1.02.2009
This Is Love
Jeff Lynne is completely responsible for keeping George musically productive in the 1980s, and his signature sound is marvelous, within proper context. In the case of some of the material on Cloud Nine, his production had a tendency to suck the life right out of the song.
"This Is Love" was just such a victim.
So, what did this song originally sound like, when George sat under a tree in his garden, strumming on a ukulele?
We stripped the song down to its (surely) simple origins, found the magic, and rebuilt it using classic All Things Must Pass sounds. And it goes like this:
Girl Don't Come
What if Plastic Letters-era Blondie were to do this song?
And here's what we came up with:
1.01.2009
Johnny & Mary
Robert Palmer…. le sigh. He was always an adventurous, sophisticated songwriter and musician who changed his look every time he changed his sound. Because he was so debonair and such a musical shape shifter, it feels like he never got the serious respect that he didn’t require from us. His sudden death in 2003 was a genuine shock, and a tragic end because he left too soon.
The song is a dialogue by 3 people: Johnny, his wife Mary, and a narrator in the chorus. Johnny is red, frantic and high strung. Mary is sardonic, resigned and blue.
Robert Palmer used incessant confinement as the key to his tale, and the Gary Numan-esque (it was the heart of the new wave era) electronic tone underscored the emotional detachment. But there was a sad humanity in the story needing to be pulled out.
The song is energetically colorful, like a Kandinsky painting: Johnny red, Mary blue, narrator green. Here's what we put onto a new canvas:
Love Is Alright Tonite
Working Class Dog still holds up as solid and exuberant professional power pop record. It's got the songs, it's got Neil Gerlado playing guitar and bringing along his wife's producer, Keith Olsen, for the big radio hits.
"Love Is Alright Tonight" is classic power pop, but how would it hold up if given a country swing arrangement? We tried it that way, and it was good, but too frantic. The arrangement changed to an Eagle's "Heartache Tonight" feel, and this is how it plays out:
What Makes You Think You're The One
Did you ever make a cassette compilation of just Lindsey's song from Tusk? We did, too. It's been stated best in 3 More Reasons Why Lindsey Buckingham is a Genius when he writes:
"In 1979, while the rest of the band were clinging to the 1970s like grim death, he cut off his hippy locks and put on make-up and women's suits and played his version of punk songs."
Family drama was a key component of the Fleetwood Mac magic, and there were several "Stevie, piss off!" songs on Tusk. Here's a less manic take on one of them:
When You Walk in the Room
This lady dated Jimmy Page before the Zeppelin debauchery, wrote many amazing songs and sang so well that Burt Bacharach recruited her to sing some of their best material (hear a "Lifetime of Loneliness"). She is an all-arounder, in the best sense.
Uptempo and ready to kick unrequited love to the curb is how most people know "When You Walk in the Room," but change a few things and it becomes a sad song of love lost that goes something like this: