4/14/13

"Pink Cadillac" by Natalie Cole

Get ready to rev your engines, Dialophiles! Tonight the Dial beams a frequency to your speakers containing a top 10 smash from 1988, a song which has unfairly been retired to the used-car lot of terrestrial radio in successive years… Natalie Cole’s “Pink Cadillac”. 

"You may think I’m foolin’, for the foolish things I do… You may wonder how come I love you, when you get on my nerves like you do…"

Extracted as the third single from Natalie’s 1987 “Everlasting” LP (following top 20 hits “Jump Start”, and “I Live For Your Love”, Pink Cadillac served as a major comeback for the singer, and was Cole’s first top ten hit (peaking at #5) since 1977’s “Our Love”.

Written by Bruce Springsteen, and originally issued by him as a B-side to his ’84 hit “Dancing in the Dark", his tale of lust in (or for…) the legendary car, received tons of airplay in my home market of Washington DC, but didn’t cross over as a top 40 hit. Since then, the track has become a regular feature in “The Boss’s” concert repertoire, and has been covered by several other acts aside from Ms. Cole, such as Melissa Etheridge, Graham Parker, Southern Pacific, and even two versions by rockabilly pioneers Jerry Lee Lewis, and Carl Perkins!

Like many of my classmates, upon first listening to Natalie’s danceable pop interpretation, I thought I was listening to the Queen of Soul herself, Ms. Aretha Franklin! In hindsight, the confusion is understandable not only with the vocal similarity, but because Franklin’s 1985 hit “Freeway of Love” contains the lyric...

“We’re going riding on the freeway of love in my Pink Cadillac”.

Had Aretha actually laid down the vocals for this upbeat ditty, it would have been a perfect follow up to Franklin’s earlier automotive themed hit. 

"They say Eve tempted Adam with an apple, but man, I ain’t going for that… I know it was her pink Cadillac, crushed velvet seats…"

Most music reviewers agree that Bruce’s original works on two levels. The innocent and humorous tale of a car fanatic dating a woman just because he loves her iconic ride, and also the racier interpretation that despite being with someone that is not his perfect match, he remains for the exceptional… *ahem* carnal benefits, the Caddy serving as a metaphor for those very pleasures of the flesh.

Though the lyrics remain unchanged, the vibe of Natalie’s smash takes on a lighthearted innocent flair, especially when she sings “waving to the girls, peeling outta sight”, you can practically see Natalie waving to her friends, yelling “whoooo-hoooo” and leaving them behind as she burns rubber down the street. Natalie truly loves that car, and stays with her man just for the ride.

Though, now that I think about it, it seems unlikely that a man would be a likely owner of a Caddy in the designated shade, no matter how tricked out it was. Hmmm, this song may create more questions than it answers… Take a spin with the dial, and arrive at your own conclusion! 

"Hey man, there’s only one thing… and one car that’ll do. Anyway, we don’t have to drive it, honey, we can park it out in back, and have a party in your pink Cadillac."





4/3/13

"Pencil Thin Mustache" by Jimmy Buffett


Hey all you Dialophiles (or perhaps I should say Parrotheads!)

Tonight, the Dial reaches wayyyyyy back to the early ‘70s (sorry if that comment made anybody feel old…) for a Jimmy Buffett track which was unsuccessful at radio, but ended up becoming a very popular concert staple for the man behind Margaritaville.  Tonight we present the whimsical “Pencil Thin Mustache”. 

“Now they make new movies in old black and white
With happy endings, where nobody fights
So if you find yourself in that nostalgic rage
Honey, jump right up and show your age!” 

The second single from his iconic 1974 Living and Dying in ¾ Time LP, “Pencil…” barely missed placing in the Billboard Hot 100 at #101, but managed to achieve #44 on the easy listening chart. It followed the soft rock classic “Come Monday”, the first of Jimmy’s many top 40 hits.

Containing humorous musings on his childhood and young adulthood, “Pencil…” is filled with 1950s pop culture reference points such as, Ricky Ricardo, Andy Devine, Sky King (and Sky’s niece Penny), American Bandstand, Disneyland, and many more. The titular facial hair belonged to “Boston Blackie”, a former criminal turned investigator, whose TV series was among the earliest successes in the new medium of television.

Jimmy’s unapologetically nostalgic track also contains an amusing acknowledgement that “only jazz musicians were smoking marijuana”, and the final few seconds interpolates the famous Brylcreem commercial… “Bryllll Creeeeem… a little dab’ll do ya!”

Though Buffett’s top 40 chart presence ended in the late 70s, he’s made two interesting returns to the chart, in the guise of collaborations with popular country artists… 2003’s US #17 hit “It’s Five O Clock Somewhere”, recorded with Alan Jackson; and the Zac Brown Band’s 2011 hit “Knee Deep” which hit US #18. Both of these tracks hit US Country #1.

Normally, when the Dial selects a tune, I’ll intersperse my review with a happy memory associated with that song. However, for this song, my memory only has to go back to last week, Tuesday March 26, 2013, to be exact.

