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Showing posts with label 2Yacht Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2Yacht Rock. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Max Gronenthal - Max

Name: Max (Carl) Gronenthal
Album: Max
Year: 1980
Style: Light "West Coast" Rock, Easy Listening
Similar Bands: Don Henley, Richard Marx, Steve Winwood. Toto, Kansas, Michael Bolton, Hall & Oates
"One-Word" Review: Motown Musak
Based Out Of: Nebraska
Label: Chrysalis
Cover & Record
 Record & Back
Max (1980)
  1. I've Got Something Here For You 3:20
  2. Rockin' Chair 3:33
  3. Shana 6:23
  4. Have A Good Time 3:50 (Paul Simon cover) / 
  5. Where Do You Go 2:50
  6. Say It Again 3:09
  7. Here We Go Again 2:39
  8. Near to You 3:20
  9. Love Shows 3:24
  10. Roll Home 2:35
Album Rating (1-10): 5.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Rob Fraboni - Producer
  • Max Gronenthal - Vox, Piano, Organ, Synth (New Breed Blues Band, Chancellors, Fabulous Flippers, Gangbusters, Energy, DFK Band, Dan Fogelberg, Don Henley, Elton John, Kenny Loggins, Molly Hatchet, Bonnie Raitt, Bette Midler, Jack Mack & the Heart Attack, 38 Speical, Joe Cocker, Bad Company, Charlie Daniels, Wynonna Judd, Richard Marx, Tower of Power, Grand Funk Railroad, Rod Stewart, Dusty Springfield)
  • Ricky Fataar - Drums, Percussion, Backing Vox, Guitar (Beach Boys, Flames, Hard Regulators, Monitors, Rutles, Upsetters)
  • Jerry Wilson - Bass, Backing Vox (Seth)
  • Rick Beilke - Guitar, Backing Vox, Sitar (Cheryl Dilcher, Persuuasions, Tractors, Mary Kay Place)
  • Marty Grebb - Organ, Synth, Guitar, Sax (HP Lovecraft, Buckinghams, Exceptions, Fabulous Rhinestones, Weight Band, Taj Mahal)
  • John McFee - Guitar, Violin (Clover, Southern Pacific, Tartan Horde, Doobie Brothers, Elvis Costello, Van Morrison)
  • Mark Goldenberg - Guitar, Lyrics (Cretones, Eddie Boy Band, Jackie DeShannon, Linda Ronstadt, William Shatner)
  • Marcy Levy - Backing Vox, Harmony Vox (Eric Clapton, George Duke Band, Nasty Housewives)
  • Renee Geyer - Backing Vox (Australia Too, Australian Olympians, Easy Pieces, Sun, Phil Manning, Jimmy Barnes)
  • Mike Finnigan - Harmony Vox, Lyrics (Black Rose, Dudek Finnigan Krueger band, Jerry Hahn Brother hood, Phantom Blues Band, Serfs, Dave Mason, Marc Tanner, Ringo Starr, Rod Stewart)
  • Cornelius Bumpus - Soprano Sax (Doobie Brothers, NY Rock & Soul Revue, Moby Grape, Eikichi Yazawa, Donald Fagen)
  • Rusty Anderson - Guitar, Effects (Ednaswap, Paul McCartney's band, Living Gaylights
  • Ian Lafresnais - Lyrics
  • Tim Kramer - Engineer
  • Larry Nichols - Asst Engineer
  • Ken Perry - Mastering
  • Marty Wolff - Direction & Mgmt
  • Bill Murphy - Album Design
  • Rod Dyer - Album Design
  • Andy Katz - Photos
Unknown-ness: I've never heard of Max, and don't know it its a band name or just one person. I like the color scheme and artwork with bold pockets of color, but it really does not shed light on what is to come on this record. Assuming it's one guy, i imagine singer songwritery stuff, and i don't see much new wave or power pop influence from the album art, but I could be wrong.

Album Review: Max, or Max Carl, or Max Gronenthal has been a singer & songwriter for his whole life, bouncing around Nebraska and Midwest bands, landing in some bigger bands like 32 Special and more recently Grand Funk Railroad. He is also responsible for scoring and writing songs for some films. He has worked on Spring Break and Police Academy, and his song plays over the closing credits of Short Circuit. Musically, this album is quite light. Despite having an R&B background, this breezy set of songs, West Coast AOR, lacks any memorable trait. At times, the R&B soes try to come out, but the production is so Easy Listening, that you could easily miss it.

