Deep Cuts: Neil Diamond

The “Deep Cuts” series digs into an artist’s catalog and pulls out gems that might be unfamiliar to casual fans. After all, the best songs are often found deep on side two or on the back of a 45…

It’s hard to believe that I have written 115 posts on the Analog Kid blog without mentioning this, but I suppose the time has come for me to finally come clean: I am the lead singer for a Neil Diamond tribute band. We’re called Diamondbag, and we’ve been playing shows in the Dallas area since 2001.

I’m not embarrassed to admit that I love Neil Diamond. I’ve been listening to his music for my entire life, and the fact that I have convinced four of my friends to spend 14 years playing Neil songs with me is a testament to my belief in the power of the Diamond.

Our keyboard player John loves to tell the story of the time one of his co-workers was in Ireland, and somehow found himself in an elevator with two people: one was Neil Diamond, and the other was The Edge from U2. All three pretty much looked straight ahead and said nothing during the ride– you know, traditional elevator decorum. The elevator finally stopped, and Neil exited. At that point, John’s friend took a nervous glance over at The Edge. The Edge saw the eye contact, and excitedly pointed at the now-closed door.

“‘That was THE DIAMOND!!”

Here are five great Neil songs that are not nearly as famous as some of his popular tunes, but to me they represent some of his best work. Diamondbag often includes all of these songs in our show, and it always makes me smile when I see an obviously knowledgeable fan in the audience singing along with us…

Moods

Neil Diamond: “Walk On Water” (Diamond)

From the album Moods

Uni Records, 1972

Our good friend Curtis was a regular at Diamondbag shows, and “Walk On Water” was always his favorite song. He’s been gone for over nine years now, but I still dedicate it to him every time we play it.

Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show

Neil Diamond: “Glory Road” (Diamond)

From the album Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation Show

Uni Records, 1969

I’ve seen Neil live multiple times, and my one minor complaint is that he rarely plays guitar anymore. A few years back, I took my Mom to see him and he shocked us with a solo acoustic rendition of this deep cut from 1969. We’ve recently added “Glory Road” to our set as a solo piano number, and the fact that no one seems to recognize it only convinces me that we need to play it more often.

Hot August Night

Neil Diamond: “And The Grass Won’t Pay No Mind” (Diamond)

From the album Hot August Night

MCA Records, 1972

Back in 2011, Diamondbag played our most ambitious show to date: we performed the entire Hot August Night double-LP on a very hot Texas August night, and that was just the first set! We had to learn about five or six songs from scratch for that show, and “And The Grass Won’t Pay No Mind” was one of them. It has since become one of our live favorites, and sometimes it even manages to shut up the drunken bar patrons and make them pay attention.

Serenade

Neil Diamond: “Yes I Will” (Diamond)

From the album Serenade

Columbia Records, 1974

I actually saw Neil play “Yes I Will” live about thirteen or fourteen years ago. It’s a very deep cut from one of his strongest records, but I never thought I’d hear it in person. Diamondbag plays a very faithful version of “Yes I Will,” but we do go a little nuts when the band kicks in about halfway through the tune. I love playing this one live.

Beautiful Noise

Neil Diamond: “Dry Your Eyes” (Diamond/Robertson)

From the album Beautiful Noise

Columbia Records, 1976

Neil wrote “Dry Your Eyes” with Robbie Robertson, who also produced this classic album. Diamond played “Dry Your Eyes” with The Band at the famous Last Waltz concert, and a viewing of that movie about five years inspired me to add it to our set. The Beautiful Noise album also contains “If You Know What I Mean,” my all-time favorite Neil song and one that we play at every single Diamondbag show.

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Bonus Tracks!

The first rule of The Analog Kid blog is that if you write about a song on the Analog Kid blog, you share the song on the Analog Kid blog.

