You can read Part 1 here: http://carlcafarelli.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-kids-are-alright-history-of-power_11.html
You can read Part 2 here: http://carlcafarelli.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-kids-are-alright-history-of-power_12.html
Punk Goes Pop
While
all of the above neo-pop groups and teenybop acts alike were pursuing their
individual pop goals, the rock and pop world was being shaken by a new music
that threatened to turn everything upside down. Pundits had dubbed this new music “punk rock,” and it looked
to be pop’s antithesis: loud, fast
and angry, with a sneering promise of Anarchy in the U.K. At first glance, it seemed there could
be little common ground between this new primal noise and classic pop.
Well,
never trust your first impression.
While the media seized upon the shock and outrage of punk’s obvious
visual elements, some fans viewed the movement as a long-overdue wake-up
call. British groups like The Sex
Pistols, The Clash and The Damned may have been short on chops and melody, but
they had energy to spare, energy that sparked the souls of diehard rock ‘n’
rollers who’d never quite given up hope that the music they loved would return,
its spirit intact.
And,
hidden beneath the angry clatter and nihilist posing, punk incorporated nascent
pop moves from the start. Most of
the songs were almost absurdly concise, all hooks and rhythm, with no room for
extraneous clutter or boring solos (solos most of the punks wouldn’t have been
able to play anyway). These short,
catchy tunes observed the traditional pop verse-chorus-bridge song structure,
even while The Clash chanted a demand for a riot of their own, and The Sex
Pistols warned that there’d be no future, no future for you.
Meanwhile,
American groups like The Ramones and Blondie (and forerunners The Dictators and
The New York Dolls) were always upfront about their affection for pop and junk
culture in general. The Ramones
even acknowledged that they were influenced by The Bay City Rollers, and they
weren’t kidding.
The
Ramones’ power pop credentials are seldom recognized, but are nonetheless
undeniable; even over and above the belligerent brilliance of the group’s first
four albums, The Ramones’ singles reflected their own warped AM radio
sensibilities. The string of
(paradoxically) non-hit hit singles The Ramones released in the ‘70s—“Blitzkrieg
Bop” (with its Rollers-inspired “Hey Ho, Let’s Go!” chant), “Swallow My Pride,”
“Sheena Is A Punk Rocker,” “Rockaway Beach,” the unfairly-maligned “Don’t Come
Close” and covers of The Rivieras’ “California Sun,” Bobby Freeman’s “Do You
Wanna Dance” and The Searchers’ “Needles And Pins”--revealed the group’s
unabashed pop aspirations and surf-and-sun roots. Add such LP tracks as “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (which Dee
Dee Ramone once claimed The Bay City Rollers wanted to cover, but that’s just
Dee Dee for you), “Oh Oh I Love Her So,” the neo-bubblegum classic “I Wanna Be
Sedated,” virtually the entire Rocket To Russia album, and even the glue-sniffin’ confessional “Carbona
Not Glue,” and a picture emerges to show The Ramones as one of the greatest
power pop acts ever.
Somewhere
in this late ‘70s time frame, that phrase “power pop” was introduced into the
discussion. The term was first
used (fittingly!) by The Who’s Pete Townshend in an interview years before
(speaking of his own band, plus The Small Faces and The Beach Boys circa “Fun,
Fun, Fun”), but it came into more general use after punk’s initial
onslaught. As punk rock tried to
parlay its initial shock value impact into something bigger (and more
profitable), music-biz types groped for new phrases to describe the music
without conjuring up the negative, safety-pinned image of The Sex Pistols. “New wave” was seized upon as one such
phrase. “Power pop” was another.
To
punk purists, both new wave and power pop were seen as corporate attempts to
dilute punk’s power. While that
charge is partially true, some of the power pop that emerged from the punk
movement was both legitimate and possessed of a power all its own. In England, The Jam appeared as a group
consciously influenced by and emulating the early Who, both in musical approach
and in neo-Mod fashion style.
Groups like The Buzzcocks, Generation X (with future solo star Billy
Idol on vocals) and The Rich Kids (featuring ousted Sex Pistol Glen Matlock,
and future Ultravox maestro Midge Ure, who had himself already been a pop
figure of sorts, as a member of UK boy scout pinups Slik) gleefully mixed punk
and pop to spectacular results.
In
the midst of all this, some British veterans of the pre-punk pub rock days
found themselves swept up in the new wave. “Do Anything You Wanna Do” by pub-rockers Eddie and the Hot
Rods was one of the defining moments of power pop on 45. Nick Lowe, pub rock veteran and
producer of The Damned’s first album, released a stellar solo debut variously
titled Jesus Of Cool and Pure Pop
For Now People. Lowe’s flawless assimilation of vibrant pop styles made him
a pure pop icon, an image he retained long after he himself had lost interest
in the style.
