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Tunes

Eighties’ best 100 redux: #87 Wall of Voodoo “Mexican radio” (1982)

<< #88    |    #86 >>

At song #87 is Wall of Voodoo’s hit “Mexican radio”, easily the most accessible track in the band’s early catalogue.

Wall of Voodoo was an American New Wave band whose beginnings in film scores informed the band’s early spaghetti western-infused sound, along with original frontman, Stan Ridgway’s dark lyrics and easily recognizable droll vocals. “Mexican radio” took the band’s normal dark and unique sound further, almost to an oddball or kitschy place, and produced for Wall of Voodoo their only radio hit, boosting record sales of their second album, 1982’s “Call of the west,” to their highest charting. Ridgway left the band shortly afterwards for a solo career, was replaced by Andy Prieboy, and the band’s unique sound was lost to a more conventional New Wave sound. The group would release two more albums before disbanding for good in 1988.

I discovered/rediscovered “Mexican radio” on a retro compilation I purchased in 1999 called “Retro 80s volume 2: Rare and brilliant” and it quickly became a favourite of mine. It’s quirky and vibrant, and has inflecting lyrics that drum up images of picking up foreign language radio signals, a repeating chorus line that you really can’t help but digest and join in. I distinctly remember drunkenly dancing-slash-stumbling and shouting along to this song one Sunday retro night at Studio 69, a long-defunct downtown Toronto bar with my old housemate, Ryan. This one’s for you, buddy, wherever you might be.

Sing it with me: “I’m on a Mexican whoa-oh radio”

Original Eighties best 100 position: #95

Favourite lyric: I wish I was in Tijuana / Eating barbequed iguana” That’s some serious rhyming…

Where are they now?: The last we heard from Wall of Voodoo was in 2006 when Stan Ridgway resurrected the name, put together a band that included none of the other original members, and toured in support of Cyndi Lauper. No other real reunions have been serious discussed, especially since Marc Moreland, the other founding member died in 2002.

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

Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: The Box “The best of The Box”

(Vinyl Love is a series of posts that quite simply lists, describes, and displays the pieces in my growing vinyl collection. You can bet that each record was given a spin during the drafting of each corresponding post.)

Artist: The Box
Album Title: The best of The Box
Year released: 2024
Details: RSD2024 release, 2 x LP, fluorescent orange & fluorescent green, foil cover, gatefold sleeve

The skinny: I’ve been participating in Record Store Day festivities for more than a decade but with the diminishing amount of exclusive releases to catch my interest, it’s been a number of years since I’ve actually ventured out early enough to get stuck in lines and get involved in the crush and the rush of the crash and grab. This year, though, there were a few on my wishlist and I ventured out before the clock even reached ten. I got coffee and queued up for hours outside and inside a couple of my local shops and in the end, found three of the four that I had my eye on*. One of these was a Canadian RSD release of a new compilation called “The best of The Box”. I wrote recently how I realized that I was a fan of The Box (without even knowing it) when I posted about their single “L’affaire Dumoutier (Say to me)” for my Eighties Best 100 Redux. Listening to this vinyl the other night only reinforced for me how underrated and how talented the Canadian new wave band was at writing an ear worm that stuck with you throughout the decades. This release is pressed to two discs in fluorescent colours (orange and green)** and comes in a foil wrapped gatefold sleeve. Definitely a successful RSD for me.

Standout track: “Ordinary people”

*I wasn’t expecting to find the fourth one here in Canada but am still on the hunt for it and closing in.

**They were an 80s band, you know.

Categories
Tunes

Eighties’ best 100 redux: #89 Frankie Goes to Hollywood “The power of love” (1984)

<< #90    |    #88 >>

I’ve written a few times already on these pages* about how Toronto’s alternative rock radio station EDGE 102 (aka CFNY 102.1) did a countdown on the air in the dying days of the 20th century, ranking their top 1002 songs of all time. It was, for me, some of the best commercial radio I’d ever heard, making for great conversation and prognosticating between alt rock music fans, reminding me of songs I’d loved forever and some I’d long forgotten, and of course, introducing me to classics I’d not yet discovered.

One such example of this latter category was broadcast and ranked in the high 100s, wedged in between Yazoo’s “Nobody’s diary” and The Stone Roses’ “Fools gold”. It sounded familiar, but not, an unconventional love ballad, lyrics referencing “hooded claws” and “vampires”, but sung with glorious, impassioned sighs. Midway through, I turned to my tool rental store colleague, Chris, with whom I was working that day, and he returned my quizzical look with one of surprise. “You don’t know ‘The power of love’ by Frankie Goes to Hollywood?”

Of course, I had known the Frankie Goes to Hollywood of “Relax” and “Two tribes” infamy, they were ubiquitous in 1984, but this was something completely different, and I was hooked.

Frankie Goes to Hollywood was started by vocalist Holly Johnson in Liverpool in 1980. The original edition didn’t take, so he tried again with a different lineup the following year. The five piece lineup that would sign to ZTT Records in 1983 included Mark O’Toole (bass), Brian Nash (guitars), Peter Gill (drums), and Paul Rutherford (keyboards, tambourine, and dancing). The band would only ever record two albums, but one of these was the iconic debut album, “Welcome to the pleasuredome”, an album that boasted three consecutive #1 UK hit singles, and a fourth that could only make it as high as #2. It was a smash the world over, even in North America, and this on the back of their their love affair with the music video and MTV’s love affair with the band. Their second album, 1986’s “Liverpool”, didn’t come close to its predecessor’s success internationally, but did reasonably well in England and Europe. The band acrimoniously split in 1987. Holly Johnson successfully sued ZTT to get out of the contract, publicly stated he would never perform with his ex-bandmates again, and successfully blocked them from using the Frankie Goes to Hollywood name.

I loved “Relax” and “Two tribes” as a pre-teen and though the nostalgia factor kept me dancing to them on retro nights, “The power of love” became a mainstay on my adult life playlists through most of the 2000s**. It is a ballad that had more of a timeless sound than the rest of their dated, new wave dance hits, boasting real instruments and less Trevor Horn production. It is a love song about love, rather than lovers, and Holly Johnson puts on the vocal clinic that you’d have every right to expect. It’s magical.

Original Eighties best 100 position: n/a

Favourite lyric: “I’m so in love with you / Purge the soul / Make love your goal.” Oh yes, indeed.

Where are they now?: Remember when I said Holly Johnson vowed never to perform with his Frankie bandmates again? Well, he did just that, for one song, at Eurovision 2023, last May, the first time they had performed together onstage since 1987. But of course, nothing since.

*I’ve posted links to playlist versions of this list for both Spotify and Apple Music consumption.

**But somehow I managed to forget to include this great track the last time I was putting together this list of 100 great 80s tunes.

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