Bottom Feeders: The Ass End of the ’80s, Part 69 (Heh, Heh)

feeders52

This is one of the very few places where I can make a statement like “I was so excited to find a near-mint copy of the Electric Dreams soundtrack” and get reactions other than people calling me a dork under their breath.

There’s this very cool shop in Reading, Pennsylvania, called Vertigo Music that’s run by this cool indie girl (one day I’ll ask her her name so that I can stop saying, “You know … that store with the cool indie girl”). I stop by on many of my trips to that area. She’s got a nice pile of one-dollar records, and the better albums are very reasonably priced. A few weeks ago I located the soundtrack I mentioned above for $8, which to me is a steal for something I don’t think I’d ever seen before. I also was able to pick up the Nails’ Mood Swings (featuring their only hit, “88 Lines About 44 Women”), another album I’d been searching for a long time.

I mention this for two reasons. The first is because I know you’ll understand my excitement in finding two albums I’ve wanted in my collection forever. No one else really does, to be honest. Second, I feel the need to let the world know about this place. In my area, just finding a record store is difficult, but when you walk into one that’s clean, inviting, well organized, and has a great selection of music without being overwhelming … well, it begs some attention. I’m assuming she does more business through her Gemm site than in-store, but if you’re ever in Reading, you should definitely stop in and check it out. The world needs more of these types of record stores.

Anyway, how about some more songs from artists whose names begin with the letter P, as we take a look at the bottom feeders — songs that charted at #41 or lower — from the Billboard Hot 100 chart during the 1980s.

Poco
Under the Gun” — 1980, #48 (download)
“Midnight Rain” — 1980, #74 (download)
“Shoot for the Moon” — 1982, #50 (download)
“Days Gone By” — 1984, #80 (download)

Poco had seven songs hit the Hot 100 in the ‘70s, and most of those were Bottom Feeders too. Almost all of them also had some combo of Richie Furay, Jim Messina, Randy Meisner, and Timothy B. Schmit on them. The Poco of the ’80s had none of those guys; guitarist Rusty Young is the only member to have been there from the start. Singer Paul Cotton replaced Messina in 1971 and can be heard on these songs. I’ve never really picked up a Poco album voluntarily, but these songs certainly count as harmless dinnertime background music.

Buster Poindexter
“Hot Hot Hot” — 1987, #45 (download)

Olé, ohh-lé! Olé, ohh-lé! This is former New York Dolls singer David Johansen’s only hit song – a cover of the Arrow original. From what I’ve read over the years, Buster is a bit tired of it at this point, as it’s the only thing he gets recognized for.

Pointer Sisters
“Could I Be Dreaming” — 1980, #52 (download)
“If You Wanna Get Back Your Lady” — 1983, #67 (download)
“I Need You” — 1983, #48 (download)
“Baby Come and Get It” — 1985, #44 (download)
“Freedom” — 1985, #59 (download)
“Twist My Arm” — 1986, #83 (download)
“All I Know Is the Way I Feel” — 1987, #73 (download)
“Be There” — 1987, #42 (download)

Pointer Sisters I hope you like the Pointer Sisters, because you’ve got enough tracks here to put together a typical ‘80s-length CD. Unfortunately, unless you were a true fan, I’d be shocked if you knew more than two of these songs. Everyone knows “I’m So Excited,” “Jump (For My Love),” and “Neutron Dance,” but this is a group where the lesser singles really didn’t stand the test of time.

None of the songs here are even that good, though at least “If You Wanna Get Back Your Lady” is slightly recognizable: it was the final charting single from the So Excited LP. The strange track here is “I Need You,” which was the first single off their smash-hit album Break Out. The three songs mentioned in the first paragraph were all from this album as well, and went top ten. I’m completely baffled how such a generic track was the lead single on an album that had can’t-miss hits on it.

“Baby Come and Get It” was the fifth single from Break Out, and was written by James Ingram. While “Be There” is also a pretty bad song, it fits right in on the Beverly Hills Cop II soundtrack, which came out three years after the Pointers contributed “Neutron Dance” to the original Cop’s soundtrack.

(Okay, so I’ve gone back and listened to these songs quite a bit since I wrote these ladies up, and I think I was generous when I said, “None of the songs here are even that good.” They all suck.)

Poison
“I Want Action” — 1987, #50 (download)

Poison I was initially shocked to see that Poison didn’t have more songs in this series. Then I was even more shocked to see that “I Want Action” was the one. But then again, I think back to how big Poison was just one year later and maybe it shouldn’t come as a surprise. And while these guys are super easy to pick on for being the prototypical hair metal band, I’m not going to — because I loved them just as much as you did. Even songs from 1990’s Flesh and Blood like “Ride the Wind” and “Life Goes On” went Top 40 and maybe I’d recognize them if I heard them, but by title I have no idea what they are.