Stand Out Track: Where Do You Go

Links:
Wiki
Allmusic
Rate Your Music
Discogs
The Vinyl Curator
Blue Desert - West Coast Music
Second Hand Songs

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Stanky Brown Group (the) - If The Lights Don't Get You the Helots Will

Name: The Stanky Brown Group
Album: If The Lights Don't Get You the Helots Will
Year:1977
Style: Light Rock
Similar Bands: Kavaret, Kinks, Eagles
"One-Word" Review: Folksy Rock
Based Out Of: New Jersey
Label: Sire / ABC Records
Cover, Lyrics, Record
Back, Liner Notes, Record
If The Lights Don't Get You the Helots Will (1977)
  1. Coal Tow 3:20
  2. Life Beyond 4:04
  3. Woman Don't Let it Slip Away 3:25
  4. Confident Man 3:14
  5. Faith in the Family 3:53 /
  6. Alone Tonight 3:11
  7. Good to Me 3:00
  8. As a Lover I'm a Loser 2:32
  9. Stop In The Name of Love 3:06 (Supremes Cover)
  10. Free and Easy 5:03
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:

  • Hank Medress - Producer, Mixing
  • Dave Appell - Producer, Mixing
  • James Brown - Keys, Vox, Arrangements (David Duke)
  • Jeffrey Leynor - Guitars, Vox (David Duke)
  • Richard Bunkiewicz - Bass (David Duke)
  • Jerry M Cordasco - Drums, Percussion, Vox
  • Jimmy Miller - Guitar
  • Frank Greene - Lyrics
  • Elliot Randall - Guitar (Randall's Island, Sh Na Na, Steely Dan, Loudon Wainwright III)
  • Jimmy Maelen - Conga (Ambergris, Shobizz, Hollywood Vampires, Latin Dimension, Peter Gabriel)
  • Werner Fritzsching - Guitar (Riff Raff, Pierce Arrow, Cactus)
  • David Lasley - Backing Vox
  • Lynn Pitney  - Backing Vox
  • Arnold McCuller - Backing Vox
  • Billy Radice - Engineer, Mixing
  • Michael Getlin - Asst. Engineer
  • Bob Ludwig - Mastering
  • Chris Dedrick - Strings & Horns
  • Artie Kaplan - NYC String & Horn Contractor
  • John Gillespie - Art Direction
  • Moshe Brakha - Photography
  • Steven Bartel - Album Design


Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but by the toilet humor name and cover album photo in front of the Statue of Liberty, I imagine this to be a southern bluesy rock band like Lynyrd Skynyrd or something.

Album Review: This is a 70's folksy AOR band with a little more bite. Some fun southern bluesy elements incorporated to power pop and classic rock songs. Not much about them out there on the internet...perhaps the most is on the comments section of a youtube video. Not quite as silly as the name would indicate.

Stand Out Track: Coal Town

Links:
allmusic
discogs
rate your music
Facebook
Robert Christgau
coal town video

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Novo Combo - The Animation Generation

Name: Novo Combo
Album: The Animation Generation
Year: 1982
Style: Power Pop
Similar Bands: Police, Survivor, REO Speedwagon, Journey, ELO
"One-Word" Review: Whispy-Commercial-Ready-AOR
Based Out Of: NYC, NY
Label: Polydor, PolyGram Records
 Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Liner Notes, Record
The Animation Generation (1982)

  1. Animation Generation 5:32
  2. Too Long Gone 3:51
  3. Slow Fade 5:17
  4. Keep Your Love Alive 3:28
  5. Anyone Can See 4:10 /
  6. Welcome Innervision 5:38
  7. Chained Man 4:08
  8. Follow the Love 3:53
  9. She Runs 4:22
  10. No Wonder 4:10


Album Rating (1-10): 5.0

Members & Other Bands:

  • Elliot Scheiner - Producer, Remix
  • Stephen Dees - Vox, Bass (Hall & Oats, Tony Carey, Bandees, Pat Travers, Victor Wainwright)
  • Pete Hewlett - Vox, Guirar (Billy Joel, Carly Simon, Joe Jackson, Julian Lennon, Amy Grant, Eric Carmen, Peter's Pipers, Sweet Lightning, Euclid Beach Band, The Hit Men)
  • Carlos Rios - Guitar, Backing Vox (Gino Vannelli, Lionel Richie, Boz Scaggs, Herb Alpert)
  • Michael Shrieve - Drums, Percussion, Backing Vox (Santana, Abraxas Pool, Automatic Man, HSAS, Stomu Yamashta's Go)
  • Sanford "Sandy" Ross - Personal Mgmt
  • Glenn Orsher - Personal Mgmt
  • Ted Jensen - Mastering
  • Rob Mounsey - Synth Programming
  • Wayne Yurgelun - Digital Doctor
  • Bill Roach - Digital Doctor
  • Larry Franke - Asst. Engineer
  • Gregory Mann - Asst. Engineer
  • Michael Morongell - Asst. Engineer
  • Kevin Halpin - Asst. Engineer
  • Cheryl Smith - Asst. Engineer
  • Dean Janoff- Photography
  • SchaefferBoehm - Art Direction
  • Ronnie Cooke - Styling


Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band. Based on their name, I assume it is has an adult contemporary sound, with attention to genres that have specific dances, be it Cha-Cha, Foxtrot, Salsa, Mambo, etc. However, the artwork shows a group of four, slightly hipper guys that are trying to look cool, but come off as a bunch of parents trying on their kid's stylistic clothes. They are tapping into the popular-at-the-time idea of animation, but also the popularity of arcade games, further trying to adapt to a youthful culture. I imagine this to be some very light AM radio music trying to fit into a New Wave world.

