Posts Tagged ‘ 80s ’

Robert Palmer + Duran Duran + Chic = ….

Let’s look back to 1985.  Duran Duran were on top of the world, having had 5 top 20 hits in the US from 3 different albums in the span of a year.  But they were also on the verge of breaking up, and bassist John Taylor and guitarist Andy Taylor were looking for something to do.  Robert Palmer had been releasing music for 15 years, both with bands and as a solo artist, but he’d only had one moderate hit (“Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor)“), way back in 1979.   As a member of Chic, Tony Thompson had played on some of the biggest disco hits, but the band had gone on hiatus in ’83.

Nobody knows exactly how it happened, but this rather random group of musicians, all at loose ends, somehow came together to form the most awkward-looking supergroup ever: POWER STATION.

Can’t you just feel the love?

They only recorded one album.  Let’s take a look at this doozy of an ’80s album cover, designed by John Taylor:

Their sole album included the top 10 hit “Some Like It Hot.”  (Fun factoid: video stars transsexual supermodel Caroline Cossey!)

They also had a hit with a cover of T. Rex’s “Get it On (Bang a Gong)”, an idea too terrible to even contemplate.

After the success of the album that provided him with his biggest hit to date, Robert Palmer ditched the group to record another solo album.  This disc, Riptide, borrowed heavily from the Power Station sound and scored him an even bigger hit: “Addicted to Love.”

Power Station wanted to tour, but was now out a vocalist, so they brought in Michael Des Barres, a.k.a. the co-writer of “Obsession”, a.k.a. Murdoc from MacGyver, a.k.a. ex-husband of Pamela Des Barres (groupie legend and author of I’m With the Band).  The Des Barres version of the band only recorded one song — for the Arnold Schwarzenegger movie Commando! — before breaking up.

Guess who’s helping Howard Jones?

You probably know Howard Jones from every dentist office visit you’ve made in the past 20 years.  Here, bite down on this fluoride tray full of synthy poppy goodness… and guess what famous musician produced and played on this track (answer after the break)

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A little bad, a little good

BAD: Dammit, Kid Rock is the 99th best selling musician of all time in the U.S.

GOOD: This awesome 7″ cover:


Gerry Rafferty

You know him.  He did “Baker Street,” that song with a saxophone chorus that probably gave birth to the ’80s saxophones-in-rock fad.  (EDIT: Whoa, I’m right!  “The eight-bar alto saxophone solo led to a resurgence described as “the ‘Baker Street’ phenomenon.”[1] There followed a jump in saxophone sales, and a noticeable increase in the use of the instrument in mainstream pop music and TV advertising.”)

But did you know that he was one of the founding members of Stealers Wheel (y’know, the band who did “Stuck in the Middle With You,” not Bob Dylan like you probably thought)?

Wikipedia also alleges that Gerry Rafferty has become considerably more, uh, interesting in his old age:

The newspaper Scotland on Sunday reported that Rafferty was asked to leave the Westbury Hotel in London during July 2008. This report stated that the hotel manager had claimed that other residents were distressed by his habit of relieving himself in various corners of the hotel and that his suite was also in a disgraceful and unusable condition.[5] He then checked himself into St Thomas’ Hospital suffering from a chronic liver condition. The same report claimed that on 1 August 2008, Rafferty had disappeared, leaving his belongings behind, and that the hospital had filed a missing persons report.[5] However, this was rebutted by the Metropolitan Police who stated that no such missing persons report existed.[9]

After unconfirmed sightings and unauthenticated reports that he was in contact with his family, on 17 February 2009 The Guardian reported that Rafferty, “who has battled alcoholism for years”, was in hiding in the south of England, being cared for by a friend.[10]

“Hungry Heart”

The station I listen to at work plays too much Springsteen.  I don’t hate his music, but I don’t need to hear “Pink Cadillac” every other day.  They play “Hungry Heart” a lot too, another one of those Bruce ditties that probably has more going on in it than the schlocky music would lead you to believe, but I’ve never felt the need to find out.  But I did feel the need to look it up on Wikipedia.

Apparently Joey Ramone (!) asked Springsteen (!!) to write a song for the Ramones (!!!) and “Hungry Heart” was the result.  And the backup vocalists?  Two dudes from The Turtles (of 1967’s “Happy Together” fame).