Archive for May, 2006

Essential 80′s: #175-#151

Monday, May 29th, 2006

200 Essential 80′s Singles
Part 2:
#175-#151

#175
“Bop”
Dan Seals
1985
Peak: #1

How conservative is this song about wanting to “bop with you baby, all night long”? It goes out of its way to make clear that no sexual metaphor is intended – “I’m not after your body, I just want you to dance with me.” Classic.

#174
“The Ride”
David Allan Coe
1983
Peak: #4

Alan Jackson lifted the storyline for his hit “Midnight In Montgomery” directly from this Coe hit, which Tim McGraw resurrected for his live video of “Real Good Man.” Jackson and McGraw are already legends, but Coe can out-Hank either one of them.


#173
“Strangers Again”
Holly Dunn
1988
Peak: #7

Dunn was understandably washed away by the wave of literate and talented female vocalists that hit the scene in the early 90′s, but she acquits herself nicely on this bittersweet ode for a love gone wrong. She pushes her thin voice to the limit here, with decent results.

#172
“Unwound”
George Strait
1981
Peak: #6

It’s hard to believe it’s been 25 years since Strait first hit the charts with this, his first single for a major label. Despite being a new artist during the Urban Cowboy crossover era, he couldn’t be bothered with a single nod to pop music. This is pure western swing honky-tonk, as he laments “that woman that I had wrapped around my finger just come unwound.” This was co-written by Dean Dillon, who would provide Strait with most of his best singles for more than a decade.

#171
“Any Day Now”
Ronnie Milsap
1982
Peak: #1

Not that there’s anything wrong with pure pop music. Milsap made great pop records for country radio, and this is a fine example of that talent at work. It’s even written by Burt Bacharach.

#170
“Strong Enough To Bend”
Tanya Tucker
1988
Peak: #1

Tucker’s best records have fallen into two categories: her brassy adult work, and her early southern gothic hits. So it’s surprising and refreshing to here her on this record, surrounded by sparse, nearly bluegrass instrumentation. She shines.

#169
“Tennessee Flat Top Box”
Rosanne Cash
1987
Peak: #1

A big fuss was made when Rosanne admitted she didn’t know her father had written this song until after she recorded it, which quieted down when Johnny himself took out an ad in the music trade magazines saying that made him proud, since he knew his daughter recorded it on the merits, not as a half-hearted tribute to dear old dad. This is one of her biggest hits and still sounds great today.

#168
“Last Thing I Needed First Thing This Morning”
Willie Nelson
1982
Peak: #2

Nelson deftly traces a mundane list of little things going wrong to his woman leaving him first thing in the morning. There’s a chilling description of his desperation that feels very real because the song is so steeped in daily routines that are rarely sung about.

#167
“I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again”
T. Graham Brown
1986
Peak: #3

Brown compares living with someone who no longer loves him to living alone after she’s left, and decides that the former was better, since there was hope for tomorrow, in spite of all the pain.

#166
“The Closer You Get”
Alabama
1983
Peak: #1

Alabama’s pop-flavored southern rock, complete with electric guitar licks and crackling drum beats, made them the most successful commercial country act of their time. This is one of their most finely crafted love songs.

#165
“I Love A Rainy Night”
Eddie Rabbitt
1980
Peak: #1

Hey, don’t we all? Snap those fingers, Eddie.

#164
“I Ain’t Livin’ Long Like This”
Waylon Jennings
1980
Peak: #1

It’s hard to believe, but Jennings’ take on this Rodney Crowell song is one of the tamest. Emmylou Harris and Crowell himself recorded ferocious versions in the 1970′s before Jennings turned it into a smash. Then again, Jennings lived this song; he hardly needed to do a hard sell.

#163
“Stand Up”
Mel McDaniel
1985
Peak: #5

McDaniel fiendishly uses the Southern Baptist technique of standing up and testifying about being saved to testify about some absolutely filthy back-seat shenanigans. He toned the message down by shooting the video in a courtroom, but those gospel backup singers reveal his true intent.

#162
“Victim or a Fool”
Rodney Crowell
1982
Peak: #34

Crowell’s career is littered with great songs just waiting to be rediscovered and turned into smash hits. One great line after another reveal the frustration of a man left behind. When you’re debating if you’re a victim or a fool, you’re in bad shape. Keith Urban could knock this out of the park.