Now, of course, Bret Michaels is a whore (but frankly, if I was single and was offered a job where the main premise is to hook up with rock skanks for years, I’d do it too). But this is nothing compared to the travesty of recording a “rock” version of Justin Timberlake’s “Sexyback” in 2007. If the love bus didn’t do it, this certainly stripped him of his rock-cred card.

Apparently there’s a gangsta rapper out there now going by the name of Poison. He raps in French. Look him up on iTunes for a laugh. Gangsta rap in French doesn’t translate well.

Police
“Message in a Bottle” — 1979, #74 (download)
“Secret Journey” — 1982, #46 (download)
“Don’t Stand So Close to Me ‘86” — 1986, #46 (download)

Police Boy, we really run the gamut here. Who would have expected “Message in a Bottle” to top out at #74? (It peaked on the Hot 100 near the end of ‘79, but for the week of January 5, 1980, it was at #100, so it makes the cut for this series.) Who would have expected that the very un-radio-friendly “Secret Journey” was a single? And who would have expected something as utterly blasphemous as the 1986 butchering of “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” even exists?

The only reason I can understand radio stations playing “Secret Journey” is that it was simply another song by the untouchable Police. I don’t blame them for jumping on the “Don’t Stand So Close to Me ‘86” bandwagon, but I’m dismayed it got as high as #46, though it did get as high as #10 on my Bottom 80 Songs of the ‘80s list. It’s simply an unnecessary and brutal remake of an absolutely classic song.

Gary Portnoy
“Where Everybody Knows Your Name” — 1983, #83 (download)

Gary Portnoy has released a couple albums and written some songs for other people, but he’ll be forever known as the guy who sang the theme song to Cheers, which he cowrote with Judy Hart Angelo. They also wrote the theme songs for Mr. Belvedere, sung by Leon Redbone, and Punky Brewster, sung by Portnoy. (”I’m RICH, bitch!” –Ed.)

Powersource
“Dear Mr. Jesus” — 1987, #61 (download)

Somehow this one only checked in at #32 on my Bottom 80 Songs of the ‘80s list. Surprisingly, I’ve never taken any heat for putting a sincere song about preventing child abuse in my “unholy trilogy” (no, I’m not even remotely calling Powersource unholy — they were essentially a Christian-music ministry … but it works!). The other two songs in the trilogy, if you haven’t been around for Bottom Feeders from the beginning, are Toni Basil’s “Shoppin’ From A to Z” and Steve Miller’s “Bongo Bongo.”

A few radio stations actually played this on their own, but it became a hit when, around the same time as its release in 1987, a girl named Lisa Steinberg was beaten to death by her adoptive father, Joel. I get the message and why it was played in the wake of that tragedy, but I’m still allowed to rip it because it’s fucking creepy. Face it — it really is kind of alarming to hear this little six-year-old girl talking about being beaten, and it not only sends shivers up my spine every time I hear it, but it’s totally a mood killer in any given iPod shuffle. And before right-wing Christians knock down my door, I want to state for the record that I’m talking about the quality of the song itself, not the message. Child abuse = BAD. Powersource = WORSE.

Elvis Presley
“The Elvis Medley” — 1982, #71 (download)

Well, with the surge of medleys in the ‘80s, this was bound to happen. And I mean, I can’t really say much about classic Elvis songs, but this mix is perhaps the worst of all the various mixes in the decade, probably because most of the other ones seem to be tied together via some backbeat that made transitions seemless. This is simply just one song stopping and the next one starting. I don’t get the album of the same name either (well, I get it – money) as this medley is six songs long. The album then includes these six songs in their entirety, in order. It’s then followed up with “Always on My Mind,” “Heartbreak Hotel,” and “Hard Headed Woman.” If you’re going to tack on three major hits at the end, why the fuck weren’t they in the medley? I guess it would have taken us to the five minute mark, which would have just been too much Elvis for the radio. Yeah.

QUICK HITS
Best song: Police, “Message in a Bottle”
Worst song: Police, “Don’t Stand So Close to Me ‘86”

TOP 40 ONLY
Point Blank (1); Bonnie Pointer (1); Mike Post (2); Power Station (3)

Next week we finish up the letter P with my favorite artist of all time.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

  • jack
    The Powersource song is the strongest argument for creating playlists on your iPod. I'm imagining a scenario in which you bring a woman home, put the Pod on shuffle and start making out. Barry White goes to Marvin Gaye goes to... Powersource.

