Night Moves: Pop Music in the Late '70s
By Don Breithaupt and Jeff Breithaupt
()
About this ebook
The late 1970s brought us an eclectic mix of popular music--everything from big hits (and even bigger hair) to cult favorites, along with the dawn of disco and punk, the coming of corporate rock, the rise of reggae and new wave, and some of the most progressive, inventive songwriting of the century.
Whether you cranked up your radio for Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, Supertramp, the Bee Gees, Talking Heads, Rickie Lee Jones, or Earth, Wind and Fire, you'll relive those heady days with this compulsively readable, behind-the-scenes account of the "Frampton years," an era when pop became very big business. It's all here, from ABBA to Zevon. Night Moves by Don Breithaupt and Jeff Breithaupt is a feisty, funny volume that will leave pop fans of every stripe feeling Reunited, Afternoon Delight-ed, and Still Crazy After All These Years.
Don Breithaupt
Don Breithaupt, a three-time Juno Award nominee, is a musician and journalist. He is the coauthor of Night Moves: Pop Music in the Late '70s. He lives in Bolton, Ontario.
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Night Moves - Don Breithaupt
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Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Epigraph
A New Preface
Foreword by Joe Jackson
Introduction
Bar Wars • Disco
Take the Money and Run • Pop
Wild and Crazy Guys • Novelty Records
Last Tango • Early Seventies, Continued
Mr. Bill • Billy Joel
Sweathog Nation • Bubblegum
Boogiespeak • Buzzwords
Family Feud • Fleetwood Mac
The Six Million Dollar Tan • West Coast Pop
A Little Bit Country, a Little Bit Rock and Roll • The Eagles
Artificial Heart • Corporate Rock
Bicentennial Blues • Bruce Springsteen
Logical Songs • Progressive Pop
Future Legend • David Bowie
Wavelengths • Singer-Songwriters
Carly’s Angel • James Taylor
Coolsville • Rickie Lee Jones
The Girls in the Plastic Bubbles • Divas
Platinum Bland • MOR
The Wonder Years • Soul
Movin’ On Up • Corporate Soul
Sgt. Pepper’s How Can You Mend a Broken Heart
Club Band • Bee Gees
The Linen • Soft Rock
Dazed and Confused • Rock
No Static At All • Steely Dan
Sax and Violins • Corporate Jazz
The Clinton Administration • Funk
Funk the World • Earth, Wind and Fire
The Doobie Brother • Bob Marley
Meltdown • Punk
A Flock of Haircuts • New Wave
Revenge of the Nerd • Elvis Costello
Conclusion
Appendixes
Bibliography
Artist Index
Also by Don Breithaupt and Jeff Breithaupt
Copyright
For Rikki and the boys, my deeper music
—D.B.
For Shelley and her big, beautiful spirit
—J.B.
Acknowledgments
Thanks to Mom and Dad for everything, but especially for relinquishing control of the car radio for an entire decade; Ross, this endeavor’s silent partner; Shelley and Rikki for their love and support (and input); Marian Lizzi for her patience, enthusiasm, and insightful edits; Joe Jackson; Clair Moritz; Donald Lehr; Dave Donald; Paul Kellogg; Miss Walton; Joel Whitburn; BPI Communications, Inc.; NARAS; the record labels.
Put on the radio. Light up a cigarette. You are a normal citizen. Fiddle among the stations. Find a good tune.
—Leonard Cohen
Death of a Lady’s Man, 1978
Preface
Eighteen years gives you plenty of time to change your mind, especially in an area like your musical taste, which is, almost by definition, in constant flux. That’s why, upon rereading our two ’70s pop books after a long absence, we were pleasantly surprised to find that, by and large, we agreed with ourselves. Sure, I Gotcha
may not have been as good as we thought (and Silly Love Songs
not as bad), but slowly, surely, the Me Decade has acquired the cultural respect it never had while it was actually, um, Going On.
When we started Precious and Few, it was something of a reclamation project. The ’70s had been passed over in the popular imagination in favor of endless boomer-fueled fetishizing of the ’60s. At this writing, though, the pop pendulum seems to have swung forward. Despite having produced its share of Top-40 outlandishness (what decade hasn’t?), the ’70s saw many of the rock era’s greatest artists at the peak of their powers. Amid a cultural landscape strewn with distractions—goofy fads, bad hair, president’s men—Al Green, Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan, Stevie Wonder, David Bowie, Carole King, Marvin Gaye, Led Zeppelin, Gladys Knight, Randy Newman, Pink Floyd, Bruce Springsteen, Laura Nyro, Bob Marley, and many others produced their most enduring work.
