Rock Evolution – The History of Rock & Roll - 1998 - (page 271)

There is lots of songs I could have put up as my final pick and I may make some extra suggestions towards the end but sometimes a great song is just a great song irrespective of genre.
Unbelievably never a hit in the US but Top 3 here.
A song I never get tired of hearing

Womack & Womack - Teardrops
 
Whilst there are one or two less obvious OB1 choices to put forward for the playlist, I am sticking to what got me rocking in 1988.

We have already had a selection from Robert Plant’s Now & Zen album but the single that preceded that one is my personal favourite from the album and one that heavily references his LZ days. Robert Pant: Tall Cool One.

The track features samples of “Black Dog”, “Dazed and Confused”, “The Ocean”, “Custard Pie”, “When the Levee Breaks” & “Whole Lotta Love”. Jimmy Page contributes the guitar solo.
 
Rock started to take another direction in 1988 with Jane's Addiction at the forefront of alternative rock, going on to influence the likes of Tool, The Smashing Pumpkins and RATM.

Jane Says is a song inspired by Perry Farrell's ex-housemate and her battle with heroin, with the repeated line "I'm gonna kick tomorrow" at the end of each verse. The song was originally recorded with bongos, but the version on their debut album Nothing's Shocking replaces them with steel drums, and is all the better for it.
 
The playlist is great, but we're missing a HUGE event from 1988 - certainly in the UK anyway.

1988 was the "Second Summer of Love" and whilst I was a few years too young to appreciate it, our mates older brothers weren't and they introduced us to the music and videos of that era. They were telling us of these amazing clubs, venues and this madness of not sleeping

The news was frequently headlines by the new 'folk devil' - youngsters on Ecstacy who were staying up till the morning after. The Police chased around the fields and warehouses trying to stop raves but it didn't matter.

Stakker Humanoid - Stakker Humanoid

It's hard to describe how these tracks sounded to my younger ears at the time. They literally sounded like nothing else - it was infectious, didn't seem to have anything about it like melody or lyrics but it just sounded amazing. It also annoyed by that my cheap Yamaha PSR keyboard couldn't produce anything like it!

When you heard this on a VHS video and watched these crazed people in bright colours, throwing limbs all over it just looked like nothing we had seen before. On the news, these songs soundtracked this new 'problem'.

One thing I do think about with these rave tracks is that they remind me of punk - if you had the equipment and half an idea, you could have a hit.

I remember watching TOTP back in the day and seeing them perform this. I think those performances were bizarre looking back. This was rave music played on the 'nice' TOTP show but it was just so out of place and it made it sound even more dangerous!

Def Con One -Pop Will Eat Itself

These tracks started to bring the gaps between Indie music and Rave music. Is it a rock song? Yes, but that's a drum machine in the background and drops samples in for fun like Crazy Horses and Funky Town. It was a massive melting pot of styles and music.

PWEI and their ilk seemed to open up a new type of music in Indie where these 'mash ups' could mean blending anything in. Again, nothing else sounded like this at the time and - like we saw in the 60s - the counter culture of Rave, Indie, Rap and generally alternative music was where the zeitgeist was. Although hair rock and the like might have topped the charts, it was being eaten away.

The Pixies - Where Is My Mind?

The Pixies released Surfer Rosa which - in some ways - lays the blueprint for what happens next to rock music: Grunge.

At the time, you would have the 'Indie Chart' on The Chart Show and see these bands you'd never heard of. You'd then go to Oldham Library, borrow the tape and tape it. I was introduced to so much music from the library, some good and others not so good but it was exciting hearing the Indie chart in particular as it was so random. You'd hear The Pixies then Napalm Death then Stakker Humanoid then something else! The styles were incredible!

Hearing these songs for the first time opened my mind up to 'modern' rock. I wasn't into the Bon Jovi's and all that hair rock, THIS was rock! I love Bon Jovi nowadays, but The Pixies still blow them out of the water and we're hugely influential on Nirvana.

