song of the day #2 – “Relax” | FRANKIE GOES TO HOLLYWOOD | 1984 / 1985.

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On June 15, 2014, Casey Kasem, host of the longtime countdown program, AMERICAN TOP 40, passed away at the age of 82.  From my first blog post (and prolly some more inbetween then and now), I explained how, in 1979, I was a geeky, lanky and somewhat lost 12-year-old living in Central Maine, had a few friends and not a lot of interest in much of anything, but at some point early that year, I discovered AMERICAN TOP 40, and was glued to it every weekend.  Not only could I hear the 40 biggest songs in the country every week, but also Casey’s cool trivia and facts about the songs and the artists, a trait I treasure to this day.  For me, the show was No. 1 with a bullet.  And still is (thanks to the re-airing of broadcasts of AT40 on iHeart Radio).american-top-40-casey-kasem

In honor of my radio hero, Casey Kasem, for the entire month of June (and now through July), I will be highlighting a song each day (some days will have two songs!) that peaked in the Top 40 of the BILLBOARD Hot 100 (including five (real) one-hit wonders of the 80s), and with every blog post, just like on AMERICAN TOP 40, the hits will get bigger with each post.  On June 1, 2017, I featured a song that peaked at No. 40.  Sometime here in July, I’ll feature a “song of the day” that went all the way to No. 1. 

HOORAY!  We’ve finally reached the Top 10!  Woo-hoo!  When Casey Kasem got to this point of an American Top 40 countdown, he would usually say, “We’re headed into the home stretch now!  And on we go!”

Wow, in my research for this series, no chart position so far has had nearly 90 songs reach a certain position between 1979 and 1989…until now.  Nearly 90 songs set up camp at the No. 10 position during that time, some stays as short as one week (like “Borderline” by Madonna, “Hysteria” by Def Leppard and “The Goonies ‘R’ Good Enough” by Cyndi Lauper), or as many as six weeks (“Muscles” by Diana Ross). 

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There were only about a baker’s dozen and a half of women who peaked at No. 10 during that time, like Kim Carnes, Pat Benatar, (real) one-hit wonder Regina (with the Madonna-inspired “Baby Love”), Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac, Cher, Donna Summer, Exposé, and the aforementioned Madonna and Diana Ross (the latter of which reached No. 10 twice).

It was pretty much a boys club for the rest of the songs that reached No. 10 on the Hot 100 between 1979 and 1989, including songs by David Bowie, Culture Club, Pet Shop Boys, Asia, Wham!, Steely Dan, ELO, Golden Earring, Prince, Phil Collins, Duran Duran and Stevie Wonder, and for some, one No. 10 song wasn’t enough.  The Police had two No. 10 hits, Heart had two, plus the Little River Band had three, as did Michael Jackson and Billy Joel.  And Kool & The Gang had four No. 10 hits – “Get Down On It,” “Misled,” “Stone Love” and “Victory.”

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For me, though, there was one No. 10 hit that stuck out more than any other.  And, as a singles chart nerd, it’s a big one.  It’s also what I call a “second-chance single,” and that historic single is “Relax” by Frankie Goes To Hollywood.

Formed in Liverpool, England in 1980, Frankie Goes To Hollywood was a five-man  New Wave / Dance-Pop band who was a thorn in the BBC’s side (the British Broadcasting Corporation, that is) in 1984, with their debut single, “Relax.”  I’ll come back to that. 

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Producer and ZTT Records co-founder, Trevor Horn, saw Frankie Goes To Hollywood perform on a television show called THE TUBE, when an early version of “Relax” was played.  He thought it was “more a jingle than a song,” and he wanted to “fix it up” in his own way. 

Another co-founder of ZTT, Paul Morley, had a great campaign lined up for Frankie Goes To Hollywood: “a strategic assault on pop.”  This was a brilliant marketing move.  His plan was to also tackle certain a trilogy of themes in the band’s single releases – sex, war, and religion.  “Relax” was first, followed by “Two Tribes” (about the Cold War), and “The Power Of Love” (a video which features the birth of Christ).

Trevor Horn and especially Paul Morley were really going for the shock value when it came to Frankie Goes To Hollywood.  They released a series of provocative advertisements introducing Frankie to the U.K., and one advertisement even said, “Frankie Goes To Hollywood are coming…making Duran Duran lick the shit off their shoes…”  Wow. 

