Wednesday, July 31, 2024

BEST CLASSIC BANDS: My GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! Interview

The Best Classic Bands website has just published a new interview with me, ranting on behalf of my new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), and I'm all buzzy with glee. The interview was conducted by the esteemed music journalist Jeff Tamarkin. Jeff was my editor when I began freelancing for Goldmine in 1986, and the lessons I learned in that working situation have fueled whatever the hell it is I've been doing since then. I regard Jeff as a mentor, and I'm grateful for all of his help and guidance then...and for the spotlight he's given my book now.

Go! READ IT!  And tell 'em CC sent you.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available for order; you can see details here. My 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is also still available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

VIRTUAL TICKET STUB GALLERY [updated]: Oh, The Shows I've Seen

 



My sporadic, ongoing series Virtual Ticket Stub Gallery recounts my memories related to specific live shows that I've seen. As a tangent to that series, this will be an attempt to make note of pop music acts that I've seen live, for good or bad, as many as I can remember.

1.4.5.
976-SING
999
The A*Teens
Willie Alexander and the Boom Boom Band
Ambrosia
American Idols
The Animals
Tim Anthony
The Antics
The Antoinettes
Artful Dodger
Atlas
The Baha Men
The Bangles
Don Barber and the Dukes
Len Barry
The Battered Wives
The Beach Boys
Beatlemania
Beauty Scene Outlaws
The Pete Best Band
The Bevis Frond
The Bobcats
Blotto
Andy Bopp
The Blushing Brides
David Bowie
Bowzer
The Brambles
The Brandos
Brass Inc.
Brownskin Band
The Buckinghams
Annie Burns and Rain
The Burns Sisters
Joe "King" Carrasco
Castle Creek
Felix Cavaliere
Ray Charles
Charlie
Cheap Trick
Chubby Checker and the Wildcats
The Chesterfield Kings
Chicago
Chicklet
Alex Chilton
The Clash
Classics IV
The Cliches
CNY Women In Music
Cockeyed Ghost
Cold Sweat
Paul Collins and John Wicks
Colorblind James and the White Caps
Tommy Conwell and the Young Rumblers
Gene Cornish
The James L. Cortland Band
Elvis Costello & the Attractions
The Cowsills
The Crickets
Culture Club
Baron Daemon
The Charlie Daniels Band
Paul Davie
Lonnie Day
The dB's
The Dead Ducks Band
The Delta Rays
Bo Diddley
Ani DiFranco
Digby
Distortion
Mark Dixon and the Goldman Theory Band
Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones
The Doyle/Whiting Band
Dread Zeppelin
Dress Code
Bob Dylan
Earth, Wind & Fire
The Easy Ramblers
Eclipse
John Eddie
Electric Broom
Dan Elliott and the Monterays
Jack Ely
ESP
The Everly Brothers [with Albert Lee]
Exile
The Fab Five
The Fabcats
The Fabulous Spectrelles
The Fallen Archies
The Fast
The Flashcubes
The Flashing Astonishers
The Fleshtones
The Forgotten Rebels
The Four Tops
Frank & Esce
Freaky Age
Gary Frenay
Frenay and Lenin
Frenay and the Rays
Dennis Friscia and His Oh-So-Sensitive Sidemen
The Georgia Satellites
Goldie
The Goonies
Red Grammer
The Grass Roots
Green Jello
The Grip Weeds
Grit and Grace
Grupo Pagan
Israel Hagan
Hamell On Trial
Hard Promises
Harmonic Dirt
Jerry Harrison
Deborah Harry
Kenne Highland's Airforce
Herman's Hermits
John Hiatt
The Todd Hobin Band
Danny Holmes
Mark Hudson
Ian Hunter & Mick Ronson
The Insiders
Intergalactic Burnt Toast
Kate Jacobs
The Joe Jackson Band
Tommy James
Al Jardine
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
David Johansen
Davy Jones
Scott Kempner
The Kennedys
Tom Kenny and the Hi-Seas [with Andy Paley and the Damselles]
Tom Kenny and the Pushballs
The Greg Kihn Band
Carole King
Sean Kingston
The Kinks
KISS
Knickers In a Twist
