Showing posts with label Cyndi Lauper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyndi Lauper. Show all posts

The PMRC's Filthy Fifteen

 

The original Karen, Tipper Gore. She sure didn't have anything to do with her time back in May 1985 when she and her four fellow harpies decided to form the PMRC, AKA Parental Music Resource Center. Their goal was nothing short of the censorship of music. Their inspiration, The Filthy Fifteen, a list of selected songs, which the group themselves dug deep to curate.

The group was supported by Coors beer owner, Joseph Coors, and oddly, Beach Boys singer, Mike Love. The goal, and essentially their demand, was that music labels would voluntarily develop a rating system for albums, and adhere these labels to all material placed on the market. Additionally, they would require record companies to print warning labels on explicit material albums, force record stores to keep these under or behind the counter, and pressure television stations to not play music or videos of these songs. Lastly, they would set in place a panel to determine these ratings, and set industry standards.

By August of that same year, record companies agreed to implement warning labels on all explicit content albums. However, before this could be implemented, the senate agreed to hold a hearing on the matter, held on September 19, 1985. Among the attendees were the PMRC committee, musicians, and a gaggle of senators, who would all testify, and plead their side.

Shortly over an hour into the hearing, the senate called Frank Zappa to speak. The artist was clearly agitated by the prospect of any committee censoring artists, but stated he would have no issues with the lyrics being provided as a separate sheet packaged with the album. He further stated he would not be in favor of a grading system, because unlike a movie, the rating assigned doesn't hurt the actor's career, wherein it does for musicians because the album is that individual's personal art. Ultimately, despite Zappa's points, he hurts his own credibility with a tone of arrogance, and personal attack of the women behind it, stating he felt it was more so their project built out of boredom, rather than legitimate concern. Personally, I agree.

John Denver spoke next, and while on the surface one would attribute him with a wholesome image, he too spoke about the unfairness of censorship. He discussed how his hit song, Rocky Mountain High, was brought under scrutiny by those who misinterpreted the lyrics to be about drugs, and raised the question of what if the lyrics were misrepresented when consideration for grading occurred. Overall, he was not a fan of the possibility, nor censorship in general, feeling musicians had the right to express themselves through their art under the constitution.

Last to speak, and the show stealer of the day, was Dee Snyder. Snyder entered the room, dressed in a sleeveless jean jacket, long hair, and sunglasses. He personified the spirit of rock and roll, and depicted the image which the majority of the room equated to Satanic music. However, when he spoke, he did so confidently, intelligently, and with facts, debated every argument presented to him coherently, and respectfully.

While all three artists came from a different angle, and didn't necessarily share the same opinion of labeling albums with warning labels, they ultimately shared the same sentiment. The responsibility of what their children listen to is that of the parent's, and not a government committee.

What exactly were The Filthy Fifteen that spawned all of this nonsense? What was so bad about them that it necessitated the demand for change? Believe it or not, some of them are among the most popular hits, which still resonate today. Others, you probably wouldn't even know existed if they weren't on this list. Ironically, it was because of their affiliation with The Filthy Fifteen that garnered them some of the attention they got.

Prince and the Revolution
Darling Nikki

Sheena Easton
Sugar Walls
(funnily enough, another Prince song)

Judas Priest
Eat Me Alive

Vanity
Strap On Robby Baby

Mötley Crüe
Bastard

AC/DC
Let Me Put My Love Into You

Twisted Sister
We're Not Gonna Take It

Madonna
Dress You Up

W.A.S.P.
(Animal) F**k Like A Beast
This song wasn't even on an album! It was only a B-Side to a single!

Def Leppard
High 'n' Dry

Mercyful Fate
Into the Coven

Black Sabbath
Trashed

Mary Jane Girls
My House

Venom
Possessed

Cyndi Lauper
She Bop

By the standard of your typical hip hop song these days, most of these are timid, not even a footnote by comparison. Others are simply left to the imagination of the crazy women who deemed them so offensive.

Regardless, they got their way, and this is why since the late 80's we've had the privilege of "Explicit Lyrics" warnings. The irony is that this really didn't seem to do anything in terms of stopping the flow of these albums. In fact, I'd wager it cast more light on them, serving to make them more appealing to a broader spectrum.

What's the best way to make a child want something? Draw attention to it being taboo, and tell them they can't have it. You've now piqued their curiosity more.

