Spring colors, spring things, spring art show prep...
Black Celebration by
Depcehe Mode was released in March 1986.
Happy 40th Birthday to an absolute masterpiece.
Duran Duran - Nite Romantics EP (1981)
Every time I hear remixes, alternate takes, B-sides and demos from Duran Duran’s first two album eras I’m mesmerized by how fresh and modern they sound 45 years later. I’ve followed them since Rio in 1982 and while I continue to enjoy their work (the last three albums in particular) I’m awestruck by the very unique place they claimed for themselves with their first bold sonic statements. Having said that, they have yet to be given credit for their influence on contemporary pop of all subgenres. DD FOREVER.
Every time I hear remixes, alternate takes, B-sides and demos from Duran Duran’s first two album eras I’m mesmerized by how fresh and modern they sound 45 years later. I’ve followed them since Rio in 1982 and while I continue to enjoy their work (the last three albums in particular) I’m awestruck by the very unique place they claimed for themselves with their first bold sonic statements. Having said that, they have yet to be given credit for their influence on contemporary pop of all subgenres. DD FOREVER.
I’ve got some great reads ahead of me. Many thanks to my friend Steve for preordering these two long awaited memoirs for me, the Christina Applegate one signed on one of the opening pages and the Liza Minnelli one with a signed bookplate. Steve had the rare privilege of being seated next to Liza in a bar one evening long ago as she and a companion had some cocktails. Steve and I both met Christina after a performance of Sweet Charity in NYC. I asked her to autograph my DVD of the film Wonderland (which I enjoyed her in) and she signed it across Val Kilmer’s crotch. What a very cool and nice lady she is. I’m looking forward to reading about the life journeys of both of these talented humans.
31 March 1986 • 40 Years Ago…
Prince And The Revolution’s Parade LP was released.
My first dose of Prince’s Parade era came in January 1986 when a Z-100 New York DJ announced that he would be playing an exclusive track from Prince’s upcoming album. The song was a sparse, altogether baffling mixture of electronic drums, synth, playful guitar licks and falsetto vocals called “Kiss”. It sounded like it had been recorded fast and furious… altogether unlike the ornate arrangements of “Purple Rain” and “Raspberry Beret”. It was wildly different, a bit edgy and I LOVED IT. When the Parade album was released and I got to experience it in full, everything that puzzled me about “Kiss” made sense in context with the rest of the album. “Mountains”, “AnotherLoverHoleInYoHead” and “Girls & Boys” (which contains what is to this day one of my favorite Prince lyrics: “Meet me in another world, space and joy / Vous êtes très belle, mama, girls and boys”) sounded like next level adult sophistication to my 13 year old ears. It felt classic, yet modern. Hip, yet elegant. 40 years on I’m still moved by “Sometimes It Snows In April” in ways that my younger self was only coming to understand when it stopped me in my tracks for the first time. This wasn’t merely R&B, pop or funk. It was Grown Up Music. Many thanks as always to Prince And The Revolution for being a huge part of my musical education.