Gladys Knight
Cub Koda
Billy J. Kramer
Lady Antebellum
Denny Laine
Letizia 
L'il Georgie and the Shuffling Hungarians
Little Big Town
Little Caesar
The Livin' Ennd with Sandy Bigtree
Living Colour
Let's Active
Mark Lindsay
LMNT
The Longwood Jazz Project
Mary Lou Lord
The Lords Of The New Church
Los Blancos
Buddy Love and the Tearjerkers
Lyle Lovett
The Lumens
The Lyres
Machine and Hummer
The Manfreds
Marilyn's Chamber
Adam Marsland and the Chaos Band
Masters Of Reality
Maura and the Bright Lights
Paul McCartney
The Mike McKay Band
Don McLean
Idina Menzel
The Miamis
The Mind's Eye
Moist
Joey Molland
Joey Molland's Badfinger
The Monkees
The Most
Mushroom
The Mystic Eyes
The Natives
Steve Neat and the Chances
The Necessaries [with Chris Spedding]
Chuck Negron
The Neverly Brothers
New Math
New Riders Of The Purple Sage
The New Times Banned
Willie Nile
Peter Noone
Jamie Notarthomas
Jon Notarthomas
NRBQ
The Nudes
The Ohms
Oz
Oz and Biz
Pale Green Stars
Paper Faces
The Party Dogs
Ray Paul
Pauline and the Perils
Perilous
The Joe Perry Project
Peter, Paul & Mary
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Phil and the Spectors
Regis Philbin
Gene Pitney
Play
Iggy Pop
The Pop Tarts
Porcelain Forehead
The Posies
Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
Preacher
The Presstones
The Pretenders
Prince and the Revolution
Process and the Doo Rags
Gary Puckett
The Ramones
The Rascals
The Records
Red Rockers
The Reducers
The Replacements
The Restless
Paul Revere and the Raiders
The Richards
The Riddlers
The Rigbys
Robbie Rist and Kenny Howes
Rockin' Bones
Joe Rogalia and the Swamp Boys
The Rolling Stones
The Romantics
The Rubinoos
The Runaways
The Saints
Santana
The Karen Savoca Band
The Searchers
Screaming Meemies
Screen Test
Pete Seeger
The Shadows [NY]
The Shangri-Las
Sheila E
Sheriff
Bobby Sherman
The Shirelles
The Skeletons
Slaughter
The Smithereens
Phil Solem
Spyro Gyra
Stone Cold Miracle
The Strangers
The Stray Cats
The Strawberry Zots
Stroke
Super Action C*** Modified
Switch
The Swordsmen
Terry Sylvester
Talking Heads
Tattered Hoyt
The Tearjerkers
Johnny Thunders
Tom Tom Club
The Peter Tork Project
The Toys [Syracuse]
The Tremblers
The Trend
Tina Turner
The Turtles
The Turtles [with Ron Dante]
The Urban Squirrels
The Unholy Wives
Uriah Heep
Utility Life
The Va Va Voodoos
Hilton Valentine
Velvet Elvis
The Ventures
Kyle Vincent
Violent Femmes
The Vipers
Chris von Sneidern
The Waitresses
The Wallmen
Wang Chung
The Weather Girls
Al Wilson
Brian Wilson
The Winters Brothers Band
"Weird" Al Yankovic
The Works
Zoid



If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available for order; you can see details here. My 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is also still available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Monday, July 29, 2024

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1244

 

On Friday night, I checked off one of my big bucket list items: I finally saw the Rubinoos perform live. I've been a Rubinoos fan since 1977, and the Rubinoos were the first of a series of fantastic acts (including the Sex Pistols, the Runaways, Blondie, and the Ramones) to enter my sovereign airspace that year. I was 17. Was it a very good year? Man, whatever ups, downs, and all-arounds that year had to offer, my soundtrack for 17 rocked.

So seeing the Rubinoos play was a dream come true, and the dream did not disappoint. I was very happy. I was very, very happy. The Rubinoos are irreverent, somehow simultaneously casual and accomplished, blessed with an impressive supply of irresistible originals (and impeccable taste in covers), and the ability to execute the lot of 'em. What a great group. What a great, great, GREAT group.

