Thursday 31 January 2013

31 January 2013 – Some guilty pleasures

After drafting yesterday’s post, I relaxed in from of the TV and watched;

(A/V 3) Abba – Bang A Boomerang (ABC 1)
This is an enjoyable and entertaining  documentary that explained the ABBA phenomenon purely from the Australian perspective.  It portrayed the crucial role that Australia had in re-starting their career after failing to build on their Eurovision success with Waterloo and threatening to become another one hit wonder.   I missed approximately the first 5 minutes or so and hope that some of my comments were not addressed in the bit I missed.

Basically put, the ABC had started Countdown and needed content to fit into the allotted hour so it was decided to air any film/video clips that were available.  Ian “Molly” Meldrum, the show’s host received a reel of ABBA film clips from their record company, showed I Do I Do I Do and it became a hit.  He followed this up with the clip for Mama Mia despite the fact the record company had no plans to ever release it as a single.  As the documentary revealed, the demand from the Australian public was so intense after a mere three plays on successive weeks, the record company reluctantly backtracked. The rest, as they say was history.
In many ways this story was not without precedent whilst also being prophetic.  In the 1960s the Australian TV audience fell in love with a dubbed black and white program from Japan called The Samurai. Its success also came as a surprise to its creators and star and spawned a massively successful Australian tour at the time and affectionate documentary a few decades later.  But musically speaking, exactly the same thing happened in the 1980s when MTV started in the United States.  Faced with a shortage of home grown product, it plugged the gap by showing clips from various sources and among the unlikely success was a band from exotic Australia called Men At Work.  (Who said there is no such thing as karma?)  Unfortunately these things were not mentioned in the documentary. 

But that’s a minor quibble.  The one thing I didn’t like about the documentary is how it didn’t portray the extent of ABBA’s Australian dominance.  It referred to their number 1 hits, the early promo tour culminating with the Channel 9 special with huge ratings which increased on its first repeat, the concert tour and the dominance of Fernando.  All are valid achievements and were duly covered, even if the documentary failed to point out that the 9 special shown about 7 times in a 6 – 12 month period.  But what was glossed over, if mentioned at all, was the sheer dominance of the band on the charts apart from the number 1s.  If my memory holds, I’m pretty sure that at the height of Abba mania, all four of the band’s studio albums and The Best Of Abba compilation were in the top 10 or 15 simultaneously.  There were also occasions when they held at least 3 tracks in the top 10. 
I also seem to remember that ABBA’s popularity held for a while after the number 1 reign of Fernando finally ended and didn’t just suddenly plummet as was inferred.  Once again, if my memory holds, the chart action gradually dropped off for the simple reason that by then there was no more old or new product to release and the Australian market had to wait for any subsequent albums or singles as these were released.   The documentary though was spot on about how hip it was to dislike ABBA for a time and the reasons for their re-emergence in the nation’s psyche. 

I and, it would appear, the rest of the country fell in love with the band at the time and, like most of the males at the time too, fell in love with Agneta.  (Frida’s charms only started to become apparent when she got rid of that hideous perm that graced all of those early film clips.)  More significantly, one of the first albums I bought with my own money was the Arrival album or, as it appears to have become universally known, “The One With The Band In The Helicopter”.  It is the only vinyl album I’ve ever purchased that is not stored at my house.  I hid it in the family collection and it still resides in the .youth family home.  It is also not listed in my collection.  Even though I appreciate the genius behind a number of ABBA singles, I still can’t bring myself to admit that I own their music.  I haven’t even used the justification that many now use, that of it being a “guilty pleasure”.
For me an album must fit certain criteria to qualify as a “guilty pleasure”.  It must be either an artist or album that is generally considered to be unfashionable today or that you would find impossible to justify to others familiar with your current musical listening habits.  More importantly, it must be something you enjoy listening to today and for me that translates to “must be on my iPod”.

Thus, today I decided to listen to some of my guilty pleasures starting with my guiltiest pleasure;
(89) Extreme – Pornograffiti

Extreme hit the big league for a while when two tracks off this album, More Than Words and Hole Hearted, both acoustic ballads, became monster hits.  These two tracks, along with a third number When I Kissed You, a 1940ish ballad, could not have been more unrepresentative of the band’s calling card, a blend of hard rock, funk and glam. Many of these tracks are quite impressive  - apart from the, at times, embarrassing lyrical content - including the title track, Get The Funk Out, When I’m President and It’s A Monster, all of which display the guitar heroics of Nuno Bettencourt and the over the top vocals of Gary Cherone.   It is an album almost without parallel within my collection and it always gets a least one play a year, although I simply cannot tolerate More Than Words.  What places this album above all of the other guilty pleasures is that I even went to see the band in concert.  If my memory holds that Melbourne  show was  the final date of the Pornograffiti world tour and, as is often the case, the playing that night was extremely tight with a celebratory air which only served to enhance my opinion of the album.  It even convinced me that Hole Hearted is a great tune; if only the horns employed live were included on the recorded version!
(90) Yes – 90125

Generally speaking I do not like the bulk of this band’s output although they have put out four great to classic albums.  The Yes Album is undoubtedly their best and both Fragile and Close To The Edge are pretty good too.  But this album, recorded in the early 1980s with Trevor Horn as producing is the one I play the most.  And to think that I discovered this totally by accident, being on a second hand C90 cassette tape I bought with the intention of wiping the contents!  This album starts with what is arguably their best known single, Owner Of A Lonely Heart.  There is great guitar work throughout courtesy of Steve Howe – City Of Love borders on heavy metal - and some intricate tracks such as Changes and Cinema that utilise every trick in the Horn production manual.  And just to prove that home taping is not killing music, a couple of  years ago, I spent actual dollars in buying the remastered and expanded version.
(91) Supertramp – Even In The Quietest Moments

It’s been fashionable to dismiss Supertramp for a number of years now, especially since the departure of Roger Hodgson.  But this band was responsible for at least two great albums in the 70’s including this one and Crime Of The Century.  Even In The Quietest Moments is notable for containing two of their best singles, Give A Little Bit and Lover Boy, but it is the epic 11 minute closer, Fool’s Overture, a track which sounds like a homage to Pink Floyd, that gets me every time.  It is also another album I accidently discovered on  a second hand tape which I’ve since upgraded to CD.
(92) 10CC – Deceptive Bends

This is possibly the best Paul McCartney album which the man did not make.  It starts off with two radio hits, Good Morning Judge and The Things We Do For Love but don’t let the latter put you off.  It has a number of quirky songs with an English sense of humour including the aforementioned Judge, Marriage Bureau Rendezvous and You’ve Got A Cold.  But once again, it is the 12 and a half minute closer, Feel The Benefit, which is ultimately the reason to hear this.  It is a track in three parts stitched together a la the McCartney suite at the end of Abbey Road but with a return to the opening melody at the end.
(93) Gerry Rafferty – City To City

This is an exceptional middle of the road album.  It starts off with a terrific quartet of songs;  The Ark, an Irish sounding number that appears to referring to global warning decades before the term was invented, the towering Baker Street (with THAT sax solo, although personally I’ve always preferred the guitar break near the end), the wonderful ballad Right Down The Line and the title track, a train song.  The rest of the album is pretty consistent without reaching the very high standard of the opening volley. Whatever’s Written In Your Heart,  a tremendous piano based ballad with a hymn like feel, is the pick of these.

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