Beautiful Noise

Neil Diamond: “If You Know What I Mean” (Diamond)

From the album Beautiful Noise

Columbia Records, 1976

The Last Waltz

Neil Diamond & The Band: “Dry Your Eyes” (Diamond/Robertson)

From the album The Last Waltz

Warner Brothers Records, 1978

Hot August Night

Diamondbag: “Longfellow Serenade” (Diamond)

Recorded live on 8/23/2013 at Lee Harvey’s in Dallas, Texas

The Lost Boys: Hard-To-Find ’80s Albums (Icehouse’s “Measure For Measure”)

“The Lost Boys: Hard-To-Find ’80s Albums” gives you exactly what the title implies: a rare or out-of-print album or EP from the ’80s in its entirety. Some will be from CD, but most will have been lovingly transferred from pristine vinyl culled directly from the Analog Kid’s vast collection. Whatever album I choose, it will be one that you can’t easily find a physical copy for sale on Amazon or in your local record store (if you even have one anymore). Death…by stereo!

 

When I first started the Analog Kid blog last October, one of my first posts expressed my amazement that you cannot acquire any music from the Aussie band Icehouse in the United States. You can read that blog entry here:

You gotta be out of your mind not to like Icehouse.

No CDs. No downloads. Not even a single greatest hits compilation. NOTHING. I included a number of my favorite Icehouse songs on that blog, and it has proven to be one of my most popular posts ever. It continues to receive hits each and every day from all over the world. The people have spoken, and they want more Icehouse!

Today, the Analog Kid blog features Icehouse’s 1986 album Measure For Measure. The LP included the classic “No Promises,” which reached the Top 10 on Billboard’s Rock Chart and Club Play chart. It was also prominently featured in the 1986 movie Modern Girls, and I have that semi-obscure Daphne Zuniga film to thank for reintroducing me to Icehouse. I stumbled upon Modern Girls one night on cable about ten years ago, and I heard “No Promises” for the first time in about 18 years. I had loved the song back in ’86, but it had simply slipped from my memory. Now it was back, and with a vengeance.

Long story short, that chance viewing of Modern Girls initiated my quest to track down the entire Icehouse catalog. Believe me, it wasn’t easy– but I finally managed to acquire all of the Icehouse albums on both CD and vinyl. Measure For Measure is one of my favorites, and I hope you enjoy it!

 

Measure For Measure 1

Icehouse: Measure For Measure

Chrysalis Records, 1986

 

1. “No Promises” (Davies/Kretschmer)

No Promises

2. “Cross The Border” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Cross The Border

3. “Spanish Gold” (Davies)

Spanish Gold

4. “Paradise” (Davies)

Paradise

5. “The Flame” (Davies)

The Flame

6. “Regular Boys” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Regular Boys

7. “Mr. Big” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Mr. Big

8. “Angel Street” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Angel Street

9. “Lucky Me” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Lucky Me

10. “Baby, You’re So Strange” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Baby, You’re So Strange

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Bonus Tracks!

The first rule of The Analog Kid blog is that if you write about a song on the Analog Kid blog, you share the song on the Analog Kid blog.

Icehouse_ Singles & B-Sides 1

Icehouse: “No Promises” [Club Mix] (Davies/Kretschmer)

From the 12″ single No Promises

Chrysalis Records, 1986

No Promises [Club Mix]

 

baby youy're so strange

Icehouse: “Into The Wild” (Davies/Kretschmer)

Into The Wild

Icehouse: “Too Late Now” (Davies)

Too Late Now

B-sides from the 7″ double-pack Baby, You’re So Strange

Regular Records, 1986

 

Icehouse_ Singles & B-Sides 2

Icehouse: “Cross The Border” [Dance Mix] (Davies/Kretschmer)

From the 12″ single Cross The Border

Chrysalis Records, 1986

Vinyl rip courtesy of the Analog Kid

Cross The Border (Steel Love) [Dance Mix]

Texas Radio & The Big Beat: 1983

This continuing series on the Analog Kid blog takes a look back at some of the best AOR songs from the ’70s and ’80s. All of these songs were radio favorites from my teenage years in Texas, but for some reason you just don’t seem to hear them very much any more. I hope to change that.

