music on that single was probably more Foreigner than new wave.

And oh yeah -- duh! -- the Village People's new romantic album Rennaissance was '81, right?

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:16 (fifteen years ago) link

Rick James talked about "the kind of girl you read about in new wave magazines" on Street Songs. (His music had actually been referred to as "punk funk" in the late '70s, which never made much sense. And in the early '80s, magazines like I think Musician were talking about a new genre they called "funk'n'roll," which consisted primarily of, um, Prince and the Bus Boys, I think. And maybe the Time and, uh, Prince Charles and the City Beat Band.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:31 (fifteen years ago) link

busboys are a good call. goofy lyrics, campy midcentury retro vibe (esp on the debut), danceable but kinda square, lotsa synths. but they pretty much stand alone, right?

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:43 (fifteen years ago) link

most interested in 81, as there seems to have been a LOT of activity during that year, but 82 is cool

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:54 (fifteen years ago) link

Van Halen's Fair Warning featured their first use of synth. And I believe 1981 was the year Genesis discovered funk (to Geir's horror).

Myonga Vön Bontee, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 18:47 (fifteen years ago) link

'Nother big '81 new wave move I thought of by an arguable aging proto-new-waver: Yoko Ono's "Walking On Thin Ice" (though I guess stuff like "Kiss Kiss Kiss" on Double Fantasy the year before may have prefigured that, dance-oriented-rock-wise.)

Disco guy going new wave in 1980: August Darnell (formerly Dr. Buzzard, now Kid Creole).

Jazz guy probably playing to new wave crowds around the same time (though more New Yorky new wave crowds than country guy Joe Ely was playing for): James Blood Ulmer. (Neither changed his sound much.)

Another r&b guy making a rock (if not new wave) move circa 1982: Ray Parker Jr., with "The Other Woman."

Also, nobody has answered my Steve Miller question yet. "Abracadabra," pretty darn new wave, was '82. In '81 he put out Circle Of Love, which I've never heard, but one of its tracks, "Macho City," wound up on one of those Disco Not Disco compilations a few years ago. So he counts, right?

Re Rosanne Cash, Seven Year Ache from '81 was indeed new wavey in the pubby Carlene Carter sense (in its hair and song choices) (and also the best album she would ever make), but what did her two earlier LPs ('78 and '80) sound like? (And how am I so sure it's her best if I don't know those two?)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:47 (fifteen years ago) link

http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/443/cover_14571823112005.jpg

Anyone heard this? Apparently Peter Hammill's stab at new wave.

Matt #2, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:50 (fifteen years ago) link

Jon Anderson & Vangelis "The Friends of Mr. Cairo"

and I just discovered a band The Monks UK that has members of the Strawbs doing fake punk. Suspended Animation is from 1981 and was big in Canada. They did go new wave early (in 1979) though.

james k polk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:52 (fifteen years ago) link

I had a cutout of that Hammill album once; thought it was okay, I guess, but remember nothing else about it. It does remind me though that Bill Nelson of Be Bop Deluxe had a new wave (I think) band called Red Noise; that was around 1978 or so, right?

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:58 (fifteen years ago) link

dunno about circle of love. "heart like a wheel" was the big pop tune, and that sounds exactly like mid 70s prime SMB. "macho city" sounds a lot like NYC nu/no wave, though: all awkward, jittery white boy funk. hard to say whether it's a funk/disco move or a punk/wave one. i guess, circa 81, that can be a hard distinction to make no matter what

abracadabra, though, is fully waved. check out synth bass on "keeps me wondering why"

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:59 (fifteen years ago) link

xp Also, Col. Bruce Hampton (of the Hampton Grease Band) put out what I assume were his two new waviest LPs with the Late Bronze Age in '80 and '82. (Both reissued on CD a couple years back; they're good.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:01 (fifteen years ago) link

no mention of Jethro Tull, who kinda tried the new wave thing with 1980's A, either.

I Want to Edit My Profile... (Ioannis), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:02 (fifteen years ago) link

The cover of A was posted way upthread.

The Wild Shirtless Lyrics of Mark Farner (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:04 (fifteen years ago) link

never heard tull's A. dunno why, as i got some use out of both stormwatch and broadsword (both absolutely miserable records)

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:05 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm not sure I'd count Bill Nelson because Be Bop Deluxe bordered on New Wave, and his entire '80s career was pretty darn new wave! I mean, he palled around with Yukihiro Takahashi and YMO.