My wife and kids and I visited Castaway Bay, an indoor water park in Sandusky, to get away from the lingering Ohio winter. At 9pm, we all attended the Snoopy themed “movie time”, in which a Peanuts TV special is played for gathered families. A few minutes later, my 14 month old daughter Zoey became rather restless, so I elected to take her for a walk around the hotel, letting my wife and son enjoy the Snoopy show undisturbed.

As we explored the hotel, we soon found ourselves wandering down a hallway leading to the restaurant next door, a corridor into which was being piped Jimmy Buffett’s classic ode to his youth.

Zoey had a huge smile on her face as I sang along to Jimmy’s nostalgic lyrics, and gently bounced her up and down to the beat, creating a sweet little “Daddy/Daughter” moment. It was then, that I knew that Buffett’s track deserved the latest spotlight from the Radio Dial. 

”Oh, I could be anyone I wanted to be…
Maybe suave Errol Flynn or the Sheik of Araby…
If I only had a pencil thin mustache…
Then I could do some cruisin’ too”

3/4/13

TWO-FER TUESDAY: Everclear




Hey there Dialophiles!

It’s that time again… the time in which the Dial delivers two equally strong tracks from one musical artist. In cases like this when it’s just too difficult to decide, we present both cuts to you, in one fun filled entry. It’s a little thing we like to call “Two-Fer Tuesday”, and today’s Two-Fer features Art Alexakis, Craig Montoya and Greg Eklund; Portland Oregon’s own Everclear; and a pair of great tracks from their 2000 LP Songs from an American Movie Vol.1: Learning to Smile.

“KHJ Los Angeles - Portions of today’s programming are reproduced by means of electrical transcriptions, or tape recordings”

A short station I.D. and disclaimer delivered by KHJ newsman Art Kevin opens “AM Radio”, a string of humorous recollections laid over a sampled bed of Jean Knight’s 1972 classic “Mr. Big Stuff”. Alexakis and company touch on cruising in his sister’s Pinto in ’72, getting busted for pot in ’75, and seeing his first Zeppelin concert in ’77. Along the way, he laments his mother’s insistence on watching TV other than Good Times and Chico and the Man, and playful sneers are made at DVD players, portable CD players, and other modern entertainment devices… “There wasn’t none of that crap back in nine-teen-seven-ty…

The incredibly fun video features a parade of visual “shout-outs” using either actual period footage (American Bandstand, Jimmy Carter, Muhammad Ali, Mr. Rogers, Abba, the Captain & Tennille, KISS, Skylab, Pong, TRS 80 computers), or Everclear spoofing decade icons such as The Brady Bunch, Kojak, The Partridge Family, Sid and Marty Krofft shows, and Mr. Potato Head.

Alexakis insists over the closing refrain that he liked rock, he liked soul, he liked pop, but he never liked disco. While I can’t say that I personally share his disco disdain, I can say that AM Radio is among the best, and most fun-loving tributes to ‘70s pop culture ever laid to wax. It’s the musical equivalent of the “Have a nice day” happy face! There is no way you can’t smile or nod your head while listening!

“Yeah, when things get stupid, and I just don’t know where to find my happy… I listen to the music on the AM radio… you could hear the music on the AM radio”



 
The song immediately following the celebratory “AM Radio” on the American Movie LP is a brilliant cover of a 1967 Van Morrison smash, itself a major hit carried via AM frequencies to the transistor radios of America. Allow us to introduce “Brown Eyed Girl”.

A nostalgic ode to a former girlfriend, Morrison’s lyrics poetically recant the carefree days of experiencing the elation of young love with his special lady.

“In the misty morning fog with our hearts a thumpin’ and you… My brown eyed girl.”

In making the song Everclear’s own, Alexakis slows the tempo, reflecting a man weary from life’s trials and tribulations, wistfully recollecting innocent times shared with a past love he still carries a torch for.

Opening with an a cappella variation on the original’s “sha la la la la” refrain, then adding the drums, and a lyrical intro that thematically harkens back to the previous song on the album (and in this very post): “I hear a song makes me think of a girl I used to know… I sing along when I hear it on the radio now…

The classic song’s iconic lyrics combine with Art’s restrained and slightly somber vocals to create an unconventional, yet emotionally open re-invention.

“Sometimes I’m overcome thinkin’ ‘bout, making love in the green grass… behind the stadium with you…”

Neither track stormed the singles charts (a damn crime…), as AM Radio just missed the Hot 100 at #101, but did better on the US Adult Top 40 chart by reaching #17. Brown Eyed Girl peaked at #26 on that same chart, with no appearance at all on (or outside) the Hot 100.

AM Radio and Brown Eyed Girl complement each other quite nicely when enjoyed back-to-back. Both reference fond memories, the former of music and pop culture, and the latter of a special girl and young love, and both acknowledge, in their respective ways, that those bygone days can never be returned to.

“Do you remember when, we used to sing… Sha la la la la la la la la la la la?”


"Home by the Sea" by Genesis

   “ Creeping up the blind side...shinning up the wall.. stealing through the dark of night. ”    Welcome back to Kyle's Radio Dial, fr...