Last week's TIRnRR was our own Rubinoos-inspired playlist, expressing our undiluted enthusiasm and anticipation as we prepped for this intoxicating notion of THE RUBINOOS LIVE!!! We only have one Rubinoos track this week--the break-everything-and-burn-it-with-its-own-lethal-volume "Rock And Roll Is Dead"--but we offer this collection of tunes as our own ongoing endorsement of...that feeling.

That feeling. 

That feeling of delight. That feeling of discovery. That feeling that music can electrify the whole friggin' planet.

Rock and roll is dead. Rock and roll is risen. And somewhere out there, the Rubinoos are rocking still. This is what rock 'n' roll radio sounded like on another Sunday night in Syracuse this week.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream, and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio

You can read all about this show's long and weird history here: Boppin' The Whole Friggin' Planet (The History Of THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO)

TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATIONS are always welcome.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:

Volume 1: download
Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download
Volume 5: CD or download

HEY! Looking for something to read? Check out Carl's books Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones and the brand-new The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). You can also follow Carl's daily blog Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) at https://carlcafarelli.blogspot.com/ If you would like to receive links to each day's blog, please reply to this email.

TIRnRR # 1244: 7/28/2024
TIRnRR FRESH SPINS! Tracks we think we ain't played before are listed in bold.

THE HALF CUBES: Precious To Me (Big Stir, Pop Treasures)
THE KINKS: I Took My Baby Home (Sanctuary, The Anthology 1964-1971)
THE FOUR TOPS: Standing In The Shadows Of Love (Motown, The Ultimate Collection)
THE BYRDS: Lady Friend (Columbia, Younger Than Yesterday)
THE GRIP WEEDS: Strange Bird [remix of original single] (Kool Kat Musik, VA: This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4)
THE MONKEES: For Pete's Sake (Rhino, Headquarters)
--
NANCY MOORE: My Cube (n/a, 3D Woman)
THE SHANG HI LOS: Morganatic Panic (Rum Bar, single)
DAVID BOWIE: DJ (RCA, Lodger)
PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You (Jem, Stand Back And Take A Good Luck)
ROCKPILE: Play That Fast Thing (One More Time) (Columbia, Seconds Of Pleasure)
--
DEAN LANDEW: Maria (single)
SHAKIN' STEVENS: Marie Marie (Sony, VA: Rock-A-Billly Rock)
THE HANDCUFFS: Let's Name Our Children (Pravda, Burn The Rails)
THE MERSEYS: Sorrow [alternative version] (Strawberry, VA: Let's Stomp! Merseybeat And Beyond 1962-1969)
ARTHUR ALEXANDER: Woman (Big Stir, ...Steppin' Out!)
ROBIN LANE AND THE CHARTBUSTERS: When Things Go Wrong [Deli Platters single] (Blixa Sounds, Many Years Ago: The Complete Robin Lane & the Chartbusters)
--
LYNDA MANDOLYN: Little Dreamer (single)
DOLPH CHANEY: My Good Twin (Big Stir, This Is Dolph Chaney)
THE ISLEY BROTHERS: It's Your Thing (Epic, The Essential Isley Brothers)
THE HOLLIES: Stop Stop Stop (EMI, All The Hits & More)
BIRD AND THE MIDNIGHT FALCONS: Baby Stop Running Around (Virgin Movie Music, VA: The Five Heartbeats OST)
--
DISTRICT 8: All Is Forgiven (Code 213, single)
TOM PETTY: You Wreck Me (MCA, Wildflowers)
PRINCE: Hot Summer (NPG, Welcome 2 America)
BLONDIE: Dreaming (Chrysalis, The Platinum Collection)
CYNDI LAUPER: I Drove All Night (Epic, The Essential Cyndi Lauper)
--
SUNBUZZ: Sunny Days (n/a, Hello Again)
DWIGHT TWILLEY: No Place Like Home (Big Oak, The Best Of Dwight Twilley: The Tulsa Years 1999-2016)
CARLENE CARTER: Sweet Meant To Be (Giant, Hindsight 20/20)
KLAATU: True Life Hero (Klaatunes, 3:47 E.S.T.)
P. P. ARNOLD: Soul Survivor (Metrophonic, single)
THE SMALL FACES: Shake (Deram, The Decca Anthology 1965-1967)
--
The Greatest Record Ever Made!
THE BAY CITY ROLLERS: Wouldn't You Like It (Arista, The Definitive Collection)
KEVIN ROBERTSON: Just Give Me Time (Futureman, The Call Of The Sea)
IGGY POP: Pumpin' For Jill (Arista, Party)
BADFINGER: Baby Blue (Apple, Straight Up)
THE NASHVILLE RAMBLERS: The Trains (Rhino, VA: Children Of Nuggets)
--
TAMAR BERK: Good Impression (n/a, Good Times For A Change)
THE SMITHEREENS: All I've Gotta Do (Koch, Meet The Smithereens!)
GLENN ERB: I Never Said Goodbye (Martini Time, Category Four)
JOE BENNETT AND THE SPARKLETONES: Black Slacks (Rhino, VA: Loud, Fast & Out Of Control [The Wild Sounds Of '50s Rock])
THE RAMONES: I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You (Rhino, Ramones)
POINT: All My Life (Rhino, VA: Children Of Nuggets)
--
sparkle*jets u.k.: Hey Grandma (Big Stir, Box Of Letters)
THE SLAPBACKS: Make Something Happen (Kool Kat Musik, VA: This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4)
THE FLASHCUBES: Wait Till Next Week (Northside, Bright Lights)
POP CO-OP: It Ain't Easy Being A Boy (Silent Bugler, Four State Solution)
THE BEVIS FROND: He'd Be A Diamond (Woronzow, New River Head)
MARY LOU LORD: Right On 'Till Dawn (Kill Rock Stars, Speeding Motorcycle)
THE RUBINOOS: Rock And Roll Is Dead (Castle, Everything You Always Wanted To Know About The Rubinoos But Were Afraid To Ask!)
THE BEATLES: Nowhere Man (Apple, Rubber Soul)
--
SHONEN KNIFE: Till The End Of The Day (Virgin, The Birds And The B-Sides)