Texas Radio & The Big Beat: 1983

I feel like I’m on a blog roll this week, so let’s keep it going– instead of the usual five songs per year on a “Texas Radio & The Big Beat” post, I’m doubling down to ten. 1983 certainly deserves the love…

 

One Night With A Stranger

Martin Briley: “The Salt In My Tears” (Briley)

From the album One Night With A Stranger

Mercury Records, 1983

The Salt In My Tears

I recently ripped all three of Martin Briley’s ’80s albums from vinyl, and it was definitely time well spent. The guy had an ear for crafting some great pop hooks, even if all he had to show for it was one measly Top 40 hit. “The Salt In My Tears” only reached #36 in 1983. but substantial MTV airplay made it seem like a much bigger hit than that.

 

Here To Stay

Schon & Hammer: “No More Lies” (Schon/Burtnik/Hammer)

From the album Here To Stay

Columbia Records, 1983

No More Lies

Neal Schon’s second collaboration with Jan Hammer was released just a month or so before Journey’s Frontiers album, but that didn’t keep “No More Lies” from receiving a ton of airplay on DFW radio. I put Frontiers on one side of a TDK SA90 and Here To Stay on the other, and every night I went to sleep listening to that tape with my giant Radio Shack headphones.

Schon actually performed “No More Lies” on Journey’s Frontiers tour, and there’s a memorable version on the Frontiers…And Beyond VHS of Neal singing the song with blood pouring down his face. Someone apparently threw a beer bottle out of the audience and hit him right in the head, but Schon just kept on playing. I guess the supposed fan just really wanted to hear “Wheel In The Sky”…

 

Charlie

Charlie: “It’s Inevitable”

From the album Charlie

Mirage Records, 1983

It’s Inevitable

“It’s Inevitable” was the biggest of four minor hits for the British band Charlie, peaking at #38 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1983. You probably remember Charlie’s album covers if you spent any time at all in record stores during the late ’70s and early ’80s– the covers always featured an attractive female in a very seductive pose. I always assumed that the girl on the cover was “Charlie,” but never cared enough to investigate further. Apparently no one else did either, as Charlie’s highest-charting album (1979’s Fight Dirty) in the U.S. only reached #60.

Charlie1Charlie2

 

State Of Confusion

The Kinks: “State Of Confusion” (Ray Davies)

From the album State Of Confusion

Arista Records, 1983

Vinyl rip courtesy of the Analog Kid

State Of Confusion

Confession time: I absolutely hated “Come Dancing.” I’m sure the fact that it was on MTV at least once an hour during the summer of 1983 had something to do with that, but I really just didn’t like the song very much. I didn’t even own a copy of State Of Confusion until I acquired one on vinyl in the late ’90s, and now I really regret not giving this album a chance earlier. It’s a great Kinks record, and the title track is one of my favorite later-era Kinks songs.

 

Planet P

Planet P: “Why Me?” (Carey)

From the album Planet P

Geffen Records, 1983

Why Me?

Former Rainbow keyboardist Tony Carey was a busy man in the ’80s. His solo work led to some big hits (1984’s “A Fine, Fine Day” among them), but apparently he needed even more outlets for his creativity. Carey created a side project entitled Planet P (later rechristened The Planet P Project) as a way to release some of his more experimental music, and 1983’s “Why Me?” is a great example of his edgy work.

 

Fastway

Fastway: “Say What You Will” (Fastway)

From the album Fastway

Columbia Records, 1983

Say What You Will

During the first few weeks of the Analog Kid Blog’s existence, I wrote a post entitled “5 Led Zeppelin Songs That Are Not Led Zeppelin Songs” in which I shared five of my favorite Zep-influenced tracks from other artists.

Read it here! https://theanalogkidblog.com/2013/10/30/5-led-zeppelin-songs-that-are-not-led-zeppelin-songs/

I received a ton of feedback from that post, and the one song that was cited as the most egregious exclusion from that list was Fastway’s “Say What You Will.” This driving rocker from Fastway’s debut album was all over rock radio in 1983, but the band (led by former Motorhead guitarist “Fast” Eddie Clark) could never keep a stable lineup together and never again matched the success of their first album.