And then there were all those singular singles, rotating 45 times per minute over the AM airwaves, still spinning now, nearly 45 years on. For every muskrat in love, every duck at the disco, every dead skunk in the middle of the road, that multifarious era, with its unfettered, yet-to-be-formatted radio dial, also made room for a treasure trove of one-offs, records that, even without the life-prolonging force of nostalgia, have held up on their own merits. One-hit wonders like Mr. Big Stuff,
Spirit in the Sky,
O-o-h Child,
Resurrection Shuffle,
Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl),
Me and Mrs. Jones,
Rock On,
Hang on in There Baby,
Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo,
Funky Nassau: Part 1,
Be Thankful for What You Got,
and Dancing in the Moonlight,
to name a few, sound as fresh today as they did then.
They also provided the initial spark for these two volumes. When we rediscovered them as young adults, these songs were our nostalgia delivery systems, our very own petites madeleines. But as with Proust’s plump little cakes,
which initially inspired his protagonist to flights of sentimental joy, each taste of the tea-dipped sweets—each listen to a dearly loved single—gives rather less than
the one before, like a potion losing its magic.
The initial wistful thrill of rediscovery we experienced hearing those records for the first time in many years has, inevitably, worn off: all that’s left is the music. But that’s okay. Eighteen years after the first of these books was published, and 43 years after the summer of 1971—that childhood moment when we first grasped the explosive potential in a three-minute pop song—that seems more than enough.
By the time we wrote Precious and Few and Night Moves, vinyl had long been moribund, and the music we were revisiting had long since been digitized. Now we find ourselves (nostalgically? yes) revisiting our books because they, too, are making the move to digital. Things change. But the songs? The songs remain the same.
Foreword
THE LATE SEVENTIES
Joe Jackson
I hate nostalgia.
In my early teens, I rolled my eyes as my mother sighed over the lack of dance-halls in our home town. Why, there were dozens before the war; Hitler’s bombers blasted most of them to bits and the ones that were left turned into bingo parlors or worse. What did I care? I was a Beethoven fanatic.
By my late teens, I was a Bowie fanatic, and people in their thirties sneered. Rock’n’roll, the real rock’n’roll, was already dead for them. It died along with that magical decade, the sixties, and the seventies was a musical wasteland. I rolled my eyes again.
Much more recently, I’ve had arguments with people who think that electronic dance music is not music at all. The real music, they say, was back in the seventies, when people had to play real instruments. Guitars, for instance, even though most of the spiky-haired upstarts you saw in punk bands at the time barely knew how to strap them on and plug them in, let alone tune them up. I seem to remember a few arguments about that, too.
Please, God, let no one’s eyes roll when I talk about the past. I’m really more interested in Right Now, which for all I know might be a Golden Age—it’s hard to judge when you’re in the middle of it. Chance distributes talent unevenly, creating the impression of peaks and troughs. From a more objective distance, though, every musical epoch seems to contain about the same proportion of the good, the bad, and the yawningly mediocre.
So I’m not going to claim that the late seventies were better than now. In a lot of ways they were worse. A shaky economy, high unemployment, racial unrest, and we didn’t even have e-mail. Instead I’ll have to talk about how they were different.
It was an edgy, exciting time. The pace of musical change was accelerating, although new styles still took a bit longer to catch on than they do now. They still erupted on the street and worked their way upwards, established themselves a bit before they had a chance to be bastardized and exploited. Now, at the turn of the century, acceleration is a constant, and there’s no resistance. Someone invents a new beat, a new sound, and the following week, you hear it in a car commercial.
In the late seventies there was still enough resistance for the Sex Pistols to be truly shocking. Anarchists who weren’t so much creating music as doing their damnedest to actually destroy it. A kind of upside-down logic comes into play here: the Pistols ultimately failed because they succeeded. God Save the Queen
went to Number One despite being banned by the BBC—and one thing you can always bet on is that if something is profitable, the entertainment industry will find a way to absorb it. And if the Sex Pistols could be absorbed, then anything could. Hence another kind of nostalgia, for a time when being rebellious was actually rebellious. Or perhaps that’s really nostalgia for being rebellious in a certain way.
I was in my early twenties when all this happened. And being in my early twenties, and having just moved to London, I was caught up in it all in a way that I might not have been if I’d been born, say, ten years earlier. In London in 1977, you could have found me most weeks at a frantic, sweaty club called the Vortex. I saw bands there whose names we’ve all forgotten, thrashing their instruments almost to pieces, while the crowd smashed and slammed and jerked each other up and down with chains or dog collars. And spat, too. Gobbing
at the performers was all part of the fun, or all part of some nihilistic hate ritual—I was never quite sure which. As I watched one band, the singer opened his mouth wide and, just as he let out a blood-curdling scream, a thick gob of phlegm sailed right into the back of his throat. He spent the next five minutes assaulting nearby members of the audience with his mike stand—it must have been one of you bastards!—as the spit kept coming. I wonder what happened to that guy. He never achieved immortality as a glamorous junkie suicide, but he probably had a dose of hepatitis to be proud of.