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Tonight on THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO


We're reeling in the delight and glory of a seven-day weekend (last Saturday through this past Friday), bookended by incredible in-concert performances by THE GRIP WEEDS and THE RUBINOOS...and we still got a radio show! We'll hear the Grip Weeds and the Rubinoos--obviously!--as well as new music from THE HALF CUBES, NANCY MOORE, DEAN LANDEW, LYNDA MANDOLIN, DISTRICT 8, SUNBUZZ, KEVIN ROBERTSON, and SPARKLE*JETS U.K., plus THE FOUR TOPS, THE BYRDS, THE MONKEES, THE SHANG HI LOS, DAVID BOWIE, PAUL COLLINSTHE HANDCUFFS, DOLPH CHANEY, THE ISLEY BROTHERS, JOHNATHAN PUSHKAR, PRINCE, CYNDI LAUPER, CARLENE CARTER, P. P. ARNOLD, THE BAY CITY ROLLERS, IGGY POP, TAMAR BERK, THE SMITHEREENS, GLENN ERB, THE RAMONES, a teasing segue of THE FLASHCUBES into POP CO-OP, and more weekend than you can shake a Sunday at. Hey! Why NOT a nine-day weekend? On the nineth day: THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO WITH DANA AND CARL! Sunday night, 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FMhttps://sparksyracuse.org/, streaming on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. The weekend stops HERE!

Saturday, July 27, 2024

10 SONGS: 7/27/2024

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single. 

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1243.

THE MAVERICKS: True Love Ways
THE VILLAS: Someone To Hold On To
THE HALF CUBES: The Girl

July 21st. 

This week's show fell on the 40th anniversary of the day Brenda and I got married. We are still together, and together will shall remain. Happy Anniversary, Brenda!

Our wedding song was the lovely Buddy Holly ballad "True Love Ways." So we open this week's rockin' pop proceedings with the Mavericks' ace cover of "True Love Ways," segued into "Someone To Hold On To," the Villas' irresistible ode to finding the love of one's life (as heard on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 5), and wrappin' up our opening true-love tribute trifecta with the Half Cubes' remake of the Rubinoos' "The Girl," a track which recruits Rubinoos Jon Rubin and Tommy Dunbar to assist in establishing a beach head to hold on to true love ways. The girl. As a boy, that's all I ever want. My girl is Brenda.