Album Review: For having some musical greats...or at least folks that worked beside musical greats (Santana, Hall & Oats, Billy Joel, Joe Jackson) , this is a light forgettable album whispy and floating radio pop with nothing that seems challenging or deep. There are some lofty island jams, and musician's musician performances, so i can see why there was comparison to the police. Many of the songs are repetitive and irritating, basically good fodder for advertisements. There are not really any good tracks, but the title track at least has some fun dated lyrics about arcades and computers.

Stand Out Track: Animation Generation

Links:
Wiki
Discogs
Rate your music
Spotify
Glory Daze
Allmusic

Friday, February 3, 2017

Sniff 'n' the Tears - Fickle Heart~, The Game's Up*

Name: Sniff 'n' the Tears
Album(s): Fickle Heart~ The Game's Up*
Year(s): 1979~, 1980*
Style: Rock, Soft Rock, 70's AOR
Similar Bands: Dire Straits, Motors, 10cc, Dave Edmunds, Steve Forbert, Foreigner, Chicago, Ace, Al Stewart
One Word Review: Back Alley Folky Tonk Jams
Based Out Of: London England
Label: Atlantic, Chiswick
 Fickle Heart: Cover, Liner, Record
 Fickle Heart: Back, Liner, Record
The Game's Up - Cover, Liner, Record
The Game's Up - Back, Liner, Record
Fickle Heart (1979)
  1. Driver's Seat 4:00
  2. New Lines On Love 3:40
  3. Carve your Name on My Door 2:33
  4. This Side of The Blue Horizon 4:40
  5. Sing 2:23
  6. Rock N' Roll Music 2:35 /
  7. Fight For Love 3:45
  8. The Thrill of it All 3:37
  9. Slide Away 3:45
  10. Last Dance 1:50
  11. Looking For You 4:20
The Game's Up (1980)
  1. The Game's Up 3:52
  2. Moment of Weakness 3:13
  3. What Can Daddy Do? 3:15
  4. Night Life 3:57
  5. If I Knew Then 4:57 /
  6. One Love 3:20
  7. Five & Zero 4:38
  8. Poison Pen Mail 4:41
  9. Rodeo Drive 6:22
Album Rating (1-10):~5.5
*5.0

Members & Other Bands:
Jim Nellis - Backing Vox~
Noel McCalla - Backing Vox~* (Moon, Blade & Masquenada Family, Partners in Crime, Paul Carrack, Mike Rutherford, Mezzoforte, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, Arthur Louis )
Chris Birkin - Bass~
Andrew Young - Design~
Luigi Salvoni - Drums, Percussion, Producer~ (Moon, Loz Netto's Bzar, McCalla, Snivelling Shits)
Loz Netto - Guitar~ *Backing Vox* (Brian Copsey & The Commotions, Eye Talk)
Mick Dyche - Guitar~* Backing Vox* ( Wild Turkey, McCalla, Maddy Prior Band, Snips)
Alan Fealdman - Keys~ (Jasper, Trifle, FBI, Mome Yamaguchi, McCalla)
Stephen Lipson - Mixing~ Producer, Engineer*
Keith Miller - Synth, String Machine~  (Culture Club, Nick Garvey, Copycats)
Paul Roberts - Vox, Guitar, Composer~* Cover Painting~
Paul Robinson - Drums* (K2, Turning Point, Zoe Schwarz Blue Commotion, Intercontinental Express, Turning Point, Art of Noise, Invisible Men, Proclaimers, Van Morrison, Rod Stewart, Pet Shop Boys)
Richard Bailey - Drums* (Ananda, Batti Mamzelle, Dave Defries Quarter, Gonzalez, Hope Collective, Incognito, The Breakfast Band, Dysfunkshun, Johnny Nash, Jeff Beck)
Richard Marcangelo - Drums* (Cinerama, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, The Drivers, Vibraphonic, Ostara, Rumer)
Nick South - Bass* (Time UK, Second Hand, Ellis, Claire Hamill, Blue Goose, Cafe Society, Donovan, Murray Head, Zoot Money, Red, Chimera)
Phil Smee - Design*
Julien 'Jools' Cooper - Engineer Asst*
Nick Tomory - Engineer Asst*
Mike Taylor - Keys* (Renaissance)
Karen Knorr - Photography*
Dominique Durand - Tech Tape Op*
Bud Prager - Management*
Miffy Smith - Moog~
Ron Lawrence - Bass~
Bazza - Mixing~

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band. From the looks of the band pictures and album artwork, looks like it will be glammy power pop. To me, the name feels a little embarrassing, but I want to see if the artwork's mood is an interpretation of the music, or if it is just a stylized theme.

Album Review(s): Sniff ‘n’ the Tears was started at drummer Luigi’s request, asking Paul Roberts to join him after hearing promise in some demos they recorded together. Their first track on the first album was a huge success in the US and less so in the UK due to a production error. But Driver Seat kept Roberts in the spot light time, and time again, as it was used in a 1991 Dutch auto commercial, and in 1997’s Boogie Nights. Roberts was the only continuous member throughout the history, even painting the majority of the artwork himself. Although they never found the same success as the first album, Roberts still uses the moniker along with his own solo material to this day.

