Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe – the MOUTH edition (Installment 8)

It’s time for another installment of my Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe series. 

This week’s body part focus is the MOUTH

        Here is my playlist with songs that have MOUTH in their title.

Just hit Play and Enjoy!

SOMETHING IN YOUR MOUTH by Nickelback

Something in Your Mouth” is the second single and first promotional single from Canadian rock band Nickelback‘s sixth studio album Dark Horse. The song was released as a digital download first to iTunes Store (October2008) and as the second single to rock radio in December that same year. It’s heavier than the first single “Gotta Be Somebody”, and more like the rest of the album. The song was also used in the 2009 film American Pie Presents: The Book of Love.

Dark Horse sold 326,000 in its first week and debuted at number 2 in the US. More than a year after its release, the album did not leave the Top 100 on the Billboard 200. The album spent 125 consecutive weeks inside the Billboard 200.  On the week of November 29, 2014, Dark Horse re-entered the Billboard 200 at number 195, more than six years after the album’s release. It is the band’s fourth straight Multi-Platinum selling album in the US. Songs “Something in Your Mouth” and “Burn It to the Ground”, written by Kroeger, were released only to the rock radio stations in December 2008 and May 2009 respectively. The album won numerous accolades at the 2009 Juno Awards, winning three out of five of its nominated awards including “Rock Album of the Year”. “Burn It to the Ground” is one of my favorite Nickelback songs! –that’s why I linked the music video for ya’ll. 😊

Lyrically, Dark Horse has been characterized as “a slice of perceptive, precise self-examination.” Some of the subject matter is considered to be vulgar, and by the assessment of some critics, misogynistic. Themes explored include binge drinking, recreational drug use, prostitutes, adult film actresses and exotic dancers.

Some of Dark Horse‘s guitar riffs have been described as “knuckle-dragging.” The album’s production has been described as “caught somewhere between the two extremes of AC/DC and Def Leppard.” The album incorporates drum loops on some tracks.

CRITICAL RECEPTION of the Dark Horse album: Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic gave Dark Horse 1.5/5, writing, “Dark Horse is constructed entirely from the group’s standard power ballad and hard rock templates, the mood only lightening when Kroeger and company take a break to kick back on ‘This Afternoon.'”

Entertainment Weekly reviewer Leah Greenblatt wrote, “It’s hard not to be put off by the execrable lyrics of album opener “Something in Your Mouth” (the song is basically kryptonite for feminists).” PopMatters criticized the band’s release, giving it 3/10 and saying it was a step down from previous albums: “Dark Horse finds the group at a creative low point. Each song sounds like an older, better Nickelback hit, and Kroeger only once displays his prior songwriting strength with the sad-bastard portrait ‘Just to Get High’.”

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The Guardian awarded the album one out of five stars, being particularly negative of the band’s cliché style; “Nickelback’s music reaffirms every sex-and-stupidity cliche hard rock can offer.” In congruence, Consequence of Sound gave the album one star out of five in a scathing review. Staff writer David Buchanan assessed: “The problem is that while Nickelback’s front man tries so hard to convert us to perversion, it feels less like Matthew McConaughey hitting on you and more like those creepy old men at your local burger joint. Chad Kroeger might be blond now, but he still sounds like a sex-crazed 40-something with a soft side.”

Rolling Stone gave the album a positive review, complementing its production, writing “Mutt Lange lightens Nickelback’s dreary post-grunge plod, applying guitar shimmer to prom ballads and detonating big beats under frat-party shouts and raplike vocal parts.” ChartAttack credited the band’s success to knowing its target audience: “Chad Kroeger is a genius because he knows exactly what people want and precisely how far he can go. He turned out an extremely racy album that’s loaded with songs about gettin’ drunk and doin’ it all without breaking any taboos, and with enough love and moral authority to grease its passage into the mainstream. Rejoice, North America. This is your world.” Billboard also praised the album’s content: “The bulletproof Nickelback provides affordable fun that promises good returns in hard times.”

Reception for the song “Something in Your Mouth”: Christopher Rosa of VH1 wrote: “OK, Nickelback: So, women are more appealing to you when they can’t talk? That’s what you’re saying right now. If it’s not, please offer an explanation. I’d love to hear it.”  YIKES!

About the song: Frontman and lyricist Chad Kroeger told MTV News that this track was the starting point for Dark Horse. He explained:

“That was the first song we worked on for the record. We were in Sweden and went over a bunch of material with our producer, Mutt Lange, and he wanted to get to a rocker. I’ve got this phrase: ‘You look so much cuter with something in your mouth.’ He thought that was perfect and was like, ‘Let’s start with that one right there.’ So we just went off and just wrote this silly rock song that’s got this great groove to it, and away we went.”

Kroeger admitted that much of Dark Horse, such as this track, features adult themed lyrics and innuendo. He explained to MTV that he did this in order to pull the listener in. Said Kroeger:

“I wanted to get into grabbing someone’s attention and holding it. Sometimes, there are a couple of moments within the record where parents might be going, ‘What? This has to come out of the minivan.’ But I think we’re at the point now where we have to grab people’s attention.”

And that they did! (btw, I happen to like Nickelback. Not sure why all the hate. Heard it started with a comedian on a talk show dissing the band, it went viral and suddenly the whole world was hating on Nickelback – most didn’t even know why! Just parroting rhetoric. Sound familiar??)

 

PUT YER MONEY WHERE YER MOUTH IS by Oasis

“Put Yer Money Where Your Mouth Is” is a track from Oasis’s fourth studio album, Standing on the Shoulder of Giants, released in 2000. The song is known for its heavy, psychedelic rock sound, which was a distinct departure from the band’s earlier Britpop style.

The album was created during a turbulent period, a very transitional and chaotic time for Oasis. Two founding members had left, and the band embraced a more experimental sound with the help of producer Mark “Spike” Stent.

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“Put Yer Money Where Your Mouth Is” features a dark, driving, and almost repetitive beat, with elements of psychedelic music woven in using drum loops and other effects. Oasis’s shift toward a more psychedelic sound during this era was influenced by the band The Beta Band, a Scottish indie rock group formed in 1996, known for their eclectic mix of genres like post-rock, electronica, hip-hop, and psychedelia.

Regarding the song’s lyrics, guitarist and principal songwriter Noel Gallagher has suggested that the lyrics were not deeply conceptualized. He felt the album needed more rock songs, so he focused on creating a high-energy track and added lyrics that fit the backing music. The lyrics are largely utilitarian, designed to fit the driving beat rather than convey deep, complex meanings. It’s a straightforward take on the idiom, challenging someone to act on their words. The song doesn’t have a traditional chorus; instead, it uses a repetitive, almost chant-like vocal delivery of the title phrase. Liam Gallagher’s vocals are in his distinct Mancunian accent, but the delivery of the repetitive lyrics has been criticized by some for being less inspired than earlier work.  

The song’s reception has been mixed. Some fans appreciate its rocking energy and the evolution of the band’s sound. However, others have criticized it as an unfinished idea, with some finding the repetitive elements a bit much.

It is one of several tracks on Standing on the Shoulder of Giants that highlighted the band’s move away from their Britpop roots and into more experimental territory. Overall, the song exemplifies a production shift for the band, moving towards a more processed and effect-heavy sound compared to the raw, classic rock approach of their previous albums.

The psychedelic feel in “Put Yer Money Where Your Mouth Is” is noted for its departure from the band’s previous work, incorporating various experimental and “psychedelic” techniques and specific instrumentation.

Key production techniques include:

  • Drum loops: The song uses repetitive drum loops that give it a driving, almost hypnotic rhythm, a characteristic common in psychedelic music.
  • Samples: The track incorporates samples (the use of short pre-recorded audio fragments or effects, like atmospheric sounds, instrumental stabs, or manipulated audio snippets) which adds an experimental and textured layer to the music.
  • Guitar effects: The bassline is prominent and driving, adding to the song’s dark energy. The song features distorted and heavily processed guitar sounds, likely using effects like fuzz, phase, or flanger, which create an atmospheric and “grittier” sound than their previous work.
  • Leslie Speaker Cabinet Effect: A prominent feature of the song is the use of a Leslie speaker cabinet (typically used for organs) on various instruments, particularly the guitars. This gives the sound a warbling, rotating effect that adds to the song’s trippy atmosphere.
  • Repetitive motifs: The song builds around a repetitive musical motif, described by some as a “repetitive finger hitting the piano on the same key”, which is characteristic of the hypnotic nature of psychedelic rock.
  • Reverb and Delay: These were used to create depth and atmosphere, complementing the other effects.

The general mixing and overall production have a slightly darker, more experimental vibe compared to the bright production of their earlier albums. These elements combine to create a sound that is distinctively different from the band’s traditional Britpop style, leaning instead towards the experimental and psychedelic rock genres.

“Put Yer Money Where Your Mouth Is” is a significant track in the Oasis catalog not for its commercial success, but for what it represents: a definitive break from the band’s Britpop sound and a dive into more experimental, psychedelic rock. The song reflects the band’s chaotic state at the time of recording (1999-2000). The underlying tension and raw energy are palpable in the final recording. The song was recorded after the departure of Paul “Guigsy” McGuigan and Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs. Noel Gallagher filled in on bass guitar and all other instruments, with the exception of the drums played by Alan White.

Reception and Legacy The song’s reception has been polarized. Some critics and fans found the track’s structure repetitive and uninspired, the lyrics lacking in meaning and pointing to it as an example of the band’s decline during this period. It is often ranked as one of the band’s weaker or “abysmal” album tracks.

Other fans see it as ahead of its time. They appreciate the track for its sheer energy and as a sign of the band’s willingness to experiment and change their sound. It is a favorite among those who enjoy the band’s heavier, more psychedelic material and a straightforward rock song that gets the blood pumping.

In summary, the song is a snapshot of a band in transition, pushing into new, darker sonic territory, whether successfully or not remains a point of debate among Oasis fans.

Album cover: The album’s artwork features the photo of the Manhattan skyline taken from the rooftop of 500 Fifth Avenue (5th Ave/W 42nd St). Some famous buildings are visible including the Empire State Building in the foreground and the former World Trade Center in the background. To create the cover photo, the photographer captured the same frame every 30 minutes over 18 hours during the whole day’s course; the photos were digitally composited into the final picture. All of the singles released from this album contained artwork that was based on the album artwork. This album was the first Oasis artwork not to be created by Brian Cannon at Microdot.

Fun Fact: The Gallagher brothers are notoriously surly toward their fans. “I don’t have to be nice to people because they dig my music,” Noel told Rolling Stone. “I don’t live my life to have my picture taken by fans. I’m not asking them to buy records. They buy them because they like them.”  Wow! So rude!

Fun Fact: They are wildly popular in the UK, with eight #1 hits, but have never had much success in the US. Noel claims this is because Americans have “very bad taste” in music and cites the Backstreet Boys as an example.

Fun Fact: Noel left their 2000 European tour after he and Liam got into a fist-fight in Barcelona – they finished the tour without him. It’s one of many dust-ups between the brothers in their history. They officially called it quits in 2009 and didn’t patch things up until 2024, when they announced a reunion tour for the following year.

Fun Fact: Noel and Liam are from Manchester and have the thick accents associated with the city. MTV once poked fun at their inscrutable speech by subtitling them.  (haha, serves them right for being so surly with fans!)

Fun Fact: Their album Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants is named after an inscription on the British 2 Pound coin. The coin says: “Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants and is a tribute to Isaac Newton. The album title was supposed to say “Shoulders” but by the time they noticed the mistake, it was too late.

Fun Fact: Drummer Zac Starkey joined Oasis for a tour in 2005. He is the son of Beatles drummer Ringo Star and was working with The Who. His decision to join Oasis threw off plans for a tour and album from The Who.

Fun Fact: Noel Gallagher on songwriting: “With every song that I write, I compare it to the Beatles. The thing is, they only got there before me. If I’d been born at the same time as John Lennon, I’d have been up there.”  (This guy is so arrogant! Comparing himself to John Lennon?? Puh-leeze!)

MOUTH by Bush

Mouth” is a song by British grunge band Bush from their 1996 second album Razorblade Suitcase. Patricia Jones of Cryptic Rock opined the original mix of the track to be “one-two punch of classic grunge grit and narcotic rhythms”, evoking a “comfortable daze”.

Though its original version was not released as a single, it was remixed by Bush under the pseudonym “The Stingray” for the 1997 remix album Deconstructed. It was released as a single in October 1997, due largely in part to it being featured prominently in both the trailer and the 1997 film An American Werewolf in Paris. The Stingray remix was the version that made the song popular and received airplay on radio, peaking No.5 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. The remix version was also included on their greatest hits album Loaded: The Greatest Hits 1994–2023.

Lyrics and Theme: The lyrics for “Mouth” were written by frontman Gavin Rossdale. The song explores themes of love, communication, and the complex nature of relationships…toxic relationships and emotional pain caused by another person’s words and actions.

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The song portrays a deeply unhealthy relationship where the singer feels suffocated and broken by the presence of the other person. The central refrain, “Nothing hurts like your mouth, mouth, mouth,” emphasizes the pain inflicted by verbal abuse or negative communication.

The lyrics use the metaphor of “mental armor” that is shattered by hurtful words: “All your mental armor drags me down.”

The remix of “Mouth” (The Stingray Mix) drastically changed the song’s atmosphere and commercial appeal by transforming a raw, atmospheric grunge track into an energetic, industrial-rock electronic anthem, effectively moving the song from a hidden album track to a club-ready single that successfully crossed over into mainstream pop culture.

The primary difference between the original version of “Mouth” (from Razorblade Suitcase) and the remixed version, “Mouth (The Stingray Mix)” (from Deconstructed and the An American Werewolf in Paris soundtrack), lies in their production style and overall sound:

Feature Original Version Remixed Version (The Stingray Mix)
Album Razorblade Suitcase (1996) Deconstructed (1997), An American Werewolf in Paris Soundtrack
Genre/Style Grunge/Post-grunge, consistent with the band’s core sound, often described as darker and heavier. Industrial rock/Electronica-influenced, features more loops, effects, and a distinct dance-rock beat.
Instrumentation Typical rock band setup (guitars, bass, drums, vocals), produced by Steve Albini. Retains the core rock elements but incorporates synthesizers, drum loops, and studio effects.
Vibe Rawer, more organic, characteristic of 90s grunge production. More polished, danceable, and electronic, giving it a more modern, film-soundtrack feel.

How did the remix change the song’s vibe and appeal?  The remix of Bush’s “Mouth” fundamentally altered the song’s vibe from raw, introspective grunge to an energetic, commercially viable electronic rock track, thereby broadening its appeal to a new and larger audience.

Aspect Original Version Remixed Version
Mood Darker, more atmospheric, raw, and intense. Energetic, catchy, danceable, and “club-friendly”.
Genre Post-grunge, raw rock. Industrial rock, electronic, dance-rock.
Feel Organic, heavy, album-oriented rock. Polished, produced, “arena club stomper” feel.

 The remix’s new sound significantly shifted its vibe and enhanced its appeal for several reasons:

Shift in Vibe

  • From Raw to Polished/Cinematic: The original version, produced by Steve Albini, had a raw, organic, and introspective grunge sound. The remix added layers of studio effects, making the sound more polished and epic, which aligned well with film soundtrack production. The added electronic elements gave the song a “futuristic” feel.
  • From Dark Rock to Dance-Rock: The remix incorporated a driving electronic beat and synthesizers, making it more danceable and suitable for club environments.
  • More Mysterious and Sexy: Some listeners felt the electronic elements made the song more mysterious, “sexy and epic” compared to the heavier, darker album version.

Shift in Appeal

  • Broader Audience Reach: The remix appealed to a wider demographic that included fans of electronic music and dance clubs, as well as mainstream pop/rock radio listeners. The original version was largely limited to the band’s core grunge fanbase.
  • Commercial Success: The remix was significantly more commercially successful. Its inclusion in the film An American Werewolf in Paris soundtrack and its release as a standalone single exposed it to a mass audience it never would have reached as a deep album cut.
  • Market Strategy: The shift reflected a deliberate music industry strategy in the late 1990s to prolong a song’s promotional life and diversify an artist’s reach by appealing to the growing popularity of electronic music.

In summary, “Mouth” stands out as a unique track for Bush, existing in two distinct forms that highlight their grunge roots and their brief but commercially successful experimentation with electronica.

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*In the late 1990s, the crossover between rock and electronic music was a major trend, with many bands experimenting with industrial, techno, and trip-hop elements. Key bands who blended these genres include the metal band Nine Inch Nails and alternative/experimental bands Smashing Pumpkins and Radiohead.

Fun Fact: The “Stingray mix” refers to a specific remixed version of the Bush song “Mouth” that was created by the band themselves using the pseudonym Stingray. “Stingray” was not an external producer or DJ, but rather a name the band used for their own remixing work.