    You'll be taking her home now.
  • Oh, wait. So you're supposed to alienate and creep-out the ladies AFTER you've taken them back to your place? So THAT'S what I've been doing wrong all these years!
  • tvh
    "The only reason I can understand radio stations playing “Secret Journey” is that it was simply another song by the untouchable Police."

    Well put. Great tune--weird single.
  • Is this the first time that best song and worst song were from the same group?
  • Yes, that is a first. I can't imagine it happening again either.
  • luffy66
    Don't stand so close to me '86 was included on their greatest hits. Their intention was to remake all of their big hits, but we were spared of this idea when Sting (or was is Copeland) broke his arm.

    Even worse was the version that the Police did on their reunion tour a couple of years back. It was a cross between the newer version and the old version. It somehow made it even way suckier than the remake. (Otherwise an awesome show)
  • Stewart broke his collarbone playing polo. Andy hoped there'd be a spark between the three guys once they started playing, but Stewart couldn't play the drums with his arm in a sling, and Sting and Stewart still weren't getting along, so that was that. The plan was to record new versions of "Don't Stand So Close" and "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da," but they only made it through the first song. Here's an article about those sessions that's pretty interesting:

    http://www.tookooltokalypso.org/dssctm.html

    Nice work as always, Dave! I had no idea Gary Portnoy cowrote those other TV theme songs.
  • I love Secret Journey, but I'm releasing Rehumanize Yourself or Demolition Man as a single before Secret Journey.

    Wow, that Powersource song is bad. "What? It doesn't sound manipulative enough? Get a choir of kids in there for the chorus."

    Just got to the metal guy singing at the end. Ahhhhh hahahahahahahaha!
  • Also, Buster Poindexter = El Diablo.
  • I have to believe they released "Secret Journey" based on the good feedback coming from "Invisible Sun" - both songs are, tonally, quite similar. I also have to say that while everyone falls over themselves to praise Synchronicity, Ghost In The Machine was The Police in top form.
  • yo, Ghost In the Machine is fucking AWESOME. I mean, I love all their stuff, but yeah.
  • Eric_in_Baltimore
    Nice. My younger sister and one of her friends performed a duet dance at a recital to the strains of Toni Basil's "Shoppin' from A to Z" The song was bad enough, but when your little sister is practicing endlessly to a tape of it, I can tell you it becomes something far more sinister.
  • Happy to see you made it past that hell. I'm sure it scarred you pretty bad though.
  • WHarrisBullzEye
    C'mon, Steed, I'd finally managed to purge all memories of "Dear Mr. Jesus," and now you've brought them all rushing back. AAAAARRRRGGGGHHHH!!!!!!!

    I'd never heard Poco's "Shoot for the Moon" before today, but I'm definitely digging it...even if it IS basically just Eagles Lite.

    The Police's "Secret Journey" doesn't strike me as that strange a choice for a single. It's a little quirky, but it only takes one listen to hear that it's from the same band that brought you "Spirits in the Material World," which was probably all the label cared about, anyway.

    And I won't even pretend that I don't like Poison's "I Want Action." I like virtually everything on their debut. It's just good old fashioned bubblegum metal.
  • jeff
    it's amazing just how awful 'don't stand so close to me' (86) really is.
    what's even more amazing is how much worse it sounded live during the police's 'no room for spontaneity' reunion tour last year.

    why someone just couldn't say, 'hey, this doesn't sound so great... let's play "the bed's too big without you instead,"' is beyond me.
  • kingofgrief
    This week's Meltie could be tossed up between "Hot Hot Hot" and "Message in a Bottle", though like you, I'm more surprised "Message" charted that poorly than anything else.

    I have a friend who prefers the '86 retooling of "Don't Stand"...he claims it sounds more appropriately menacing than the original. As for me, I'll actually defend the 12" remix, as I did here.

    Those early Pointers songs ain't that bad, but I admit "Could I Be Dreaming" is little more than a clone of the Jacksons' "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)". "I Need You" truly was an ankle-twister out of the gate for that album; Hysteria is the only other record I can immediately compare that situation to. And I've always dug "Baby Come and Get It", though that might have been hormones at play.

    I've been waiting for "The Elvis Medley" to come around. As a fan (still to this day), I bought that 45, even though I made better Elvis medleys (one uptempo, one ballad, all 50s/early 60s tunes) on my stereo at home. It did give you the original, full-length "Always on My Mind" on the flip, so it wasn't a total loss. (Likewise for "I'm Happy Just to Dance With You" backing "The Beatles' Movie Medley".)