#161
“I Don’t Call Him Daddy”
Kenny Rogers
1988
Peak: #86

It’s surprising that Rogers, an established superstar, bombed with this song, when unknown Doug Supernaw would soar to #1 seven years later with his take. Maybe it was hard for listeners to suspend their disbelief and imagine Rogers as a divorced dad not able to make ends meet; either way, Rogers revealed his great song sense, even if it didn’t hit for him.

#160
“Just To Satisfy You”
Waylon Jennings & Willie Nelson
1982
Peak: #1

Willie was so big in 1982 that this duet was knocked out of #1 by another Nelson single, the massive “Always On My Mind.” This doesn’t have the element of surprise of Jennings & Nelson’s first collaborations in the 70′s, but it’s a fantastic performance nonetheless.

#159
“Don’t Close Your Eyes”
Keith Whitley
1988
Peak: #1

Alcohol addiction robbed us of one of the genre’s most promising traditional vocalists when Whitley drank himself to death in 1989. Witness this perfect country weeper, where Whitley implores his lover to keep her eyes open during lovemaking so she can’t picture the man she really loves instead of the one she’s with.

#158
“She’s Crazy For Leaving”
Rodney Crowell
1988
Peak: #1

One of a remarkable five #1 singles from Diamonds & Dirt, Crowell weaves a hilarious tale of a leaving woman he simply can’t keep up with; after all, “you can’t stop a woman when she’s out of control.” His sassiest female character since Mary of “Leavin’ Louisiana in the Broad Daylight.”

#157
“Storms Never Last”
Waylon Jennings & Jessi Colter
1981
Peak: #17

Perhaps the most unfairly overlooked husband-and-wife combo in country music history, they complement each other beautifully on this tender song of comfort during the hard times. There’s a quiet sincerity here that Garth & Trisha could learn from.

#156
“I Will Always Love You”
Dolly Parton
1982
Peak: #1

When Dolly first hit with this song in 1974, it gave her the radio success that eluded her with her dark prostitution lament “My Blue Ridge Mountain Boy” five years earlier. By 1982, she was a singing whore once again, but on the big screen, playing the madam in Best Little Whorehouse In Texas. This is widely considered the inferior of the two versions of this song that Dolly took to #1, but hey, cut her some slack; you try singing a love song about Burt Reynolds convincingly.

#155
“Sometimes You Just Can’t Win”
Linda Ronstadt
1982
Peak: #27

Despite it paying increasingly smaller artistic and commercial dividends, Ronstadt continued her album-making formula of a few country songs and rock songs thrown together well into the 1980′s. This was her last solo country hit, and it’s a great one, allowing her voice to shine through. She’d return to country with success one more time on the legendary Trio project four years later.

#154
“I’ll Still Be Loving You”
Restless Heart
1986
Peak: #1

Forget my earlier comparison to Rascal Flatts. After listening to this hit single, I’m now convinced Lonestar should be giving Restless Heart a cut of their royalties.

#153
“Ashes By Now”
Rodney Crowell
1980
Peak: #78

While “Victim or a Fool” waits to be rediscovered, Lee Ann Womack already grabbed this one and turned it into a hit in 2000. Crowell’s own version is more subtle than Womack’s, sticking to a basic mid-tempo arrangement that lets the lyric dominate.

#152
“Don’t Fall In Love With A Dreamer”
Kenny Rogers with Kim Carnes
1980
Peak: #3

Give Rogers credit. He picked Carnes as a duet partner a full year before her massive breakthrough with “Bette Davis Eyes.” Her raspy vocal blends beautifully with Rogers’ own scratchy voice, and the song, which Carnes co-wrote, is worthy of both talents.

#151
“Brilliant Conversationalist”
T. Graham Brown
1987

Peak: #9

Remarkably wordy for a country hit of any era, Brown is nearly too clever for his own good, but keeps things together with a confident vocal performance, so he’s never overwhelmed by the verbal barrage.