It just so happens that Sunday was also Half Cubes singer and bassist Gary Frenay's 40th anniversary. HuzZAH, Gary and Jackie! See, now I understand why Brenda and I couldn't hire Gary to play at our wedding in '84. Priorities. I can dig that. And Dana and I will open our next TIRnRR with a brand-new single by the Half Cubes.

Meanwhile....

THE RUBINOOS: Nowhereseville

By the time you read this, I expect to be enjoying the afterbuzz of my first-ever Rubinoos show. I've been a fan since I was 17; 47 years is a long time to wait to see one of my favorite bands, but I betcha it was well worth the wait.

On this week's TIRnRR, I wanted to prep for last night's Rubinoos club show by playing some Rubinoos, and supplementing with a number of other tracks featuring Rubes guitarist Tommy Dunbar. The latter category included the Half Cubes number in our opening set, plus tracks by Duncan Faure, Vox Pop, Ken Sharp, Marty Rudnick, Scott McCarl, Kyle Vincent, and Suzy and Los Quattro

And for the evening's first Rubinoos spin, we opted for "Nowheresville," the track the Rubinoos allowed us to use on our 2017 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4. Here's what I wrote about "Nowhereseville" at the time:

...The music we listen to as teens can resonate throughout our lives, etched in memory alongside every eternal snub and accolade. In 1977, I was a seventeen-year-old senior at a high school in Syracuse's northern suburbs. I liked oldies better than most then-current music--the Beatles, the Monkees, the Dave Clark Five, the Animals, and my recent discovery, the Kinks--but I was also looking for new. I liked KISS. I liked "Cherry Baby" by Starz, and "Isn't It Time" by the Babys, "Carry On Wayward Son" by Kansas, Boston's debut LP, Sweet's Desolation Boulevard, and Rumours by Fleetwood Mac. Spurred by intriguing things I read in Phonograph Record Magazine, I would become a fan of the Ramones, the Sex Pistols, and Blondie before the end of the year, as this high school senior transformed into college freshman. But before the Ramones, or the Pistols, or my nascent hormonal devotion to Blondie's Debbie Harry, one group stood as the great teen hope. That group was the Rubinoos.

The Rubinoos were young, not much older than I was. They were on the radio, with a hit cover of Tommy James and the Shondells' "I Think We're Alone Now," and (on freer-form WOUR-FM) with a delectable album track called "Wouldn't It Be Nice." They were on TV, lip-syncing "I Think We're Alone Now" and "Rock And Roll Is Dead" on American Bandstand. They were revered in the pages of Phonograph Record Magazine, and they were one of the subjects of My First Rock Journalism. Their eponymous debut album was an absolutely essential purchase for me. God, I loved this band. That has never changed over the ensuing crashing and passing of four freakin' decades. I love the Rubinoos. I will always love the Rubinoos...

...[For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4], we initially selected a track called "This Is Good," a frothy li'l pop tune whose title provides its own spot-on review. But another song on the [This Is The Rubinoos] EP kept haunting the ol' consciousness. "Nowheresville" can best be described as pop noir, a shotgun marriage--well, more like a .45 automatic marriage--between a hardboiled crime paperback and Tiger Beat, Mickey Spillane meets Shaun Cassidy. And even that sells it short. It is a fully-realized slice of pure pulp, made pretty in spite of itself by the talent of the Rubinoos. Jon Rubin's unmistakable, irresistible voice soars, Tommy Dunbar's guitar twirls tastefully, while the lyrics could serve as a summary of something published by Gold Medal Books in the '50s or Hard Case Crime today. The one they call Honey was slurring her words/"Oh, why should we have to cut this thing in thirds?/I know the perfect patsy/Yeah, a pretty little bird/Who better to take the fall in Nowheresville?" Man, I would read that book, battered cover to battered cover, right now.