~“Driver's Seat” was a huge single, reaching #15 in the US. The keyboard and harmonized chorus feel like disco, while the electric guitar is buzzy in the background. The lead vocals are nasally, but in an abrasive way, that feels like they’re sung through a sneer. The song has a disco shuffle tempo, too
“New Lines On Love” has story telling vocals of a typical singer/songwriter, like a more melodic Bob Dylan. The music is dark, shuffling back alley music, and a little jangly. It has the harmonized backing vocals that echo the lead in the chorus.
“Carve Your Name on My Door” begins with the title sang/spoke instrument-free. The song has a southern rock / country sense; honky-tonk rock, perhaps. The vocals sound light and airy, with the same sneer, reminding me of Dave Edmunds and Steve Forbert.
“This Side of the Blue Horizon” is slower, and with the piano in the beginning, is basically a piano ballad with some twang. It is pretty slow and tedious, and the only energetic moments are countrified.
“Sing” is another slinky, back alley bluesy pub song with a shuffle strut.
“Rock N' Roll Music” is decidedly more oldies-style rock and roll. The vocals echo more, as if they are being sung at an indoor pool, and feel like a quiet afterthought. The production falls flat on an otherwise energetic song.

“Fight For Love” begins with an acoustic guitar, and continues down a light groove, reminding me of the little I know of the Grateful Dead. The harmonized chorus punctuate the lyrics in the chorus with the song title.
“The Thrill of it All” takes a jazzy, bluesy tone. It is general 70’s AOR, or dad rock.
“Slide Away” has a bit more electronic, prog rock feel. It is more mystical and spacey. Some of the instrumentation reminds me of Ween hippy jams.
“Last Dance” is a slow folk song, reminding me of Rod McKuen, and a little Dylan with the vocal style. There is only an acoustic guitar for support.
“Looking For You” begins after a cymbal hit, and a slow, methodical jam begins. It gently glides along in a wafty drug dream state.

*“The Game's Up” picks right up where the previous album left off with the specific kind of light 70’s rock. It must be the right mindset to mellow out and listen to this while stoned. It has an organ and other jazzy elements. But the chorus is standard catchy pop.
“Moment of Weakness” is a bit bouncier, and upbeat. And it has minimal, jazzy instrumentation. The verses are sung a bit faster than usual. The song sounds like an 80’s sitcom theme song (Full House).
“What Can Daddy Do?” has a tinge of reggae vibe. It sounds like a cheesy Caribbean all-inclusive resort’s house band.
“Night Life” is a beatnik poem set to incidental sound effects, like a single person performance art monologue. The music kicks in to be a dark, back alley style song for the chorus, but returns to the monologue again for the verse.  The instrumental section is a whining guitar, played upscale to a final scream at the end.
“If I Knew Then” starts with jangly guitar, and sitcom horns, as if from MASH. The bass line is jazzy, but the song is casual and light. There are synth effects used in the song, but they come off like a starter kit, like the synth box was just opened, and the couple of effects used were from the first trial setting. Also, everyone else is using a synth on their hit records, so they wanted to too. It reminded me of the segment music from the science spoof show “Look Around You.”

“One Love” borrows some synth elements, but is mostly a stripped down bluesy lite rock song. In the instrumental section, the electric guitar answers the synth hook in conversation, and they go back and forth. The song ends with a skittering drum and rhythm guitar combo, and fades out.
“Five & Zero” continues with the light, sparse songs, with a reflective tone. There is not much energy to the music; it is basically non-threatening, relaxation rock, almost like a demo of what could be a power pop song.
“Poison Pen Mail” takes another minimal music, folksy spoken lyric route. The organ is the only music in support for a while, but is then added to with a guitar that uses a couple notes as lyrics to the song. This too feels like a fragment, or an unfinished song. More elements are added as the song progresses, and it fills out some, but it feels like a cheap, radio friendly, dumbed down cover of a Tom Waits song.
“Rodeo Drive” starts with a variety of jazzy synth effects, not really finding a melody or cohesion until the swirling and fading synth notes are held, forming melodies and guitars pick up some of the weight. The song is an odd composition, throwing a lot of elements at the walls to see if anything sticks. Not everything works, and it definitely does not all fit together, but for a creative album ending track, it offers inspiration for things that may be investigated on the next album. At its heart, is a jazzy, free-form composition, tidied together by a general vocal melody. The end of the track draws back, and gives the theatrical situation of the listener changing channels while in their car. 