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One of several provocative ads ZTT released for Frankie Goes To Hollywood and “Relax.”

When “Relax” finally reached the U.K. singles chart in November 1983, it wasn’t really a big deal.  But, when Frankie performed “Relax” on the BBC flagship television show, TOP OF THE POPS, people went nuts.  The following week, it soared to No. 6 on the U.K. singles chart. 

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Frankie’s performance of “Relax” on Top Of The Pops.

About a week later, BBC Radio 1 DJ Mike Read expressed his offense towards the cover art for “Relax” and especially these lyrics – “Relax, don’t do it / When you want to suck it, do it / Relax, don’t do it / When you want to come…”, and he announced his refusal to play the record.  Unbeknownst to him at the time, the BBC had already decided it couldn’t be played on the BBC anyway. 

relax UK

A couple of days later, the BBC officially banned the single from its airwaves, though radio heroes – like the brilliant John Peel – continued to play it throughout 1984.  Don’t people know when you ban a record, it only increases its popularity?!  And that’s what happened with “Relax.”  It reached No. 1 by late January 1984 and stayed on top for 5 weeks.  Apart from “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” by Band Aid, it was the biggest-selling single of the year in the U.K.

Since the BBC ban also applied to TOP OF THE POPS, which, like SOLID GOLD here in the U.S., did a countdown of the country’s biggest hits during the show.  When “Relax” was No. 1, all they did was put up a picture of the band during its big No. 1 announcement.  For five weeks.  Boo.

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If “Relax” going to No. 1 didn’t piss off the BBC enough, “Relax” took its time falling down the U.K. singles chart.  And by the time the Cold War Classic “Two Tribes” had started its nine-week run at No. 1 in June 1984, “Relax” was right back behind it at No. 2.  Hot damn.

“Relax” remained on the U.K. Top 75 singles chart for 48 consecutive weeks, and returned in February 1985 for another four, giving “Relax” an entire calendar year on the U.K. singles chart.  Pretty impressive.  The BBC ban on “Relax” proved to be a huge embarrassment, and eventually the ban was lifted sometime during 1984, but the damage was done, and Frankie and ZTT prevailed. 

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Speaking of embarrassments, I was sometimes embarrassed about how the U.S. didn’t pick up on some huge U.K. singles, and they didn’t do much here, if they were released at all.  Back in the early 00s, on my STUCK IN THE 80s radio show, I did a show called U.K. 1, U.S. O, highlighting songs that reached No. 1 in the U.K. but did nothing here.  Featured on the show were “Ashes To Ashes” by David Bowie, “Pipes Of Peace” by Paul McCartney (relegated to a B-side here), and songs by The Jam and The Flying Pickets, among others.  I think “Two Tribes” was also on the playlist.

Well, “Relax” eventually made its way to American shores and debuted on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 early April 1984 at No. 84.  And, similar to the initial U.K. release, it received little fanfare here, maybe because radio stations had heard all about the song’s controversy in the U.K. and thought it was too obscene to play.  Irregardless, it spent a week at No. 67 in early May 1984, and fell off the chart after just seven weeks.

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My original copy of the “Relax” 12″ single, purchased in July 1984, many months before it became a big hit here in America.

Somewhere along the line, I caught wind of “Relax,” and in a rare move, bought the 12” single (sans fancy cover art) in July 1984 BEFORE it was a radio hit here in America.  And I loved it from the start, and kept wondering, “Why exactly wasn’t this a huge hit here?”

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In late October 1984, just nine days before the release of the band’s brilliant double-album debut, WELCOME TO THE PLEASUREDOME, “Two Tribes” debuted on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 at No. 79, on its way to a respectable No. 43 peak in mid-December 1984.  I will forever credit “Two Tribes” as the song that re-ignited interest in “Relax” here in America.

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And “Two Tribes” was still on the chart in mid-January 1985 when “Relax” made its re-entry onto the Hot 100.  In only its third week back, “Relax” debuted in the Top 40, and rose to No. 10 for a quick two weeks in March 1985.  It fell out of the Hot 100 by mid-May 1985 after a combined total of 23 weeks on the chart. 

Outside of North America between 1983 and 1985, “Relax” was one of the biggest hits of the decade.  It reached No. 1 in the aforementioned U.K., plus Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and Thailand, and the Top 10 in at least 11 other countries.