But I’m getting carried away here: Punk was not the only thing happening in the late seventies, just the most colorful. We’re all guilty of categorizing eras and genres in simplistic ways. We don’t have time for the messy reality, which in the case of the late seventies in the U.K., was that you could do pretty much anything you wanted as long as you didn’t wear flares. In the United States, even that stricture didn’t seem to apply. Nineteen seventy-seven was the year of the Ramones, but also the year of Foreigner, Styx, the Commodores, and Donna Summer. As the Pistols excoriated the Queen’s fascist regime,
Crystal Gayle pleaded with someone not to make her brown eyes blue, and Joe Tex vowed never to bump no more with no big fat woman.
Despite this dizzying variety, things were, in some ways, simpler. No Internet, no computer games, no MTV, no DVD, just records and gigs. But they seemed really important, and not only because we had fewer distractions. Rivalries were fiercer then, too, and short hair versus long was not just a fashion footnote but a major tribal distinction. Older rockers snarled at younger ones, like recently empowered eighteen-year-olds who’d rather die than play with their little brothers. But rockers of all ages lined up against R&B and dance music. On my first American tour, in 1979, people kept giving me buttons that said DISCO SUCKS. I didn’t have the heart to tell them that I actually rather liked it.
I was touring, of course, because my first album—recorded in the summer of 1978—had finally been released. I was the right age in the right place at the right time, and I was inflamed enough by the so-called New Wave to tailor my music at least superficially to the zeitgeist. Basically this meant stripping it down to just guitar, bass and drums, and keeping it as simple as possible. More sophisticated ideas would have to wait till later. Now it can be revealed: I was a graduate of the Royal Academy of Music, but I tried very hard to keep that a secret.
On that same first tour, we played homemade tapes of obscure heavy reggae in between sets. Reggae was cool in London. Naive and arrogant, we wanted to educate the Yanks, who were only just starting to notice Bob Marley.
By 1980, bands like Madness and the Specials were reinventing ska. Genres and subgenres were multiplying like hyperactive amoebas. In retrospect, the late seventies looks more than anything else like a time of fragmentation. The style wars were so passionate and bewildering that it would have been hard, then, to imagine anyone tackling it all in one book. But here you are holding that book in your hand, and within its pages, the Clash are at last united with Meat Loaf, Chic, and the Village People by the only force that could ever have united them: chronology.
The late seventies created a musical climate in which anything could happen next … and didn’t. The eighties by comparison, seemed dull. The nineties were much more interesting. But that’s just my opinion, and we’ve probably had enough of that for now.
Enjoy this little vacation in the musical past. Just try not to get stuck there.
Introduction
When the nostalgic go searching for the late 1970s’ heart of darkness, they might imagine that the compound at the end of the river will be crawling with blow-dried discophiles and peroxide punkers. Picture a world of both polyester and safety pins, Harvey Wallbangers and heroin, where a Carter-era Colonel Kurtz leads his followers in prayer: Boogie oogie oogie—bollocks!
The truth is at once more mundane and more complicated. Though punk and disco do represent the extremes of the late-seventies popular culture, they are hardly its heart. For that we need to revisit platinum-selling megastars like the Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, ABBA, Peter Frampton, and the Bee Gees. The era’s bona fide creative movements grew out of a few grimy nightclubs in New York and London, but its commercial center was the football stadiums of middle America.
The late seventies, after all, were about nothing if not bigness. From the Concorde to the Howard Hughes estate, from Bigfoot to Roots, the world was attuned to the concept of being first, biggest, best. In the music business, words like event,
blockbuster,
and multiplatinum
were bandied about freely, as though there were no tomorrow (there was, and its name was MTV). Sales records were broken and rebroken as pop touchstones (Hotel California, Rumours, Minute by Minute), future classic-rock staples (Bat Out of Hell, Boston, Frampton Comes Alive!), and slick movie soundtracks (Saturday Night Fever, Grease, A Star Is Born) reasserted the commercial supremacy of white American pop, and the concert business expanded to match. Dickey Lee’s 9,999,999 Tears
(1976) exponentially one-upped? [Question Mark] and the Mysterians’ hit 96 Tears
(1966). The Bee Gees notched seven number-one singles—seven more than elite songwriters like Bruce Springsteen, Kate Bush, Neil Young, and Elvis Costello could manage. Paralleling the path