Essential 80′s: #200-#176

Saturday, May 27th, 2006

200 Essential 80′s Singles
Part 1:
#200-#176


#200
“Shakin’”
Sawyer Brown
1986
Peak: #15


Fresh off their victory in the very first Star Search competition, Sawyer Brown released a string of campy singles that cemented their reputation as a novelty act, complete with tacky stage outfits and cheesy videos. It took years and Mac McAnally for them to finally gain credibility.



#199
“Crackers”
Barbara Mandrell
1980
Peak: #3

We take empowerment among our country women for granted today, so it’s startling to here this bouncy little number that has Mandrell willing to put up with anything her man wants to do if he’ll just come back to her; she even regrets having fewer dishes to wash, and the hook is “you can eat crackers in my bed any time.” I was going to write here that it’s impossible to imagine a contemporary female country singer recording this, then I read that Sara Evans has cut it for the forthcoming Mandrell tribute album. Since the ACM just anointed her the female standard-bearer for our format, the ladies might be backsliding.



#198
“Honky Tonkin’”
Hank Williams, Jr.
1982
Peak: #1

A smooth and swinging cover of his father’s hit, Williams tosses this off so effortlessly that he was clearly no longer living in the shadow of his legendary dad; he even throws in some lines from “Hey Good Lookin’” at the end.



#197
“Meet Me In Montana”
Marie Osmond with Dan Seals
1985
Peak: #1

Dan’s not finding an audience for his music in Nashville, Osmond’s not pretty enough for the big screen in Hollywood, so they’re ready to give up their dreams and reunite in Montana. Despite the pop sheen that defines country records from this era, there’s a bittersweet melancholy powering this classic duet.



#196
“Mona Lisa Lost Her Smile”
David Allan Coe
1984
Peak: #2


Coe just might be the most underrated honky-tonk artist of the last forty years. This was his biggest hit, and doesn’t have the beer-and-sawdust edge of most of his best work, but it’s sharply written, using the metaphor of painting to illustrate how a man can create a woman that ends up leaving him, “the masterpiece that we planned is laying shattered on the ground; Mona Lisa lost her smile, and the painter’s hands are trembling now.”


#195
“Lookin’ For Love”
Johnny Lee
1980
Peak: #1

Personally, I enjoyed Eddie Murphy as BuckWheat on SNL singing this song as “Wookin’ Pa Nub” more than Lee’s original, but this is the quintessential Urban Cowboy hit; hell, it’s actually on the soundtrack that ended up the label for an entire movement within the genre.



#194
“(There’s) No Gettin’ Over Me”
Ronnie Milsap
1981
Peak: #1

Toby Keith is hardly the first cocky male singer, and Milsap is a greater influence on Keith than he’ll ever admit. Milsap scored a Grammy for this performance.



#193
“Goodbye’s All We’ve Got Left”
Steve Earle
1987
Peak: #8

It’s easy to forget that this alt-country legend actually scored some mainstream country success with his first album. Comparisons to Bruce Springsteen were never-ending, but Earle’s got his own distinctive voice; “goodbye’s all we’ve got left to say” is one of those obvious hooks that nobody got around to writing until Earle.



#192
“Theme From Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol’Boys)”
Waylon Jennings
1980
Peak: #1

Jennings scored a gold single with this TV theme that gets more play on CMT than most of the current country singles.


#191
“1982″
Randy Travis
1985
Peak: #6


Travis’ breakthrough single establishes his neotraditionalist credentials, his rich baritone adding pure country soul into each line. Right out of the gate, he was a master vocalist with great taste in material.


#190
“Fourteen Carat Mind”
Gene Watson
1981
Peak: #1

Ever see a really gruff, tough-looking guy, then get taken aback when you hear him speak in a not-so-gruff voice? Watson is the musical equivalent here, with this wimpy but entertaining ode to a gold digger.


#189
“Couldn’t Do Nothin’ Right”
Rosanne Cash
1980
Peak: #15

Rosanne Cash’s earliest solo hit establishes her bittersweet sound right off the bat, with husband-producer Rodney Crowell blending in his distinctive background vocals.



#188
“The Last One To Know”
Reba McEntire
1987
Peak: #1


It may be surprising to those who only know Reba as the WB’s rubber-faced ass clown, but she was once one of the genre’s strongest traditional vocalists, wrapping her phenomenal voice around weepers like this one.