Here’s the Stingray version video. You can find Bush’s original version in my playlist. Which one do you like, the grungy original or the more electronica Stingray version? Feels kinda like a Battle of the Bands…so please do let me know which version you prefer in the comments section below. (I actually like the Stingray mix better.)

 

SHUT YOUR MOUTH by Garbage

“Shut Your Mouth” is a 2001 alternative rock song by the band Garbage, from their third studio album, Beautiful Garbage. As the album’s opener the song was released as the fourth and final single from the album in 2002.

The song features a wah-wah guitar sound created with a vintage Les Paul and a DigiTech Whammy pedal, as well as complex, “messed up” percussion created by manipulating drum tracks with editing software.

Shut Your Mouth” was one of the first songs Garbage completed; the genesis of the song came from the band setting up their instruments and playing music for three hours, while Manson spontaneously sang. “It came from Garbage attempting to do a funk jam,” recalled Butch Vig, the band’s drummer. “And then Shirley went into the vocal booth and this Patti Smith-style stream-of-consciousness vocal came out”. Vig later described “Shut Your Mouth” as “Sly & The Family Stone on quaaludes.  (Sidebar: Whatever happened to quaaludes anyway??!)

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Lyrically,  Shirley Manson explained, “In a general sense, it’s about keeping your own counsel. There are so many opinions out there and misinformation and everybody’s got their own agenda”.

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In 2007, “Shut Your Mouth” was remastered and included on Garbage’s greatest hits album Absolute Garbage.

The song’s MUSIC VIDEOS: Two music videos were completed for “Shut Your Mouth”. The first was a stiff 2D/3D animated promo, directed by Henry Moore Selder in May/June 2002. Garbage approached Selder to direct the video after being impressed with his videos for The Hives (“Die, Alright!” and “Hate to Say I Told You So”). The video concept is Manson’s plea to the press to stop meddling in her private life, interpreted by her featuring as a guest on a Letterman/Springer-style talk show. The square characters are meant to look ‘anti-3D’; achieved by removing the smoothness and perfection in the software, to give a jerky and organic look. Hand-drawn images of the band were then mixed in.

Four people, including Selder, from production company RealA worked on the video for a month. After the video was first broadcast online, the video was re-edited to suit the band. The band’s co-founder & guitarist Steve Marker, particularly, did not like his animation. The second edit, where Marker was redesigned with a Terminator-style look, was broadcast across Europe.

Neither Garbage nor Mushroom Records were pleased with the animated video and commissioned a second video for the singles UK release. With a small £10,000 budget for the video, it was decided a live video would be released, but the label offered a few up and coming directors the chance to remix some footage or give it a different spin. Existing live footage filmed by MTV in London and by WDR in Cologne filmed at two shows in April 2002 was used to create an initial live cut.

The concept behind the Bloomberg-style data screens was to use them as a platform to show the footage in an unusual format and to illustrate ideas within the song’s lyrics with animation. The idea came from the production team seeing a large LCD display outside Waterloo station, the image shown became distorted when viewed up close. A number of shots were re-played through a 20-foot video wall in a Portsmouth warehouse and filmed on Digi beta for the distorted effect. This footage was combined in the final edit of the video, which was completed in August 2002 and screened a few days after.  (This second version is the one featured in my playlist)

Both versions of the “Shut Your Mouth” video were made commercially available on both the enhanced CD singles of the “Shut Your Mouth” UK release. A remastered version of the Live Version of the “Shut Your Mouth” video was included on Garbage’s 2007 greatest hits DVD Absolute Garbage and made available as a digital download via online music services the same year.

CRITICAL RECEPTION: “Shut Your Mouth” received a mostly positive reception from music critics upon the release of Beautiful Garbage. In a review for Q, Ian Griffiths wrote

“Arch opener “Shut Your Mouth” is a bile-laden [lyrics full of bitterness, anger, cynicism, or resentment] winner from the same school as “Stupid Girl” 

while Victoria Durham in her review for Rock Sound commented on the tracks “bombastic sass”. In Peter Murphy’s album preview for Hot Press, he wrote,

“In an album of hot colors and dark corners, “Shut Your Mouth” is designer dirty-in-your-ear funk with free-flowing lyrics and what sound like purloined AC/DC riffs.”

 

 SHUT YOUR MOUTH by Motorhead

Motörhead’s song “Shut Your Mouth” is a straightforward, aggressive heavy metal track from their sixteenth studio album, Hammered, released in April 2002. The song is the sixth track on the album. It was also released as a promotional single in 2002 and as a single edit on the 2024 singles compilation album We Take No Prisoners (The Singles 1995-2006).*

The song is characterized by its simplicity and no-nonsense, aggressive lyrics. The general theme is a direct, confrontational message to someone who is a nuisance or “outstaying their welcome”. The lyrics express disdain for this person, essentially telling them to stop talking and go away, as summed up in lines like “you’re everything that we despise”. The lyrics are considered very direct, even simplistic, by some fans and critics, who note the lack of the complexity found in some of Lemmy’s other writings.

Musically, “Shut Your Mouth” features a catchy, earwormy riff and a sing-along chorus. It has a driving beat, though some critics found the main riff to be a bit pedestrian. The song provided a needed tempo contrast to other, speedier tracks on the Hammered album.

Despite being a single from the 2002 album Hammered, the song was quickly dropped from the band’s live setlist during that album’s tour. It is very rare for Motörhead to abandon a new song live so soon after an album’s release. It was rarely performed after the tour either, which is unusual for a Motorhead single.

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Ultimately, it was a rare instance where the band decided to drop a new song from their live rotation during the album’s supporting tour. So then, why did they drop it from their setlists? Motörhead stopped playing “Shut Your Mouth” live shortly after the Hammered album’s release for a combination of reasons:

  • Difficulty Replicating Live: Lemmy Kilmister mentioned that the song was “difficult” to perform live, specifically noting the challenge of doing the harmonies and the presence of keyboards on the track, which were not part of their standard live setup.
  • Simplistic Lyrics: Some fans and critics have noted that the song suffers from very simple, sparse, and somewhat stilted lyrics, leading to less engagement compared to other tracks.
  • Lack of “Meat”: The band likely felt the song didn’t have enough substance (“meat on these bones”) to sustain a live performance throughout the entire tour.
  • Audience Reception: The track did not resonate strongly enough with the live audience compared to other songs, prompting its quick removal from the setlist.

However, its raw, punk-rock energy makes it a favorite for some fans. Despite some criticism, the song received positive feedback for its “bombastic sass” and “designer dirty-in-your-ear funk” style.

I found online this breakdown of Motorhead’s songwriting process. In applying that process we can surmise just how “Shut Your Mouth” came to be.

Motörhead’s songwriting process typically involved Lemmy providing a basic song “skeleton” (usually lyrics and a core idea/riff), which the full band would then “flesh out” together during rehearsals and studio sessions. While specific details on the development of “Shut Your Mouth” are limited in available interviews, the general process for the band, particularly with the long-standing lineup of Lemmy, Phil Campbell, and Mikkey Dee, gives insight into how it was likely developed.

Key aspects of their collaborative process that would have applied to “Shut Your Mouth” include:

  • Initial Ideas: Lemmy often came in with an initial riff, chord progression, or lyrics. Lemmy’s Lyrics: Lemmy Kilmister was the primary lyricist for the band. He would come in with an initial riff, chord progression or lyrics. The lyrics for “Shut Your Mouth” are direct and confrontational, in keeping with Lemmy’s signature style. They were likely written relatively quickly, once the basic musical structure was established. The theme of telling someone to essentially “shut up and go away” is a simple, no-nonsense sentiment characteristic of his writing and aligns with his style.
  • Band Collaboration: The other members, Phil Campbell (guitar) and Mikkey Dee (drums), would add their parts and arrangement ideas, developing the song’s structure and dynamics. Phil Campbell mentioned in an interview that band members would sometimes “fight for three days over song ideas,” indicating an intense, collaborative, and sometimes combative approach to finalizing tracks.
  • Collaborative Jamming: Motörhead often wrote songs by jamming in the studio. One band member would typically come up with a riff idea, and the others would build upon it. The “earwormy” central riff for “Shut Your Mouth” likely emerged from one of these sessions.
  • Studio Recording: The band would then record and refine the song in the studio. Lemmy was known for a specific, non-traditional bass sound (playing through guitar amps with the bass rolled off) which heavily influenced their overall sound and would have been central to the song’s final mix.
  • Production: The song was self-produced by the band members, with Lemmy, Campbell, and Dee all three credited as producers for the entire Hammered album. As such they not only had significant control over the sound and arrangement of “Shut Your Mouth”, but their hands-on approach also meant they had complete control of the direction and final sound of every track during the recording sessions and all post-production for the entire Hammered album. 

The final form of “Shut Your Mouth” with its catchy riff and driving beat, resulted from this collaborative effort, where a simple, aggressive core idea was built upon by the seasoned musicians until it became the punchy track on the Hammered album.

Fun Fact: Motörhead had recorded several albums as a three-piece, with drummer Mikkey Dee, guitarist Phil Campbell, and original vocalist/bassist, Lemmy. In Joel McIver’s memoir Overkill: The Untold Story of Motörhead, Dee is quoted as saying the Hammered album – which is noted for its darker subject matter and reflective tone – was influenced by the 9/11 attacks:

We Are Motörhead, the album before, was extremely hard and fast, it was an extremely aggressive album, and this one’s not so aggressive…Me and Phil, we flew into LA on September 10 and we wrote these songs over a month of fuckin’ fear over there, you know, it was a bad vibe. So maybe that had something to do with the mood of this album. I was thinking about it afterwards. This album’s really moody, you know? And the same goes for Lemmy, the way he wrote the melodies.”

*’Motörhead’s Late-Career Singles Collected in New Vinyl Box Set’ appeared first on Consequence of Sound. A new 7-inch vinyl/CD box set collects Motörhead’s latter-era A-side and B-side singles, ranging from 1995 through 2006.

Dubbed We Take No Prisoners: The Singles: 1995 – 2006, the set is both vinyl with nine 7-inch vinyl discs and a 2-CD box set. The track “Shut Your Mouth,” from the band’s 2002 album Hammered, was chosen as the lead single for the collection.

The box set is especially notable for collectors. As mentioned in the band’s press release, 7-inch singles were a dominant format up until the ’90s, when CDs took over. Many of these tracks were released as CD singles at the time, before becoming sought-after collectibles. Not only does this box set return them to print, but most are receiving their first-ever release on 7-inch vinyl.

Fun Fact: Motorhead’s contract riders for their concerts were apparently hilarious!

 

YOU TOOK THE WORDS RIGHT OUT OF MY MOUTH (Hot Summer Night)                by Meat Loaf

Michael Lee Aday (born Marvin Lee Aday; September 27, 1947 – January 20, 2022), better known by his stage name Meat Loaf, was an American singer and actor. He was known for his powerful, wide-ranging voice and theatrical live shows. His 1977 debut studio album, Bat Out of Hell, along with the two sequel albums, Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell (1993), and Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose (2006)—has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, making Meat Loaf one of the best-selling music artists of all time. The first album stayed on the charts for over NINE YEARS and is one of the best-selling albums in history, still selling an estimated 200,000 copies annually (as of 2016 accounts).

Despite the commercial success of the Bat Out of Hell trilogy and earning a Grammy Award for Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance for the song “I’d Do Anything for Love”, Meat Loaf nevertheless experienced some difficulty establishing a steady career within the United States. However, his career saw significant success due to his popularity in Europe, especially in the United Kingdom and Ireland. He received the 1994 Brit Award in the U.K. for Best-Selling Album and Best-Selling Single and was ranked 23rd for the number of weeks spent on the UK charts in 2006. He ranks 96th on VH1’s “100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock”.

“You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth” was the first of four singles released from Meat Loaf’s debut album. The “Bat Out of Hell” music and lyrics for the entire album were written by composer Jim Steinman.

This song is a spirited, lust-filled rock ballad that tells the tale of a boy’s first kiss with a girl on a hot summer night. The climax occurs when she kisses him and he realizes that she “took the words right out of [his] mouth,” stopping him just as he was about to say, “I love you”. The track famously opens with a dramatic spoken-word intro performed by Jim Steinman and actress Marcia McClain. Its theme of love and desire is intertwined with horror imagery.

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Some classify Bat Out of Hell as a rock opera but that designation is a point of debate, largely because its songs don’t tell a single, coherent story from beginning to end. It’s more accurately described as a concept album, a form of rock opera, or a series of songs based on themes and images from a rock musical that songwriter Jim Steinman was developing.

I dug a little deeper because I wanted to explore the essence of a rock opera, its criteria and the difference between a rock opera and a concept album. There are a bunch of sites and forums that discuss, dissect and define the two but put simply, this widely cited, though unattributed, explanation offers the simplest specification:

“While all rock operas are concept albums,

not all concept albums are rock operas –

– the key difference is the narrative structure.”

A rock opera tells a story, has characters who drive the plot; it has a beginning, middle and an end and the songs serve to move the story forward. In a concept album the songs revolve around a central theme but don’t necessarily tell a story. And that little sidebar was for all the folks who wanted to know this stuff! But if you’re an info nerd like me and want to dive a little deeper, here’s a breakdown of elements specific to the album that can answer the question “Is the Bat Out of Hell album a rock opera or not?”

Google offers this explanation: The primary element of a rock opera is not present in this album: it doesn’t tell a single cohesive story with a beginning and an end. That alone takes it out of the genuine rock opera classification.

BUT not so fast:  Even though it doesn’t meet the primary “rule”, it does have these defining qualities:

  • Thematic unity: The songs revolve around common themes of teenage angst, romantic longing, forbidden love, and rebellion, creating a shared emotional world.
  • A “backstory”: The album evolved from an unproduced musical by songwriter Jim Steinman called Neverland, which was a futuristic rock version of Peter Pan. This origin story provides a loose thematic framework for the songs, even though a clear narrative doesn’t persist through the album.
  • Dramatic, theatrical style: The songs are over-the-top, with exaggerated performances and musical arrangements that evoke a larger-than-life, stage-ready feeling

Examples of rock opera traits in the album

  • “Paradise by the Dashboard Light”: The song is a three-act miniature rock opera in itself, with a distinct beginning, middle, and end. It features a play-by-play commentary from baseball announcer Phil Rizzuto during a narrative section.
  • “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad”: This song tells a story from the perspective of a character who can’t bring himself to say “I love you,” a common sentiment on the album.
  • Title track: The song “Bat Out of Hell” describes a tragic, cinematic motorcycle crash and sets the tone for the album’s dramatic and epic feel.

Ultimately, while the album may lack a traditional linear plot, its origins, shared themes, and powerful theatrical style cement its reputation as a defining—if unconventional—work in the rock opera canon (body of works). In other words, it’s not a rock opera per se but it is definitely within and under the rock opera umbrella…sitting just at the junction of concept album and rock opera. I can see why there is debate on the question “Is Bat Out of Hell a rock opera or not?” Take the debate one step further: 

Why Bat Out of Hell is considered part of the rock opera canon:

Bat Out of Hell earned its place in this canon for a few key reasons, despite not being a traditional linear narrative:

  • Theatricality and scope: Like other canonical rock operas, it has an over-the-top, dramatic, and cinematic feel. The songs are grand and ambitious, reflecting the themes and intensity of a stage show.
  • Origin in a stage musical: The album’s songs originated from an unproduced musical by songwriter Jim Steinman, giving it roots in the world of musical theater. This makes it an especially unique example of a concept album born from a rock opera concept.
  • Influential style: The album pioneered a uniquely dramatic style that combined hard rock with orchestral arrangements and narrative lyrics. This “operatic rock” sound had a massive influence on the trajectory of rock and power ballads for years to come.

Wow! Who knew?? Certainly not I, until now…

Bat Out of Hell has sold over 43 million copies worldwide, making it one of the best-selling albums of all time. It is certified 14× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). As of June 2019, the album had spent 522 weeks (!!!) in the UK Albums Chart, the fourth longest chart run by a studio album. It is the best-selling album in Australia, having been certified 26× platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA).

Fun Fact: The album, released in October 1977, was produced by Todd RundgrenBat Out of Hell spawned two Meat Loaf sequel albums: Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell (1993) and Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose (2006). Todd Rundgren was instrumental in creating the album’s iconic sound and he played guitar on the record. However, his involvement and contribution decreased significantly on the two subsequent BOOH albums, essentially only arranging background vocals on some of the songs; his role was said to be “pretty much peripheral” after his time with the initial album.