“Relax” has been featured in a ton of films and TV shows for more than 30 years, including POLICE ACADEMY, BODY DOUBLE, MIAMI VICE, GOTCHA!, ROCK STAR, ZOOLANDER and ZOOLANDER 2, THE PROPOSAL, CALIFORNICATION, and 2017’s T2 TRAINSPOTTING.

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A number of covers of “Relax” have been released over the years as well, including “Weird Al” Yankovic, Richard Cheese, The Dandy Warhols, Germany’s Tech-Death Metal band Atrocity, and most recently, a brilliant cover by Blondie from their incredible 2014 album, GHOSTS OF DOWNLOAD, which includes a clever sample of the original within their cover.  I love it when artists do that.

In 1987, Frankie Goes To Hollywood ended up disbanding after just seven singles and two albums (though, somehow they manage to have 11 compilation albums), but honestly, it sure wouldn’t have been the 80s without them…

frankie says relax

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCp2h5jslKY

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(real) one-hit wonder of the week – “A Million Miles Away” | THE PLIMSOULS | 1983.

Between late 1979 and the end of 1989, there were nearly 500 (real) one-hit wonders of the 80s that reached the BILLBOARD Hot 100 just one time, a list that includes Soft Cell, Gary Numan, Timbuk 3, The Church, Bronski Beat, Nik Kershaw, The Buggles, The Waitresses, Ultravox and two different bands named The Silencers.  Once a week, I’ll highlight a (real) one-hit wonder for you.

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One of the great movie soundtracks to come out of the 80s was the soundtrack to 1983 film, VALLEY GIRL, starring a young Nicholas Cage in his first lead film role.  There was just one problem – despite all of the great music to come out of VALLEY GIRL, like Modern English’s “I Melt With You,” “Johnny Are You Queer?” by Josie Cotton, “Angst In My Pants” by Sparks, “Love My Way” by The Psychedelic Furs and “Who Can It Be Now?” by Men At Work – there was no official soundtrack released. 

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valley-girl-soundtrack-2Well, that changed in 1994 when Rhino Records put together VALLEY GIRL: MUSIC FROM THE SOUNDTRACK, a 15-track CD compilation of songs that appeared in the movie.  The soundtrack was so successful, Rhino put out a companion CD in 1995 called VALLEY GIRL: MORE MUSIC FROM THE SOUNDTRACK, which featured songs from Sparks, Thompson Twins, Bananarama, Culture Club, The Jam, “I Eat Cannibals” by Total Coelo, “Mickey” by Toni Basil and much more.

One of the songs featured in the film and on the first soundtrack was “A Million Miles Away,” a song by a Power Pop / Alt-Rock band formed in Paramount, California (just outside of Los Angeles) called The Plimsouls. 

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Formed in 1978 by singer / songwriter / guitarist Peter Case, The Plimsouls already had an EP and an album to their credit by 1983, when they released their second full-length album, EVERYWHERE AT ONCE.  When VALLEY GIRL was released in late April of that year, several songs from the film ended up being minor hits, prolly most notably, “I Melt With You” by Modern English, which reached No. 78 on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 in 1983, but has lived on in radio ever since.

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“A Million Miles Away” also benefited from its use in VALLEY GIRL, and debuted on the Hot 100 in late July 1983 at No. 88.  It reached its No. 82 peak the following week, and its stay on the Hot 100 was short-lived, leaving the chart after just three weeks.  They wouldn’t reach the Hot 100 again.blue-guitar

The Plimsouls broke up shortly after their minor success, and Peter Case has gone on to have a successful solo career, releasing 16 albums and compilations between 1986 and 2015, including one of my favorite album titles of the 80s, THE MAN WITH THE BLUE POST-MODERN FRAGMENTED NEO-TRADITIONALIST GUITAR (or BLUE GUITAR for short; from 1989).

The band has reunited a number of times since 1995, including a stint featuring Blondie’s Clem Burke.  They have also put out three live albums, the latest of which was released in 2012.

But, it was their 1983 Alt-Rock gem from a small movie with a future big actor and Academy Award winner and a kick-ass soundtrack that has thankfully endured much longer than its Hot 100 chart life, and never seems like a million miles away any time I revisit it…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIxgBMNhsKU

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song of the day – “Move On Up” | THE JAM | 1982.