 

Cuts Like A Knife

Bryan Adams: “This Time” (Adams/Vallance)

From the album Cuts Like A Knife

A&M Records, 1983

This Time

I saw Bryan Adams open up for Journey at a few dates on the Frontiers tour in the summer of 1983, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen an opening act win over an audience the way Adams did on that tour. He really knew how to work a stage, and it was obvious that he was going to be a big star. It also didn’t hurt that Bryan (and co-writer Jim Vallance) knew how to write killer pop songs like “This Time,” my favorite track on Cuts Like A Knife.

 

Sucker For A Pretty Face

Eric Martin Band: “Sucker For A Pretty Face”

From the album Sucker For A Pretty Face

Elektra Records, 1983

Sucker For A Pretty Face

Long before Mr. Big and “To Be With You” made the girls swoon, singer Eric Martin had scored a big AOR hit with “Sucker For A Pretty Face” during the summer of 1983. The Eric Martin Band broke up after only one album and tour, but drummer Troy Luccketta would go on to great success of his own with Tesla.

 

Caught In The Game

Survivor: “Caught In The Game” (Peterik/Sullivan)

From the album Caught In The Game

Scotti Brothers Records, 1983

Caught In The Game

Survivor’s follow-up to Eye Of The Tiger was its last album with original vocalist Dave Bickler, who had to leave the band due to problems with his vocal cords. At least Dave went out on top– to me, “Caught In The Game” is easily Survivor’s best song. Great guitar riff, great melody, great song.

 

Michael Bolton

Michael Bolton: “Fool’s Game” (Bolton/Brooks/Mangold)

From the album Michael Bolton

Epic Records, 1983

Fool’s Game

I had to save the best for last! Bolton himself barely even acknowledges the existence of this record, but it’s true: Michael Bolton was Bon Jovi before Bon Jovi was Bon Jovi. Future KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick gave “Fool’s Game” the punch it needed to enter heavy rock radio rotation, and there’s no denying that Bolton had the pipes to rock the AOR genre. Obviously, he chose a different career path. Perhaps we are all better off because of it, but what if…

Naw. Let’s not go there.

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Bonus Tracks!

The first rule of The Analog Kid blog is that if you write about a song on the Analog Kid blog, you share the song on the Analog Kid blog.

 

Greatest Hits Live

Journey: “Wheel In The Sky” (Fleischman/Schon/Valory)

From the album Greatest Hits Live

Columbia Records, 1998

Wheel In The Sky

 

State Of Confusion

The Kinks: “Come Dancing” (Ray Davies)

From the album State Of Confusion

Arista Records, 1983

Come Dancing

 

tonycarey

Tony Carey: “A Fine, Fine Day” (Carey)

From the album Some Tough City

MCA Records, 1984

A Fine, Fine Day

 

Lean Into It

Mr. Big: “To Be With You” (Martin/Grahame)

From the album Lean Into It

Atlantic Records, 1991

To Be With You

 

Mechanical Resonance 1

Tesla: “Little Suzi” (Diamond/Hymas)

From the album Mechanical Resonance

Geffen Records, 1986

Little Suzi

 

Eye Of The Tiger

Survivor: “Eye Of The Tiger” (Peterik/Sullivan)

From the album Eye Of The Tiger

Scotti Brothers Records, 1982

Eye Of The Tiger

 

Bon Jovi

Bon Jovi: “She Don’t Know Me” (Avsec)

From the album Bon Jovi

Mercury Records, 1984

Vinyl rip courtesy of the Analog Kid

She Don’t Know Me

 

Revenge

KISS: “Domino” (Simmons)

From the album Revenge

Mercury Records, 1992

Domino

Groovy Tuesday: 1980

Every Tuesday, the Analog Kid blog goes back in time and features some groovy R&B/soul songs from a specific year. Sometimes you’ll hear songs from individual artists, and other times you’ll get an entire full-length classic LP ripped directly from the Analog Kid’s vast vinyl vault. Warning: by R&B/soul, I also mean disco. I could go all Village People on your ass at any given moment, so just be ready!