Meat Loaf and Todd Rundgren 1982

I didn’t realize Todd Rundgren produced for so many bands and artists. I’ve come across his name as producer numerous times. Jim Steinman, composer/lyricist/producer who wrote the Bat out of Hell album then wrote and produced the sequel BOOH albums, labeled Todd Rundgren “the only genuine genius I’ve ever worked with.” In a 1989 interview with Redbeard for the In the Studio with Redbeard episode on the making of the album, Meat Loaf revealed that Jimmy Iovine and Andy Johns were potential candidates for producing Bat Out of Hell before being rejected by the band and Steinman in favor of Todd Rundgren, whom Meat Loaf initially found cocky but grew to like. [I concur with the cocky comment; I met and talked with Rundgren a few years ago on the R&R Cruise when he was hanging out with his crew in the ship’s coffee shop. I thought he was a dick. And not just from that coffee shop interaction but from what followed. That I’ll save for another story]. But I have heard good things about him so sounds like he’s not a total dick. According to Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler, Todd Rundgren is an awesome stepfather to Tyler’s daughter…which leads me to another FF, though “off on a tangent” FF:  😉

Fun Fact: Todd Rundgren was the stepfather of Liv Tyler. For years, Liv was under the impression that Rundgren was her biological father, as her mother, Bebe Buell, was in a relationship with him when she was born. Steven Tyler and Bebe Buell had broken up around the time Liv was conceived. At the time of Liv’s birth in 1977, Tyler was struggling with severe drug addiction and Buell made the choice to protect Liv from his chaotic rockstar lifestyle. When Buell told Todd Rundgren she was pregnant, he “very courageously and lovingly said, ‘This child needs a father and I will be the father.’” Rundgren signed her birth certificate and acted as a father figure throughout her childhood. He then became Liv’s adoptive and legal father. Steven Tyler was aware of this arrangement and realized that Rundgren would be a better father than he could at that time, given his addictions.

Liv Tyler did not discover that Steven Tyler was her biological father until age 8 when she met Mia Tyler, Steven Tyler’s daughter with another woman. She noticed a strong resemblance between herself and Mia. When Liv was about 11, after discovering the truth on her own, her mother confirmed Steven was her biological father. Liv has stated that while the revelation was a shock, she was ultimately happy to have “two dads and all this love”. Both men became – and remain – loving figures in her life.

Steven Tyler is now (and has been for quite some time) sober. Today, he maintains a close, family-like relationship with Liv, Bebe, and Rundgren. According to Bebe Buell, she and Steven have become close over the decades and she considers him to be “one of my oldest and dearest friends”. Any potential conflict or jealousy from the early years has subsided, replaced by a sense of familial harmony. Bebe has noted that Steven is the one who has “done the most work on himself” and “come the fullest circle.” Steven Tyler talks more about it in his memoir, Does the Noise in My Head Bother You?: A Rock ‘n’ Roll Memoir. He has expressed gratitude and respects Rundgren for stepping up to be a father figure to Liv.

Todd Rundgren, Liv Tyler, Stephen Tyler

Now, “back to our regular programming” … let me leave you with one last fun fact on Meat Loaf:

Fun Fact: Meat Loaf also acted in over 50 films and television shows, sometimes as himself or as characters resembling his stage persona. His notable film roles include Eddie in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), the bus driver in Spice World (1997), and Robert Paulson in Fight Club (1999). His early stage work included dual roles in the original Broadway cast of The Rocky Horror Show; he also appeared in the musical Hair, both on and Off-Broadway.

 

 HORSE’S MOUTH by Edie Brickell & New Bohemians

The song “Horse’s Mouth” by Edie Brickell & New Bohemians is on the 5th studio album Hunter and the Dog Star, released in 2021.   The song was one of three singles released from the album, along with “Tripwire” and “My Power”.

Edie Brickell with the New Bohemians

The song “Horse’s Mouth” has been described as a funky, mid-tempo rocker that blends ’70s pop with vintage Lou Reed influences. It is one of several musical styles featured on the album. American Songwriter highlighted its “timeless vibe of a classic R&B hit”. The track also incorporates a country element with pedal steel guitar played by musician Burton Lee. It features a persistent melody and relatable lyrics about the unreliability of gossip, a kind of “lighthearted earworm”.

As for Hunter and the Dog Star as a whole, the album showcases the band’s trademark genre-blending style, incorporating elements of pop, rock, and jangle pop. Despite being recorded during a “dark time” of social unrest, the album is described as a “remarkably uplifting effort” and focuses on positive themes. Reviews also point to the record’s “agile, lively sound,” with the band aiming to capture their live energy. “Horse’s Mouth” fits well within this overall mood as one of the record’s energetic and upbeat tracks.

Writing for American Songwriter, Lee Zimmerman gave the album four out of five stars and called it a “remarkably uplifting effort”. In Forbes, Steve Baltin described it as “stellar” and “a smart, highly literate, enjoyable song cycle that goes on a full journey”.

 If you hear something from “the horse’s mouth,” you’re hearing it firsthand, from the source. If you don’t, you could be getting bad information, or as Edie Brickell puts it in this song, “hearing it from a horse’s ass.”

In a 2021 Songfacts interview with Brickell, the beginnings of the band are highlighted before the interview:

“The story is legend in New Bohemians lore. The band was playing a gig in Dallas in 1985 when Edie Brickell, an 18-year-old art student at Southern Methodist University, was coaxed to the stage to sing with them after working up her courage with a shot or two of Jack Daniel’s. She soon became their lead singer and primary songwriter, with a nuanced soprano and a deft hand with lyrics. Geffen Records signed them in 1986, and two years later they released their debut album, with the hit “What I Am,” a song with Brickell’s unique metaphors for philosophy (“the talk on a cereal box”) and religion (“the smile on a dog”).

“After a second album, Brickell married Paul Simon, released a solo album, and raised a family. Her bond with the New Bohemians remains strong; in 2021 they released their fifth studio album, Hunter and the Dog Star, with the same five members from that 1985 lineup, plus two others.

“Along the way, Brickell has collaborated with the best in the business. She recorded some songs with Willie Nelson, did an album with drumming great Steve Gadd, and teamed with comedian/banjo virtuoso Steve Martin for the acclaimed 2013 album Love Has Come for You and its spin-off musical, Bright Star.”

Brickell tells the story behind the song “Horse’s Mouth”:

Outside of the New Bohemians, Brickell has been a part of many collaborations, including a band called the Gaddabouts, led by drummer Steve Gadd. Brickell recorded the first performance of this song, called “The Horse’s Mouth,” for their 2012 album Look Out Now! She didn’t think this jazzy version was fully realized, so a few years later she took the chorus to Willie Nelson, who loved it. Inspired, she went home and wrote a new version of the song, hoping Nelson would record it with her. They ended doing another song together called “Sing To Me Willie,” so Brickell recorded “Horse’s Mouth” with New Bohemians and issued it as part of their fifth album, Hunter And The Dog Star.

Hunter and the Dog Star album cover

Fun Fact: In a Songfacts interview, Edie was asked about the album’s title, its significance and the story behind the name. Edie Brickell’s answer:

“I was reading about the constellations, and this phrase really struck me as something quite beautiful. It was talking about Orion and Sirius, and it said Orion, the hunter, seems to move across the night sky with Sirius, the dog star, following him, and that just before dawn, Sirius becomes the brightest star in the sky. I just thought that was gorgeous and with everything that our band has felt these last couple of years, it was an appropriate title.”

 

HUSH YOUR MOUTH by Derek Hoke

This song “Hush Your Mouth” by Derek Hoke is a critique of arrogant newcomers to the Nashville music scene who arrive with an undeserved swagger. Released in 2022 on his album Electric Mountain, the song is characterized by a rocking sound and clever wordplay.

 The lyrics, delivered with a bit of a sneer, target musicians who move to Nashville with a “chip on their shoulder” and act like they are going to “take it over”. Hoke sings, “hush your mouth, go back home, you ain’t got nothing to say,” suggesting they lack the experience and authenticity to earn their boastful attitude.

The song is partly inspired by Hoke’s own experience moving to Nashville in the late 1990s and meeting many people with bad attitudes. Hoke, originally from South Carolina, moved to Nashville to unlearn bad habits he’d picked up playing cover gigs and to fully immerse himself in the music scene.

Musically, the song features “rocked-out guitar licks”. The style is described as more “direct driven” than Hoke’s earlier work, which tended to be more fun and reserved. In “Hush Your Mouth,” he sings “harder and more direct”.

Derek Hoke has been making music in Nashville for more than 20 years, but once upon a time, he was the new kid on the block – with a big chip on his shoulder. In this tune, he takes aim at brash upstarts just like him.

“‘Hush Your Mouth’ is a song that’s about me when I moved here,” he said. “It’s about a lot of people that, when they move here it’s like ‘big fish, small pond’. I’ve found over the years of being here that a lot of people move here with a really bad attitude and then don’t have the goods to back it up. If you’re going to act like a total asshole rock star please at least be really really good – as this town is full of some amazingly talented people that are also super nice. It’s still a small town at heart and we just don’t have time for that.”

Hoke was raised in South Carolina, where he started playing cover songs in bars and restaurants to audiences that were less than enthusiastic. “Growing up playing sports bars and rooms full of people where no one’s listening, you create a lot of bad habits,” he recalled. “I had a lot to unlearn.”

He also had a lot to learn. Luckily, he found a great teacher in Ricky Skaggs. When Hoke relocated to Nashville in the ’90s, he landed a gig selling merchandise for Skaggs on his tour, where he also learned the art of showmanship from watching the veteran bluegrass singer perform.

Electric Mountain is Hoke’s first album of new music since 2017’s Bring the Flood. Although it was completed during the COVID-19 pandemic, Hoke told the Songfacts podcast he didn’t want to write any “pandemic, depressing songs – I feel like everybody else has got that covered.”

Fun Fact: Nashville singer-songwriter Lillie Mae, who also played fiddle on the album’s second single, “Let Go of My Heart” plays on this tune and shares backing vocal duties with Alyssa Graham (of the singer-songwriter duo The Grahams) and jazz singer Laura Mayo.

 

MOUTH TO MOUTH by Paloma Faith

 The song “Mouth to Mouth” by English recording artist Paloma Faith is a track on her third studio album A Perfect Contradiction, released in 2014. The album received mixed reviews but it was commercially successful, becoming one of Faith’s most popular albums and producing several hit singles.

Musically, the album is a pop record that blends elements of R&B, jazz, soul, Motown, and disco. While it maintains the retro-soul influences found in Faith’s earlier work, A Perfect Contradiction introduces a more polished production style, drawing from 1970s soul and disco. The album features doo-wop-inspired tracks and slower ballads, as well as rhythm-focused arrangements that mark a shift from the ballad-driven approach of Fall to Grace. Across the record, Faith explores a sound that remains rooted in classic pop traditions, while incorporating a broader range of upbeat, vintage-inspired styles

“Mouth to Mouth” is a soulful pop track that has a retro-inspired, upbeat vibe, reminiscent of 1980s Michael Jackson, with influences from disco and soul. It demonstrates Faith’s ability to blend modern pop with classic sounds.

The song is about revitalizing passion in a relationship by pretending to be strangers again. The lyrics tell a story of a couple who feel they have become stale and monotonous over time. To reignite their romance, they go out for a night and act like they’ve just met, removing the “fighting” and “pain” of their daily lives. The phrase “mouth to mouth” is a metaphor for resuscitating their love.

The song features relatable and romantic imagery, including dressing up for a night out, dancing, and writing phone numbers on each other’s hands. This fantasy-like approach helps the couple recapture the excitement of their initial attraction

“Mouth to Mouth” follows the album’s overall theme of exploring the idea of contradictions, as seen in the song’s concept of revitalizing an old relationship by pretending it is new.

Fun Fact: This song was inspired by Prince. Faith told The Daily Star: “I recorded that with Raphael Saadiq after we met at a Prince concert. So, we honored that situation by paying Prince his dues in the studio. I was inspired by early Prince and Chaka Khan records, cool late ’70s and early ’80s soul,” she added. “I think we could all do with a bit of dance now.”

 

BIG MOUTH by Nikki Yanofsky

Big Mouth” is a song by Canadian jazz-pop singer Nikki Yanofsky. The song was released in September 2018 as a single from Nikki’s upcoming album, Big Mouth. Nikki Yanofsky teased a music video for the song on her Instagram that contained a tribute to the talented Aretha Franklin. She recorded the music video for the song before Aretha Franklin’s death. The song was accidentally leaked on Nikki’s management website for two days on August 22 and 23 until it was taken down.

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Nikki announced on her Twitter that the song was inspired by the 2018 Women’s March. She wrote this unapologetic anthem celebrating her outspokenness after watching coverage of the Women’s March that took place in New York City in January.

“I saw it on the news and I felt so inspired watching woman after woman speak and be so poised and articulate,” she told Fashion magazine. “It felt like history and I just wanted to have something forever to remind me of that moment. Songs, in my opinion, are like tattoos. You write them and you put them out and then they’re there forever, you can’t take them away. I just wanted to have a tattoo of that moment in my head.”

Yanofsky elaborated on the song’s meaning:

“It’s about having women be proud to speak their mind and to stand up for themselves and to never dull their shine for anybody. That’s what I want the song to do. I’ve always been a kind of in-your-face person, but I’ve definitely had my fair share of moments where I’ve felt, oh maybe I shouldn’t have said that or just felt ashamed. I wanted to write a song to remind women everywhere that no, never be ashamed of being you.”

The song title was inspired by her childhood nickname.

“My whole life my family has always called me ‘Big Mouth,'” she told Fashion. “That’s like their nickname for me. It’s because I don’t stop talking, I don’t stop singing, whatever it is, I’m using my voice. And I was like, what if I use that voice to encourage others to do the same? That’s why I thought ‘Big Mouth’ was an important single. I think also, with the current climate of the world, it’s important to have a song that celebrates women like this and doesn’t have to be so serious all the time. You know, you can also play to the softer sides and the funny sides and the sassy sides of women.”

 

It’s not always easy for a woman’s voice to be heard in the male-dominated music industry. In a 2020 Songfacts interview, Yanofsky shared her experience with sexism in the business:

“I am very lucky to have a team that I love, but generally speaking, it’s no secret that ‘sex sells’ and it’s a phrase women hear more often than men do. I can also relate to this unspoken pressure for women to ‘make it’ while they’re still in their 20s. I can’t imagine that men have that same stress.

Creatively, I’ve had experiences where I feel that a guy is reluctant to take my ideas seriously, or to let me drive the session. I’ve also reached out to someone I wanted to work with and they saw me as a groupie, not an artist. They ignored my initial message asking if they’d want to collaborate and hit me up at 1 a.m. after their show with a ‘Hey babe, what are you doing now’ DM.”  (WTF?! Ay-yi-yi)

The music video, directed by Emma Higgins (Mother Mother’s “The Drugs”), features a tribute to Aretha Franklin as Yanofsky and her dancers hold folding fans that spell out “Respect” – the title of Franklin’s iconic 1967 hit. On August 22, 2018, four days after the Queen of Soul’s death, the video was leaked on Yanofsky’s management website. It officially debuted a month later on VEVO.

“Mouth to Mouth” peaked at #40 on Canada’s Adult Contemporary chart.

 

OPEN MY MOUTH by Kiiara

“Open My Mouth” is a single by singer-songwriter Kiara Saulters (born May 24, 1995), known professionally as Kiiara. Kiiara originally released the song in June of 2019 stating that it would be the lead single of her debut studio album Lil Kiiwi. Ultimately though it was cut from the final standard edition and included on the Deluxe version instead, along with three other previously released singles. The Deluxe edition of Lil Kiiwi dropped in February 2021.

The song is about self-doubt. In an interview with Variety, Kiiara explained that while the song can be interpreted as being about relationships, for her, it was primarily about her own self-doubt. The chorus reflects her struggle with anxiety and feeling like she makes things worse when she tries to talk.

“Art is open for interpretation, so while some will listen to this song and relate to it based on relationships they’ve had in their lives, for me this song is about the relationship I have with myself,” Kiiara says of the new track. “I’ve struggled with mental health issues for my entire life. I’ve felt silenced, I’ve felt alone, and I’ve felt afraid. To me, this song is about facing these realities and putting it all out there. It feels empowering to open up and finally speak my truth, and I hope in doing so I can encourage others to let their guard down and do the same, so they don’t feel so alone and helpless.”

The music video, directed by Juliana Carpino, features designer Christian Cowan and fashion from his FW19 line along with a special cameo appearance from Austin Mahone. “Working with Kiiara is always a dream, her talent is off the charts, she has her own style and is the most fun to work with. When those all come together it always ends up being magic,” Cowan says of their video collaboration.

The “Open My Mouth” music video is an allegory. It features Kiiara walking a high-fashion runway before she begins to tear it apart. In an interview, she explained that this symbolized breaking through her self-doubt and anxiety.