    FAIL on the single version of "Where Everybody Knows your Name". The rendition I heard every week was simple, even poignant, rare for a TV theme. With the extra synths and gear change, it just doesn't sound that NORM!-al. (Sorry.)

    After hearing friends and family talk about it for over two decades, I finally get to hear "Dear Mr. Jesus". I'll leave it at this: Suzanne Vega addressed the topic in a better, less cloying manner. And for a creepy record featuring a girl under 10, nothing that crosses my ears will ever top this. Want me to send you an mp3 'round Christmastime, Steed?
  • One of my buddies told me last night that he prefers the '86 version as well - I don't understand how.

    Thanks for the offer of little Becky and her lambs - normally I'd pass but how can I say no to that experience.
  • kingofgrief
    Check your email the week of Thanksgiving. I digitized both sides.
  • kingofgrief
    BTW, since you mentioned a cool record store in the intro (which i will hit should I ever wind up in reading), here's some info about the VERY cool record store in Tuscon where i finally found the Becky Lamb record. The wife and I stopped in the area during our honeymoon odyssey last year. http://www.yelp.com/biz/twist-and-shout-records-tucson
  • The '80s was a weird decade, wasn't it? I can't imagine a TV show theme becoming a hit anymore, and I can't imagine anyone listening to the Cheers theme particularly for musical pleasure. It's not horrible, but it's not actually a song either.

    And don't bring up the Friends theme to counterpoint me - that's not a song. That's just evil.
  • Can I bring up The Heights?
  • Can I bring up my lunch?
  • breadalbane
    I bet if they released the theme to CSI, rock radio would be all over it.
  • Yeah! I bet they totally would go --- Hey! Waitaminnit!!
  • Jen
    Oh sweet Jesus on a triscuit. I had convinced myself that wretched "Dear Mr. Jesus" song was a nightmare. Thanks. I'm gonna go crawl under the bed and suck my thumb now.
  • Sharon
    Ironically, I didn't know Gary Portnoy sang "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", nor do I even remember Gary Portnoy, though I could recite the entire theme for the opening of Cheers. And I used to call myself an 80s fanatic. Shame on me! I'm merely an 80's fan now. I learn so much on Popdose.
  • Keith629
    I agree that Secret Journey is not radio friendly, and I'm reminded of how much I hate the term radio friendly. Maybe that is why I have such an affinity for this period in radio history. Pretty much anything goes, as a glance at the chart shows on May 15, 1982, when Secret Journey peaked. Everything from Aldo Nova, to Haircut 100, to Ronnie Milsap. Stations back then had a local program director, and playlists 50 current titles deep. Now the same 20 songs are heard everywhere, over and over and over. I used to fall asleep with the radio on, and Secret Journey reminds me of that feeling of being half awake yet not fully conscious.
  • There was a time when, really, the only requirements to radio friendliness was to have a decent beat and not say "fuck" and "shit". Now, to be radio friendly, you have to have the exact same beat as everyone else and say "fuck" and "shit" a couple dozen times.

    We're through the looking glass, people.
  • Elaine
    I just want to know who your all-time favorite artist is. Is he 5'nothin in purple heels and shreds like a mofo on guitar?
  • And now and then brings out the Purple assless chaps...yep, that'd be him.
  • See, I was with you until you had to bring up the flossed hams.
  • sneezebag
    "Flossed hams"?!? Oh, good god! But yeah, Mr. formerly unpronounceable still is heavy shit. His bottom feeders were sometimes his best singles. "Flossed hams." I'm still laughing...
  • wow, I'm late to the party this week. Um...my cat ate my homework?

    I share your excitement in your opening paragraph. This past winter, I found the Oakey/Moroder title track 12" in a "free" box outside some vintage store. I went through the entire box, and came out with over 50 records. And this was AFTER I had gone to the library and checked out a shit ton of books and DVDs, so my backpack was full. I spent the next 20 minutes walking awkwardly through South Philly carrying a ridiculously goofy looking, and somewhat weighty stack of 54 records home. Good times, but maaaan, the gems I found that day. You'd probably love most of them. Put it this way- we've probably discussed a good bit of them the past 69(heh heh) weeks here. Mostly 80s new wave, funk, freestyle, and pop. Good times.

    Oh hey! There are songs to talk about here! Now then...

    The Pointer Sisters had some good ones, but I'm bummed about your lack of inclusion of "Automatic" in naming their hits. OK, it was earlier and not part of the trio that had them all over the radio in the mid-80s. But I think it's better, and is the only Pointers tune you'll ever hear spun at one of my gigs. Every once in awhile, I'll be tickled by the notion of playing "Neutron Dance" but I haven't given in to the temptation yet.