The juxtaposition of these extremes is somehow natural and flawless. How did the Rubinoos pull this off? In the words of Mike Hammer in Spillane's I, The Jury: It was easy.... 

KISS: Calling Dr. Love

Speaking of how the music we listen to as teens can resonate throughout our lives....

GLENN ERB: I Never Said Goodbye

The new Glenn Erb album Category Four comes to us courtesy of Friend To The Show Rich Rossi, who worked on the record and co-wrote all of the originals (not counting the cover of the Rolling Stones' "Gimme Shelter"). The album was produced by Jamie Hoover--THERE'S your pop pedigree!--and Rich thought we might wanna consider its opening track "Baby Is A Hurricane" for airplay on our little mutant radio show.

Instead, I was drawn to the closing track, "I Never Said Goodbye," a solid tale of a relationship reaching the end of its road. It makes its TIRnRR debut this week. It spins again on our next show. Say hello to Glenn Erb.

DEADLIGHTS: For Free

New single from Deadlights? Instant airplay, guaranteed. Good stuff, as always.

THE RUBINOOS: Wouldn't It Be Nice

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE RUBINOOS: I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend

ALSO The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE GRIP WEEDS: Lady Friend [vocals only mix]

Wow. Rubinoos playing in Rochester this week, the Grip Weeds in Syracuse last week. People should envy us. I envy us. The Grip Weeds put on a fantastic show at the Lost Horizon, and their cover of the Byrds' "Lady Friend" has become a perennial TIRnRR Fave Rave.

The Grip Weeds' full recording of "Lady Friend" is on their sublime 2021 covers album DiG. This lovely a cappella mix can be found on A Deeper DiG, the bonus third disc packaged with the DiG Super Deluxe Edition. That is, of course, the edition any self-respecting Grip Weeds fan will get.

So: Respect yourself! Here it comes again. Dig?

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available for order; you can see details here. My 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is also still available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Friday, July 26, 2024

THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! The Rubinoos, "Wouldn't It Be Nice"

This is not part of my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Probably should have been.

An infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Today, this is THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE!

THE RUBINOOS: Wouldn't It Be Nice
Written by James Gangwer and Tommy Dunbar
Produced by Gary Phillips, Glen Kolotkin, and Matthew King Kaufman
From the album The Rubinoos, Beserkley Records, 1977

All hope abandon ye who enter here

How can a crowded, chaotic hallway seem so empty? The tumult is palpable, its air heavy with sweat and hormones, its loudest rah-rah-sss-boom-bahs seeking to engulf and drown the square pegs alienated by its clamor. People, people, everywhere, and not a stop to think. 

In the middle of it all, he stood alone, quietly shutting his locker, willing himself into an anonymity he wasn't sure he wanted, but still a camouflage he was too intimidated to relinquish. Shuffle. Jostle. Ridicule. Scorn. If it were a movie, a paper airplane would sail his way and lodge itself--painfully--in his ear. 

But it wasn't a movie. It wasn't even real life. It was high school.

(And please don't tell me high school is real life. Surely our lives can aspire to something better than that.)

And he sees her. Again, as he sees her every day. The sight of her face restores an ember of the hope he was supposed to have abandoned. He thinks she's pretty. She thinks he's pretty. They connect in a way the tumult all around them cannot comprehend. They draw closer to each other. And she whispers in his ear:

Could you come over tonight? Nobody's home, nobody except me.

Are his eyes closed or open? Is this real? Can it be real? That is not for us to say.

But wouldn't it be nice?

I was 17 when I discovered the music of the Rubinoos. It was 1977, and I was nearing the end of my sentence to high school. The also-young members of the Rubinoos were on the radio with a cover of the Tommy James and the Shondells hit "I Think We're Alone Now." The Rubinoos' version just missed the Top 40 (# 45), so I may or may not have heard it on Syracuse's WOLF-AM. But I heard it, somewhere. I thought it compared well with my cherished memory of the Shondells.

I'm not sure if this cover of "I Think We're Alone Now" would have been enough to transform me so quickly into a Rubinoos fan. Perhaps not by itself, but there were other factors in play. I read about the Rubinoos in Phonograph Record Magazine. I saw them on American Bandstand. They were only a few years older than I was--maybe in their early twenties?--so they projected YOUTH!! in a way most other acts could not. 