Groovy Tuesday: 1980

brothersjohnson

The Brothers Johnson: “Stomp!” (Temperton/Johnson/Johnson/Johnson)

From the album Light Up The Night

A&M Records, 1980

The Brothers Johnson turned to former Heatwave member (and “Rock With You” writer) Rod Temperton for some help with their fourth album, and the result was a #1 R&B record and a Top 10 pop single. “Stomp!” also appeared on Hitline, the very last K-Tel record that I purchased as a kid. I turned 13 in the summer of 1980, and it was now time for AC/DC and The Cars instead of “Escape (The Pina Colada Song)” and “Just When I Needed You Most” (both of which were also included on Hitline).

I loved K-Tel Records growing up almost as much as I loved the Los Angeles Dodgers. That, my friends, is a lotta love.

VLUU L200  / Samsung L200

The S.O.S. Band: “Take Your Time (Do It Right)” (Abdallah/Clayton)

From the album S.O.S.

Tabu Records, 1980

When I rent a car, my only real requirement is an auxiliary jack for my iPod. Enterprise could offer to upgrade me to a Rolls at no cost, and I would still say no if the automobile in question lacked an auxiliary connection. The only exception is when I travel to Los Angeles, thanks to the ridiculous amount of radio variety in the area. I also grew up there, and it really takes me back to my youth when I listen to KLOS and KROQ. I didn’t listen to it very often as a kid, but K-Earth 101 has become my go-to radio station during my frequent visits to the Southland. Here’s why:

My soon-to-be wife and I were in Los Angeles in January of 2010 for the Texas-Alabama national championship game. Obviously the game didn’t go quite as we had hoped, but the depressing drive back to Orange County that night was greatly enhanced by two things:

1) a stop at In-N-Out Burger off the 405.

2) K-Earth played “Take Your Time (Do It Right)” by the S.O.S. Band.

That was actually the second time we had heard K-Earth play “Take Your Time (Do It Right)” that week, which is a minor miracle when you consider the fact that it must have been 25 years since I had last heard the song. Of course, I immediately tracked this masterpiece down upon my return to Texas and can now proudly say that I own just about everything from the S.O.S. Band.

Thanks, K-Earth One-Oh-One! (warning: the jingle will stick in your brain FOREVER)

After Midnight

The Manhattans: “Shining Star” (Graham/Richmond)

From the album After Midnight

Columbia Records, 1980

It may have been a new decade, but the Manhattans’ “Shining Star” has smooth ’70s soul written all over it. The only thing missing from this classic is a slow-burn, deep-voiced spoken intro (see the Manhattans’ “Kiss And Say Goodbye” for a perfect example). “Shining Star” spent three weeks at #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July of 1980.

The Two Of Us

Yarbrough & Peoples: “Don’t Stop The Music” (Peoples/Simmons/Simms)

From the album The Two Of Us

Mercury Records, 1980

My family relocated to the Dallas area from Los Angeles in the summer of 1979, so we arrived in Big D just in time to see local heroes Yarbrough & Peoples hit #1 on the R&B chart with “Don’t Stop The Music.” The song actually peaked at #19 on the pop charts, but you wouldn’t have guessed that based on the insane amount of airplay it received in the DFW Metroplex area.

I have a vague recollection of Channel 5’s Bobbie Wygant conducting a hilariously awkward interview with Yarbrough & Peoples on a local news broadcast back in 1980. Wygant has been with Channel 5 for 64 years, so she was ancient even back in 1980. I cannot guarantee you that this event actually took place, as I can find no proof that it happened. My mind may have made it up, because if it didn’t really happen, it should have happened…

The Gap Band III

The Gap Band: “Burn Rubber On Me (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)” (Wilson/Simmons/Taylor)

From the album The Gap Band III

Mercury Records, 1980

“Don’t Stop The Music” actually knocked The Gap Band’s “Burn Rubber On Me (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)” out of the top spot on the R&B charts. Somehow, this funk masterpiece only managed to reach #84 on the pop charts. Sure, it’s no “Every Woman In The World,” but “Burn Rubber On Me” certainly deserved more exposure on radio than it received at the time. At least 1982’s “You Dropped A Bomb On Me” almost made the Top 30…

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Bonus Tracks!

