Showing posts with label Foreigner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreigner. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2019

Crash Course, No. 15: Battle of the Bands, Dad Rock Edition

In which, clouds, carpets and lazy dogs are "arena rock."
A couple weeks ago (now pushing three weeks), I challenged myself to choose the catalog of one band from my childhood to take with me to a desert island as the only music I would hear for the rest of my life. Here are the bands in play: Styx, Journey, REO Speedwagon, Boston, and Foreigner. Now, for a little framing.

First, why did I choose those bands? Mostly, they were what passed for cool in the American Midwest circa 1980. I’ve since discovered that they passed for cool just about everywhere: even back then and before I had a working understanding of what “big” meant, I grasped that Journey, at least, was massive. Musically, they shaped my earlier understanding of what “rock ‘n’ roll” sounded like and, to some extent, what rock stars looked like. With that, we reach a pivot.

Even though I called three of these bands my personal favorite at some point in my confused little life (for the record, Foreigner, REO Speedwagon and, yes, Styx; Boston’s “More Than a Feeling” sunk a pretty deep hook too), whatever mystique stood between me and at least four of those bands evaporated as I got older and as those bands kept putting out new albums and videos. For instance, some latent instinct told me that 3/5’s of Styx looked anything but “cool” in the video for “Too Much Time on My Hands” (e.g., white pant-suit for James J. Y. Young, the purser’s uniform for drummer John Panozzo, and…just Dennis DeYoung), while Foreigner always came off as middle-aged men singing music suited for guys in their late teens, and REO Speedwagon’s Kevin Cronin knows better than anyone that he doesn’t remotely fit the mold of a rock ‘n’ roll front-man. Between those details and a pile up of fresh inputs – e.g., the immediately mockable “Mr. Roboto,” REO Speedwagon’s pun-infused video for “One Lonely Night,” or even Foreigner’s band-breaking mega-hit, “I Want to Know What Love Is” – it became clearer with each passing year that these were popular bands, and on the cutting edge of absolutely nothing. Everyone involved had real talent, but what they put out stopped meaning anything to me by 1982. (Boston gets a pass in all this because, if I remember right, I had no sense of what they looked like – and for good reason as it turns out.)

Fast forward to today – or, more accurately, to a couple months ago – the fact that I didn’t know anything about all those bands started nagging at me. Defining as all these bands were to their era – i.e., disco, punk, funk, progressive rock, even late-early stage heavy metal all existed or matured at the same time - they occupied a fucking weird space of, for lack of a better word, normal. They were rock music for the straight world…and I still somehow worried that I missed something with one or two of them. So, after starting with a far larger sample (e.g., the first pass included Loverboy, Toto, and about a dozen others), I reduced the sample size to those five bands and started listening – and reading.

My light research into all five bands (seriously, it’s just Wikipedia entries and (massive hat-tip to @morrisonicpod for reminding me they existed!) the Behind the Music features on each) turned up all kinds of surprises. The biggest of those came from how often the same kind of storylines showed up in the different bands – for instance, how many of them started without their most famous and/or revered band members, the instability of their line-ups (and, sometimes, their styles), and how much ego and brand preservation drove that instability. That said, and obviously, no band’s story runs parallel to another’s: think of overlapping circles in a Venn diagram more than anything else, and with a big circle in the middle that reads “arena rock.”

I’ve already written about all five bands in separate posts, and links to those are below. I posted them according to how far or close each band got to coming with me to that desert island, from the last band I’d take to the first one. With that, here are the results and links to each of the earlier posts:

Foreigner, aka, Mick Jones’ Control Issues

One final note: further/continued listening and attempting to create a “Dad Rock Top 20” revealed that Styx belongs in last place. As it turns out, I’m partial to a couple Foreigner ballads, while even the stuff I used to like about Styx rubs me the wrong way.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Dad Rock Primary, No. 5: Foreigner, aka, Mick Jones' Control Issues

He's not wrong....
[Ed. Links to all sources besides the songs are at the bottom of the post.]