As
power pop appeared to be shaping itself into a bona fide movement, Bomp! Magazine’s Greg Shaw and Gary Sperrazza! took due
notice. Bomp! had long championed the virtues of classic rockin’ pop,
both in the pages of the magazine and with an attendant record label, a label
which had been launched in 1974 with a 45 rpm release by The Flamin’ Groovies. (That first Bomp! single, “You Tore Me
Down” backed by a cover of Paul Revere and the Raiders’ “Him Or Me—What’s It
Gonna Be?,” led directly to the Groovies’ major label contract with Sire
Records. Bomp! was an influential
player right from its start.)
Sensing
a subject worth getting worked up over, Shaw and Sperrazza! devoted the March
1978 issue of Bomp! to power pop,
chronicling the genre’s history and speculating on the inevitable juggernaut
success of the burgeoning power pop movement. Wrapped in a gorgeous William Stout cover illustration that
encapsulated power pop’s gut-level appeal, the power pop issue of Bomp! was like a rallying cry for any who cared to listen.
“The
power pop issue of Bomp!,” Shaw later
recalled, “was an attempt at something rarely done in the magazine world: to lead people’s taste, rather than
reflect it. Of course it was for
the most part ‘preaching to the choir,’ but it does seem to have had some
effect, especially on the U.K. music press, which corrupted the idea and spawned
a plethora of gutless bands. Gary
Sperrazza! deserves a lot of credit for pushing the concept; he was even more
of a zealot than me, with a special fetish for Cheap Trick (whom I also loved,
of course).”
But,
as a movement, power pop was essentially stillborn. It was done in, in part, by the corrupting forces that Shaw
referred to. In the U.K., power
pop became a bandwagon for lame acts to hop on and claim trendy cachet. A case in point was a group called The
Pleasers, a quartet of Beatle-tressed Mersey-wannabes peddling a diluted
distillation of Beatlemania they dubbed Thamesbeat. The Pleasers were not a bad group--they made some decent
records, including a very nice cover of The Who’s “The Kids Are Alright,” one
of several Pleasers tracks produced by former Monkees producer/songwriter Tommy
Boyce--but they were too obviously derivative, too slavish in their skinny-tied
attempt to be Beatles ‘78. And
they were just the kind of act that the British music press thought embodied
power pop. No wonder the British
punks rejected power pop! (Or, as
Sperrazza! put in Bomp!: “After all, power pop means pop with power!!!, not some whimpering simp with a Beatles haircut.”)
Gotta Have Pop
Gotta Have Pop
In
spite of the backlash inspired by such media forces (who’ll get their reward
some day in Hell), there were nonetheless a lot of eminently worthy acts mining
the power pop vein by the end of the ‘70s. One of the most notable (and durable) of these groups was
Shoes, an exquisite four-man band from Zion, Illinois. Shoes took their first step with an
album that was literally homemade, recorded in guitarist Jeff Murphy’s living
room and released on the group’s own Black Vinyl label in 1977.
That
album, Black Vinyl Shoes, was an
instant pop classic, bursting with understated gems, songs simultaneously
Beatlesque yet not strictly derivative of anything. Black Vinyl Shoes brought the group to Greg Shaw’s attention, and Bomp!
released a non-LP 45 of “Tomorrow
Night”/”Okay,” which still ranks as the best 1-2 punch of Shoes’
always-distinguished recording career.
(Shoes actually recorded two albums prior to Black Vinyl Shoes: Un Dans
Versailles was an extremely
limited-edition record from 1975, while an album called Bazooka was recorded in 1976 but not released at that time.)
In
any case, Shoes went from the Bomp! single to a record contract with Elektra,
commencing with 1979’s Present Tense
album. The “Too Late” single made
the charts but stalled at # 75 (the album reached # 50). Shoes made two more albums for Elektra
in the early ‘80s, then returned to indie-land. The group continued to record into the ‘90s, on their
re-activated Black Vinyl label, but now appears to be dormant. This book’s very own John M. Borack
organized a splendid Shoes tribute album, Shoe Fetish, for the Parasol label in 2001.
Another
act that graduated from the indies to the majors was The Romantics, from
Detroit. The Romantics made their
recording debut with a 1977 single on their own Spider Records label. “Little White Lies”/”I Can’t Tell You
Anything” was a two-sided winner, and probably the toughest-sounding record The
Romantics would ever make. They
followed that with a great single (“Tell It To Carrie”/”First In Line”) and a
couple of compilation-album contributions (“Let’s Swing” and “Running Away”)
for Bomp!, and then signed with Columbia’s Nemperor imprint.