Musically speaking, the overall style of the song is a contrast to her previous work: While Kiiara is known for her moody, darker electro-pop style, “Open My Mouth” marked a noticeable shift. The track features a brighter, more upbeat sound, though its lyrics still carry a heavy, vulnerable weight.

The song deliberately featured the signature “vocal chop”, the stuttering or chopped vocal sound that Kiiara became known for on her breakout single “Gold“. This time, it was used in a poppier context, demonstrating how she could adapt her signature style.

Fun Fact: Upon its release in June 2019, Paper Magazine described “Open My Mouth” as a legitimate contender for “Song of the Summer” due to its infectious, breezy feel.

Fun Fact: She was a featured vocalist on Linkin Park‘s last single. Kiiara provided vocals for the 2017 song “Heavy,” which was released just months before the death of Linkin Park’s vocalist Chester Bennington. Kiiara later performed the song with Julia Michaels at the tribute concert for Bennington.

 

MOUTH OF THE RIVER by Imagine Dragons

“Mouth of the River” is a track on Evolve (stylized as ƎVOLVE), the third studio album by American pop rock band Imagine Dragons, released in June 2017. The song is known for its anthemic chorus, strong electronic elements, and deeply personal lyrics delivered with a sense of urgency.

After the release of their previous album (Smoke + Mirrors) and its world tour in 2015, the band took a self-imposed hiatus for 2016 with cryptic messages from the band through their social media.

After finishing a ten-month world tour for their Smoke + Mirrors album in February 2015, lead singer Dan Reynolds stated in an interview with Billboard that the band would be on hiatus for the remainder of the year, explaining “We [Imagine Dragons] haven’t stopped in, like, six years, so we’ve forced ourselves to at least take a year off.”  Though on a break the band contributed songs to the soundtracks of three movies, Me Before YouSuicide Squad and Passengers and they played at several shows.

Then word of a third Imagine Dragons album generated anticipation from fans and in May 2017 the band announced the new album and initiated pre-orders. Frontman Dan Reynolds called the album an “evolution” for the band.

Evolve peaked at No. 2 on the US Billboard 200 and received mixed reviews from critics; some acknowledged the band’s claim of evolution, while others described it as lifeless and commercially oriented. One featured in Atwood Magazine raved, “It’s as if the band threw away the formula and truly waited for inspiration to strike…they organically incorporated sounds, meaning, and feelings that come together in telling not just any story, but their story. Call it positivity, call it comfort, call it brightness, call it an ‘evolution’… Whatever it is, Imagine Dragons are basking in the moment, and as listeners we get to soak up the warmth, ease, and passion that radiates from their new songs.”

Other critics, however, did not enjoy the album. The Alexandria Times stated, “Imagine Dragons has never been popular for its poetic brilliance, but for fun, creative melodies and big, stadium choruses that are always easy to sing along to. Just picking a track from “Evolve” and playing it while driving around is harmless fun. But sitting down and listening to all 40 minutes straight as an album, it becomes less a work of art and more a shallow, chorus-driven, made-for-radio mess.”

Despite some unfavorable reviews the album was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Album at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards.

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“Mouth of the River” is largely about confronting an emotional crisis, finding strength, and the importance of resilience when facing difficult times. It uses the metaphor of a river to symbolize life’s journey, challenges, and the flow of emotions. Specifically:

  • Confronting Pain: The lyrics, “I can’t believe that I’m still here / The water’s rising of the river clear,” suggest a moment of vulnerability and a realization of being pushed to the limit.
  • A Journey to Healing: The “mouth of the river” can be interpreted as the destination or a place of peace, where one can finally find solace after a long, difficult journey. It is about striving toward a better place mentally or emotionally.
  • Resilience and Hope: Despite the challenges described, the song maintains a sense of hope and determination. It encourages listeners to keep going and not give up, even when it feels like they are drowning in their problems.
  • Songwriter’s Perspective: Dan Reynolds, the lead singer, often writes about his personal struggles with depression, anxiety, and faith. The song can be seen as a reflection of his own battles and journey toward finding peace and acceptance.

Dan Reynolds has spent much of his life fighting depression. For a long time the Imagine Dragons frontman struggled with the fact that rather than the band’s music, he had become the story. “It was hard for me,” he admitted to The Sun. “I would get through all these interviews and then they would write ‘Dan Reynolds. Depressed.'”

However, Reynolds is now in a better place and during this song he uses the analogy of the river meeting the sea, to describe the new journey that he’s on. “Now, I’ve gotten to a place where I don’t see depression as a weakness. I see it as part of who I am,” he explained. “For me I have just accepted it and I know my pitfalls as I am growing older. I know the things that bring me happiness and the things that help stabilize me and I am not afraid to sit down with a therapist and talk about my problems.”

Lyrical Meaning  The song is a metaphor for personal transition or the ending of one life era and the beginning of a new one, symbolized by where a river meets a larger body of water like the sea.

  • Self-Reflection and Inadequacy: The verses express a feeling of not being who one wants to be. Lead singer Dan Reynolds sings about wanting to live a “life like that,” perhaps comparing himself to a “faithful one” and acknowledging his own “moral lacking.”
  • The “Mouth of the River”: The chorus uses this metaphor to describe the critical point of self-evaluation and interaction with the wider world. It’s about testing oneself in a new environment despite past mistakes (“hands of a sinner”) and the pressures of life.
  • Anxiety and Ambition: The second verse reveals anxiety and a fear of failure, despite a self-assured front. Lines like “I’m overboard, I’m self-destructive, and self-important, and I’m anxious” expose vulnerability and the pressures of ambition.
  • “Going Under”: The bridge repeats the line “I am going under,” which signifies feeling overwhelmed and potentially drowning in the anxiety and pressure of trying to achieve difficult goals or navigate life’s changes

Fun Fact: The name “Imagine Dragons” is an anagram for an as-yet-undisclosed phrase known only to the band members. The phrase has been kept secret by the band members and has never been officially revealed. The band, in brainstorming to come up with a name for the band, had created a phrase with personal meaning to them all; they really liked it but then they decided it should be just for them, something to hold onto for themselves. They then re-arranged the letters of the phrase to form the band’s name.

Fan theories for the anagram: Though the official answer still remains a mystery, fans have come up with several theories based on clues and speculation.

  • Ragged Insomnia: This is the most popular and persistent fan theory. Some fans noticed the phrase “Ragged Insomnia” briefly appearing in the music video for the song “On Top of the World”. The letters in this phrase can be rearranged to spell “Imagine Dragons.”
  • Other anagram guesses: Other theories that have circulated online and on Reddit include:
  • “A Man’s Radio Gag”: This phrase was suggested by fans on Reddit, as all the letters match.
  • “Gemini Is So Grand”: This anagram was considered clever by guitarist Wayne Sermon.
  • “God Is In The Manger”: This phrase was also mentioned by Sermon, who noted that many fan guesses are better than the final anagram.
  • “Aged Men’s Radio”: This was another fan hypothesis mentioned by Wayne Sermon.
  • “Roman’s Big Angie”: A Reddit user mentioned this theory.
  • “Insomnia Daggers”: This anagram was posted by a fan on Facebook.
  • “Damaged Origins”: Fans noted that the band’s album Origins provided inspiration for this theory.
  • Band running a joke: Some fans believe that the band’s anagram is a long-running joke, based on contradictory messages in songs.
  • “The Amigos Are In Danger”: This theory was posted on a Reddit thread.

Wonder when or if Imagine Dragons will reveal the phrase that gave them the Imagine Dragons name? Any guesses to the phrase beyond the above?

 

BIG MOUTH by The Muffs

“Big Mouth” is a well-known song by the American pop punk band the Muffs. It is one of their most popular tracks, known for its catchy power-pop melody, raw energy, and trademark vocal style of lead singer Kim Shattuck. Key band members were Kim Shattuck (vocals, guitar), Melanie Vammen (guitar), Ronnie Barnett (bass), and Roy McDonald (drums).

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“Big Mouth” was one of the key tracks that helped launch The Muffs’ career, contributing to the strong critical reception of their debut album The Muffs, released in 1993. It also contains the other single “Lucky Guy”.

In 2015, the album was remastered, expanded and re-issued. The expanded album had 26 tracks, 16 from the original debut album plus 10 bonus tracks including 8 that were previously unreleased demo recordings (plus an unlisted hidden track phone message, bringing the total of new material to nine).

The Muffs formed in 1991 in Southern California. Led by singer and guitarist Kim Shattuck, the band released four full-length studio albums in the 1990s, as well as numerous singles. The band has been described as pop-punk and power-pop genres, with strong elements of punk rock and garage rock.

Their sound was characterized by:

  • Catchy melodies and pop hooks, often drawing influence from 1960s pop acts like The Kinks and The Beach Boys.
  • Fuzzed-out, distorted guitars and “crunchy” instrumentals.
  • Fast-paced rhythms and a “cheerfully snotty” attitude.
  • Distinctive Vocals – Lead singer Kim Shattuck’s distinctive “almost comically sneering adolescent rasp” and powerful vocals, which could range from sweet to guttural screams.
  • Witty, snarky lyrics: Shattuck’s lyrics were known for their clever combination of humor, snark, rage, and vulnerability, often inverting pop conventions.

Kim Shattuck wrote all the songs on the debut album. Her songwriting was highly praised for its ability to combine punk energy with pop sensibilities and relatable, often fiery, lyrics. The sound of the album, it’s “Grungy” sound, is a product of the early 90s alternative/grunge era, blending pop-punk with a raw, distorted fuzz-out guitar aesthetic that was popular at the time. The band is considered influential in defining the sound of the 1990s pop-punk scene.

The Washington Post said, “the Muffs mostly play a style of rootsy pop-rock that’s been making the rounds in Southern California for some 15 years.”  AllMusic wrote: “There’s a certain charm to the group’s 3-chord riffing and primitive rhythms that seems to have most appeal when driving a vehicle beyond the posted speed limit on a hot, sunny day. But stretched over 16 tracks, the forced minimalism begins to wane in appeal.”

About the Song: “Big Mouth” is a classic example of The Muffs’ sound: loud, fast, and hook-filled. “Big Mouth” features the band’s trademark sound: straightforward, catchy pop-punk with a garage rock edge. The production, co-helmed by Rob Cavallo (who would later produce Green Day’s breakthrough Dookie a year later), gives the song a raw but polished feel. It is a short, fast-paced track (clocking in at 1:51) that delivers an immediate punch of melody and aggression.

The song is a classic Muffs track dealing with themes of betrayal and vengeance. The lyrics describe the anger and hurt caused by a person who was trusted with secrets, only to reveal them to everyone, leading to the narrator’s embarrassment and isolation. The central theme is a warning and a promise of retribution: “What you say / Will come back to you / What you say / Will come back to your big mouth”.

The lyrics, written by the band’s late frontwoman Kim Shattuck, are a direct and candid confrontation of someone who talks too much or spreads rumors. Shattuck delivers the lines with her signature “comically sneering adolescent rasp,” adding to the song’s raw and frustrated energy. The song captures a feeling of irritation with a “big mouth” who needs to be quieted, delivered with Shattuck’s signature explosive, slightly strained vocal style. Her distinctive “scream” and gravelly vocal delivery became a signature element of the band’s sound and made the track instantly recognizable.

Due to its popularity, “Big Mouth” remained a staple of the band’s live set throughout their career.

After a long hiatus beginning in 1999, the band released a fifth album in 2004 but thereafter effectively disbanded. Almost a decade later, the three core members of the band reunited and started performing again. Their sixth album, Whoop Dee Doo, was released in 2014.

Tragic End: Kim Shattuck died on October 2, 2019, following a two-year battle with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). On that same day, the Muffs confirmed that they had disbanded. Shortly after, the Muffs released their seventh and final album No Holiday.

Fun Fact: The late Kim Shattuck was known for her unpretentious, humorous, and sometimes “obnoxious” personality, which perfectly matched the song’s attitude. In one instance, she was banned from a venue for messing with a patron’s food because they were dining during her set.

Fun Fact:  Although sometimes mis-identified as the Muffs song being in the 1995 film Clueless, it was actually their cover of the Kim Wilde hit “Kids in America” that was featured prominently in the movie and on the platinum-selling soundtrack. The song “Big Mouth” was featured in the 2021 Netflix film Moxie and its soundtrack, but it was a cover version performed by the teenage punk band The Linda Lindas.

 

That wraps up the MOUTH edition! Any Mouth songs here that you especially liked? Any other Mouth songs that you would recommend? Please let me know in the comments section. I always love hearing from you and reading your comments.

Thanks for coming along with me on the MOUTH installment of this                  Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe journey.

                                                             

Stay tuned — I’ll be bringing a new playlist with the next body part edition!

Until then, ROCK ON!

Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe – LIPS – Part 2


Another week has flown by & that means it’s time for Monday’s Music Moves Me! And that means a new edition of Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe. Last week was LIPS – Part 1 with 10 Lip songs. This week’s LIPS – Part 2 has 10 songs as well but very different songs. For starters, there’s not one classic rock song in this list! Shocking, I know.  (Btw, if you’re just joining the party and want to catch up on the previous posts featuring body parts already explored, go to my Index Page for the RnR H2T series where you’ll find links to each individual post).

I found some awesome new-to-me songs and bands. In fact I found a few so good and so interesting I’ll probably end up doing an “Artist Spotlight” on them down the road. But that’s later. Now let’s Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe! Here is the playlist containing all 10 songs. As always, no need to read my song & artist/band info unless you are interested and have time. At the very least though, hit Play and check out the rest of songs with LIP(S) in their titles.

 

CAUTIOUS LIP by Blondie

“Cautious Lip” is a track on the second studio album Plastic Letters by American rock band Blondie, released in February 1978 (Chrysalis Records). The song, written by guitarist Chris Stein and Ronnie Toast, has a rockabilly sound with a funk groove and features a horn section and glockenspiel. The song explores different musical styles for Blondie and was performed live between 1977 and 1978. It was first played in concert February 9, 1977 at Whisky A Go Go, West Hollywood, CA, USA; the final time it was played live was September 9, 1978 at Hammersmith Odeon, London, England.

Fun Fact:  I normally save Fun Facts to the end of the song info but I’m going to slip it in here first to clear up a misconception that many folks have about Blondie. Blondie is NOT the lead singer or even an individual person; Blondie is the name of the band. Lead singer Debbie Harry became so famously associated with the name that many people assumed she was the solo artist “Blondie”. In 1979, the band created “Blondie is a group” buttons and posters to emphasize that they were a collective effort, not a solo act named after its singer.

Harry was the charismatic and stylish frontwoman whose platinum-blonde hair inspired the group’s name. Her distinctive voice and image made her an icon of punk and new wave music.

Founded in 1974 by vocalist Debbie Harry and guitarist Chris Stein, Blondie was a pioneer of the American new wave scene in New York City. They became internationally famous with hits like “Heart of Glass,” “Call Me,” and “Rapture”.

RE: “Cautious Lip” song: The reviewer on donignacio.com says of the Plastic Letters album: “The diversity in this album is absolutely staggering, and it’s another huge contribution to the enjoyment of this work. There’s “Denis,” a throwback to ’50s love ballads, “Contact Red Square” has a Russian connection, “I’m on E” is surf-rock, “No Imagination” has a classical vibe, “Detroit 442” is nearly heavy metal. There are no two songs that sound alike. Not even remotely! Furthermore, every single one of these styles produces a *fun* song. Apart from maybe “Cautious Lip” at the end, there’s not a dull moment anywhere.

The song’s place in Blondie’s music was pure musical exploration. In a 2004 interview, lead singer Debbie Harry noted that the song “explored our appreciation of the late ’60s jam bands”. The song represents a different side of Blondie’s sound compared to their more famous hits. Trouser Press described it as an example of the band’s “thoughtful experimentation”.

Another Blondie song that shares the spirit of ’60s jam bands is “Desire Brings Me Back,” from their 2003 reunion album, The Curse of Blondie.

In a 2004 interview, singer Debbie Harry mentioned that “Desire Brings Me Back” was an intentional throwback to the style of “Cautious Lip,” which also explored the band’s appreciation for late ’60s jam bands. She noted her fondness for its “pulsing agony” and how it’s “so driven, really alive with some funk”.

Blondie (with lead singer Debbie Harry) performing in 1978. © Gary Gershoff / MediaPunch.

Like “Cautious Lip,” “Desire Brings Me Back” demonstrates Blondie’s “thoughtful experimentation” and willingness to draw inspiration from a variety of genres and eras. While many of their hits famously explored disco and other popular styles, the jam band influence is another layer of their diverse musical identity.