The Happy Mondays - Wrote For Luck

You can't imagine how this sounded either back in 1988. Introduced to it by my mates older brother, we couldn't tell if this was the future, a joke or if it was any good. Shaun Ryder has a voice that NO ONE can imitate and I absolutely love it. Of course, once these songs get remixed they become club classics but there's a real beauty in the rawness of it and just how 'mad' it sounds.

Tyree Cooper - Turn Up The Bass

Sorry, I'm going to cheat and slip in another one!

This song just sums up the era in some respects - that piano sound from House music, the drums from Acid House, the 'woh/yeah' from James Brown, 'Bring The Noise' maybe from Public Enemy or something, the rapping and I think it's sampling "Annie I'm not your Daddy" as well. The whole track screams energy and even now just sounds amazing.

What a year 1988 was for music.

I hope the above show that 1988 was a crucial year in music. Rave culture explodes - national news, moral panics and a demand for something to be done. The arrival of acid house, raves and ecstacy transform music and in time will transform British society. Ecstacy will be taken on football terraces and is generally recognised for help to reduce hooliganism. It helped to break down social barriers and bring in a culture where it's more important to have a good time and love each other than what shoes and shirt you're wearing. Laws would be changed about how many people could gather and there would be the ridiculous spectacle of people trying to define a rave. There was an energy in this period where it felt like things were changing - politically, socially, drugs and music wise. You can understand where the "Second Summer Of Love" comes from as it is very similar to the summer of 68.

Nothing the authorities did mattered - everything changed anyway.

I just wish I was about 5 years older to have fully appreciated it at the time!
 
I've been listening to quite a few of the Rave classics recently and whilst it might not be as complicated as Steely Dan, Yes or The Beatles there's something about that raw, hopeful, simple, DIY sound that really is so catchy. Even to this day, those classic tracks still rock and get people on the dancefloors!
 
Rock started to take another direction in 1988 with Jane's Addiction at the forefront of alternative rock, going on to influence the likes of Tool, The Smashing Pumpkins and RATM.

Jane Says is a song inspired by Perry Farrell's ex-housemate and her battle with heroin, with the repeated line "I'm gonna kick tomorrow" at the end of each verse. The song was originally recorded with bongos, but the version on their debut album Nothing's Shocking replaces them with steel drums, and is all the better for it.
As noted in the initial write-up, this was the song that I dropped for The Railway Children as "Nothing's Shocking".

I stand by that, but I enjoyed both songs and glad you picked it as part of the main playlist.
 
88 was the year Hard Rock finally morphed, or rather red lined a Testarossa off the top of the Grand Canyon, into the abyss of Hair Metal heaven or hell (depending on your proclivity) kick-started by Slippery When Wet in 86. It was the High/Low watermark.

The schism it created paved the way for Alt Rock and strengthened the hand of the Thrash bands such as Metallica. Seismic year in that respect.
 
88 was the year Hard Rock finally morphed, or rather red lined a Testarossa off the top of the Grand Canyon, into the abyss of Hair Metal heaven or hell (depending on your proclivity) kick-started by Slippery When Wet in 86. It was the High/Low watermark.

The schism it created paved the way for Alt Rock and strengthened the hand of the Thrash bands such as Metallica. Seismic year in that respect.
Hair metal seemed to be everywhere back then and it was getting sillier and more outrageous in terms of what the stars were doing. There was a lot of shite like Poison, Extreme, Def Leopard, Motley Crue etc around at the time and I didn't like any of it at all back then ( I do like DL, GNR, Bon Jovi now)

That over-produced, slick sound just seem to make all bands sound the same and the make up and hair just looked odd to me!! Thank God Nirvana etc came along and blasted the whole lot of it out of the water!
 