Yeah. I was a fan, pretty much immediately. Rubinoos Forever!

And regardless of whether or not I heard the Rubinoos on AM radio, I know that I did hear them--perhaps incongruously--on FM in '77. Utica's WOUR-FM--The Rock Of Central New York--was a progressive station in the best sense, open to new things, new vistas. In this rough time frame, WOUR introduced me to the music of Graham Parker, Nick Lowe, and Greg Kihn, played LP tracks by the Kinks, Michael Nesmith, Joan Baez, and the J. Geils Band, and, in the summer of 1977, WOUR gave me my first listen to the Sex Pistols. WOUR could be as laid-back and mellow as the next guy. But clearly, they could also be much, much more.

Now, the Rubinoos were a proudly and avowedly pop combo. They were famously booed at '70s shows for covering the likes of the Partridge Family, and they reacted to the crowd's disdain by performing a freakin' Pepsi jingle. The Rubinoos were punk in every way except their sound and image. They were as cool as uncool could be.

And, one presumes, not cool enough for hipper heads at many (most?) progressive FM radio stations. I'm sure that WOUR wasn't the only exception, the only album-oriented rock station to understand the Rubinoos, to get it. But in MY area code, WOUR was the one that got it. Rubinoos on progressive FM? Damn straight, man.

WOUR played "Wouldn't It Be Nice," a track on the Rubinoos' eponymous debut LP in '77. It wasn't a Beach Boys cover, but an original, co-written by Rubes guitarist Tommy Dunbar (with James Gangwer). It shared some wish-for-bliss DNA with the Beach Boys song of the same title, and it shared a lot of earnest teen lust with the Tommy James gem that the Rubinoos covered for their ticket into the Billboard Hot 100.

Like "I Think We're Alone Now," the Rubinoos' "Wouldn't It Be Nice" employs an implied innocence to sweeten its driving urge for passion. Heavy petting sounds, if you will. The Shondells and Rubinoos songs are more discreet than, say, the horniest hits of the Raspberries, and far, far less blunt than the Knack's subsequent "My Sharona" and "Good Girls Don't." But the fact remains that's these are all songs about the joy of sex.

Or maybe the presumed joy of sex. Within the Beach Boys, Shondells, and Rubinoos tracks, the delight and anticipation approach a (roughly) age-appropriate rite of passage. Could you come over tonight?

With apologies to Janis Ian, I learned the truth at 17. I bought the Rubinoos' first album that summer, and picked up the second LP Back To The Drawing Board when it was released in 1979. Unrelated to that, this boy met girls who thought I was pretty. They acted accordingly.

I thought that was pretty nice.

1977 was a crucible year. I discovered the Ramones and the Runaways, Blondie and Television. I started dating, and I slipped the shackles of high school. The Rubinoos were an integral part of the soundtrack of this boy becoming...well, whatever it was I was going to become. "I Think We're Alone Now." "Rock 'n' Roll Is Dead." "As Long As I'm With You." "I Never Thought It Would Happen." "Nothing A Little Love Won't Cure." "1-2-3 Forever." "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend." "Wouldn't It Be Nice." More. The Rubinoos broke up. They came back. They're still as cool as anything ever.

I've wanted to see the Rubinoos in concert since I was 17. Science suggests that was a very, very long time ago. They're playing in Rochester tonight and, in the words of another cooler-than-cool rockin' pop combo, it's not hard, not far to reach. 

And I'm still 17 when I feel like being 17.

The sturm und drang of high-school hallways receded into the rubble of what no longer mattered (if they ever mattered in the first place). The boy and the girl looked into each other's eyes, as so many other boys and girls, and boys and boys, and girls and girls had done likewise over a span of always. Hands joined. Maybe lips met. Plans were made, plans with varying dates, dates with varying plans, but plans with one big, urgent thing in common:

TONIGHT!

I think we're alone now. Wouldn't it be nice to be together tonight? The boys and the girls believe this to be true. Let the chaos get its own girl. Tonight can't wait another minute. Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls: The Rubinoos.

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My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available for order; you can see details here. My 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is also still available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl