“Hello, you’re my very special one.”

Maria McKee introduced me to Lou Reed in the summer of 1986.

Not personally, of course, although I am now Facebook friends with Maria (thank you, internet!). Lone Justice was recording its second album Shelter at the time, and they played some gigs around L.A. to work on the new material. I saw two shows that summer, and they played “Sweet Jane” at both of them. Maria said it was her “favorite rock and roll song.”

1986 may seem a little late for a music junkie to arrive at the Lou Reed party, but you must consider that I grew up in Plano, Texas. Aldo Nova was considered cutting edge in Plano, Texas. I went off to college in Austin, and it’s not a cliche to say that my musical world exploded. And thanks to Maria and her band and a summer vacation in California, I went out and bought a Velvet Underground album called Loaded.

If you’re going to pick one Velvet Underground album to start with, Loaded may be the best choice, It’s certainly the most accessible (clearly by design), which may explain why Reed quit the band before the album was even released in late 1970. I played Loaded to death that year. I liked it so much that I went out and bought Mistrial, Reed’s current solo album.

That one admittedly set my fandom back a couple years. I continued to dig into the Velvets catalog, though, and I still own those vinyl pressings of White Light/White Heat and The Velvet Underground & Nico. 1989 saw Lou Reed return to masterful form with the New York album, and he continued to push musical boundaries over the next 24 years. And now, sadly, Lou Reed is gone.

It was inevitable that I would have eventually discovered Lou and the Velvets, even without Maria’s help. After all, I think it was mandated that every ’80s alternative band had to talk about them and how they discovered their records at a garage sale. An old quote attributed to Brian Eno said, “The Velvet Underground’s first album only sold a few thousand copies, but everyone who bought one formed a band.”

No one can actually find a source for this quote, or if Eno even really said it. I can say only this: I bought a copy of that first record. Shortly thereafter, I formed a band.

Coincidence? Maybe. But probably not.

In Memory: Five Lou Reed Covers

This World Is Not My Home

Lone Justice: “Sweet Jane” [Live] (Lou Reed)

From the album This World Is Not My Home

Geffen Records, 1999

Sweet Jane [Live]

This must have been recorded in 1985, as it clearly features the original Lone Justice line-up. A certain famous Irishman even shows up to lend Maria a hand.

 

Rainy Day

Rainy Day: “I’ll Be Your Mirror” (Lou Reed)

From the album Rainy Day

Serpent Records/Rough Trade, 1984

Vinyl rip courtesy of The Analog Kid

I’ll Be Your Mirror

Yes, that is Susanna Hoffs on lead vocals. Rainy Day was sort of an early alternative super-group, similar to the revolving band member concept of the Golden Palominos and This Mortal Coil. This rare EP is one of my most-cherished pieces of vinyl.

 

Sparkle In The Rain

Simple Minds: “Street Hassle” (Lou Reed)

From the album Sparkle In The Rain

A&M Records, 1984

Street Hassle

Simple Minds gave Lou the full-on arena treatment, and it works wonderfully. Lou’s original epic version appears on his 1978 album of the same name.

 

Duran Duran_ Singles & B-Sides (2)

Duran Duran: “Femme Fatale” [Alternative Mix] (Lou Reed)

From the CD single Perfect Day

Capitol Records, 1995

Femme Fatale [Alternative Mix]

Duran Duran originally released “Femme Fatale” on their self-titled 1993 album. This alternate mix comes from the Perfect Day CD single– yes, another Lou Reed cover.

 

Jane's Addiction

Jane’s Addiction” “Rock & Roll” (Written By Lou Reed)

From the album Jane’s Addiction

XXX Records, 1987

Rock & Roll

Rock and roll.

Lou Reed

If you close the door, the night could last forever

Leave the wine glass out, and drink a toast to never.

Sunday Morning Disco Cookies!

The Analog Kid usually tries to put songs in context by explaining his personal associations with the music. Sometimes, though, you just need to shut up and get down with your bad Cookie Monster self…

sesamestreetfever

Cookie Monster & The Girls: “C Is For Cookie”

From the album Sesame Street Fever

Children’s Television Workshop, 1978

Vinyl rip courtesy of The Analog Kid

C Is For Cookie

10.15 Saturday Night: “Rockin’ All Over The World” / “Almost Saturday Night”

It’s 10:15 Saturday night, and time for a quick song (or two) from the vaults of the Analog Kid. I’ll only interrupt your drinking/lovemaking/bootyshaking for a moment, I promise. And no, the songs are not always going to have “Saturday” in the title because even my vast back catalog would eventually run out of tunes!

 

John Fogerty is a rock legend, but for some reason his first solo album is almost impossible to find. The album was briefly issued on CD in the mid-’90s, but it’s now long out of print and fetches close to $200 on eBay. You can’t even download it, and that makes no sense given that it contains two bona fide Fogerty classics: “Almost Saturday Night” and “Rockin’ All Over The World.”

Fogerty plays both of these songs regularly in concert, but you’re out of luck if you want to hear the studio versions– unless, of course, you subscribe to the Analog Kid blog.  I like it, I like it, I like it!

John Fogerty

John Fogerty: “Almost Saturday Night” (Written By John Fogerty)

Almost Saturday Night

John Fogerty: “Rockin’ All Over The World” (Written By John Fogerty)

Rockin’ All Over The World

Both tracks taken the album John Fogerty

Asylum Records, 1975

Vinyl rip courtesy of The Analog Kid

_____________________________________________________________________________

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.

OK, I didn’t really talk about the Georgia Satellites’ double-shot version. But it certainly makes a nice bonus track!

Rubáiyát_ Elektra's 40th Anniversary [Disc 2]

The Georgia Satellites: “Almost Saturday Night/Rockin’ All Over The World” (Written By John Fogerty)

From the album Rubáiyát: Elektra’s 40th Anniversary

Elektra Records, 1990

Almost Saturday Night/Rockin’ All Over the World

Who Wore It Best: “Our Lips Are Sealed”

Welcome to what I hope will become a regular feature here on the Analog Kid blog. We’ll take two (or perhaps even more) versions of the same song and attempt to decide, once and for all, WHO WORE IT BEST?

TODAY’S SONG: “Our Lips Are Sealed”

“Our Lips Are Sealed” is a fascinating song for WHO WORE IT BEST, as both famous versions can claim to be definitive. The song was co-written by Jane Wiedlin and Terry Hall, and each one recorded the song with their own band. The Go-Go’s version certainly received more airplay than Fun Boy Three’s, and it also had the advantage of coming out first.  But is it the better version of “Our Lips Are Sealed?” Did Belinda & Charlotte & Kathy & Jane & Gina truly wear it best?

Let’s compare…

The_Go-Go'sBeautyandtheBeat

The Go-Go’s: “Our Lips Are Sealed” (Hall/Wiedlin)

From the album Beauty And The Beat

I.R.S. Records, 1981

Our Lips Are Sealed

A pure slice of pop perfection, with perhaps the best bridge I’ve ever heard (made even better by the Who-like trick of having Wiedlin herself take over the vocal):

Hush my darling, don’t you cry/Quiet angel, forget their lies

“Our Lips Are Sealed” was the lead single from Beauty And The Beat, the Go-Go’s debut album. It topped out at #20 on the Billboard Hot 100, but the album spent six weeks at #1 and made the Go-Go’s into overnight stars.

 

The Fun Boy Three_ Singles & B-Sides

The Fun Boy Three: “Our Lips Are Sealed” [Single Version] (Hall/Wiedlin)

From the 7″ single Our Lips Are Sealed

Original version from the album Waiting

Chrysalis Records, 1983

Our Lips Are Sealed [Single Version]

David Byrne produced this melancholy version of “Our Lips Are Sealed,” and it just might be the perfect song for a rainy Sunday morning. In contrast to the peppy Go-Go’s version, the Fun Boy Three’s take sounds downright gloomy. Terry Hall’s vocal expresses a sense of longing completely absent from the Go-Go’s version, and transforms the song into something completely new. If the long-standing rumors of a failed relationhship between Hall and Wiedlin are true, it’s not hard to figure out whose heart was broken when the (supposed) fling ended.

The Fun Boy Three’s version didn’t chart in the United States, but it did go to #7 in the UK.

THE VERDICT: This is a tough one, because both versions are so different and yet so perfect in their own way. But in the end, I have to go with the Go-Go’s. Remember the video, with the band riding around Los Angeles in a convertible? Every time I hear “Our Lips Are Sealed,” I feel like I’m in the back seat. The Go-Go’s definitely wore it best.

Which version do you like better? Am I right, or am I crazy insane? Let me know what you think in the comments section!

Love stinks.

last-american-virgin_320

If you had HBO in the mid-’80s, you probably saw The Last American Virgin. You probably saw it multiple times. And if you’re anything like me, the ending kicked you in the %#@$ every time.

For ninety minutes, The Last American Virgin is a typical early-’80s teen sex comedy. There are a lot of boobs, a lot of drugs, and a lot of sex. But in the last fifteen minutes, the movie transforms itself into perhaps the most honest portrayal of teenage life and love ever put on film, A movie with an ending like this would never be released today– test audiences would have a fit, and the director would be forced to reshoot. Thankfully, that didn’t happen to this cult classic.

Last American Virgin Gary Karen Rose

Like most teen comedies, the music plays a huge part in The Last American Virgin. AOR staples from from Journey and REO Speedwagon mingle seamlessly with edgier tracks from The Plimsouls and Blondie, and the soundtrack boasts four songs unavailable elsewhere. The soundtrack album has become a huge collector’s item over the years, especially since it has never been released on CD (don’t be fooled by the bootleg CD selling on Amazon). It took the Analog Kid years to track down an original mint-condition vinyl copy, and now I would like to share it with you. Come to me, my big burrito!

last_american

The Last American Virgin: Music From The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

Columbia Records, 1982

 

1. Tommy Tutone: “Teen Angel Eyes” (Heath/Keller/Call) 

Teen Angel Eyes

Previously unreleased

2. The Police: “De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da” (Sting)

De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da

3. Devo: “Whip It” (Casale/Mothersbaugh)

Whip It

4. Phil Seymour: “When I Find You” (Rollings)

When I Find You

Previously unreleased

5. Oingo Boingo: “Better Luck Next Time” (Elfman)

Better Luck Next Time

Previously unreleased

6. Gleaming Spires: “Are You Ready For The Sex Girls” (Bohem/Kendrick)

Are You Ready For The Sex Girls?

7. The Cars: “Since You’re Gone” (Ocasek)

Since You’re Gone

8. The Waitresses: “I Know What Boys Like” (Butler)

I Know What Boys Like

9. The Fortune Band: “Airwaves” (Fortune/Fortune/Barrett)

Airwaves

Previously unreleased

10. U2: “I Will Follow” (Hewson/Mullen/Clayton/The Edge)

I Will Follow

________________________________________________________________________________________

Bonus Tracks!

Like many film soundtracks, there are a number of songs in the movie that do not appear on the soundtrack. Don’t you just HATE that?

11. The Commodores: “Oh No” (Richie)

Oh No

12. James Ingram & Quincy Jones: “Just Once” (Mann/Weil)

Just Once

gary