 

LIPS ON YOU by Maroon 5

“Lips on You” is a song by Maroon 5 from their 2017 album, Red Pill Blues. It is an R&B-influenced pop song with a slow groove, a prominent bassline, and suggestive lyrics about intimacy and passion.

Maroon 5 performing in Sydney Australia in February 2019 (photo credit: MasterMind5991)

The song’s lyrics describe a sensual and intimate connection between two people. Phrases like “When I put my lips on you, I feel the shivers go up and down your spine” and “You and me can forget all our manners” establish a mood of passionate, late-night desire. With a deep bassline and smooth R&B production, the track stands out from some of the band’s more upbeat pop hits. 2 Loud 2 Old Music called it the “sexiest” song on the album.

The music video for “Lips on You”, released in December 2017, primarily features performance shots of the band playing the song in a dark, intimate, and moody setting. The visuals reflect the sensual, late-night atmosphere of the track, focusing on Adam Levine and the rest of the band. Unlike some of Maroon 5’s more elaborate narrative-driven videos, this one is straightforward. It is centered on the band playing their instruments and capturing the vibe of the song. As is common in Maroon 5’s videos, Adam Levine is the primary focus. The camera captures his emotional performance as he sings the lyrics. The video’s simplicity allows the focus to remain on the music and the song’s sensual themes, creating a direct visual representation of the track’s sound.

Fun Fact: The title of Maroon 5’s sixth studio album Red Pill Blues refers to the science fiction term of taking the red pill or the blue pill, which originated from the 1999 sci-fi film The Matrix.

Fun Fact: The album cover art for Red Pill Blues, created by American photographer Travis Schneider, is inspired by filters featured on the mobile app Snapchat. The cover depicts all seven members of Maroon 5 pictured on polaroid photographs with a filter on their faces. “We all use Snapchat, and the filters have become a huge part of the culture,” frontman Adam Levine told Billboard in an October 2017 interview. “We thought it would be funny to take some more straight-ahead band photos and sprinkle in a little fun.”

 

LUCKY LIPS by Cliff Richard

Cliff Richard’s 1963 cover of “Lucky Lips” was a major international hit, reaching number one in several countries. Originally written by the legendary songwriting duo Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller (who also wrote hits like “Hound Dog” and “Jailhouse Rock”) the song was first recorded by R&B singer Ruth Brown in 1956.

Cliff Richard’s version, featuring his band The Shadows, is an upbeat pop rock and roll tune with a catchy guitar riff and energetic vocals. His version was an enormous international hit, especially across Europe and in other parts of the world.

Cliff Richards & the Shadows performing live in 1963

The song was a significant international hit for Richard. In the UK, it topped the charts, and it also reached number one in several cities in North America, such as Vancouver and Ottawa. However, it only peaked at number 62 on the U.S. charts.

  • United Kingdom: The single entered the UK Singles Chart in May 1963 and peaked at #4. It remained on the chart for 15 weeks.
  • United States: In the US, “Lucky Lips” was released as the A-side of a single in June 1963, reaching a peak of #62 on the Billboard chart.
  • #1 in these other countries: The song was a major international hit, reaching #1 in Belgium, Denmark, Hong Kong, India, Israel, the Netherlands, Norway, South Africa, and Sweden.
  • Germany: Richard’s German-language version, titled “Rote Lippen soll man küssen,” topped the charts in West Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. The single was awarded a Gold Disc for selling one million copies worldwide.

Cliff Richard Lucky Lips single sleeve cover

Cliff Richard’s music career followed suit as far as chart successes go. He has only had TWO Top 10s in America but has had amazing chart success internationally. Here, he is probably best known for this one, “Devil Woman” (#6 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart in 1976).

Here’s a link to a video of Cliff Richard on a BBC Radio interview in 2018. It’s a 24 minute interview, most of which is talking about his 104th album (!!!) Rise Up, his first new music since 2004, but it also explores a bit of Cliff’s life and career from his own mouth, including answering questions about his ordeal in his lawsuit against the BBC in a privacy case.

 

SUNBURNT LIPS by Luke Bryan

“Sunburnt Lips” didn’t come out until it was included in four bonus tracks on the Deluxe Edition of Luke Bryan’s fourth studio album Crash My Party released in August 2013 by Capitol Records Nashville. When released the deluxe edition was exclusive to Target stores only but now the song is widely available for streaming.

Luke Bryan Crash My Party Deluxe edition cover – available only at Target stores

The song tells the story of a hard-working man toiling in his tractor who daydreams about a romantic, sun-soaked memory with his love interest. The repeated refrain focuses on remembering her “sunburnt lips”. The phrase “sunburnt lips” symbolizes a specific, vivid memory of a passionate summer romance. It is a potent symbol for nostalgia, capturing a moment that is both physically intense and emotionally significant for the singer. It is a straightforward and physical image, fitting for the honest, everyday emotions often portrayed in country music. It captures a deep feeling without needing overly complex metaphors.

Liuke Bryan live performance
photo credit Jason Kempin Getty Images

The lyrics are a perfect fit for Bryan’s down-to-earth image, focusing on simple, relatable themes of rural life and nostalgic summer romance. The narrator working on a tractor while daydreaming is a classic country trope that connects with Bryan’s fanbase. “Sunburnt Lips” shares DNA with many other songs in Bryan’s catalog. The song’s themes of summertime, the outdoors, and youthful romance are central to his party-friendly persona and his more reflective, sentimental tracks. It fits comfortably alongside other songs on the Crash My Party album.

 

FELT GOOD ON MY LIPS by Tim McGraw

“Felt Good on My Lips” is a song recorded by American country music singer Tim McGraw. It was released in September 2010 as the lead single from his compilation album Number One Hits and has since become McGraw’s 24th Number One hit on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. The song is also included on his 2012 album Emotional Traffic.

The song was written by two sets of brothers – Brett Warren and Brad Warren and Brett and Jim Beavers. In an interview with The Boot, Jim said that Brett provided the idea of writing with The Warren Brothers, and Brett Warren based the song around a bass guitar riff that Jim played.

Jim Beavers and Brett Warren told The Boot the story behind this song:

Jim Beavers: My brother Brett had this crazy idea that he and I should start writing with The Warren Brothers just to see what would happen. We dubbed ourselves “The Warren Beavers,” and the very first song we wrote was ‘Felt Good on My Lips.’

Brett Warren: It started with a bass riff that Jim began to play. Then we started spitting out some ideas. Brad and I started singing the “oh oh oh ah” part, and it really unfolded quickly.

Jim Beavers: I thought the song was one of the weirdest things I had ever heard. That “oh oh oh ah” part came out of nowhere, but we vowed when we started writing that we wouldn’t worry about Music Row songwriting convention. We wrote the song like a band, so the music, groove and instrumentation were as much a part of the tune as the lyrics or idea. One unusual thing was that I played bass on everything as we were writing, which I have never played in my life before. I think the unconventional approach to the writing made the songs that much more unique. We ended up going into the studio and recording all the songs pretty much live. It was a blast. Not musical perfection by any means, but vibe perfection.

The title phrase, “felt good on my lips,” became the recurring hook. The verses connect the phrase to specific details of the woman and their interactions, such as her Spanish name, the song they danced to, a fruity drink she ordered, and a goodnight kiss, all of which “felt good on his lips”.

The song received mixed reviews. Critical reception for the song saw some reviewers praising its progressive sound while others criticized its lyrics and production.

Positive feedback: Matt Bjorke of Roughstock gave the song three and a half stars, calling the chorus “catchy” and praising its progressive melody. Others saw it as a fresh and welcome change for a long-established country artist.

Negative reviews: Other critics were less impressed. Kevin John Coyne of Country Universe gave it a C-, criticizing the heavily processed vocals and claiming the production sank the record. Stephen M. Deusner of Engine 145 gave it a “thumbs-down,” criticizing the chorus while noting that the verses “ably convey the excitement of attraction”. Some complained that McGraw’s vocals sounded “old” and not energetic; others claim his voice was overly auto-tuned.

Well, I like the song! How about you?

 

LIP SERVICE by Jimmy Buffet

This man needs no introduction but Jimmy Buffett (December 25, 1946 – September 1, 2023) was an American singer-songwriter, author, and businessman. He was known for his tropical rock sound and persona, which often portrayed a lifestyle described as “island escapism” and promoted enjoying life and following passions.

He had so many hit songs. In total, Buffett sold over 20 million certified records worldwide, placing him amongst the world’s best-selling music artists. In addition to two Grammy Award nominations, Buffett was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the Musical Excellence category in 2024.

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“Lip Service” is a song by Jimmy Buffett that appears on his 1982 album, Somewhere Over China. It was co-written by Buffett and longtime friend and fellow band member Michael Utley, a keyboardist and musical director for Buffett’s Coral Reefer Band.

The lyrics describe a narrator’s frustration with a lover who offers nothing but empty promises, or “lip service,” instead of real action. The narrator suggests he will leave if the situation doesn’t change. The chorus emphasizes the narrator’s exhaustion with a relationship built on unfulfilled promises: “Oh darlin’, oh darlin’, all I ever get is lip service from you”. The song includes a classic Buffett escape plan. Faced with their partner’s “voodoo,” the narrator threatens to take off to Pascagoula, Mississippi—Buffett’s hometown—to start fresh.

                The “voodoo” that Jimmy Buffett is referring to is not a literal, magical curse. It is a metaphor for his partner’s powerful but manipulative emotional games that have a hypnotic effect on him. The “voodoo” is the powerful, controlling spell she casts with her “lip service,” which leaves him dazed and unfulfilled, even as he threatens to leave. The song’s New Orleans-inspired music style is a nod to the regional culture, further emphasizing the idea of a mystifying, emotionally draining influence.

The song also has a New Orleans-inspired musical feel, which Buffett is known for integrating into his music. It is filled with Creole flavor and references. The New Orleans flavor comes primarily from the bluesy, rolling piano and the song’s overall rhythm and tone.

The most prominent New Orleans influence in “Lip Service” comes from the keyboard performance by Michael Utley. The rolling, boogie-woogie style piano is reminiscent of New Orleans R&B legends such as Professor Longhair or Fats Domino.

  • Utley, the Coral Reefer Band’s longtime musical director, is a skilled pianist and composer with roots in southern musical traditions, including blues and jazz. His extensive work in Miami studios with Atlantic Records’ house band, backing artists like the Allman Brothers, further developed his expertise in these genres. His history and skill directly contribute to the New Orleans-style piano heard in “Lip Service.”

In addition to the bluesy piano, the distinctive New Orleans influence in this song is also conveyed through the lively rhythm section with layered percussion (timbales and congas) and soulful harmonica.

The song’s musical style, like much of Buffett’s work, is a blend of rock, country, and pop mixed with a distinctly tropical and Southern flavor. The New Orleans sound in “Lip Service” adds another regional layer to this fusion of “gulf and western” styles.

Fun Fact: Buffett also parlayed the “island escapism” lifestyle of his music into several business ventures, including Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville restaurant chain, the now-defunct Cheeseburger in Paradise restaurant chain, and ventures in hotels, casinos, liquor, and retirement communities. He was also a bestselling author. Buffett’s estate was estimated to be worth $275 million. His devoted fans are known as “Parrotheads”.

Fun Fact: Buffett appeared on Elmopalooza, the Sesame Street 30th anniversary special (aired February 1998 on ABC) singing “Caribbean Amphibian” with the popular Muppet, Kermit the Frog.

Here is the adorable performance of the two greats singing Caribbean Amphibian:

 

LIPSTICK ON YOUR COLLAR by Connie Francis

“Lipstick on Your Collar” is the 1959 hit single by Connie Francis and one of the most popular songs in her catalog of songs loved by many worldwide. It is a rock-and-roll classic about a girl discovering her boyfriend’s infidelity written by Brill Building staff writers Edna Lewis (lyrics) and George Goehring (music). [The Brill Building itself has a very interesting and intriguing history and is worth reading if you’re interested in the ins and outs of the 1950-1970s music industry.]

The lyrics tell the story of a girl whose boyfriend leaves her alone at a dance, supposedly to get a soda. When he returns, she discovers a lipstick stain on his collar, realizes he was “smooching” her best friend, and tells him they are through.

Songwriter George Goehring recalled that he had personally pitched “Lipstick on Your Collar” to Francis when he made an unannounced visit to her New Jersey home and played the song for her on her piano.

Francis recorded the song in April 1959, in a session at Metropolitan Studio (NYC). At the same session Francis recorded her romantic ballad “Frankie“, a song written by Howard Greenfield and Neil Sedaka meant to appeal to Frankie Avalon fans. “Lipstick on Your Collar” was originally intended to serve as the B-side to “Frankie”, but MGM Records and Francis herself were so pleased with the recording that the two tracks were both promoted equally.

The result was the most successful double-sided hit of Francis’ career, as “Lipstick on Your Collar” – the first uptempo Connie Francis single to reach the US Top Ten – peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in July 1959, while “Frankie” peaked at No. 9. “Lipstick on Your Collar” sold over one million copies in the US and was a major hit overseas. In the summer of 1959 “Lipstick on Your Collar” also reached No. 3 in the UK Singles Chart and became Francis’ first Top Ten hit in Australia at No. 4.

Back in 1959 Connie Francis was the sole female singer then scoring rock and roll hits. In a 1959 interview, she attributed her being the sole female singer scoring rock and roll hits by saying:

“Rock ‘n’ roll is a masculine kind of music” with its mindset of “‘Come on out baby we’re going to rock’…[best] suited for a man to sing…The mistake that many girl singers have made is trying to compete with the men [whereas] I’ve tried for the cute angle in lyrics, things like ‘Lipstick on Your Collar’ and ‘Stupid Cupid’.”

Cute indeed! I always liked to hear “Lipstick on Your Collar” when it came on the radio. My parents had Connie Francis albums and I fondly remember the Connie Francis favorites “Who’s Sorry Now”, “Where the Boys Are”, “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool”, “I Was Such a Fool (to Fall in Love with You)”, and “I Don’t Wanna Play House”. My Mom played Connie Francis songs on the organ and my Aunt Judy had an incredible voice; she often sang hits by Connie Francis, as well as Tammy Wynette, Loretta Lynn, Patsy Cline, etc. Ahh, such great memories from my childhood.

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Anyway, back to Connie Francis and her hit “Lipstick on Your Collar” here are some cool fun facts for ya:

Fun Fact: In 1982, Wisk laundry detergent used an adaptation of the song as a jingle for a radio ad campaign, playing on the theme of a cheating boyfriend and a telltale stain. The song was re-purposed as a jingle for a radio advertisement celebrating the 25th anniversary of Wisk detergent.

The ad campaign leveraged the song’s musicality and the cultural familiarity of a lipstick stain as evidence of cheating. The commercials were a spin-off of the long-running Wisk “Ring Around the Collar” campaign, which highlighted how the liquid detergent could be poured directly onto difficult-to-treat spots.

A modified version of the song’s lyrics was used in the radio commercial. George Goehring, who originally wrote the music for “Lipstick on Your Collar,” also composed the jingle’s updated lyrics. The product was presented as the solution to the “problem” of a cheating man, which is revealed by a lipstick stain.

Fun Fact: Connie Francis’ song served as the title and theme song music for the 1993 British television drama Lipstick on Your Collar, which was written by Dennis Potter and starred a young Ewan McGregor.

  • Plot: The series was set in the Suez Crisis of 1956, three years before the release of Francis’s hit single. It followed a young military intelligence clerk named Private Francis, who fantasized about the 1950s musical numbers that played in his head. The popular songs of the era provided the soundtrack to his life and the emotional drama of the story.
  • Usage: Connie Francis’s song bookended each episode and was used as the opening theme music. It anchored the series in the popular music of the time. The show also used other popular hits from the 1950s, such as “The Great Pretender” by The Platters and “Blue Suede Shoes” by Carl Perkins.
  • Relevance: The series is known for its use of “lip-synching” musical sequences, where the characters’ emotions were explored through musical numbers. In this way, Francis’s song became not just a title but a key narrative device, reflecting the characters’ secret passions and affairs.

Fun Fact: The song has seen a revival on TikTok! In recent years, Connie Francis has experienced a resurgence in popularity among younger generations due to her music going viral on TikTok. While some posts featuring Connie Francis’s hit “Lipstick on Your Collar” have gained views on TikTok, the significant viral revival was for her lesser-known 1962 track, “Pretty Little Baby”. It has an upbeat, peppy, retro sound which made it a perfect soundtrack for lighthearted content. The track’s lyrical themes of innocent puppy love aligned perfectly with the tone of the trend.

“Pretty Little Baby” gained momentum on TikTok in early 2025, and by June it had been featured in over 17 million videos, accumulating more than 27 BILLION views globally. The trend gained additional traction from celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Kylie Jenner, as well as high-profile influencers. Content created for the trend included everything from short lip-sync videos to makeup tutorials and videos of pets.