Stand Out Track(s):~ Driver's Seat

Links:
WIki
Discogs
Website
Allmusic
Facebook
about Driver's Seat

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Sad Cafe - Misplaced Ideals* Facades~

Name: Sad Cafe
Album(s): Misplaced Ideals* Facades~
Year(s): 1978* 1979~
Style: AOR, Prog, Jazzy Rock, Pub Rock
Similar Bands: Rockets, Mick Jagger, 10cc, Styx, J Geils Band, ELO
"One-Word" Review: Jazzy Depressed Fantasy* 
Based Out Of: Manchester, England
Label: A&M Records, RCA Limited
 Misplaced Ideals* - Cover & Record
Misplaced Ideals* - Back & Record
Facades~ - Cover & Record/Sleve
Facades~ - Back & Record/Sleeve
Misplaced Ideals (1978)*
  1. Restless 4:37
  2. Here Come Those Clowns 4:01
  3. Run Home Girl 4:57
  4. Black Rose 4:37
  5. I Believe (Love Will Survive) 4:34 /
  6. Babylon 3:41
  7. Shellshock 3:15
  8. Hungry Eyes 5:28
  9. Feel Like Dying 4:09
  10. On With the Show 5:14
Facades (1979)~
  1. Take Me to the Future 4:05
  2. Nothing Left to Lose 4:34
  3. Everyday 4:09
  4. Strange Little Girl 5:06
  5. Crazy Oyster 4:30 /
  6. Emptiness 3:33
  7. Time is Do Hard to Find 3:30
  8. Angel 3:42
  9. Get Me Outta Here 3:53
  10. My Oh My 4:43
Album Rating (1-10): *6.0
~6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Paul Young - Vox & Percussion*~ (Toggery Five, Gyro, Mandalaband, Mike and the Mechanics, Squeeze, Mike Read)
Ian Wilson - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals, Percussion *~(Gyro, Mandalaband, Bunk Dogger, Boss Brothers, Ramones, Steve Warley, Alarm, Loz Netto, Jon Astley, Johnny Hallyday, The Law, Barclay James Harvest, Flutadors, Alestrom, Common Tongue, Debbie Harry, )
Tony Cresswell - Drums, Percussion* (Mandalaband)
John Stimpson - Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Vox*~ (Mandalaband)
Vic Emerson - Keyboards~, Piano, String Arrangement*~ (Sylvie Vartan, Mandalaband, Tim Hart, Heebeeheebees, Steve Warley, Gilbert O'Sullivan, 10cc, John Wetton, Phil Manzanera, Was (Not Was), Lio, Zazie, Pascal Obispo, Emma Shapplin, Tono Balliardo, Sofia Mestari, Fabien Martin, Magna Carta)
Ashley Mulford - Lead Guitar, Vocals*~ (Mandalaband, Mike and the Mechanics, Tim Hart, Michael Learns to Rock, Chilliwack)
Dave Hassel - Kabasa, Bell Tree*
Dave Irving - drums, vocals~ (Supercharge, Loz Netto, Cam'ron)
Lenni Zaksen- Saxophone, Vocals*~ (Alan Parsons Project, Gonzalez)
Eric Stewart - Producer, Engineer, Mixing~ (10cc, Paul McCartney)
Katherine Ann Walter - Photo Treatment*
Lou Beach - Photo Treatment*
Chuck Beeson - Design*
Dorene Chanter - Vox*
Irene Chanter - Vox* (Allmusic Credits)
Lisa Strike - Vox*
Mark Hanauer - Cover*
John Punter - Engineer, Percussion, Producer* (Bryan Ferry)
Nigel Walker - Asst Engineer*
Jon Walls - Asst. Engineer*
Roland Young - Art Direction*
Bernie Grundman - Mastering~
Harvey B Lisberg - Management*~
Dave Kershenbaum - Special Thanks*~
Joe McSorely - Special Thanks~
Mark Smith - Special Thanks~
Hipgnosis - Photos*~

Unknownness: I had never heard of this band before picking up these albums up at a thrift store. Basing judgement on the cover art and the name, I expect this to be general 70's rock / pub rock, perhaps with a bit of shady noir. Many bands of the era incorporated a back alley bluesiness, and I expect a little of that, too.

Album Review: So this band is still active, under the guidance of Ian Wilson, even if it is just a cover band of their once selves. A couple of the members went on to join the more populat Mike & The Mechanics, the singer who did, Paul Young, passed away unexpectedly in 2000 (not the same Paul Young as London Dilemma). They topped out in the UK at #3 with Every Day Hurts, titled Everday on Facades (their 3rd of 7 albums).

“Restless” struts from the start, with a skipping drum beat, and segmented guitar parts. The chorus is harmonized, and I can tell that the vocals are patterned after Mick Jagger. There is a breakdown, with chimes and jazzy percussion, and is fronted with a sax solo. Power chords bring the song back to rocking territory, but the instrumental seems like it will go on forever. The song recycles, and the skip-beat tempo returns.
“Here Come Those Clowns” changes tempo, and feels like a Dexy’s Midnight Runners or Black 47 track thanks to the horns creating a Celtic sound. The J Geil’s band bouncy piano and angry vocals give the songs a pub rock feel, with a little bit of a The Who feel as well. It has a very nice groove, and the seemingly opposite styles merge together very well.
“Run Home Girl” was a US single. It starts with a smooth jazz intro, and reminds me of a lighter version of Foreigner’s Urgent once it hits the disco pop chorus: perhaps if ELO covered Urgent. The instrumental breakdown is full of spacey synth keys, further contributing to the smooth AM radio ELO feel. The song returns to its roots with a smooth jazz fade out.
“Black Rose” continues with the spacey synth to make a brief power pop intro, which flattens out to a soft elevator pop melody. By the chorus, a chorus of vocals make a very Prog case for the song. Until the next subdued part, the song soars in an aggressive prog rock orchestra.
“I Believe (Love Will Survive)” is a slow jam. It’s not quite a ballad, as it has some marching forth tempo, and some “White Snake” crooning, not to mention a weeping metal guitar breakdown. But Bee Gees harmonies and crystal sweeps make up the verse. It is a rock song trying to find its elegant footing in a disco land.

