The Best Music of 1980

April 24, 2009

All Music Guide recently posted their retrospective on the music of 1980. The further back these retrospectives go, the more albums that I missed or just never got around to purchasing are brought to my attention (I don’t own The River, for the love of Mike!). You may find some music to explore in the article as well, so read the whole thing, definitely including the comments.

I’ve made my own list, as I did with their 1993 retrospective. This time I’ll make a few comments.

Classic or Near-classic

The Clash – London Calling. Technically released at the tail end of 1979, but generally considered an ’80s album. There are more classics on this album than most albums have songs. A strong contender for greatest album ever made.

Joy Division – Closer. A perfectly realized masterpiece.

Blue Angel – Blue Angel. It’s easy to understand why this album landed Cyndi Lauper a solo contract. It’s not easy to understand why so few people have heard this terrific album. I plan a write-up on this in the near future.

Prince – Dirty Mind. Worst cover art in history, but a great album that includes the masterful “When You Were Mine,” later covered memorably by Cyndi Lauper. Plus, dude nails his sister! How fucked up is that?

Gang of Four – Entertainment! Technically 1979, but Rolling Stone had it in its top albums of the ’80s, so I’m guessing it didn’t come to the Colonies until then.

X – Los Angeles. Fucked-up rockabilly that sounds like nothing before or since (except for a couple other X albums).

AC/DC – Back in Black. Yes, I’m sick of it, too, but are you going tell me it doesn’t belong here? Are you going to tell Angus?

The Feelies – Crazy Rhythms. Would someone please get this record back in print?

Public Image Ltd.Metal Box/Second Edition. Again, I think 1979, but again, I think it was releases Stateside in 1980 as it was, again, in Rolling Stone‘s best of the 80s list.

Pretty Damned Great

Dire Straits – Making Movies. Just short of classic, with some classic songs. “Skateaway” gives me goosebumps.

Barbra Streisand – Guilty. The album has only her name on it, but that’s Barry Gibb standing next to her on the cover, and it’s just as much his album–he wrote it, produced it, duets on three songs, and (with his brothers) sings backup throughout. The gorgeous “Woman in Love” is just one of the expertly-crafted pop songs that fill this album.

Motörhead – Ace of Spades. The thundering title classic would be enough to get this album remembered, but it’s got a lot more where that one came from.

Teena Marie – Irons in the Fire. She has never gotten the respect she deserves as critics have mostly ignored the oddity of a white singer who sold a large percentage of her records to a black audience. On her third album, she asserts herself by writing and producing the whole thing for the first, but not last, time.

Honorable Mention

Warren Zevon – Stand in the Fire. Including a live album in the above sections didn’t seem quite right, but this rowdy set needed to be mentioned somewhere.

The Clash – Sandinista! This three-record mess has too much great material to leave out entirely.

The Cure – Boys Don’t Cry. I haven’t heard it in ages, but I know a lot of the songs by heart.

David Bowie – Scary Monsters. My copy was stolen and I haven’t replaced it yet. I recall loving a lot of it, being iffy on some. I’d like to hear it again before ranking it properly.

Below the fold!

A 1980 YouTube mixtape including some of the above. Just for you! ♥♥♥!

Read the rest of this entry »


Album Review: Lucinda Williams – Little Honey

November 14, 2008

Lucinda Williams famously took six years to complete her masterpiece, 1998′s Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, recording it three separate times before deeming it worthy of release.

Abandoning that level of perfectionism was probably necessary for her sanity, so good for her for saying goodbye to all that.  Since Car Wheels, she’s been downright prolific by Lucinda Williams standards, releasing four studio albums and a double-live.

However, the reduction in obsessiveness did not come without a price–none of her work since has matched the consistency of Car Wheels, or the two great albums that preceded it.  But no matter–despite a slight decline, she’s four-for-four since then, her new album, Little Honey, included, which makes her seven-for-seven since her self-titled 1988 album.  (I do not yet own the two folk albums she did very early in her career for Smithsonian Folkways.)

So let’s start on the new one by getting the problems out of the way.  The second half of Little Honey is considerably weaker than the first.  It opens with “Jailhouse Tears” a country-rock novelty that might have gotten over if it wasn’t a duet with Elvis Costello, woefully miscast as a heavy-drinking, drug-abusing, three-time loser–wasn’t Mike Ness available?  This is followed by three plodders in a row, the best of which, the nearly nine minute(!) “Rarity,” doesn’t have a prayer of waking up dozing listeners despite an emotional performance and touching lyrics.

But there is so much good here, having to hit skip a couple of times is a small price to pay.  The first half is terrific, hopping about effortlessly from the pop of opener “Real Love,” to the romantic “Circles and X’s,” to the word-to-the-wise “Little Rock Star” (who is likely also the subject of “Rarity”).  The first half concludes with “If Wishes Were Horses” (she’d have a ranch), which Rolling Stone called “sublime.”  I can’t think of a better word, so I’ll use that one–the song is sublime.

Listeners who make it through the tough patch on the second half are rewarded with “Plan to Marry,” where us-against-the-world, love-conquers-all lyrics are brutally undercut by a mournful, heart-in-tatters vocal.  It’s devastating, but still, somehow, leaves a tiny ember of hope glowing.

Little Honey ends with, of all things, a cover of AC/DC’s “It’s a Long Way to the Top,” and Lucinda Williams has once again given me a reason to show up day-and-date at the record store for her next album.  Long may she run.

Three and a Half Stars

“Circles and X’s”:

“If Wishes Were Horses”:


Well, this is painful…

July 1, 2008

…but pretty funny, too.

The background is that Noel Gallagher thought it was wrong that a hip-hop act headline the Glastonbury music festival and made his feelings very plain.


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