Friday, January 24, 2020

Creamy Covers (SOTT 2019) liner notes


SOTT 2019 Creamy Covers and Sticky Sweet Originals

1. “Head Over Heels” by Throwback Suburbia
      My New Favorite Band!  I discovered Throwback Suburbia through the new edition of Shake Some Action - The Top 200 Power Pop albums of All Time by our own John Borack. The album Shotglass Souvenier showed up on the new edition but not the old. (By the way - you should own both!).  I hunted down the CD and was blown away.  This first cut is a ELO-influenced gem. Later you will hear another cut by this phenomenal band.  This is the kind of music discovery I live for.  Thank You John!

2. “Adrienne” by The Orion Experience
  This band was brought to my attention years ago by my good friend and fellow Power Pop geek Jeremy Morris.  As I was leaving his home with a new batch of Power Pop purchases (Jeremy runs Jam Recordings), Jeremy recommended The Orion Experience as a band that had the same fun quotient as Teen Machine, a band Jeremy knew I loved.  He was right. CosmiCandy is their standout album.

3. “Shine On” by Heartsfield
    A song I heard on the radio back in the 70’s.  The mood and harmonies remind me of America at that band’s best.

4. “All or Nothin’” by Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
    This leapt back to my attention when a friend sent me a bunch of mp3s of Jeff Lynne-produced tunes. I forgot just how good and powerful it was. I had to find a spot in this year’s (now last year’s) SOTT to showcase it.

5. “Stand By Me” by Weezer
   It’s no secret to anybody who read my last post that I loved the Weezer covers album, “The Teal Album”. My only criticism is that some of the covers are very close to the original versions. Weezer knocks off a perfect rendition of “Mr. Blue Sky”, for example. It sounds great on the disc, but given the choice on my own, I’d always pull out Jeff Lynne’s original. Weezer’s punched-up version of “Stand By Me” stands on its own.

6. “Get Well City” by Felix Hagen & the Misfits
    Here’s a rowdy barroom piano stomper about a damaged human seeking his own peculiar comfort.  I’m not sure who recommended this band (maybe Bruce Brodeen) but this one really hits the spot. Just try to keep your head from bobbing when you listen to this.

7. “The Sunny Side of the Street” by McFly
    This is a B-side found on the Memory Lane Best of {Special Edition}. It has a rhythmic guitar similiar to the one that propelled “Alphabet Street” by Prince. Coming from me, that is definitely a big compliment. The classic McFly harmonies are also here in spades. Side note, Amazon has this 2cd set available used for $3.05.  It is a steal!

8. “Wheels of Fortune (single edit)” by The Doobie Brothers
    Great guitar riff? Check! Quality Doobies production? Yes.  15 minute instrumental jam in the middle? WTF?? My Doobies CD has the album version where they *really* stretch out. I had to hunt down the single version. Now it fits perfectly.

9. “You Know How Those Boys Are” by LeRoux
  This hit my radio as I went to Michigan State in 1981.  I love the chorus and the backing riff.  The band was once known as Louisiana LeRoux.  I’m guessing they had a similar band-name conflict as did “The London” Suede.

10. “I’m Not in Love” by Mitch Easter
   How do you improve on the 10CC original? Add a touch of The Byrds and remove the “Big Boys Don’t Cry” interlude. I always hated that part! You will think The Byrds themselves (or at least The Wrecking Crew) stepped in and recorded this arrangement.

11. “If I Had a Rocket Launcher” by Bruce Cockburn
   A Canadian pacifist is pushed to the point of violent retaliation. The atmospheric tune was deserved hit in 1984.  A quick search turned up the fact that this was written in response to a visit to a Guatemalan refugee camp that was regularly shelled by government helicopters.  I think I would harbor the same fantasies.

12. “It Never Rains in Southern California” by Chris Collingwood
    Chris steps out from Fountains of Wayne to record this for Volume 5 of Michael Shelly’s WFMU fundraising cover series “Super Hits of the Seventies”. I don’t know why I love this version so much - perhaps it’s the simple arrangement and a voice that evokes Glen Campbell at his balladeering best. To learn more about the series, you can visit www.wfmu.org/superhits

13. “Straight Up” by The Fainting Room
   This came to my attention upon listening to Brian Ibbot’s wonderful Coverville podcast. It was high on his best covers of 2018 list. It is a smoldering take on Paula Abdul’s bouncy hit. It builds to a rocking crescendo. Nice!

14. “9 to 5” by Tragedy
  To consider Tragedy as simply a heavy-metal Bee Gees cover band sells them short.  Their tounges are firmly in cheek, but their musicianship and production values are undeniable.  It takes a certain kind of mind to merge Dolly Parton and “Unskinny Bop” and they pull it off.

15. “Side Effects” by Throwback Suburbia
     This is the masterpiece that I fell head over heels in love with. It’s the best song the Everly Brothers never wrote. From a simple piano lead it builds to a perfect close. They stick the landing.

16.  “There Goes My Baby” by Kelly Jones
    Where do we find these perfect songs we never heard before?  Not on the radio. That’s for sure.  This one came to me via a re-reading of a volume of Bruce Brodeen’s Power Pop Prime. That often starts a new musical quest. Luckily this treat was waiting for me on Bandcamp. This is a wonderful “60’s Girl Group” styled song sung innocently by Ms. Jones.  It was one of the best things I have heard in years!

17. “The Impossible Past” by Nutty
    Mission Impossible meets Jethro Tull in a Jazz Lounge.  ‘Nuff said!

18. “Be Not Coy” by Vanilla
    A lovely but simple string arrangement compliments lyrics from Renaissance poetry.  It’s “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” by Robert Herrick.  The origin nagged at me. Why were those lyrics so familiar? Then I found out that poem was quoted by Robin William’s character in “Dead Poet’s Society”. Mystery solved.

19. “Physical” by Juliana Hatfield
    Another Coverville finalist off the album “Juliana Hatfield does Olivia Newton-John”.  Does she ever! Each ONJ cover is as good as the last and this one beefs up the arrangement nicely.  I see that last year she did an album of Police covers.  I will have to check that out.

20. “Super Ultra Wicked Mega Love” by Gigolo Aunts
    The rockingest tune they ever recorded IMO.  Back in the day the Auditeers on the listserv were suggesting songs and cover artists for a future power pop tribute to Alice Cooper.  Most thought I was nuts when I proposed that Gigolo Aunts would be a good choice to cover “No More Mr. Nice Guy”. This song proves they have the chops. And what a riff!

21. “Reflections of My Life” by Jeffrey Foskett
   Off of the CD “Cool and Gone, Gone, Gone”.  Jeffrey delivers a wonderful take on this classic and naturally he nails the harmonies. It makes an excellent set closer

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