“Babylon” opens with prog rock harmonizing guitars. The funky, shuffle tempo of the verse collides with the precedented guitar harmonies when it reaches the chorus. This song is a mix of funk and prog, which is a fine line, itself. And here the vocals are again trying to channel the energy and fluidity of Jagger’s vocals.  
“Shellshock” is a jazzy, bluesy tune, featuring back alley keyboards and drafty streetlamp gusts. The vocals try even harder to capture Jagger’s soulful, poetic delivery.
“Hungry Eyes” is not the Dirty Dancing song, but is a soft acoustic ballad fading up. Once it reaches adequate volume, we are again taken to the forlorn side streets and depressed, dark city blocks. Bitter, angry vocals offer up the energy for the chorus. The singer’s sentiment seems real when he breaks the preset format to offer his feelings. The piano twinkles out to end the track.
“Feel Like Dying” picks right up with a depressed, somber light story-song. A female chorus backs the singer up when he prematurely hits the song title. The feeling is real, but it makes for a tedious track, filled with gospel efforts, but feet dragging obstinacy, which perhaps is the gist of the song.
“On With the Show” ends the album with the same bluesy swagger, but in a little more upbeat melody. Like a life story, the singer has gone through the steps of life, and has decided to just keep going, even if it hurts.


“Take Me to the Future” starts off with that same bluesy, pub rock guitar, but is underplayed with some futuristic synth effects. The vocals start much looser, and jittery (sometimes just spoken) than anything on the first album, giving this a more playful and care free vibe. The vocals share similarities with both Jagger and Peter Wolf (of J Geils), and the chorus is a harmonized prog segment. It has more powerpop guitars than before, too. The chaotic ending, and blending of vocals and chuckling oh-oh-oh’s ends in a spaceship lifting off.
“Nothing Left to Lose” wakes up from the dream/nightmare of the first track with haunting, new age synth. The notes dial up, and I half expected Madonna’s Like A Prayer to begin. Acoustic guitar kicks in, and the singer is out of bed and with careless swagger, explores his surroundings. The song is about the aftermath feelings from a love lost. The tone, like the conceptual mood, crests and falls. The violin fades the song out as it skips off down the street.
“Everyday” was a UK single, reaching #3. It has life breathed in to it as solemn, understanding vocals. The bouncy keyboards flow with orchestral support and rushed, bouncy vocals to parallel. The piano driven verse reminds me of Elton John. It sounds like a nice radio friendly song, but nothing I would have gleamed onto.
“Strange Little Girl” was another single from the album. And it begins with a county fair like music box fading in. Then a skip beat tempo (think Billie Jean) and bass line create a fun, but dark soundscape. The guitar’s power hook mixed with the futuristic synth are both catchy and accent the build into the verse. The chorus is lighter and mystical, but features some fun new wave harmonies, akin to the Cars. After two verse-chorus sections, a metal guitar solo is fed in over the steady beat.
“Crazy Oyster” begins without missing a beat from the previous song. It continues with the Bee Gees style harmonies that are barely there. It is a driving song, with poppy call out “Ohs!” The off-beat organ puffs keep the song unsteady and interesting in a reggae style.

“Emptiness” starts side two with the 80’s-style smooth jazzy sax. The lyrics don’t line up exactly with the melody, but it is only briefly. The song has a bit of a Mellencamp-Americana feel to it, mixed in with off beat jazz and a stalking march. The vocals become more aggressive in the second verse, but between these song title, you can feel a pattern of trying to fill a hole in the singer’s soul.
“Time is So Hard to Find” fades in as a funky groove that again dabbles in Prog. The song builds very well in the instrumental, until the lead guitar is given range to yowl, and the song picks itself up from underneath the guitar. There is a little Talking Heads funkiness in this song too.  
“Angel” continues instantly, but calms down on the 80’s synth, and features steady power pop and acoustic guitars instead. Finally, the protagonist in these songs has found a love. And although the euphoria is reserved, and rightfully so, since he is saying that she’d be his angel, you can sense the positive vibes from the song.
“Get Me Outta Here” is a drunken pub rock track. The stagger and synth honky tonk funk give this a full on southern rock, with a little “Jagger singing a Billy Joel” song feel.
“My Oh My” was a single from the album. It twinkles in with piano, and the building blocks for a power pop song. The vocals are reserved and knowledgeable. You can feel the song building, until it kicks into a rollicking pub rock piano ditty. After the burst, it calms back down to the travelling wanderer verse. The let-loose vocals are supported with a brief chorus of female vocals, and the song sways and treks along into a fade, even as the vocals stay strong.