The
Romantics, the group’s ace 1980 debut
album, included inferior remakes of some of the Spider and Bomp! songs, but was
fully redeemed by a number of other fine tracks, including “When I Look In Your
Eyes” and a little ditty that would become The Romantics’ signature tune, “What
I Like About You.” As a single, “What
I Like About You” peaked at a mere # 49, but has since become indelibly branded
on the public consciousness via rock videos and Budweiser commercials. The fact that the song still retains
its original appeal is testimony to the power of its pop.
The
Romantics eventually did have a # 3 hit with “Talking In Your Sleep” in 1983,
but to many they’re remembered as a one-hit wonder, and “What I Like About You”
is the "hit" these folks remember.
Well, it is the more memorable
song, after all. The Romantics
made a total of five albums of varying quality for Nemperor, but the debut
remains the best. An incredible live
set from 1983 was later exhumed as a King Biscuit Flower Hour CD release, and
it provides lasting documentation of just how great The Romantics were
live. They’re probably still great
live; they’re still with us, and their most recent album, 61/49 (with Blondie’s Clem Burke now on drums), shows they still
have it.
A
British band called The Records also managed a near-hit (# 56) with “Starry
Eyes,” a sublimely Byrdsy track reminiscent of Eddie and the Hot Rods’ “Do
Anything You Wanna Do.” The
Records’ 1979 debut LP (Shades In Bed
in the U.K., re-titled as The Records
in the U.S.) included more wonderful pop stuff in “Teenarama” and “Girl,” and
The Records seemed sure to hit big.
The group even covered Tim Moore’s “Rock And Roll Love Letter” as a
non-LP single (an able cover too, though not as good as The Bay City Rollers’
version) and wrote a great song called “Hearts In Her Eyes” for The Searchers’
comeback album.
Alas,
The Records never quite made it.
Following a change in guitar personnel, 1980’s perennially-underrated Crashes album had lots of wonderful tracks—“Man With A Girl Proof
Heart,” “Hearts Will Be Broken,” “The Same Mistakes,” and a decent version of “Hearts
In Her Eyes” that still paled beside The Searchers’ definitive reading--but was
poorly received. The band
reconfigured again, without lead singer John Wicks, and the version of The
Records that recorded 1982’s Music From Both Sides was definitely not the same Records that fans had once
cherished. The Records broke up
thereafter, though John Wicks resurfaced with a new Records line-up in the ‘90s.
And
there were scads of others. There was
Squeeze, a British group whose low-key style lacked flash but was unerringly
agreeable. Squeeze went on to have
chart hits in the ‘80s, but always really seemed a breed apart from the power
poppers.
There
were The Scruffs, a spunky pop outfit from Memphis with a superb 1977 power pop
LP cheekily titled Wanna’ Meet The Scruffs? Scruffs
tracks like “Revenge,” “Break The Ice” and “She Say Yea,” plus the non-LP “Teenage
Girls,” cried out for the kind of mass attention that The Scruffs never came
close to getting. There was Van
Duren, another Memphis resident, whose essential Are You Serious? album sounds uncannily like Eric Carmen at his pop
finest. Moving north to Boston,
there were The Real Kids, an irresistible punky-pop combo whose radio dial was
permanently set on whatever station played The Ramones, The Kinks and Eddie
Cochran in constant rotation.
In
Canada, there was Bob Segarini, a veteran of pop group The Wackers, who sang on
the title track of his Gotta Have Pop
album that, “I loved The Beatles up to Sgt. Pepper/Then they ruined pop for what could be forever/But it’s
never to late to hope.” There was
Stanley Frank, whose “S’cool Days” single was an incomparable cross between the
best qualities of The Sweet, Slade and The Bay City Rollers. There were The Diodes, a Toronto
post-punk band who pulled it all together for a perfect power pop single called
“Tired Of Waking Up Tired.”
And
there were still countless others, miscellaneous power pop groups from local
scenes across the U.S.A. and elsewhere, acts with unlimited potential who never
got beyond the indie single stage:
The Jumpers in Buffalo, New York; The Names in Chicago, Illinois; The
Flashcubes in Syracuse, NY (my favorite
power pop group; man, you should see these guys live!). There was probably a cool power pop act
plying its trade in your home town at that time too.
But
the greatest hopes for power pop’s conquest of the record charts were pinned on
four Southern California groups.
Each of these groups had all the essential goods to some degree--the
songs, the approach, the awareness of pop’s power. Three of the acts seemed sincere in their fondness for the
genre, while one of ‘em was widely suspected to hold a more crass, cynical
view. Guess which one topped the
charts.NEXT WEEK: Get It?
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