Also, I wouldn't call Belew a "dino rocker." Didn't his career start in the late '70s as a guitarist for Frank Zappa? I don't think of his solo albums or his Talking Heads work as a "rebirth," but more of his core. His solo albums and Bears albums are jerky, XTC/Talking Heads-esque new wave. In fact, I think his unique guitar style was quintessentially new wave and in fact influential in the new wave scene. When I think of a new wave guitar solo, I think Adrian Belew.

Excellent call on the Jon Anderson, though!

Patrick South, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:08 (fifteen years ago) link

Also, unless my control-F just isn't working, I can't believe nobody has mentioned one of the most definitive examples of this (especially since I've seen it mentioned on ILM fairly often elsewhere): Robert Palmer's Clues, which first charted in October 1980, according to Joel Whitburn.

Tim Curry "went" new wave in 1979 with "I Do the Rock," though maybe his Rocky Horror stuff before then counts as new wavey to begin with (more post-glam, I'd think); fairly sure I knew a guy in college who also had one of his singer-songwritery '70s solo albums, but I could be totally wrong about that.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:13 (fifteen years ago) link

agree about belew, but think he's more a bridge-type guy than either the one thing or the other: the grey area where edgy 70s future-prog starts to overlap with the arty/punky stuff that would become "new wave". there's no clear line between the things. plus i really just LOVE "big electic cat".

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:15 (fifteen years ago) link

I can't believe nobody has mentioned one of the most definitive examples of this ... Robert Palmer's Clues

― xhuxk

yeah, that has to be one of the cornerstones. truth be told, i'd never heard it. just listened to a few tracks. good record, and exactly the kinda thing i was talking about. he covers gary numan ffs! plus even cowrites another tune with him!

WAIT! "johnny & mary" holy crap!!!! i've been trying to figure out what this song is for YEARS! i head it in a wamu in brooklyn about 3 yeas ago, but couldn't make out any words, and have been looking relentlessly (though cluelessly) for it ever since. thank you thank you thank you chuck! so freaking great, and one of the secret lipstick traces behind this thread.

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:30 (fifteen years ago) link

embedding of the actual vid disabled :(

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:31 (fifteen years ago) link

I'd like to hear Mad Love. I remember reading once that L.R. almost ruined her voice recording it.

WmC, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:35 (fifteen years ago) link

Howard Werth went from:

to:

on LA punk label Dangerhouse, of all places.

dan selzer, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:40 (fifteen years ago) link

Robert Palmer's "Johnny & Mary": C or D?

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:41 (fifteen years ago) link

listening to mad love right now. fantastic! - about as note-perfect new wave as anything on this thread, and another one i'll have to pick up a proper copy of. with the r palmer, she's making a real strong case for 1980.

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:41 (fifteen years ago) link

ha, missed that "johnny & mary" thread, though i might not have connected the song in my head with the thread anyway. agree with geir: palmer's best moment (or, at least, the one i love best)

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Though it's from '82, Arthur Brown's "Requiem" is totally synthed out and worth seeking.

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 20:59 (fifteen years ago) link

also, i'm a bit late, but jkpolk OTM way upthread about rod stewart's tonight i'm yours - another iconic new wave move from 81 (though, yeah, not terribly shocking given the goofy pop/disco he'd gone for a few years before).

plus "young turks", of course

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:00 (fifteen years ago) link

Tonight I'm Yours is a good album!

Also: I'd love a copy of Mad Love. Someone email me.

The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:13 (fifteen years ago) link

A few more '70s has-beens going new wave in whatever year:

-- John Hiatt
-- David Werner
-- Ish Ledesma of Foxy (as Oxo)
-- Godley and Creme of Hot Legs (and oh yeah, 10cc)
-- Joan Armatrading
-- Roky Erickson of the 13th Floor Elevators
-- A couple Stackridge guys (as the Korgis)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:37 (fifteen years ago) link

I completely forgot about that Rod Stewart song! Not sure why, because I certainly liked it at the time. Not as good as Young Turks, though.

Gross Chapel British Grenadiers (Bimble), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Hawkwind's "Quark, Strangeness and Charm" always struck me as punk-influenced, but it's from 1977. And the rest of the LP isn't so much that way. I think we've had this thread before (shocker) because I remember mentioning this one elsewhere.

nickn, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:48 (fifteen years ago) link

Nice one on the Armatrading. She went from singer-songwriter with folky/bluesy '70s production to full on synthy new wave. Some songs ("I Love My Baby" comes to mind) have no guitar at all.