Stand Out Tracks:

Links:

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

(the) Producers - You Make the Heat*, Run For Your Life~

Name: (the) Producers
Album(s): You Make The Heat*, Run For Your Life~
Year: 1982*, 1985~
Style: New Wave*, Power Pop* Yacht Rock~
Similar Bands: Squeeze*, Rod Stewart~, Kansas~, Rick Springfield~, Shoes~, Tommy Tutone*, Planets*, Cheap Trick*, Michael Bolton~, Genesis~, Journey~
One Word Review: Naive-Pop* Dad-Rock~
Based Out Of: Atlanta, Georgia
Label: Portrait Records, CBS, Marathon
 You Make The Heat* - Cover & Lyrics
You Make the Heat* - Back & Record
 Run For Your Life~ - Cover, Liner Notes, Record
Run For Your Life~ - Back, Liner Notes, Record
You Make the Heat (1982)*
  1. Back to Basics 5:10
  2. She Shelia 4:36
  3. Operation 4:19
  4. Dear John 5:59/
  5. Breakaway 3:44
  6. You Make the Heat 3:33
  7. Merry Go-Round 4:19
  8. Chinatown 3:53
  9. Domino 3:36
Run For Your Life (1985)~
  1. Run For Your Life 4:25
  2. Slow Dancing 3:57
  3. Depending on You 3:39
  4. Tight Rope 4:15
  5. Can't Cry Anymore 5:35/
  6. Boat Song 3:29
  7. Table For One 3:40
  8. Friendly Fire 5:01
  9. Big Mistake 3:51
  10. Waiting on a Train 4:24
Album Rating (1-10):*8.0
~5.5

Members & Other Bands:
Van Temple - Guitar, Vox* (Cartoon, Rainmen, Reason Y, Steve Morse Band)
Kyle Henderson - Bass, Vox* (Whiteface, Laura Branigan, Kyle Henderson's Blue Eyed Soul, Boy Meets Girl, Kansas)
Wayne (McNatt) Famous - Keys* (Billy Joe Royal, Cartoon)
Bryan Holmes - Drums* (Cartoon, Pat Walsh, Charlie Mars, Ultraphonic, Nelson)
Tom Werman - Producer* (Cheap Trick, REO Speedwagon)
Tim Smith - Bass~(Jellyfish, Umajets, Sheryl Crow, Lynyrd Skynyrd, David Mullen, Pat Walsh, The Perrys, Cricket, Stevie Nicks, Curly Corwin, Arvel Bird, Legacy Five, Molly Bancroft, Rusty Truck, Greater Vision, Abby Burke, Meghan Hayes, Jason Burton, Bonnie Bramlett, Emmylou Harris, Hennifer Hammond, Boots Randolph, Mr. Groove Band, Mastedon)
Joe Blaney - Production~
Rick Diamond - Photography~
Chuck Fedonczak - Engineer~
Louis Hajosy - Asst Engineer~
James Flournoy Holmes - Design~
Bob Ludwig - Mastering~
Linda Mitchell - Design~
Kim Parks - Sax~ (Bluebusters, T Lavitz, Pat Coli)
Luis Stefanel - Congas Percussion~(Dardanelle, Larry Saunders, Curtis Mayfield)
Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band. I got these albums in two purchasing trips seperated by many miles and many years. What looks like a standard pub rock, perhaps with a little power pop and new wave influence via the artwork and photo portraits on the first album, changes form on the second, to be a art deco, mid 80's style of adult contemporary pop. I'm hoping both lean toward the earlier guess.

Album Review:Starting as a Beatles cover band, they decided to write their own stuff and were picked up right away by CBS. Two albums got them some MTV airplay, and even a headliner spot in the MTV’s 1982  Rockin’ NYE. On their third album, they co-wrote a song “Can’t Cry Anymore” with Kansas, and it is featured on both their and Kansas’s albums. Aside from reuniting once in a while, the now hold as varying as taxi driver to carpeting & flooring labor.

*“Back to Basics” starts with a drum beat that you are not sure if it is going to go into an angular new wave song, or a reggae influenced song. And it kind of walks that line of ska, at least in tempo. But it falls more into the new wave camp, with the bouncy bass and cowbell. The vocal melody is kind of whiny, as it rises in volume and pitch. It is a descent building song, with good vocal energy, but it never capitalizes with a big hook. It feels a little like the Planets.
“She Shelia” was a single and popular MTV Video. It starts with a single synth note pinging around, creating a nervous tempo. Then an icy bell synth line is added over top, and the song has a steady progression. The vocals take the song off the ground and creating a solid new wave guitar driving song. The song powers through a steady template of single songwriting, and it trickles away with the beginning synth songs.
“Operation” begins with a dazey, loopy melody, reminding me of the instrumental winding down part of “School’s Out.” Guitars try to power themselves into the fray, but the song teeters on a half-steady tempo. There are some strong vocals in the chorus, which are followed up with some long, power guitar chords and some Cheap Trick vocalization.
“Dear John” chugs away with guitar power chords to introduce itself. It finds a natural Americana groove, and the song drives forward. Minus the small addition of some synth effects, the song has a little of a grungy, alternative style that was 10 years too early, with alarm-style guitars and choppy, slacker melodies. The end of the song falls into a Foreigner “Urgent” style loop.