#187
“That’s The Truth”
Johnny Cash
1984
Peak: #84

Cash had already been in the Hall of Fame for four years when he released Johnny 99, a fascinating concept album that visits the seedy sides of small-city America. Here, he meets one woman who looks 49 though still in her youth, and another that hardly speaks a word, even when she’s high, before ending up on the wrong end of a preacher’s gun because he got to know his daughter a little too well.



#186
“Nobody”
Sylvia
1982
Peak: #1

Even before moving the show to Vegas, the ACM Awards have always been a bit too glitzy and pop-oriented. Case in point: they actually gave Female Vocalist to Sylvia, mostly on the strength of this synth-drenched promise to love her man better than his mistress can. That’s right. She doesn’t leave him because he’s cheating; she vows to love him better than the competition.



#185
“Come As You Were”
T. Graham Brown
1988
Peak: #7

The gravely-voiced Brown produced some of country’s best blue-eyed soul in the 80′s. Here, he invites his old lover to “Come As You Were”, to show up at his house tonight as the woman he fell in love with, before she stopped loving him.


#184
“Bluest Eyes In Texas”
Restless Heart
1988
Peak: #1


Those who feel that Rascal Flatts has lowered the bar for country bands, particularly because they stepped into the void left by the artistically brilliant Dixie Chicks, need to remember that most successful country bands have had a lot more in common with the gel boys dominating the charts today. Restless Heart is a classic example of that pop-country, stacked harmony sound that fits in seamlessly in the adult contemporary radio landscape, and here, they manage to sound like they’ve only seen Texas on television.


#183
“Baby’s Got Her Blue Jeans On”
Mel McDaniel
1984
Peak: #1


The original “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk”, it’s a lot more gentlemanly than the raunchy Trace Adkins hit – “she’s not really trying to cause a scene, it just comes naturally” – but at the end of the day, it’s about men checking out a woman’s ass.


#182
“Honey (Open That Door)”
Ricky Skaggs
1984
Peak: #1

It’s often forgotten that Randy Travis was actually one of the last neotraditionalists to break through; John Anderson, Reba McEntire, The Judds and Ricky Skaggs had already brought hard country back to the radio earlier in the decade. Skaggs’ version of this Mel Tillis song finds him having tons of fun recounting how he ended up locked out of his woman’s house.


#181
“What’s Forever For”
Michael Martin Murphey
1982
Peak: #1


Murphey’s best known today for his modern spin on Western music, but he had a huge country and pop hit with this sugar-sweet lament for lovers to stop breaking up so easily. It’s hardly “Don’t Toss Us Away”, but even today it’s sure to bring a tear to newly divorced Americans.


#180
“Love’s Been A Little Bit Hard On Me”
Juice Newton
1982
Peak: #30

Not until Shania Twain released Come On Over would another woman so gleefully release pop records to the country market; Newton didn’t even try to put it in a fiddle or steel guitar as a fig leaf. The result was hugely entertaining records like this single. View VH1 Classic late at night, and you might catch the hilariously low-budget video that has a laughably literal interpretation of the lyric.


#179
“Elvira”
Oak Ridge Boys
1981
Peak: #1

The vocal quartet takes what was a raunchy recorded orgasm when first cut by Rodney Crowell & Emmylou Harris, and recasts it as a giddy, silly nursery rhyme; it sold millions in its new incarnation.



#178
“Uncle Pen”
Ricky Skaggs
1984
Peak: #1

Pickin’ and grinnin’.


#177
“Would You Catch A Falling Star”
John Anderson
1982
Peak: #6

Anderson’s beautiful lament for a star on the wane is more tender and sympathetic than “Sweet Music Man”, the genre’s standard on the subject. That this was recorded before he hit it big with “Swingin’” showed foresight and understanding that most young artists lack.


#176
“Somebody’s Knockin’”
Terri Gibbs
1980
Peak: #8

How can you not love a blind woman singing about “blue eyes and blue jeans”? Anyway, the very first winner of the CMA Horizon Award got that category off to a spotty start, as Gibbs beat out Rosanne Cash for the trophy.

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