Because of the viral success, this 1962 song broke onto several music charts for the very first time (because it didn’t chart at all in 1962)! It hit No.1 on TikTok’s Viral 50 and Top 50 charts and landed on Spotify’s Global Top 100 chart. Wow~!

And at 87 years old, Connie Francis was reportedly “flabbergasted and excited” by the unexpected resurgence of her music. She joined the platform to express her gratitude to the new generation of listeners. What an endearing tribute to her to receive such widespread recognition after being out of the limelight for so long. Fortunately she was able to enjoy her newfound popularity with a whole slew of new fans, as this all happened shortly before her death.  Vintage Rock magazine featured a nice tribute article detailing the life and career of the beloved Connie Francis.

 

 

LIPSTICK ON THE GLASS by Wolf Alice

“Lipstick on the Glass” by Wolf Alice is the opening track on their 2021 album Blue Weekend. It was their first album in over four years and received widespread acclaim from music critics, with many naming it as the band’s best work.

                ’Affirming the old adage (and Schoolhouse Rock! anthem) that three is indeed a magic number, Blue Weekend is evidence that Ellie Rowsell (vocals, guitar), Joff Oddie (guitars, vocals), Theo Ellis (bass), and Joel Amey (drums, vocals) are inching ever closer to peak form. It’s an advancement facilitated in no small part by their newfound connection with decorated producer Markus Dravs who has helped the band expand and diversify their sound, as they continue to defy easy genre classification…

“Competent, confident and captivating, Wolf Alice’s absorbing third LP showcases their penchant and passion for stretching their sound while further solidifying their distinctive musical identity. If there’s any justice in this world, Blue Weekend will be the album that finally convinces audiences outside of the UK—and specifically here, stateside—of their brilliance.”

— album review by Justin Chadwick of Albumism

The song won the band a Brit Award for British Group in 2022. It was also shortlisted for the Mercury Prize in 2021. (Wolf Alice won a Mercury Prize in 2018 and was nominated in 2015, 2018, 2021 and 2025)

Musically, the song has been described as a cinematic soundscape that builds with layers of strings, acoustic guitar and vocal harmonies. It features a propulsive, electric-acoustic sound with a surging riff and a wash of synths. Critics praised it as an “otherworldly, dangerous feel” with powerful dynamics. The band took a long time to come up with the right instrumentation and produced multiple demos before finding the track’s natural home.

“We had one version that was fairly electronic and we had one that was very ‘band-y’ and we were kind of caught between those two extremes,” guitarist Jonathan Oddie told RadioX. “Neither one felt quite right and we met somewhere in the middle. Finding where that middle-ground was took a very long time.”

The track is known for its haunting music video, directed by London-based photographer and videographer Jordan Hemingway. He directed this as part of a series of visuals for the Blue Weekend album. Presented as “Chapter III”, this video follows the music video Hemingway made for the album’s second track “Delicious Things”.

The “Delicious Things” video ends where we see the band sitting in a taxi. The visual for “Lipstick on the Glass” starts with the Wolf Alice band leaving the cab and walking through an empty street. Lead singer Ellie Rowsell is drawn to an elderly woman in a shop window where they have a symbolic encounter, lip-syncing the song’s lyrics to each other.

Wolf Alice singer-guitarist Ellie Rowsell sings about reconnecting with a lover who’s betrayed her. The “lipstick on the glass” was telltale evidence that Roswell’s lover had been cheating on her. She still loves him and will give their relationship another go. Roswell tells us on the bridge that he’s strayed before, so she is cross with herself for reconnecting again with such an untrustworthy guy.

The lyrics explore the complexities of revisiting a relationship after a betrayal. The lyrics depict a struggle between giving in to temptation and resisting it, despite a sense of betrayal. Lines like “I know it seems surprising when there’s lipstick still on the glass” a direct reference to the evidence of infidelity.

I take you back

Yeah, I know it seems surprising when there’s lipstick still   on the glass

And the full moon rising, but it’s me who makes myself mad, mm

I’ll take you

Some fans interpret the track as a powerful reflection of self-acceptance and forgiveness after a period of self-betrayal. The most insightful interpretation connects the lyrics to the band’s name, which is based on an Angela Carter short story where the character Wolf Alice kisses her own reflection in a mirror in an act of self-recognition.

“Lipstick on the Glass” is also known for the band’s poignant live performance of the song in September 2021 where Wolf Alice shared a special live version of the song recorded at the historic Union Chapel in London. The band performed with a choir for the “Jim Beam Welcome Sessions” series. Lead singer Ellie Rowsell explained that the performance was a “love letter to independent venues and the return of live music gigs (after the long Covid lockdowns),” and that the band chose the song for its “melodic grandeur”.

Fun Fact: A choir joins in with the song from the venue’s seating area towards the end of the video, with the band playing on stage. According to an official description, lead singer Ellie Rowsell sang in the choir at that same church growing up.

Fun Fact: The band has folk roots as it started as a folk duo. Before adding a full rhythm section and a rock sound, founders Ellie Rowsell and Joff Oddie performed acoustic folk-pop. Now they are a four-piece rock band known for blending grunge rock with pop choruses. Rowsell’s vocal style still retains the ability to switch between a gentle tone and a powerful howl.

Fun Fact: There was a literary inspiration in naming the band. Its name was taken from the short story “Wolf-Alice” in British writer Angela Carter’s 1979 collection The Body Chamber. The story is a gothic twist on the fairy tale of a feral child raised by wolves. The band takes its name from “Wolf-Alice,” a late-seventies short story by Angela Carter. The story, a variation on “Little Red Riding Hood” and “Through the Looking-Glass,” is about a feral girl who is raised by wolves. That would be a good way to describe Rowsell’s vocal style. She can whisper like a child and howl like a rabid animal.

Vocalist and guitarist Ellie Rowsell was responsible for choosing the band name. Apparently Rowsell borrowed the collection of stories, known for its feminist retellings of fairy tales, from her school library and never returned it. When she and founding guitarist Joff Oddie were trying to come up with a name for their acoustic duo, Rowsell’s mother suggested they look through her old books. They chose “Wolf Alice” simply because it sounded cool.

The connection to the Angela Carter story is more than just a name, as the themes of the original tale echo throughout the band’s music. The song title “Lipstick on the Glass” may allude to the story wherein a feral child sees her reflection in a mirror, leaving a bloody lipstick smear.

From Clunk Magazine: Wolf Alice Announce Short Film For Their Brand-New Album ‘Blue Weekend’

‘Blue Weekend’ is Wolf Alice’s third studio album that came out just a few days ago. Already, the album has received great feedback from their fans as we now await their highly anticipated short film. The film, which is in celebration of ‘Blue Weekend’ premiered at the Picturehouse, Soho in London. In the words of Wolf Alice:

“Last winter we began making a visual feast for your eyes. Set on a night out we wanted to bring the music of ‘Blue Weekend’ to life with this beautiful film directed by Jordan Hemingway. Pints and ciggies have literally never looked this good lol. This was an amazing experience and we really hope you enjoy it as much as we do. Thank you to our incredible team.”

The director Jordan Hemingway, who has previously worked for brands including Gucci, Raf Simons, and Comme Des Garçons has created a masterpiece that explores the nights out and relationships that form the backstory of ‘Blue Weekend’.

I am definitely going to feature Wolf Alice in an Artist Spotlight post down the road. They are a very intriguing band.

 

ALL LIPS GO BLUE by Him

 “All Lips Go Blue” is the lead single by the Finnish gothic rock/love metal band HIM from their eighth -and final- studio album, Tears on Tape (2013). I never heard of the genre ‘love metal’, have you? If no, maybe that’s because “Love metal” is a genre primarily defined by the band HIM, which coined the term in the mid-1990s to describe their unique fusion of heavy metal, gothic rock, and romantic themes. It’s not a formal or widespread subcategory of music, but rather a stylistic descriptor that has become synonymous with HIM and a handful of similar bands.

HIM is one of the most commercially successful Finnish bands of all time, with sales of over ten million records. HIM has also received numerous accolades, including eight Emma Awards. The band is known for its distinct sound, which combines more melodic and melancholic elements with heavier influences. This made it difficult for audiences to categorize HIM’s music, which led to the band coining the term “love metal”. HIM is also known for its logo, the heartagram, which has made numerous appearances in other media.

In April 2013 the band released its eight studio album Tears on Tape. The record charted in nine countries, peaking at number two in Finland and Germany. With significant critical acclaim in the U.S. Tears on Tape reached the #1 spot on the Hard Rock chart shortly after its release. And the album reached #15 the Billboard 200 chart.

Tears on Tape received mostly positive reviews, with Classic Rock calling it “a glorious return to form for one of the world’s most peculiarly successful bands”. This was echoed by Alternative Press, who stated that “within HIM’s impressive canon, it’s among their best.” Kerrang! gave a less-favorable review, stating: “Tears on Tape isn’t bad […] it’s just not as seductive as HIM can be.”

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The song “All Lips Go Blue” features a heavy, melancholic riff and signature dramatic lyrics from frontman Ville Valo. Music Credo webzine called it “one of the heaviest songs of the album”.

HIM frontman Ville Valo has commented on the song “All Lips Go Blue” in multiple interviews, highlighting its significance in the creation of the Tears on Tape album. He has noted the following about the song:

  • “All Lips Go Blue” was the igniting force for the entire album. It was the first song the band was able to complete for Tears on Tape. Valo explained that finishing the track “opened up the floodgates regarding the rest of the album” and helped the band find the right balance between its signature full-on melancholy, strong melodies, and heavy guitar riffs.

I love the Ronettes, the ‘do-run-run-run’ pop stuff. I love the lyrics, having ‘blue, blue blue’ being repetitive. It’s a ’60s doo-wop thing. It’s cool to incorporate all ideas, and to not restrict yourself. We decided to steal a bit from Ronnie Spector and Sabbath and create a bastard child,” he said. “That song was important. We cracked open the beer bottle and knew we had a new album; we found our way. We sweated it out in a little rehearsal space, and here we are.”

 

  • He considers “All Lips Go Blue” a good example of the entire album’s sound. The track effectively combines melodic vocals with heavy, grungy guitar riffs, a mix Valo saw as a good representation of Tears on Tape as a whole. “It has that bit more melancholy and melodic wistfulness in the melodies and the vocals, yet it has those grungy, heavy guitar riffs so I think that’s a good combo.”
  • Another interview described the songs on Tears on Tape, including “All Lips Go Blue,” as “melancholy minimalism.” The album, the band’s shortest, featured more compact and direct songs compared to their earlier, more epic releases. Valo says the “melancholy minimalist approach” is applied to lyrics for this and other tracks on the album and are intentionally simple and direct. The aim is to describe “humongous moments of emotional revelation as simply as possible”.

Regarding the lyrical meaning, vocalist Ville Valo has said the song is a “memento mori track,” (Latin origin literally translates to “remember that you have to die”). He explains the song’s meaning to Noisecreep, the hard rock & heavy metal news and media website:

“It’s a Memento Mori type thing and is very straightforward. Let us celebrate what we have now, as opposed to dwelling on the mysteries or what will happen afterward. We’re all going to die, so let’s not worry about it now. Let’s live first”. This fits the themes of love and death that are central to HIM’s music.

The lyrics use the metaphor “all lips go blue” to symbolize the devastating effects of grief and emotional suffocation that come with losing a cherished love or dream. This is consistent with Valo’s broader lyrical themes, which often explore the pain and drama of love, the longing it creates, the heartbreak, the despair and the way it can end.

As with many of Valo’s poetic and metaphorical lyrics, the exact interpretation is left to the listener. One fan’s interpretation is that “all lips go blue” could also mean “putting an era, a time, or a human relationship to an end”. This reflects the personal and often dramatic nature of Valo’s work, where he explores the “death of love” and the feelings of loss and sadness that follow.

There was mixed speculation as to the song’s message and meaning. The ambiguity of the poetic lyrics led to fan discussion on Reddit, with some speculating about themes of heartbreak and others interpreting the title literally as a reference to suicide. (When I first heard “All Lips Go Blue” I thought it was about suicide too…and I was relieved when I learned I was wrong!)

Overall, the deeper theme of the songs on the Tears on Tape album is that there is beauty in suffering. The lyrics often use themes of death and despair as metaphors for love, suggesting that the suffering and inevitable end of a relationship can make the love more valuable. In this view, heartbreak isn’t just a negative experience, but a necessary part of the “love metal” duality of beauty and suffering.

Fun Fact: It’s not only his personal life that influences his music but literature has influence on Valo too. Valo is a fan of dark romantic and gothic literature, particularly the works of Edgar Allan Poe. This literary influence shapes his personal experiences into more dramatic, poetic, and sometimes morbid lyrics.

THE MUSIC VIDEO: I was originally going to use this onscreen lyrics video with a pictorial look at frontman Ville Valo through the years. But the official music video for HIM’s “All Lips Go Blue,” is superior. It was directed by Eugene Riecansky, a multi-award-winning director who has worked with artists like Madonna and The Prodigy.

It is a visually striking and surreal accompaniment to the song. Released in 2013, the video features the band performing within a storm-swept, Tim Burton-esque world that resembles an oversized chessboard.

The key visual elements are:

  • A surreal, stylized aesthetic: The video has a highly stylized, dreamlike quality. Critics and fans have likened it to the surrealist aesthetic of director Tim Burton, with a touch of the quirky charm of The Mighty Boosh.
  • Chessboard setting: The band members are placed on a massive, stormy chessboard, performing as giant chess pieces move around them. This central motif symbolizes a larger, perhaps cosmic, game of fate or manipulation, tying into the song’s themes of helplessness and emotional chaos.
  • Heartagram motifs: As the video progresses, the moving chess pieces, some bearing the band’s iconic heartagram logo, begin to crumble and disintegrate. This may represent the destruction of love or the shattering of a relationship, a core theme of the song’s lyrics.
  • Apparitional band members: The band members appear as ghost-like figures or apparitions, overseeing the unsettling game from different parts of the board. This otherworldly presentation reinforces the song’s melancholic and gothic atmosphere.

The video’s reception from fans was mixed, with some praising its artistic approach and others finding its surreal imagery confusing or lacking a clear narrative. While Ville Valo’s commentary on his creative work often focuses on the music and songwriting, the abstract nature of the “All Lips Go Blue” video is consistent with his broader artistic philosophy of allowing the audience to interpret and find personal meaning in his metaphorical creations.

In March 2017, HIM announced on their social media page that the band would be disbanding following a farewell tour later that year. In the announcement, Valo stated: “After quarter century of love and metal intertwined we sincerely feel HIM has run its unnatural course and adieus must be said in order to make way for sights, scents and sounds yet unexplored. We completed the pattern, solved the puzzle and turned the key. Thank you.”  They ended with a farewell tour.

The Bang and Whimper 2017 – The Farewell Tour

began on June 14, 2017 in Barcelona, Spain, and concluded on New Year’s Eve 2017 in Helsinki, Finland, as a part of the band’s annual Helldone Festival. The tour spanned three legs across Europe and North America. Most shows were sold out and the tour generated over 110,000 attendees in total. It also attracted mostly positive reviews, with the Nottingham Post noting that HIM “truly went out with a ‘bang’ ”.

For the tour, the band performed material from all their studio albums. They played their first-ever outdoor show in Helsinki at the Tuska Open Air Metal Festival, breaking the festival’s record for highest attendance on a single date. In conjunction with the tour, a special photo exhibition by Ville Juurikkala was held at the Helsinki Art Museum and the Morrison Hotel Gallery in New York. The exhibition, titled HIM: Right Here in My Eyes, featured photos of the band preparing for the tour. Check out this feature article/interview celebrating HIM’s extraordinary frontman:

Image credit: John McMurtrie

HIM is dead: Ville Valo’s final interview ever

Excellent feature article and interview by  Alexander Milas ( Metal Hammer ) published November 2017

Gone but certainly not forgotten: here is a cool reaction video as Ville Valo himself reacts to classic HIM music videos and shares behind-the-scenes stories from their heyday. The former HIM frontman also discusses the drastic change in music video production budgets over the years. Expect anecdotes about chart-topping hits and the challenges of early music video production. Enjoy!

 

And we’ve reached the 10th and final song in the RnR H2T LIPS edition! This is one of the artists I mentioned that I’d like to feature in an Artist Spotlight post down the road:

BLUE LIPS by Regina Spektor

 Regina Spektor is a Russian-born American singer, songwriter, and classically trained pianist. “Blue Lips” is a track from her fifth studio album Far, released in 2009.