“Breakaway” starts off side two like a different band. The song is sunnier, and poppier, and just all over catchier. Only the chorus has a touch of the metal edge, heavier guitars. But it is really a shiny power pop nugget.
“You Make the Heat” is the chugging start stop nervous song, with a slight dark undertone, that can really stand out in a band’s catalogue. It features a superbly catchy ska-tinged bridge that delivers some massively effective bopping release. It repeats enough times that it sticks in your head, and you anticipate it whenever the song comes on. I often questions when bands name an album after one sub-par song, as if that’s the sound they were going for. But here, this is a good model to try to live up to. The entire song is not that attractive, as the verse is a little sloppy and directionless. But the bridge and chorus more than make up for it. At the end of the song, the backing vocals carry the chorus out, while the lead vocals take an alternate melody/path.
“Merry Go-Round” follows up as another catchy, pop nugget. It bops side to side, and then up and down, like a happy name sake. Then there is a bit of a psychedelic part (like the break in Ugly Kid Joe’s “Everything I Hate About You”) part that they count down a couple days of the week. If this was produced a little differently, it has an ability to be an angular song, in a computer / Devo sort of way.
“Chinatown” was the b-side to “She Shelia.” A drum solo introduces the song, and then the guitar has a little of an “What I Like About You” for a burst, then it slows down to a dreamy sequence. The burst of guitars come back for the chorus, which has a bit of a Phil Collins emotional vibe to it, mixed with some island keyboard synth sounds and the Romantics riff.
“Domino” begins with a guitar hook, that sounds like the intro of XTC’s “Senses Working Over Time.” But the song itself grooves with a much less sinister tone. The underlying backing vocals that echo the lead vocals add a nice pop characteristic. The chorus comes out of nowhere and is just a shout of “Girl,” followed up with “I’m not a domino” that’s basically a refuting catcall. The second half of the song is basically a combination of the backing pop vocals with hair metal lead.

~“Run For Your Life” twinkles into existence with spaceship synth and a breathy running w/ footsteps. So the idea is of running from aliens. The vocals are a little smoother, or reigned in, more like Rod Stewart here. But there is no energy that would signify running for your life. After two run throughs, the breakdown features a bouncy keyboard and melody reprise. The synth that takes over in the instrumental is the complete opposite of threatening, taking meaning away from the song.
“Slow Dancing” is a slow-ish song, with a pendulum, guitar melody, which sweeps side to side. The song is about wanting to slow dance with a girl. It has a little mellow Def Leppard feel to the song, as a simple power rock attempt. More like Def Kitten. And it fades out without so much as a whimper
“Depending on You” was a single. It introduces the elements of the song in the intro. The guitar then picks up and chugs along under an uninspiring vocal melody, akin to Michael Bolton. It shifts gears slightly for the breakdown leading up to the instrumental, which is a sad guitar ballad.
“Tight Rope” starts off with a smoothed over prog-style synth melody (Mid-late Genesis), and vocals that walk a fine line between Rod Stewart and hair metal-styles. The build in the second half of the song is nice, but it leads into a spring-like synth instrumental that sucks the life out of the song.
“Can't Cry Anymore” was a collaboration with Kansas, and was also on their 1986 album Power. It starts as a slumping, leg dragging slow dance, punctuated with bell chimes. The vocals are reserved, but ready to burst like in a Journey song. The song is ambient; echoing like it takes place on a windy sailing vessel. It’s very sparse in production and instrumentation. And when it finally gets to the instrumental it is led by Yes-style keyboards.

“Boat Song” has marching drums, and a hooky synth line fade up from some boat horn sounds. The structure is a fun prog melody, and all things considered, is a strong start to side two. The loop of the jangley guitar is disjointed and chaotic, which makes it fun. They overlaid a lot of slight melodies, creating a complex song that actually works in the realms of Rush Prog music.
“Table For One” continues with the fun, almost Devo like guitar hook. But then the vocals begin, and it has an island-style cover band feel, with a Steve Nieve like piano in support. There is a conga breakdown, after a vocal overdub seating a guest at a table…for one, and the song embraces the island theme.
“Friendly Fire” fuses jangley guitar with a bunch of overproduced studio instruments creating an impotent jazzy adult contemporary pop song. There is a synth xylophone effect that reminds me of some of the later Oingo Boingo songs, but the song is just so tame, it cannot evoke any kind of emotion, but it could be used as backing music for a Miami Vice montage. And it just seems to go on for about an extra minute and half after it should have faded out.
“Big Mistake” begins with a bass driven lonely melody, reminding me of Heart’s “All I Wanna Do Is Make Love to You.” The vocals take any similarity away, but the melody feels like it could follow the same path. Instead, the song barely transitions from verse to chorus with any noticeable difference. As if to date the song further, they employ a gloomy sax.
“Waiting on a Train” begins with conductor announcements unintelligible and echoing at a train station’s vast cavernous size. The song’s melody sounds familiar, like a slow, sad Michael Bolton song, or a bad Richard Marx melody. The song is about the gloom associated with leaving a girl, and prolonging the grief by waiting for a train.

Stand Out Tracks: *You Make the Heat 
~Boat Song

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