4/27/2024

ANNIVERSARIES: Frosting On The Beater

THE POSIES
Frosting On The Beater
[DGC - 1993]

After signing with DGC for their critically acclaimed sophomore album Dear 23 [1990] (produced by John Leckie, whose vast resumé includes helming the board for the likes of Radiohead, Stone Roses, Simple Minds and XTC), the band found themselves with a well-received breakthrough release, which put them on the map and set the stage for a promising expansion of their fan base.

But a funny thing happened before the recording of album number three: the Belligham, WA power poppers watched the scene from neighboring Seattle blow up and whether by circumstance or design, their next record would evidence a harder hitting sound, while retaining the hooky melodies and smooth harmonies that had graced the previous album.
 
A rocking collection of songs from an outfit that decided to give more power to its pop, without diminishing either element, it features a few of their most beloved songs (including the one-two punch of “Solar Sister” and “Flavor of the Month”) and was released on April 27, 1993.

4/17/2024

ST. SAMMY?

Here’s something I just realized that is very hard for me to acknowledge: Sammy Hagar saved Van Halen. Yup, he did.

How so? Even though Van Halen were never a hairband they were hairband adjacent, having been the inspiration for many of them, whether they realized it or not. So, I’m assuming the distinct possibility that the classic Van Halen sound would not translate to the Alt-rock ‘90s, when Seattle was the promised land and Lollapalpoza gathered the tribes.

With the Red Rocker on board, they became a poppier, more commercially palatable version of the band—Van Jovi, as I have taken to derisively refer to that phase—which enabled them to survive. (Not coincidentally, Bon Jovi themselves did the same thing in order to avoid the hairband graveyard of the ‘90s.)

Now, fans of the Diamond Dave years will question whether it was ever worth it for the band to survive without him. They would likely reason that the brothers Van Halen could’ve taken a break after they broke off with DLR and not recorded anything until their swan song, A Different Kind of Truth [Interscope-2012] and no one would be worse for the wear.

Of course, that was impractical not to mention an incredibly selfish point of view, especially to those who enjoyed Hagar’s stint with the band and they are in the millions. (So were the bank statements of those closely involved in this rock and roll merger.) And, as the esteemed Chuck Klosterman once wrote, after Roth's departure they were too young to retire and too successful to quit, so... 

But you can’t overlook how this led to the band’s not entirely positive mainstreaming, as well as their very uncool participation in the Crystal Pepsi soft drink fiasco and its ad campaign, which featured the VH song “Right Now”. Alternative Nation was not gonna be down with any of that.

So the question becomes, was it worth it to save Van Halen in order for them to make the records they did without the Diamond One?

I have an answer, of course, but the only one whose answer matters is you.

UNDOUBTEDLY AMAZED

PAUL McCARTNEY
McCartney
[Capitol - 1970]

Recorded mostly at home as his first formal post-Fabs musical statement, it was the recipient of scathingly negative reviews but managed to reach and stay at the top spot of the charts for three weeks in the US. (It peaked at #2 in the UK.) The passage of time, however, has been kind to this one: these days it’s remembered as the first of his lone-man trilogy of solo albums and has earned much critical re-evaluation in the decades since it appeared, not to mention being regarded as an influence on the lo-fi/DIY movement. (It’s considered the first “indie” album by the man himself.) 
 
And while it comes across, undoubtedly, as a sometimes ragged and somewhat unfinished affair overall, even at his shaggiest and carefree the man was capable of bringing the magic, as evidenced by “That Would Be Something”, “Every Night”, “Junk” and the timeless “Maybe I’m Amazed”.
 
Despite being the antithesis of the, in comparison, elaborate and ornate ‘Abbey Road’ (which was the bulk of the negative critiques this one garnered), the homespun charm of this collection of songs has caught the ear of quite a few of his musical peers and descendants, who have voiced their fondness for it over the years, including the likes of Neil Young and Paul Weller. (Even the shit-stirring grouches at Pitchfork like this one!)
 
Sadly, while its release date coincides with the death of his beloved wife—who passed away on this date in 1998—I like to think the album’s airy and delicate opening track, “The Lovely Linda” and the aforementioned “Maybe I’m Amazed”, of course, are wonderful reminders of the anchor who kept him from going adrift at this time in his life. And for many years to come.
 
In late September 2020, the album got a deluxe 50th anniversary reissue three months before the release of ‘III’, the third installment of his solo trilogy.
 
Released April 17, 1970.