Classic Rock Bottom

1980

Music Highlights...

  • February 14 – Billy Idol leaves the band Generation X to begin a solo career.
  • April 11 – Van Halen's lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen marries actress Valerie Bertinelli. (And this killed me!! I was going to marry her!)
  • April 27 – Ringo Starr and Barbara Bach marry, in London, England. (Out goes my backup plan!!)
  • June 4 – U2 appears on the Tomorrow show with Tom Snyder, their first U.S. television appearance.
  • June 5 - The TV series Night Flight, a variety show featuring music documentaries and videos, premieres on the USA Network.
  • August 1 – MTV debuts on cable television in the United States, playing music videos 24 hours a day.
  • October 26 - Iron Maiden plays its first show with Bruce Dickinson as the new lead singer in Bologna, Italy.
  • December 18 - An estimated 35 million people around the world watch a live satellite transmission of a Rod Stewart concert at the Los Angeles Forum. It is the first broadcast of its kind since Elvis Presley's "Aloha from Hawaii" special in 1973.
  • Ozzy Osbourne bites the head off a dove at a record label gathering.
  • Alice Cooper drastically changes his appearance, leaving behind his trademark make-up and donning a military uniform.
  • Brad Whitford leaves Aerosmith and is replaced by Rick Dufay.
  • Starland Vocal Band broke up (Sorry Jon, hate to re-open old wounds!!)

 

My Top 5 Albums of 1981

  1. Moving Pictures- Rush
  2. Fair Warning - Van Halen
  3. High 'N' Dry - Def Leppard
  4. Paradise Theater - Styx
  5. Allied Forces - Triumph

 

PLAYLIST --> http://www.podsnack.com/CA69EFD9E8C/a7tkathx

The Tubes
The Completion Backward Principle

1 - Sushi Girl

The Tubes' live shows in the late 1970s and early 1980s were rife with allusions to mainstream film [Dr. Strangelove (1964), Rollerball (1975), Saturday Night Fever (1977), Grease (1978)] then-forgotten B-movies [Wild Women of Wongo (1958), Attack of the 50 Foot Woman (1958)], music (Tom Jones, punk rock, a medley of Nelson Riddle television themes), contemporary pop culture (Patty Hearst, the Viking program), television (Let's Make a Deal, Fernwood 2Nite, the anime Raideen), and literature (Nelson Algren's A Walk on the Wild Side), presaging the subcultural reverence and over-the-top theatricality of later groups like The World/Inferno Friendship Society. These shows were expensive to produce, however, and while they earned the band a reputation for being one of the most entertaining live acts of the time, by the early 1980s, they found themselves short of money.

Loverboy
Get Lucky

2 - When Its Over

Their debut record became a huge hit with eventually over 1,000,000 records sold in Canada alone. The album made its American debut in November 1980, and would go on to sell over two million copies in the USA alone. The band's follow-up album, Get Lucky, released in October 1981 when they were opening for Journey, included the hit tracks "Working for the Weekend" and "When It's Over". It became their best selling album in the U.S., reaching No. 7 on the Billboard album charts and selling over four million copies. In the same year Loverboy received six Juno Awards (Canada's highest award for music) in one year, a record that still stands today. The band would later receive an additional three Juno Awards, bringing their total to nine, which is the most received by a single group or individual.

Blue Oyster Cult
Fire Of Unknown Origin

3 - Fire Of Unknown Origin

The biggest hit on this album was the Top 40 hit "Burnin' for You", a song Dharma had written with a Richard Meltzer lyric. He had intended to use it on his 1982 solo album, Flat Out, but he was convinced to use it on the Blue Öyster Cult album instead. The album went platinum, and contained other fan favorites such as "Joan Crawford" (inspired by the book and film Mommie Dearest) and "Veteran of the Psychic Wars", another song co-written by Moorcock. Several of the songs had been written for the animated film Heavy Metal, but only "Veteran of the Psychic Wars" (which, ironically, was not written for Heavy Metal) was actually used in the movie. After this album, Albert Bouchard had a falling out with the others and left the band, and Rick Downey (formerly the band's lighting designer) replaced him on drums. At the height of their popularity, the band's success spurred a host of cult-like activities, such as a Marshfield, MA Blue Oyster Cult themed summer camp which featured competitive air guitar and lip synching contests.

Van Halen
Fair Warning

4 - Hear About It Later

Fair Warning was one of the first albums to reflect the rift in the Van Halen power structure; David Lee Roth wished to emphasize the pop influence that emerged on the previous two albums (which brought the band increased attention and a wider appeal), while Eddie Van Halen preferred to explore darker, longer and generally more complex song-structures that emphasized his innovative guitar work. Eddie apparently prevailed, as the album in fact featured longer, darker, more aggressive guitar-oriented material. Unchained can be heard frequently on rock radio stations.

The album's cover artwork is accompanied by an insert of a black-and-white picture of the band, as well as a view of a ghetto drywall. This drywall has a wire running across it, cracked windows at the top and a Roth-era Van Halen logo with plaster cracked over the left wing. Also on the wall is a lyric from the album's opening song, "Mean Street".

Sammy Hagar
Standing Hampton

5 - I'll Fall In Love Again

Hagar was scheduled to open for Boston in San Bernardino, California, during their 1979 world tour. Prior to the Boston show, Hagar was replaced on the bill by the up and coming Los Angeles club band, The Knack, rather than being an opening act so close to his former hometown of Fontana. After Street Machine and 1980's Danger Zone failed to break out, Hagar felt that Capitol wasn't supporting him sufficiently. Hagar left Capitol for the newly formed Geffen Records and made some personnel changes, including enlisting long-time friend and former Justice Brothers bandmate David Lauser as his drummer. His first Geffen release, Standing Hampton, was his biggest-selling album to date and went platinum on the strength of songs such as "There's Only One Way to Rock".

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Replies to This Discussion

There was one I think...acoustic naturally, lol!

Jon is prowling the boards!!!!

Harpsichords were all the rage! Can you imagine if distortion was available how cool a harpsichord would be?

There was a lot of chanting going on back then.

In another life, I played the Lyre back then.

With the catchy hook chants, we used to ROCK, LOL!

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