Another NYC artist who was new to me, I found her background to be quite interesting. Born in 1980 to a musical Russian-Jewish family in Moscow, Regina started taking piano lessons at age 7, learning how to play by practicing on a Petrof upright piano her grandfather had given to her mother. She grew up listening to classical music but her father, who obtained recordings in Eastern Europe and traded cassettes with friends in the Soviet Union, also exposed her to rock and roll bands such as the Beatles, Queen, and the Moody Blues.

The family left the Soviet Union when Spektor was nine and a half, during the period of Perestroika, when Soviet citizens were permitted to emigrate. She had to leave her piano behind. The seriousness of her piano studies led her parents to consider not leaving the Soviet Union, but they finally decided to emigrate due to the racial, ethnic, and political discrimination that Jewish people faced.

Her family settled in the Bronx in 1989. Since the family had been unable to bring their piano from Moscow, Spektor practiced on tabletops and other hard surfaces until she found a piano to play in the basement of her synagogue. In New York City, Spektor studied classical piano with Sonia Vargas, a professor at the Manhattan School of Music, until she was 17. Regina was originally interested in classical music only, but she later grew interested in hip hop, rock, and punk as well.

She became interested in formal songwriting in her teenage years and she wrote her first a cappella songs around the age of 16 and her first songs for voice and piano when she was 17.

NOTE: I found this video on the NPR site for Regina Spektor’s song “Bleeding Heart” but the reason I include it here is that it includes many old photos from her childhood, when she was still in the USSR and her early years after arriving in the US. The old black and white photos and home movies were taken by her father Ilya Spektor. It also showcases her playing piano as a child. It is unrelated to the specific song in this post “Blue Lips” but since presenting some of her early life background I am including it here. So, Bonus! You get to hear another Regina Spektor song, the lead single from her 2016 album, Remember Us to Life and get a glimpse into her youth. Plus some of her incredible vocal range is on display in this song. I think you’ll like both, the song and the old photos:

Fast-forward to her career, Specktor self-released her first three records and gained popularity in New York City’s independent music scenes, particularly the anti-folk scene centered on the East Village. Then she signed with Sire Records in 2004, resulting in greater mainstream recognition. After giving her third album, Soviet Kitsch, a major label re-release, Sire released Spektor’s fourth album, Begin to Hope, which achieved a Gold certification by the RIAA. Her following two albums, Far and What We Saw from the Cheap Seats, each debuted at No.3 on the Billboard 200.

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For the Far album (on which “Blue Lips” appears) Spektor decided to work with multiple producers on the album. She has compared composing an album to taking a class and said she wanted to have “multiple professors”. She also felt that having multiple producers would help each to not worry what the single or big hit would be. She chose to work with these four producers for Far: David Kahne (he produced her previous studio album, Begin to Hope (2006), Mike Elizondo (he produced her next studio album, What We Saw from the Cheap Seats (2012), Jacknife Lee and Jeff Lynne.

Jeff Lynne was the producer on her “Blue Lips” song (he also produced three other songs on the Far album). Although Lynne, as founder of Electric Light Orchestra and co-founder of The Traveling Wilburys, has an expansive musical background, Spektor did not know of his work when she originally met him. Despite The Washington Post naming him the fourth greatest record producer in history in 2008, Spektor admitted to BBC News that she had very little idea about her collaborator’s pedigree before she went into the studio. She admitted: “I memorized his name off a Tom Petty record that I really liked called Highway Companion because I just loved how it sounded. It was only later that I found out he’d done all this other stuff.”

Spektor told Entertainment Weekly that she really enjoyed working with Lynne. And vice-versa, according to Jeff Lynne. It’s obvious from their comments that they have deep mutual respect for one another. Of Jeff Lynne, Regina said:

“He’s amazing, in every way. He plays everything and anything. He’s just like, ‘Oh, we need drums on this, I’ll play. Oh, we need guitar. Oh, we need 12-string, or banjo.’ He can just pick anything up and play it. And he sings. It was really fun to get to sing with him. We sing harmonies on “Genius Next Door” and on “Blue Lips.” Certain things he did, I would never have thought to do, like the way the piano fades up on “Blue Lips.” I love things like that because they would never have entered my mind. That’s the exciting thing about working with producers, because you get to work with ideas that would’ve never popped into your head.”

And from the producer, Jeff Lynne said this about Spektor:

“Regina’s songs are like literature,” said Lynne, who doesn’t usually work with new artists, but said that Spektor’s demo tapes blew him away. “It hits you right in the face how brilliant it is,” he said.

Musically, the song features a jazz-influenced, melancholic piano riff, highlighting Spektor’s skill as a classically trained pianist. While the piano is the centerpiece, subtle strings and the occasional synth swirl in the song’s production, providing a layered soundscape. Couple those production elements with Spektor’s unique vocal effects, like her signature vocal gymnastics, from “striking guitar chords” to a mix of soft and powerful vocals is why “Blue Lips” is often cited as a standout track and a highlight of the Far album. Sputnik Music‘s rave review sums it this way: “The simple fact behind Regina Spektor’s music is that she can do no wrong.”

For a real treat, watch and listen as Regina performs “Blue Lips” live, just her and her piano, recorded at Public Radio WFUV’s studio on 5/22/2019. What amazing talent to make such powerful music, just her voice and her piano. Wow!

The song is a fan favorite known for its powerful imagery and emotional depth. It contains some of Spektor’s most powerful and sorrowful imagery, showing her growth as a songwriter from her more whimsical early works. Sputnik Music’s rave review sums it up: “The simple fact behind Regina Spektor’s music is that she can do no wrong.”So just what is “Blue Lips” about? When asked directly about the song’s meaning by SPIN magazine, Spektor demurred, explaining that she often doesn’t have a specific routine or process. Instead, she creates songs from an organic and intuitive place, describing her work as “this feels right”. In fact, she is notoriously reluctant to discuss the meanings of her songs. When SPIN magazine then asked her what this song is about, she replied:

“Well, that’s really hard for me. I don’t really think of songs in those terms. I don’t sit down with an agenda and go, “I’m going to write a song about…” you know? I just start playing a little bit on the piano, and then I start singing a little bit, and then it’s over – and there’s a song.

“Sometimes, very rarely, I can trace the ancestry of a lyric, and I’ll be like, “Oh, it’s a combination of that person I saw in the street and that one painting I saw in a museum, and that one movie I saw,” or something like that. But for the most part, it’s not really clear even to me. People think that if you can’t explain a linear meaning, then the song’s meaningless, or that you just put words together because they sound nice. But it’s not that either. It feels completely meaningful – it all means very exact stuff.”

While Spektor allows listeners to find their own meaning, fans have deeply connected with the song, with many sharing personal stories of loss or introspection tied to it.

INTERPRETATION OF THE LYRICS: The song’s surreal narrative has been interpreted as a character’s search for meaning. According to the music website Genius, the song alludes to a spiritual experience or even a religious journey. The character in the song “stumbled into faith” but is left unimpressed with the experience and disappointed by it, ultimately concluding that life is just life.

The lyrics specifically reference a biblical story of good and evil. In that same 2009 interview with SPIN, Spektor confirmed her fascination with faith, religion, and spirituality, and acknowledged that the theme appeared frequently in her songwriting, noting that her perspective on the topic can range from positive to sarcastic.

Going deeper with interpretation and analysis, the song critiques the way faith is commodified or co-opted for worldly gain, suggesting that human actions have tainted and replaced original spiritual intentions. Explained through these lines in the lyrics:

“They started off beneath the knowledge tree / Then they chopped it down to make white picket fences”: This line directly references the Tree of Knowledge from the biblical Garden of Eden story in the Book of Genesis. In this interpretation, humanity’s pursuit of knowledge ultimately led to materialistic desires (symbolized by the “white picket fences”) rather than spiritual enlightenment. It contrasts the pursuit of divine knowledge with the pursuit of a standardized, materialist version of the “American dream”.

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“Made it past the enemy line / Just to become enslaved in the assembly lines”: The assembly line is a powerful and recurring image representing the dehumanization and monotonous nature of modern life. This powerful metaphor suggests that people sacrificed and fought for a belief system, only to end up in the meaningless, repetitive labor of modern life. They traded spiritual freedom for another form of enslavement, an existence in industrialized society that offers no personal gratification.

“All the people hurried fast, real fast and no one ever smiled”: Spektor uses the image of isolated, rushing people to illustrate the disconnection and loneliness of modern life. This suggests a society of individuals who are so consumed with their fast-paced routines that they fail to connect with one another. The line “and no one saw and no one heard” further emphasizes the profound sense of isolation and indifference in the urban environment.

Finally, the use of the color blue in the lyrics: The lyrics connect the body’s blue veins and lips to the expansive blue of Earth seen from a distance, suggesting a complex and universal meaning. By declaring blue “the most human color,” Spektor makes blue a profound symbol of the shared human condition, namely mortality. While “blue lips” certainly denotes death, it also symbolizes a universal and unifying aspect of mortality. Just as the “storytellers” of religious myths inevitably die, so does everyone else. The blue is a reminder that we are all, in the end, just human.

The bigger picture: The lyrics also use the color blue to shift perspective from the individual to a cosmic scale, offering a sense of transcendence. The song repeatedly returns to the line, “Blue, the color of our planet from far, far away”. This cosmic viewpoint elevates the color from a symbol of personal sorrow to one of grand, humbling significance. The blue is not just personal sadness but the immense, beautiful, and lonely reality of our existence as tiny figures on a single, blue sphere.

“Blue, the color of our planet from far, far away” (lyric by Regina Skeptor in Blue Lips song)

The song ends by suggesting that all quests for meaning—whether through faith, love, or consumerism—ultimately return to a simple, humbling truth: life simply is. The blue of our mortal bodies is the same blue of the indifferent planet we inhabit.

How’s that for heavy?! I wish I were more tuned into lyrics when I listen to songs. Typically I’m moved by the music itself, the beat, the melody, a good bassline, tight rhythms, crescendos, etc. Most times I don’t even know what a song is actually about…but put me on ‘Name That Tune’ and I can usually name the song within a few notes. Maybe it’s my preferred genre (classic rock) that makes me more inclined to listen to the groove and not the words. Now songs like Nazareth’s “Hair of the Dog” – I know what that song’s about! I say that in jest but for me and my appreciation, it’s mostly about the music. 

However, researching Regina Spektor’s “Blue Lips” in depth like this has given me incentive to start paying more attention to song lyrics. I’m so engrained in the music of songs though — wish me luck!

 

That wraps up the LIPS – Part 2 edition. What Lips songs did you like in this playlist? Was there anything surprising with the music or the info/fun facts shared? Let me know in the Comments section below. Thanks for visiting Angels Bark and coming along this Rock ‘n Roll Head to Toe journey with me!

This is part of the Monday’s Music Moves Me Blog Hop. Be sure to visit the other 4M participants. If the list of participants below doesn’t have links just click the Click Here link below and you’ll come to the list with links to their individual posts. (WP can be contemptible at times)

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Another Rock Legend Gone: AC/DC’s guitarist and co-founder Malcolm Young dead at 64

photo credit: Martyn Goodacre/Hulton Archive

Upon hearing the news about the passing of the driving force behind one of my very favorite rock bands, AC/DC guitarist and co-founder Malcolm Young, I was immediately taken back to those days when my 8-track player would blast out countless songs by this Australian band that played an important and starring role in the soundtrack of my life.

I put together a tribute playlist of my favorite AC/DC songs. And I have to wonder: what happens to the band now? Sharing with you below the two articles that I read tonight. They left me begging the question, is it over for AC/DC?

While you read the folowing articles about the great Malcolm Young, enjoy these incredible songs by one of the most influential bands that helped to shape my musical ear. And then tell me,  How would you answer the question?

 

From Rolling Stone, the news article by Daniel Kreps announcing the death of AC/DC’s Malcolm Young:

Malcolm Young, AC/DC Guitarist and Co-Founder, Dead at 64

Subhead: Musician who co-founded Australian rock legends in 1973 with brother Angus Young dies following battle with dementia

Malcolm Young, guitarist and co-founder of AC/DC, died Saturday at the age of 64. Young had been suffering with dementia for the past three years, an illness that forced his retirement from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame-inducted band he founded with his brother Angus Young in 1973.

“Today it is with deep heartfelt sadness that AC/DC has to announce the passing of Malcolm Young,” AC/DC wrote in a statement.

“Malcolm, along with Angus, was the founder and creator of AC/DC. With enormous dedication and commitment he was the driving force behind the band. As a guitarist, songwriter and visionary he was a perfectionist and a unique man. He always stuck to his guns and did and said exactly what he wanted. He took great pride in all that he endeavored. His loyalty to the fans was unsurpassed.”

Angus Young added, “As his brother it is hard to express in words what he has meant to me during my life, the bond we had was unique and very special. He leaves behind an enormous legacy that will live on forever. Malcolm, job well done.”

The Young brothers lost their older brother George Young, the Easybeats guitarist and AC/DC’s longtime producer, in October at the age of 70.

In an additional statement from Malcolm Young’s family, the band said that Malcolm Young died peacefully Saturday with his family by his side.

“Renowned for his musical prowess, Malcolm was a songwriter, guitarist, performer, producer and visionary who inspired many,” the statement said. “From the outset, he knew what he wanted to achieve and, along with his younger brother, took to the world stage giving their all at every show. Nothing less would do for their fans.”

As rhythm guitarist for the legendary rock band, Malcolm Young served as an indispensable foil to Angus Young’s arena-stuffing riffs. After forming AC/DC in 1973, the Young brothers would be credited as co-writers on every song the band recorded from their 1975 debut High Voltage through 2014’s Rock or Bust. That final album marked AC/DC’s first without Malcolm, who announced in September 2014 that he would permanently leave the band due to dementia.

“We miss Malcolm, obviously,” AC/DC singer Brian Johnson said in July 2014. “He’s a fighter. He’s in [the] hospital, but he’s a fighter. We’ve got our fingers crossed that he’ll get strong again… Stevie, Malcolm’s nephew, was magnificent, but when you’re recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn’t well, it’s difficult. But I’m sure [Malcolm] was rooting for us.”

Malcolm Young last performed live with AC/DC when their tour for 2008’s Black Ice concluded in June 2010 with a concert in Bilbao, Spain.

Malcolm Young, like his older brother George and younger brother Angus, was born in Glasgow, Scotland before the whole Young family immigrated to Sydney, Australia in the early Sixties.

Malcolm and Angus’ first brush with rock stardom came courtesy of their brother George, who found global fame thanks to his band the Easybeats and their song “Friday on My Mind.” Although Malcolm’s two older brothers found success in the music industry, their father still made Malcolm work as a mechanic in a bra factory after leaving school at 15.

“I’ve never felt like a pop star – this is a nine-to-five sort of gig,” Malcolm told Rolling Stone in 2008. “It comes from working in the factories, that world. You don’t forget it.”

In 1973, Malcolm recruited Angus to form a new band, which the brothers named after the “AC/DC” electrical current marker they spotted on their sister’s sewing machine. After a few lineup changes, the Young brothers were introduced to singer Bon Scott by their brother George, who would serve as AC/DC’s producer on their early albums.

Throughout AC/DC’s tenure, Malcolm and Angus Young served as the band’s main creative force, crafting the unmistakable riffs that would make AC/DC one of the biggest bands in music. Together, the brothers would create the music for hits like “Back in Black,” “Hells Bells,” “Highway to Hell,” “Thunderstruck,” “For Those About to Rock (We Salute You),” “You Shook Me All Night Long” and dozens more rock staples.

However, Malcolm’s time in AC/DC was not without strife: A heavy drinker, he briefly left AC/DC in 1988 during the Blow Up Your Video Tour – his only absence from the band up to and until his dementia diagnosis – to go to rehab to curb his drinking problem. After a few months, Malcolm returned to the band and remained sober ever since. “I was not surprised,” George Young said of his younger brother’s sobriety. “When Malcolm puts his mind to something, he does it.”

Reactions to his death:

E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt said in a statement to Rolling Stone, “Malcolm was the essential rhythm guitarist of the world’s greatest working class Hard Rock band. An irreplaceable loss.”

 

Guns N’ Roses’ Slash told Rolling Stone, “Malcolm Young was one of the best ever rhythm guitarists in Rock n Roll. He was a fantastic songwriter and he had a great work ethic too. I toured with AC/DC on their ‘Stiff Upper Lip’ tour. I found Malcolm to be a really cool, down to earth fellow. The entire rock n roll community is heartbroken by his passing.”

 

Eddie Van Halen wrote following Young’s death, “It is a sad day in rock and roll. Malcolm Young was my friend and the heart and soul of AC/DC. I had some of the best times of my life with him on our 1984 European tour. He will be missed and my deepest condolences to his family, bandmates and friends.”