One of the biggest music mysteries I still struggle with today is how in THE hell did The Jam not have the kick-ass following here in the U.S. that it had in their U.K. homeland?!  Punk, Mod Revival, New Wave – whatever genre you fit the trio of Paul Weller (lead vocals, lead and bass guitar), Rick Buckler (drums, percussion) and Bruce Foxton (vocals and backing vocals, bass and rhythm guitar) into, there’s no denying they were brilliant and had this energetic stranglehold on the U.K. and the singles chart there.

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The Jam, 1977, photographed by Jenny Lens.

Between their first single, “In The City,” (April 1977) and their last, “Beat Surrender” (November 1982), they released 18 singles, and they hit the Top 40 of the U.K. singles chart 18 consecutive times, which means every one of their singles / EPs reached the Top 40 there.  Pretty impressive.  Four of those went to No. 1: “Going Underground” / “Dreams Of Children” (March 1980, 3 weeks), “Start!” (September 1980, 1 week), “Town Called Malice” / “Precious” (February 1982, 3 weeks) and their last single, “Beat Surrender” (December 1982, 2 weeks).

The single for “Beat Surrender” contained the B-Side “Shopping,” while the BEAT SURRENDER EP also consisted of covers of The Chi-Lites song, “Stoned Out Of My Mind,” Edwin Starr’s “War” and Curtis Mayfield’s “Move On Up.”  Though EPs are considered singles in the U.K., here in the U.S., they are not nor have been, and instead appear on BILLBOARD’s Album chart (the BEAT SURRENDER EP reached No. 171 on that chart).

“Move On Up” was from Chicago-born Curtis Mayfield’s 1970 debut album, CURTIS, and though it did not chart here in the U.S., it has remained a soul classic and actually did reach No. 12 on the U.K. singles chart.  The version of “Move On Up” by The Jam (along with the other songs on the EP) had more of a soulful style to it that would be instrumental to Paul Weller’s next band, The Style Council (you can hear that soulful style on their lone U.S. Top 40 hit, the forever-wonderful “My Ever Changing Moods”). 

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“Beat Surrender” and the BEAT SURRENDER EP were released the last week of November 1982, and, around the time “Beat Surrender” was the “Top Of The Pops,” in December 1982, the band broke up after 10 years.  They went 20 years without speaking to each other.  Paul Weller and Bruce Foxton did become friends again in 2009 but, alas, a Jam reunion was not to be. 

Still, nearly 24 years after their breakup, the gifted “angry young men” from Woking, Surry, England (23 miles SW of London) continue to leave an impression on the music world. I know they have with me.  Though I was quite late getting to know the amazing music of The Jam, for me, they continue to move on up…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7LtX9k_ElU

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song of the day – “My Ever Changing Moods” | THE STYLE COUNCIL | 1984.

In the middle part of 1984, I fell completely in love with a song called “My Ever Changing Moods” by a relatively new British band, The Style Council.  What I would discover later on is that The Style Council was actually the second band for singer / songwriter / musician Paul Weller.  His first band, of course, was The Jam, who had four No. 1 songs between 1980 and 1982 in their native Britain, but for some Godforsaken reason, did nothing here in America.

Still being in a (mostly) American Top 40 frame of mind back in 1984, my association with The Style Council reminded me of my association with General Public a year later, in the sense that I learned of that band before learning of (and eventually adoring) the earlier band (in this case for Dave Wakeling and Ranking Roger), The English Beat. 

New Wavers The Style Council fared a little better in the U.S. than earlier counterpart The Jam did, and “My Ever Changing Moods,” their fifth overall single, was the first one to chart in the U.S., from their debut album, CAFÉ BLEU.

my ever changing moods US“My Ever Changing Moods” worked its way to a No. 29 peak on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 in June 1984, spending 3 months on the chart.  Around the globe, it reached No. 5 in the U.K., and No. 32 in New Zealand.  The Style Council would place 16 songs in the U.K. Top 40 between 1983 and 1988, but only “My Ever Changing Moods” and its follow-up, “You’re The Best Thing,” would chart in the U.S. (it stopped at No. 76).

Paul Weller and his respective bands were critical darlings here in America but would never get the proper public appreciation overall that they should have here in the States.  Regardless, my fondness for the lovely “My Ever Changing Moods” has way outlasted way its short singles chart life.  I don’t really know how to explain it, but “My Ever Changing Moods” is just one of those songs that exudes joy for me, always has.  And I’ll happily never change my mood ever about that…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmVkOlZFF3Y

the style council