1988 was indeed a particularly good year for my musical tastes, I could’ve picked anumber of great tracks for my last pick,
PS ode to Bruce, ‘Cars and Girls’.Steve Forberts ‘The Streets of This Town’which was his first album after a few years of being without a label contains tracks I’d heard years before live in New Jersey.
Brain Wilson’s ‘Love and Mercy’ although I much prefer the Jeff Tweedy version.
Neil Young’s change in direction with ‘This Notes For You’

But I’m going with this one, as being a frustrated singer I chose it 2 yrs later to sing with the band at my wedding to the 2nd Mrs MCD.
It’s also written by the great John Hiatt and like Rob I could’ve picked any track of ‘Slow Turning’

From the debut album ‘See The Light’ Jeff Healey band’s

ANGEL EYES
 
Hair metal seemed to be everywhere back then and it was getting sillier and more outrageous in terms of what the stars were doing. There was a lot of shite like Poison, Extreme, Def Leopard, Motley Crue etc around at the time and I didn't like any of it at all back then ( I do like DL, GNR, Bon Jovi now)

That over-produced, slick sound just seem to make all bands sound the same and the make up and hair just looked odd to me!! Thank God Nirvana etc came along and blasted the whole lot of it out of the water!
Ouch! Poison and Extreme shite? I think you need to wash your ears out. Wait until all the Manc indie crap starts coming in over the next two or three years, then we’ll really know what shite is :)

There’s just so much more melody and craft in Poison’s music than your average indie guff and the singing is is way better.
 
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1988 was indeed a particularly good year for my musical tastes, I could’ve picked anumber of great tracks for my last pick,
PS ode to Bruce, ‘Cars and Girls’.Steve Forberts ‘The Streets of This Town’which was his first album after a few years of being without a label contains tracks I’d heard years before live in New Jersey.
Brain Wilson’s ‘Love and Mercy’ although I much prefer the Jeff Tweedy version.
Neil Young’s change in direction with ‘This Notes For You’

But I’m going with this one, as being a frustrated singer I chose it 2 yrs later to sing with the band at my wedding to the 2nd Mrs MCD.
It’s also written by the great John Hiatt and like Rob I could’ve picked any track of ‘Slow Turning’

From the debut album ‘See The Light’ Jeff Healey band’s

ANGEL EYES
I couldn’t quite fit it in, but Steve Forbert’s “I Blinked Once” is an amazing song.
 
Ouch! Poison and Extreme shite? I think you need to wash your ears out. Wait until all the Manc indie crap starts coming in over the next two or three years, then we’ll really know what shite is :)

There’s just so much more melody and craft in Poison’s music than your average indie guff and the singing is is way better.
Poison were great fun and could play, the guitar solo in my song pick is great. Extreme were and remain a talented band. Their recent album was very good. Their guitarist, Nuno Bettencourt, is a superb musician and their lead singer is so good, he got a gig with Van Halen.
 
Poison were great fun and could play, the guitar solo in my song pick is great. Extreme were and remain a talented band. Their recent album was very good. Their guitarist, Nuno Bettencourt, is a superb musician and their lead singer is so good, he got a gig with Van Halen.
Gary Cherone. Yes, I remember that. Most of these bands have great guitarists - Nuno Bettencourt, CC Deville, Steve Vai - a lot of these guys fly under the radar outside of the hard rock/metal press and community whereas much less able players get lauded by the masses.
 
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From her third album ,by one of my favourite female artists, but made famous by Mary Chapin Carpenter’s cover version.

‘PASSIONATE KISSES’ Lucinda Williams

Another off my long list so I'm definitely going to have room for either Angry Anderson or Glen Medeiros.

Btw - really enjoyed See The Light too when it came out and as we're in that broad parish I'll pick a track from Robert Cray's follow up to the hugely successful Strong Persuader. Don't Be Afraid of the Dark didn't do as well as but is still a top album and Young Bob was still having domestic troubles.

Robert Cray - I Can't Go Home
 
There is lots of songs I could have put up as my final pick and I may make some extra suggestions towards the end but sometimes a great song is just a great song irrespective of genre.
Unbelievably never a hit in the US but Top 3 here.
A song I never get tired of hearing

Womack & Womack - Teardrops

Complicated family the Womacks!

Great song though.
 

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