 

Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine, who regarded Malcolm as one of rock’s greatest rhythm guitarists, tweeted Saturday following Young’s death, “I have to go…I am losing it that Malcolm is gone. I hate this…”

 

Kiss’ Paul Stanley added, “The driving engine of AC/DC has died. A tragic end for a sometimes unsung icon. One of the true greats. RIP.”

 

Tom Morello praised Young as “#1 greatest rhythm guitarist in the entire history of rock n roll.”

 

Foo Fighters’ leader Dave Grohl honored Young by writing about how, at age 11, watching a live AC/DC performance from Paris in 1979 in the movie theater was life-changing. “That film … was the first time I lost control to music. The first time I wanted to be in a band. I didn’t want to play my guitar anymore, I wanted to smash it,” Grohl wrote. “Thank you Malcolm, for the songs, and the feel and the cool and the years of losing control to your rock and roll.”

 

The Young brothers and AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. With over 110 million albums sold, AC/DC is also the best-selling Australian act of all time.

When Rolling Stone asked the Young brothers in 2008, “Who runs AC/DC?” Malcolm replied, “We both do, because we were there from the start.”

AC/DC's co-founder and guitarist Malcolm Young

“We pay tribute to the unassuming genius of AC/DC’s late Malcolm Young, whose unwavering vision drove the legendary hard-rock band for four decades. Bob King/Getty

Another excellent article appeared on UltimateClassicRock.com. A heartbreaking end to a rock legend.

MALCOLM YOUNG’S FINAL YEARS by Dave Lifton (November 18, 2017)

Even before AC/DC concluded their Black Ice tour on June 28, 2010 in Bilbao, Spain, they were aware that there was a problem with founder Malcolm Young’s health.

As his brother Angus said in November 2014, Malcolm had issues with memory and concentration since before they started work on their 2008 album, but he was still able to participate in the recording and the promotion of the record. “[Malcolm] was still capable of knowing what he wanted to do. I said to him, ‘Do you want to go through with what we’re doing?’ And he said, ‘Shit, yeah.’”

During the tour, which lasted nearly two years, Malcolm “got good help, good medical care,” Angus continued, even though he had to relearn many of the songs he wrote, “which was very strange for him. But he was always a confident guy, and we made it work.”

Out of respect for his privacy, the band kept the truth about his health a secret from the press. In 2012, singer Brian Johnson said that a delay in their next project was because, “One of the boys is a little sick and I can’t say anything, but he’s getting better. He’s doing wonderful. Full recovery fully expected.”

But by April 2014, a few weeks before they were planning to start recording Rock or Bust, word started to leak out that Young’s health had deteriorated to the point where he would have to leave the band. “One of the boys has a debilitating illness, but I don’t want to say too much about it,” Johnson said. “He is very proud and private, a wonderful chap. We’ve been pals for 35 years and I look up to him very much.” Later that day, AC/DC put out a statement confirming that Young was “taking a break” from the band he formed more than 40 years earlier.

They tracked Rock or Bust in Vancouver, with Angus and Malcolm’s nephew Stevie, who filled in for Malcolm in 1988 while he sought treatment for his alcohol addiction. Johnson later admitted that Malcolm’s absence affected the sessions.

“We missed Malcolm, obviously,” he noted. “Stevie was magnificent in his stead, but when you’re recording with this thing hanging over you, and your work mate isn’t well, it’s difficult. I’m sure he was rooting for us the whole time we were over in Canada.”

On Sept. 24, 2014, AC/DC announced that Stevie was permanently replacing Malcolm in the press release that accompanied news of the arrival of Rock or Bust. Two days later, it was reported that Malcolm was being treated for dementia in a nursing facility in Sydney after having suffered a stroke the previous year. The band confirmed the diagnosis on Sept. 30, and the artwork for the record featured two tributes to the guitarist.

But, as we later learned, it was more than just dementia. On the day of Rock or Bust’s release, Angus said that his brother “had a lung operation; he had a heart operation.. everything hit him at once, besides his dementia.” But again, that was an understatement. In January, it was revealed that he was diagnosed with lung cancer after the Black Ice tour, and that he had a pacemaker installed.

AC/DC opened up their tour on April 10, 2015 with a 20-song at the Coachella Festival in Indio, Calif. But by that time, there was another change in the band. A month before Rock or Bust’s release, drummer Phil Rudd was arrested for threatening to kill someone and drug possession. He was replaced by Chris Slade, who had previously drummed with the band from 1989-94. Rudd eventually pleaded guilty to slightly reduced charges and was sentenced to eight months of home detention.

During the tour, Angus would often give an update on his brother’s health, saying that he goes out for a walk and a cup of coffee daily, and that, “Every now and then he’s still the Malcolm I know.” Six months later, he was spotted on one of those walks, in the King’s Cross neighborhood of Sydney, near a facility where he received part-time treatment. Around that time, Malcolm and his wife purchased a waterfront house in the exclusive Sydney suburb of Palm Beach, reportedly for more than $10 million Australian.

While on the road, AC/DC were forced to make another change in the lineup. In March 2016, Johnson was told by doctors that if he didn’t stop touring immediately, he would risk a total hearing loss. The tour’s 10 remaining shows were in serious jeopardy, but Axl Rose offered his services to the band, and the dates were rescheduled for August and September, while Rose was on a break from Guns N’ Roses’ Not In This Lifetime dates that saw him reunited with Slash and Duff McKagan.

However, as they were waiting to make up the days, bassist Cliff Williams, who had been in the band since 1978 and, after Angus, was the second-longest tenured member of AC/DC, announced that he would retire upon the conclusion of the tour. “Losing Malcolm [Young], the thing with Phil [Rudd] and now with Brian [Johnson],” he said, “it’s a changed animal. I feel in my gut it’s the right thing.”

The tour concluded on Sept. 20 in Philadelphia, with Angus bringing Williams out from his usual spot in the back to the front catwalk during the traditional closing song, “For Those About to Rock (We Salute You).” As the tour wound down, Angus acknowledged that Malcolm’s condition had gotten worse in the two years since his condition was made public. “It’s hard to communicate,” he said. “I do pass on messages. I can’t be 100 percent sure it goes in there. But I let him know there are a lot of people missing him.”

Angus also admitted that he wasn’t sure what was next for the band. “We were committed to finishing the tour,” he said. “Who knows what I’ll feel after? When you sign on and say, ‘I’m gonna do this and that,’ it’s always good to say at the end of it, ‘I’ve done all I said I would do.'”

But he added that Malcolm’s drive kept the band going through difficult times, saying, “I feel obligated to keep it going, maybe because I was there in the beginning with him.”

photo: Hulton Archive, Getty Images

 

RIP Malcolm. 

 

Battle of the Bands – “Proud Mary”

battle-of-the-bands-botb-top-photo

Today marks the start of another Battle! I’m presenting two very different versions of the same song and both versions are charting hits.

“Proud Mary” is a rock song written by John Fogerty and first recorded by his band Creedence Clearwater Revival. The song was released by Fantasy Records as a single from the band’s second studio album, Bayou Country, January 1969. The song became a hit in the United States, peaking at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1969.

In a 1969 interview, Fogerty said that he wrote it in the two days after he was discharged from the National Guard. “In the liner notes for the 2008 expanded reissue of Bayou Country, Joel Selvin explained that the songs for the album started when John Fogerty was in the National Guard, that the riffs for “Proud Mary,” “Born on the Bayou,” and “Keep on Chooglin'” were conceived by Fogerty at a concert in the Avalon Ballroom, and “Proud Mary” was arranged from parts of different songs, one of which was about a “washerwoman named Mary.” The line “Left a good job in the city” was written following Fogerty’s discharge from the National Guard, and the line “rollin’ on the river” was from a movie by Will Rogers.” (Source: Wikipedia)

Tina Turner first covered “Proud Mary” in 1970 with her husband at the time, Ike Turner. The Ike & Tina Turner version was released as a single from their Workin’ Together album and the song differed greatly from the structure of the original, but is also well known and has become one of Tina’s most recognizable signature songs. The Turners’ version was substantially rearranged by Ike Turner and Soko Richardson. The song started off with a slow, sultry tone; after the lyrics are first sung softly by the Turners, the song is then turned into a funk rock vamp with Turner and assorted background singers delivering soulful vocals. It reached #4 on the pop charts on March 27, 1971, two years to the week after Creedence Clearwater Revival’s version was at its peak, and won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Group in 1972. (Source: Wikipedia)

Both Creedence Clearwater Revival’s and Ike & Tina Turner’s versions of the song received Grammy Hall of Fame Awards, in 1998 and 2003, respectively. And both versions charted in Billboards top five, #2 and #4, respectively. So this battle may be a toss-up. I know I like both versions.

To make it most fair, I’m presenting live performances by each band:

Creedence Clearwater Revival version:

 

Ike & Tina Turner version:
(video doesn’t show up in the post but you can either click “Watch on YouTube) inside the video block or click the link provided above).


 

Such a great song! “Proud Mary” placed at #155 on Rolling Stone’s 2004 list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.  Now it’s time for you to vote! Who’s version do you like best and why?

To check out the other Battle of the Bands participants, here is a list with links. Lots of great battles to explore:

Don’t forget to cast your vote! And thanks for playing along…

 

 

 

Z is for the Zombies and Z Z Top!

Z

DISCLAIMER THAT APPEARS AT THE BEGINNING OF ALL A-Z 2015 PAGES:

Welcome to the A-Z Musical Tour of My Life! I have wanted to put something like this together for a long time now and the A-Z Challenge just seemed like the perfect opportunity. I’ve compiled stories, trivia, research, music videos and live concert footage on all the bands and musical artists who have been important to me over the years, especially during my youthful years in the 60s and 70s. At first glance, the posts may seem long – and some of them are due to the number of videos included – but it’s really laid out in a way that will enable you to scroll through and read, see or hear just what you want and then either move on to the next A-Zer or linger and listen to the great music that you’ll find here. By all means, bookmark my blog so you can come back! In addition to individual songs, there are some full albums here for those who may want to enjoy some music while they’re surfing or working. I hope you find that the stories are entertaining, the information educational and the trivia interesting. It would be a tremendous honor if you would bookmark the A-Z Musical Tour of My Life as a resource for great music and music information! Now, let’s get started with…

Wow, today is the last day of the A-Z Challenge! And it all comes down to this:

Z is for the Zombies – The Zombies are an English rock band, formed in 1961 in St Albans, England, and led by Rod Argent (piano, organ and vocals) and Colin Blunstone (vocals). The group scored British and American hits in 1964 with “She’s Not There”. In the US two further singles, “Tell Her No” in 1965 and “Time of the Season” in 1969, were also successful. Their 1968 album, Odessey and Oracle, is ranked number 100 on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. (Source: Wikipedia)

She’s Not There – This song was released in 1964 as their debut single and reached #12 in the UK charts:

Tell Her No –  Rod Argent’s “Tell Her No” became another big seller in the United States in 1965, peaking at No.6 on the Billboard Hot 100.

In 1967 the Zombies signed to CBS Records and they recorded the album Odessey and Oracle (odyssey was accidentally misspelled by Terry Quirk, an art teacher who designed the cover). But by the time Odessey and Oracle was released in April 1968, the group had disbanded (in December 1967). The album sold poorly and was given a US release only because musician Al Kooper, then signed to Columbia Records, convinced his label of the album’s merits. One of its tracks, “Time of the Season”, written by Argent, was released as a single and eventually (1969) became a nationwide hit (Billboard Hot 100 peak position: No.3).

Time of the Season

After the Zombies disbanded, Rod Argent formed a band called Argent in 1969, with Chris White as a non-performing songwriter. Atkinson worked in A&R at Columbia Records and Grundy joined him there after a brief spell in auto sales. Colin Blunstone started a solo career after a brief period outside the music business, including working in the burglary claims section of an insurance company. Both Argent and White provided him with new songs. He also did studio vocals for The Alan Parsons Project.

 

 

And finally:

Z is for ZZ Top – I have been a fan of ZZ Top since their 1972 Tres Hombres album. My brother turned me on to their Texas boogie rock and I was hooked immediately. It ZZ Top stubwas cool then that my brother took me to see them back in 1983 at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium. Interestingly (for me, that is), Sammy Hagar opened for ZZ Top and kicked off his set with Bad Motor Scooter, a Montrose song that always reminds me of my brother.

So who are these bad boys from Texas? “ZZ Top is an American rock band that formed in 1969 in Houston, Texas. The band comprises guitarist and lead vocalist Billy Gibbons (the band’s leader, main lyricist and musical arranger), bassist and co-lead vocalist Dusty Hill, and drummer Frank Beard. One of the few major label recording groups to have held the same lineup for more than forty years, ZZ Top has been praised by critics and fellow musicians alike for their technical mastery. Of the group, music writer Cub Koda said “As genuine roots musicians, they have few peers; Gibbons is one of America’s finest blues guitarists working in the arena rock idiom […] while Hill and Beard provide the ultimate rhythm section support.”

Since the release of the band’s debut album in January 1971, ZZ Top has become known for its strong blues roots and humorous lyrical motifs, relying heavily on double entendres and innuendo. ZZ Top’s musical style has changed over the years, beginning with blues-inspired rock on their early albums, then incorporating new wave, punk rock and dance-rock, with heavy use of synthesizers. One of the best-selling musical artists in history, the band has had global album sales in excess of 50 million as of 2014.” (Source: Wikipedia)

Here are a few bits of ZZ Top Trivia for you:

In 1985, they turned down a $1 million offer to appear in a Gillette razor commercial, which would have required Gibbons and Hill to shave their beards. They claimed they were too ugly to be seen without them. According to Gibbons, “The prospect of seeing oneself clean shaven in the mirror is too close to a Vincent Price film…A prospect not to be contemplated, no matter the compensation.”

On the official ZZ Top website, I discovered another interesting tidbit: ZZ Top had to quit playing their song Just Got Paid (from their 1972 Rio Grande Mud album) at concerts because every time they played it, fans would throw coins on the stage. And apparently getting pelted with coins kinda hurts! They’d typically end up with about $50 in change on the stage after playing that song. They took the song out of their set lineup for quite a while. Now it’s back in as the coin-throwing phase has passed.

And if you’ve ever wondered where they got their name: According to TodayIFoundOut.com, “the name ZZ Top, according to band member Billy Gibbons, came from a tribute to B.B. King. The band was originally going to call themselves “Z.Z. King” in King’s honor [and a nod to Z.Z. Hill as well, but they decided it was too similar to B.B. King. Since B.B. King was at the “top” of the Blues world, they changed it to ZZ Top.”

There are so many ZZ Top songs that I like and since this is the only band that I’m posting about, I’m going to include a bunch of videos. So sit back and enjoy some boogie and blues from “That Little Ol’ Band from Texas”:

Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers – ultimately, my favorite ZZ Top song, set to this cool motorcycle montage video:

Hot, Blue and Righteous – (audio only):

Jesus Just Left Chicago – Live at the Crossroads Eric Clapton Guitar Festival 2010:

La Grange –  photo montage video:

Blue Jean Blues – Live at Gilford, 2007 (video ©U.S.Cellular Pavilion,NH USA)

Balinese – photo montage video of the Balinese Ballroom in Galveston, TX:

Mexican Blackbird – ZZ Top photo montage video

Tush – Live performance in 2014:

I Thank You – a photo montage video:

I’m Bad, I’m Nationwide – a lyric video:

Cheap Sunglasses – a 1980 performance on BBC’s guitar heroes show:

Tube Snake Boogie – live performance at Rockpalast in Germany, April 1980:

Pearl Necklace – photo montage video:

Party on the Patio – 1983 performance for Sweden TV, right before the release of the Eliminator album:

Gimme All Your Lovin – official music video:

You Got Me Under Pressure – live at the Hellfest in Clisson, France on June 22nd, 2013:

Sharp Dressed Man – Official music video:

I Need You Tonight – a lyric video:

Legs – Official music video (from Rhino); I had that keychain that is featured in the video. I have no idea where it is but I’m sure it’s in my house somewhere…

Thug – audio only:

TV Dinners – official music video:

Sleeping Bag – official music video:

Stages – official music video:

Rough Boy – official music video:

My Head’s in Mississippi – official music video:

Doubleback – official music video:

Give It Up – official music video:

Arrested for Driving While Blind – Live at Rockpalast April 1980 in Germany:

 

So that’s it for the Letter Z. And that’s it for the Blogging A-Z Challenge! Wow, what a ride, huh? It’s been a blast exploring the soundtracks of my life and I hope you’ve had as much fun as I have this last month. 

Thanks so much for joining me on this musical tour of my life. All the posts have been compiled and indexed on one page (see the 2015 Blogging A-Z Challenge Collection) so please come back and visit soon! I’ve loved having you all here. Happy Trails! And as always, Rock On…