The first rule of The Analog Kid blog is that if you write about a song on the Analog Kid blog, you share the song on the Analog Kid blog.

Off The Wall

Michael Jackson: “Rock With You” (Temperton)

From the album Off The Wall

Epic Records, 1979

Back In Black

AC/DC: “Have A Drink On Me” (Young/Young/Johnson)

From the album Back In Black

Atlantic Records, 1980

Panorama 1

The Cars: “Touch And Go” (Ocasek)

From the album Panorama

Elektra Records, 1980

Partners In Crime

Rupert Holmes: “Escape (The  Piña Colada Song)” (Holmes)

From the album Partners In Crime

Infinity Records, 1979

randy vanwarmer

Randy VanWarmer: “Just When I Needed You Most” (VanWarmer/Wilson)

From the album Warmer

Bearsville Records, 1979

Nicolette

Nicolette Larson: “Lotta Love” (Young)

From the album Nicolette

Warner Brothers Records, 1978

The Manhattans

The Manhattans: “Kiss And Say Goodbye” (Lovett)

From the album The Manhattans

Columbia Records, 1976

Lost In Love

Air Supply: “Every Woman In The World” (Bugatti/Musker)

From the album Lost In Love

Arista Records, 1980

Gap Band IV

The Gap Band: “You Dropped A Bomb On Me” (Simmons/Taylor/Wilson)

From the album Gap Band IV

Mercury Records, 1982

Songs From The Edge: 1993

94.5 The Edge was the greatest radio station I have ever heard. It debuted in Dallas in the summer of 1989, and for five years it exposed me to more new alternative music than I could have ever imagined. In this continuing series, we’ll take a look back at the songs that made the Edge required listening for anyone with a musical pulse in North Texas in the late ’80s and early ’90s.

Songs From The Edge: 1993

Dusk

The The: “Slow Emotion Replay” (Johnson)

From the album Dusk

Epic Records, 1993

1993 got off to a great start for me: I had a bone marrow transplant in early January, and happily I didn’t die. I was in the hospital for almost forty days, and Dusk came out while I was still under a heavy post-procedure morphine drip. My girlfriend Beth brought me a copy of the CD to the hospital, but at that point my mind was simply incapable of listening to music– it was just too much for my brain to process.

After a couple of weeks (and a slow weaning off the morphine), I finally felt the urge to hear music again. The first album I played was R.E.M.’s Automatic For The PeopleDusk was the second, and to this day the album still takes me back to that room at Baylor Medical Center. You would think that might make Dusk a tough listen for me, but it’s actually quite the opposite. Dusk helped make me feel normal again.

Duran Duran (The Wedding Album)

Duran Duran: “Ordinary World” (Duran Duran)

From the album Duran Duran (The Wedding Album)

Capitol Records, 1993

My recollections of the forty days I spent at Baylor are quite hazy. I remember the Cowboys beating Buffalo in the Super Bowl, but had completely forgotten about Leon Lett’s epic blunder until I watched a video tape of the game that a friend thoughtfully provided after my release. I also have a vague recollection of some sort of scandal involving Prince Charles and a tampon, but I’ve made it a point never to dig into that one any further. I also vividly recall at least two visits from Mr. Death himself, but this is a music blog so we’ll save the theological musings for another time and place…

How whacked out on morphine was I? The Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders made an appearance on my floor, and I wouldn’t even get out of bed to go see them. Does that answer your question?

When my senses finally began to return, I asked Beth what I had missed while I was “out.” She reminded me that the Cowboys had won the Super Bowl, and that SMU’s basketball team was having a surprisingly good season. Then she added, “Oh yeah, and Duran Duran are popular again.”