How about Chris de Burgh? Went from 12-string folky and medieval to "Don't Pay the Ferryman" (with Rupert Hine becoming his producer of choice).

Patrick South, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:50 (fifteen years ago) link

another crazy OTM jkpolk nom that i missed: jon & vangelis the friends of mr. cairo. wish i didn't hate anderson's voice so much

also, juice newton's juice, from 81, if just for "queen of hearts"

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:55 (fifteen years ago) link

how about '70s dino rockers recruiting a buggle?

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d0/Asiaasia.jpg

(released '82, but they formed in '81 totally in response to all the stuff talked about here.)

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:02 (fifteen years ago) link

xp! (wrote this before I saw nickn's post, I swear!)

Also Hawkwind (as Hawklords in 1978 and maybe first with Quark Strangeness And Charm in 1977)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:02 (fifteen years ago) link

alternately: any other years that were defined by this kind of industry-wide trendhopping?

Assorted garage-rock guys went "heavy" circa 1970-71 (usually in different bands), though that should probably be a different thread.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:06 (fifteen years ago) link

Mention of Jethro Tull's A upthread, but Ian Anderson's solo album Walk Into Light was the real new wave move (think it was 1983 though). Sure there were more proggers who did this around that time. Parts of The Wall maybe? Not that synthy though I guess.

Matt #2, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:13 (fifteen years ago) link

how could i forget chris de burgh?!? but wish i knew the joan armatrading stuff in question, cuz i can't say either way

a partial list of stuff mentioned so far (80-82, more or less):

adrian belew: "big electric cat" - lone rhino
after the fire: "der kommisar" - ATF
alice cooper: flush the fashion
barbara gaskin & dave stewart: "it's my party"
billy joel: glass houses
boc: cultosaurus erectus
boc: fire of unknown origin
cheap trick: one on one
chris de burgh: the getaway
dave edmunds: information
don henley: i can't stand still
foreigner: 4
frank zappa: you are what you is
genesis: abacab
george clinton: computer games
gillan: future shock (???)
golden earring: "twilight zone" - cut
grace jones: warm leatherette
grace jones: nightclubbing
grace slick: "all the machines" - software
hall & oates: voices
hall & oates: private eyes
hall & oates: H2O
ian hunter: short back and sides
iggy pop: soldier
j geils: freeze frame
jackson browne: "lawyers in love"
jon & vangelis: the friends of mr. cairo
juice newton: "queen of hearts"
kenny loggins: "footloose", "i'm alright"
kim karnes: "bettie davis eyes"
king crimson: discipline
kinks: give the people what they want
kraftwerk: computer world
linda ronstadt: mad love
moody blues: "gemini dream" - long distance voyager
neil young: trans
olivia newton john: physical
pete townsend: empty glass
peter gabriel: 3
peter gabriel: 4
peter shelley: homosapien
phil lynott: "yellow pearl" - solo in soho
queen : hot space
robert palmer: clues
rolling stones: some girls
rolling stones: emotional rescue
rush: permanent waves
rush: moving pictures
sparks: whomp that sucker
steve miller band: abracadabra
styx: "too much time on my hands" - paradise theater
the who: it's hard
the tubes: "talk to you later" - completion backwards principle
zz top: el loco
zz top: eliminator

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:14 (fifteen years ago) link

^ want all this records

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:15 (fifteen years ago) link

Dunno if it counts, but the first Eurythmics album came out in 1981 after Dave and Annie left the Tourists. Dave was originally an old folkie bastard wasn't he?

Frank Sumatra (NickB), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:15 (fifteen years ago) link

Jaki Liebezeit and Holger Czukay play on that album btw. And Robert Gorl of DAF!

Frank Sumatra (NickB), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:17 (fifteen years ago) link

anderson's walk into light (talking heads ref?) comes in kinda late, 83, but seems to fit much better than anything tull ever did. plus yeah, asia, all the way!

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:19 (fifteen years ago) link

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:22 (fifteen years ago) link

eurythmics debut: conny planck produced it, too! great record, but belongs more in proto-shoegaze (or proto-stereolab) thread more than here

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:23 (fifteen years ago) link

xhuxk, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:29 (fifteen years ago) link

wish herbie hancock's rockit had come out a year or two earlier, cuz 83 is a little late for this thread. but it's so perfect! and if information gets a pass...

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:31 (fifteen years ago) link

What's cool about all these albums is that the level of musicianship tends to be very accomplished because these are old smokey's who can shred, who have better access to nice equipment, and who can hire the best producers/studio musicians.

Patrick South, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago) link


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