    Poison. Not gonna lie, I love Look What the Cat Dragged In. They had a couple of good tunes on the following records, but no good albums besides that first one. "I Want Action" is a fun tune. Oh, and regarding your lack of knowledge - "Ride the Wind" is one of their better songs from the later years. "Life Goes On" is alright, but frankly, I'm shocked either of them cracked the top 40. I don't remember them getting much airplay, and they came out after Poison had pretty much run their course(and run through a couple more guitarists). Did "Cry Tough" chart at all?

    If I never hear "Hot, Hot, Hot" again, I'll die a happy man.

    The Police are pretty much the greatest band of all time. HOLY FUCKING SHIT, "MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE" ONLY WENT *THAT* FAR?!?!?!?! Sorry, but...dude, seriously? WOW. Did it get re-released or anything and go to number one or something? I cannot fathom this. "Secret Journey" is a really, really, really great song...but yeah, not really tailored for radioplay. I am on your side when it comes to "Dont Stand..86." Awful. Really, what were they thinking? Jeez.

    I now have the theme song for Cheers stuck in my head. Thanks a lot. NOOORRRM!

    Hey, what was Power Station's 3rd single? "Some Like It Hot" and "Get It On(Bang a Gong)" obviously..what am I overlooking? It wasn't something with that ill fated second singer (I don't care if JT introduced him to Sonny Crockett, dude cannot roll in Robert Palmer's shoes!), was it?

    I am so stoked to talk about your (and my!) favorite..."artist"(see what I did there) next week!!!!
  • Keith629
    Power Station's 3rd single was with Robert Palmer, "Communication" went to #34.
  • sneezebag
    Concerning the Police, I remember when I first obtained a Billboard book of the Hot 100 singles and was aghast that "Message" only hit #74. Then I thought about it and realized that I'd only really gotten familiar with the Police - and that particular song - after "Zenyatta Mondatta" broke them into the top 10 on the singles and the album charts in 1980.
    Around Christmas 1979, a buddy of mine rode his bike to my house with his LP copy of "Reggatta de Blanc". (Remember when you did that sort of thing, and how great it was to bond over listening to eachother's music? We really made the effort back then. I think it was freezing cold and maybe even snowing that day, and he still stuck that record in a backpack and biked three miles to my house.) Well, this kid didn't have a whole lot of records (we were both 13 and broke, of course) but he consciously got this one, and I recall thinking it was a rather edgy, bold choice. It was one of the first "new wave" albums I heard. I liked it, but didn't really come to love it until a year or so later. Nationally, it's the same story. The Police did well enough to have a hit album and single, but in a modest sense. The album only got to #25 at the time. So there were enough people hip enough to make them success, but it would still be awhile until they were stars. In 1979, they were still sort of a cult band in the US. I've got a US A&M single of "Bring On The Night"/"Visions Of The Night" that didn't chart or even bubble under the Hot 100. It would be the last single they released to fail to chart. After they hit it big, it seemed like all their singles must've been big hits, but it just wasn't the case. Not on AM radio, at least.
    By the way, the week "Message" peaked (Dec. 22, 1979) was the week "Escape (the Pina Colada Song)" went to #1, which oughta tell you something about the irrelevancy of chart positions - and public tastes.
  • Oh man, I hear that. The excitement when a new/upcoming release leaks online just isn't the same, haha
  • Yes, "Communication". Another really good song - but does anyone remember it? It certainly didn't have the impact of "Get It On" or "Some Like It Hot" - God, I love Robert Palmer though.

    I too was shocked "Message in a Bottle" only went that far - I mean, it's just as popular now as any other of their "major" hits. For my collection I never paid much attention because it was only on the first chart of the decade, but I love that it's here - never hurts to add a good song to the bunch.

    I'm going to pull out the Poison record and listen to those two tonight. "Life Goes On" has such a generic title that I very well could know it - but I'm really curious to see if I know the two of them. I think I have to - I can't believe that I would have missed any Poison songs from that era.
  • Oh and Chris - I've been that guy carrying 50 records down from the record exchange to the 3rd street parking garage. It's a hell of a walk with 25 pounds of records sliding left and right.
  • haha yeah. It was easily a 15 minute walk, I also happened to walk past my girlfriend's place of employment at the time, she saw me out the window, and the "what the fuck?!" look on her face as I stumbled by was priceless.
  • MD
    Behold, the official music video for "Dear Mr. Jesus":
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT_xEye3b3M
    The overwrought guy who comes in at the end is even more ridiculous with the visual.
  • You are evil. Pure evil, MD. :)
blog comments powered by Disqus