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Eighties’ best 100 redux: #84 Peter Schilling “Major Tom (Coming home)” (1982, 1983)

<< #85    |    #83 >>

At song #84, we have Peter Schilling’s “Major Tom (Coming home)”, the New German Wave re-telling of David Bowie’s classic tune, “Space oddity”.

Of course, when listening to the song at the time, I was too young to have been at all familiar with “Space oddity” so I never could have made the connection between “Major Tom” and the ‘weird’ singer of “Blue Jean”. It was only perhaps a decade later, when, having completely forgotten this track, I rediscovered it while dancing at an 80s night at some dance club whose name I no longer remember in Oshawa, and having further explored Bowie’s music and becoming a fan in the intervening years, that I made the connection.

To this day, I know very little about Peter Schilling and have never heard anything else by him. In fact, I only learned that he was part of the New German Wave scene and that this song was originally recorded in his native German language, while reading up on Nena for the post I wrote about her famous track quite some time ago.

“Major Tom (Coming home)” was originally released in German in 1982 as part of his album “Fehler im system” (the English version of the same album is called “Error in the system”) and was released in English the following year, when it became an international hit. The English version is part of my Apple Music library courtesy of an eighties compilation CD called “Retro night” that was released and purchased by yours truly in 1996 during the time that ‘retro’ music was making a comeback. The song is often lumped in with the synth pop music scene that was on the rise at the time but while it certainly does include synthesizers, I feel that they are used mostly to complement the sound created by using more traditional instruments (especially that wicked bass line).

If you are completely unfamiliar with the story of Major Tom, I would definitely recommend starting with David Bowie’s “Space oddity” but Peter Schilling’s tune makes an excellent companion to the original telling and has a better beat to dance to.

Here is the version I grew up listening to:

And here is the original German version from 1982 for you purists out there:

Original Eighties best 100 position: #87

Favourite lyric: “Across the stratosphere, a final message: ‘Give my wife my love.’ Then nothing more.” And the way he sings it is so ominous and haunting.

Where are they now?: At 69 years of age, Peter Schilling seems to be still very much active in music in his native Germany. For many years, he kept to German language releases but in the last four or five years, he’s seen something of a resurgence due to tracks from his early days, especially this very one.

For the rest of the Eighties’ best 100 redux list, click here.

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Best tunes of 2003: #11 The Decemberists “Los Angeles, I’m yours”

<< #12    |    #10 >>

I’ve spilled plenty of virtual ink already on the Portland, Oregon based indie-folk quintet led by Colin Meloy. However, the band keeps coming up on these lists of mine because I love them so much, so I might as well spill a little bit more.

“Los Angeles, I’m yours” is a track off The Decemberists’ second album, “Her majesty The Decemberists”. As I’ve already shared, I first heard this album, along with the debut, a year after its release and promptly fell for the literate tales* that frontman Colin Meloy spins into his globalized and folkloric indie rock. Apparently, he wrote this track after his band’s first visit to the great metropolis on the west coast and found that he hated it. The song is a hilarious number where he pokes fun at its denizens and their collective fashion sense**, the sights and the smells, and likens the entirety of it all to vomit from the Pacific Ocean.

“It’s streets and boulevards
Orphans and oligarchs are here
A plaintive melody
Truncated symphony
An ocean’s garbled vomit on the shore”

In true Decemberists fashion, though, the song is not a straight-ahead diss track. The music tells a completely different story, giving the feel of an answer to Sinatra’s “New York, New York”. The melody is at times joyful and wistful but always upbeat. There’s an aggressive strum on the acoustic that sets the mark and the tone. There’s strings. There’s a harmonica. You can almost hear birds chirping at one point… but maybe that would be too much.

As a post script to this entire thing, it’s worth noting Meloy’s story about the first time The Decemberists played this song live in LA after it was released into the world. He had been half expecting to be pelted by tomatoes by the crowd. Instead, the crowd all happily sang along, loudly and proudly, and this changed Mr. Meloy’s mind about the city and its people.

Happy endings all around.

*It was no big surprise to me when Meloy started publishing works of fiction, all of which are great. I just finished “The stars did wander darkling”.

**The women with their underwear straps showing about the waist of their pants and the men with their pants hanging off of them, well below their bottoms.

For the rest of the Best tunes of 2003 list, click here.

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Tunes

Best tunes of 2020: #12 Elliott Brood “Stay out”

<< #13    |    #11 >>

It was an old high school friend that tipped me off to Elliott Brood close to two decades ago. I haven’t seen Jeff in the flesh for many, many years but we’ve long been friends on the Facebook and at some point in the 2000s, he posted on his page about his cousin Casey’s band. I was mildly curious so I checked out their website. Their self-description as ‘death country’ made me laugh enough to give their debut long player, “Ambassador”, a listen and the rest, as they say, was history.

The trio of Mark Sasso, Stephen Pitkin, and Casey Laforet formed in Toronto in 2002, a few years before that fateful Facebook post. I’ve since found much to like in their alternative folk/country/rock over the years, have seen them live a couple of times, and would jump at the chance to do so again. By my count, they’ve released six studio long players and a bunch of EPs, including 2023’s “Town” and 2024’s “Country”, which were collected together to form one super album last year.

Today’s song, though, comes care of their last full-length album, “Keeper”. Of track two, Casey Laforet fully admitted that it was inspired by an old mandolin that he bought in St John’s, Newfoundland, that he calls ‘Old Smokey’. He hadn’t picked the instrument up in a while but when he finally did, “Stay out” simply burst forth into existence. He says that he doesn’t think the song could have or would have been written on a guitar. It was ‘Old Smokey’s tale to tell. Indeed, the mandolin strum is prominent and alive in the song. But so too are the foot stomps and hand claps* and for that we can only be eternally grateful.

“I got healthy kids and a beautiful wife
But I don’t wanna go home
I’m proud and thankful and terrified
But I don’t wanna go home”

“Stay out” is a joyful sounding number despite its not-so-joyful lyrics. Sometimes everything appears to be going well on the outside but things are not quite right on the inside. Thankfully, we have songs like this that make it all feel alright and we can get up to stomp it all out.

Thanks, Old Smokey. And you too, Elliott Brood.

*Both are sounds that the band went to great lengths to include on “Keeper”.

For the rest of the Best tunes of 2020 list, click here.