The Biggest Surprise: The extent to which the band operated like Leninist Russia.
The Most Famous Line-Up: Jones (guitar) Lou Gramm (vocals), Al Greenwood (keys), Ed Gagliardi (bass), Dennis Elliott (drums), and Ian McDonald (not clear, but I think guitar with them).

What You Need to Know
Foreigner’s chose their name deliberately, or at least after rejecting “Trigger.” Because the original membership split evenly at the time between Yanks and Brits, at least half the band would be foreign no matter where they played, or that was the joke. In his defense, Jones did start the band: “stranded” in New York and with his current band imploded, he assembled a new band one man/instrument at a time with encouragement from a friend named Bud Prager. The search for a lead singer became the final, fateful piece. Auditioning 40-50 singers finally knocked loose a memory of Gramm, an American from upstate New York he saw perform earlier with a band called Black Sheep. Gramm was “cleaning a public safety building from seven at night till about 11:30” when Jones came calling, but they hired him almost as soon as he stepped out of the booth. Once they launched – which would take some time and something like Prager’s life savings – they could neither stop churning out hits – e.g., “It Feels Like the First Time” and “Cold As Ice” from their 1977 eponymous debut and the title track and “Hot Blooded” from 1978’s Double Vision - nor hold the band together. Most of the band’s musical direction came from Gramm and Jones (though McDonald insists he got his hands in there as well), but Jones seized ownership of creative control early by way of a succession of purges – e.g., Gagliardi before Double Vision, then teaming up with Gramm to oust founding members (Greenwood and McDonald) on the way to making the band a four-piece and recording 4 (a name with multiple, fairly dull connotations), the band’s biggest album, in 1981 (ft. “Juke Box Hero,” “Urgent,” and  “Waiting for a Girl Like You”).

Even Gramm eventually strained against the short leash Jones kept on the band. Feeling stifled (paraphrase, “I was tired of singing someone else’s songs”), he recorded a solo album (with the single, “Midnight Blue”), which, no shock, Jones resented for sounding too much like Foreigner. According to Behind the Music’s account, the lead single for 1984’s Agent Provocateur, “I Want to Know What Love Is,” caused the final break…but it takes a strained narrative to hold that together – specifically, that the “hard-rocking” Foreigner recoiled at the idea of attaching their name to a ballad. I’m trying to square that against the many ballads in Foreigner’s oeuvre going back to their debut fucking album with “Woman Oh Woman” and “Fool for You Anyway” (also, what was “Waiting for a Girl Like You” on 4?). After a couple decades, some profound health scares for both Jones and Gramm (and Gramm’s was/is rough, though not as rough as Gagliardi’s actual death), the band still plays, and Jones finally achieved his dream of absolute creative control.

My Favorite Anecdote:
Gramm on the controversial album cover for Head Games (third album, and the least successful from their hey-day; picture above):

“Part of that was because of the cover. The song Head Games was banned by a lot of radio stations after the cover of the album came out. Today, that would not have even been a problem. But in the Bible Belt, the cover of the cute little girl in the boys' bathroom erasing her number off the wall...They didn't see the humor in that. It wasn't supposed to even be sexy. She was sexy....she was cute… She was erasing her phone number off the wall of the boys' bathroom and that's all it was. A big deal was made out of that and it really hurt our sales."

Why They Didn’t Make the Island
With as little disrespect as possible, Foreigner always struck me as the cheesiest band of this bunch - yes, that’s with Styx in the mix. Too many of lyrics are laughable (or cringey AF; see “Love Has Taken Its Toll”), and listening to Gramm stretch bad writing to fit the music doesn’t help. The predictability of the guitar combined with rhythm structures that don’t have any bounce in them probably turn me off more than anything else.
Other Featured Songs: “You’re All I Am” (another ballad; nice one, too) and “Blue Morning, Blue Day,” another song I almost like. I like them best when they play off type. "Break It Up," more or may not have achieved that feat, but it got some props somewhere I read...
Most Foreigner Song: “Hot Blooded,” where they don’t fuck around and nail the hard-rock energy.

Sources
Wikipedia