Star

Belly: “Gepetto” (Donelly)

From the album Star

Sire Records, 1993

Like “Ordinary World,” Belly’s “Feed the Tree” was another song that became huge while my brain was on a temporary morphine-induced hiatus. Tanya Donelly was still mostly unknown to me at that time, as I really hadn’t listened very much to either The Breeders or Throwing Muses. There was no way to ignore Belly, though– “Feed The Tree” was everywhere. When I heard “Gepetto” for the first time, I finally gave in and bought the record. I am still looking for a nice copy of Star on vinyl if any of you lovely readers happen to have an extra…

soothe you

Maria McKee: “If Love Is A Red Dress (Hang Me In Rags)” (McKee)

From the CD single I’m Gonna Soothe You

Geffen Records, 1993

I could tell a nice long story here about my semi-obsession with Maria McKee back in the ’80s and ’90s, but my lovely wife happens to be one of my most-dedicated readers and I’d really hate to lose her page clicks. Therefore, I will simply say that I nearly lost my mind the first time I saw Pulp Fiction and heard this amazing Maria b-side so prominently placed in the film. I may have been the only person in America besides Mr. Tarantino who knew “If Love Is A Red Dress (Hang Me In Rags)” prior to Pulp Fiction, as I had acquired it a year earlier on an import CD single.

If there were a Billboard chart that tracked the number of plays on dive-bar jukeboxes, I have no doubt that “Love Is A Red Dress” would be in the all-time Top 10. It was stunning then, and it is stunning now.

Radiohead_ Singles & B-Sides

Radiohead: “Stop Whispering” [U.S. Remix] (Radiohead)

From the CD single Stop Whispering

Original version from the album Pablo Honey

Capitol Records, 1993

I have seen Radiohead live many times over the years, but my most memorable show happened in Dallas in the summer of 1993. My former bandmates Simon and Dave had first introduced me to Radiohead shortly after my release from the hospital, and I owned a copy of Pablo Honey long before “Creep” became Radiohead’s “Radio Free Europe.”

That July, Radiohead scheduled a gig at Trees in Dallas’ Deep Ellum district. Trees was a venue that my band Zen Pirates had frequently played at throughout 1992, and therefore we shared a nice relationship with the manager (as I recall, his name was Swank). When we arrived at the show, the club was an absolute madhouse. The line was around the block, and most of these people weren’t getting in. “Creep” had become so huge that Radiohead could have played a venue ten times larger, but instead there were about 1,000 people crammed into a club that should hold a maximum of 500. Oh, and did I mention that the air conditioning was broken?

Recap: Dallas. July. A club at double capacity. No air conditioning.

Have you ever seen it rain indoors? I have. There was so much heat and moisture in that room that it honestly formed a cloud at the top of the club, and I could see the water coming back down. Happily, Swank had scored us some prime private seats on Tree’s side stairwell, so we were able to avoid the crush of humanity on the floor. Even then, the heat was still absolutely unbearable (especially for me, as I was obviously still recovering from the transplant). If the heat was bad for us, imagine how it felt to five pasty white Englishmen– Radiohead made it through about six or seven songs, and then Jonny Greenwood announced that Thom was about to die and they had to stop. You’d think a riot would have broken out, but every single person in that club understood.

After the brief (but epic) show, we got to talk to Greenwood for a bit in the parking lot. It was a much-more-comfortable 94 degrees outside.

“That was insane,” he said.

Jonny, it rained indoors. “Insane” doesn’t even begin to describe that night.

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Bonus Tracks!

The first rule of The Analog Kid blog is that if you write about a song on the Analog Kid blog, you share the song on the Analog Kid blog.

Automatic For The People

R.E.M.: “Find The River” (Berry/Buck/Mills/Stipe)

From the album Automatic For The People

Warner Brothers Records, 1992

Star

Belly: “Feed The Tree” (Donelly)

From the album Star

Sire Records, 1993

Pablo Honey

Radiohead: “Creep” (Radiohead)

From the album Pablo Honey

Capitol Records, 1993

Murmur

R.E.M.: “Radio Free Europe” (Berry/Buck/Mills/Stipe)

From the album Murmur

IRS Records, 1983