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Retro Spins: Cyndi Lauper - True Colors

 

She was so different from most of the female artists of the 80's. Unusual, if you will.

Cyndi Lauper's debut album, She's So Unusual, made her the first female artist to have four top five hits on the Billboard charts. Not bad for a singer who was told by a doctor in 1977 that she would never sing again, after damaging her vocal chords. 

Lauper spent her early years singing in cover bands, but by 1978 met John Turi, and formed the band, Blue Angel. They released a single album in 1980 which was not very successful. However,even then, the offers were forthcoming for a solo recording contract. Offers, which she didn't take. Instead, she was more interested with the band getting a contract.

Unfortunately, Blue Angel broke up shortly thereafter, and a financially troubled Lauper took to working in retail stores and restaurants. Meanwhile, she continued to perform in clubs, eventually signing with Portrait Records, a subsidiary of Epic in 1981, mostly due to her new manager, David Wolff.

She's So Unusual was released on October 14, 1983, and was an instant smash, eventually peaking at number four on the charts.It went on to reach the top five in multiple countries, and to date, remains her most successful album of all time, selling an estimated sixteen million copies worldwide.

Between 1983 and 1984, Lauper embarked on the Fun Tour in support of her first album, and in 1985 contributed to both USA For Africa's We Are The World, and the soundtrack for The Goonies. All the while, fans eagerly awaited her second album.

True Colors was released on September 18, 1986. While ultimately not as successful, this didn't stop accolades from being given, and pennies from rolling in. That tends to happen with an estimated seven hundred million sales worldwide. Especially the latter.

The album kicks off with the Bangles backed Change Of Heart, and sets a somewhat more mature tone for the once quirky artist. She's all grown up, and she wants the world to know it. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but it also catches you off guard a bit. This is when I realized that I was more so familiar with the image of Lauper, and her affiliation with Pee-Wee Herman, than her actual music.

While there's no denying that True Colors, the song, is a massive hit, what the album itself stumbles a bit under is the sheer weight of her debut. It just doesn't pack the punch. While this is typically how it goes, it also doesn't stop it from being a bit disappointing. The hype is there, and the audience wants so badly for the artist to bottle lightening twice.

It would only be fair for me to admit that I did end up grabbing five tracks in total, of the ten, for my shuffle list. But, these are essentially two hits, and three mediocre (at best) tunes. Whereas with She's So Unusual, which I also took five from, these were big chart toppers.

I guess what I'm trying to say is that I wanted, and expected more.

Waiting three years in between albums is typically not a good thing, and yet, this seemed to be a trend for Lauper in the 80's. She didn't release her third album until 1989. This gives people too much time to forget about you, and in such an iconic era as the 80's this may have contributed greatly to the continued plummeting sales since her debut. A Night To Remember was the last of her prime, selling one hundred twenty thousand albums, a considerable drop from 1986.

Things fared far worse as the 90's came into play. The once platinum selling artist was now only selling gold records for her 1993 and 1996 releases, and then, despite continuing to release albums, fell completely off the sales charts until 2010's Memphis Blue, which went silver. Since then, she has only released one additional record, 2016's detour.

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Disclaimer: They Toy Box does not endorse or contribute to piracy. Retro Spins posts are intended for educational and entertainment purposes only. None of the music discussed here is available for sale, downloading or distribution.

THIS WEEK ON THE CHARTS
January 31, 1981
 
THIS WEEK ON THE CHARTS
January 31, 1987


Retro Spins: Cyndi Lauper - A Night To Remember



Today's Retro Spin was a toss up between Cyndi Lauper's 1986 album True Colors and 1989 A Night To Remember. I ended up selecting the latter for two reasons. One, it has my all time favorite song from the singer on it. Two, as I went down the track listing of True Colors, my eyes landed on, Iko Iko, a terrible cover by Cyndi Lauper.

A Night To Remember starts out with a short and forgettable intro before jumping into my favorite song from Lauper, I Drove All Night. From there, I admittedly knew nothing else from the album.

As track two, Primitive, started up, I decided to hop over to the Weekly Top 40's site to look into the album a bit further. While looking, I have to admit, Primitive actually struck a good note with me. I was digging the tune and added it to my shuffle list.

With regards to the charts, it looks like Lauper had very little success with A Night To Remember. I Drove All Night reached number six, My First Night Without You charted and disappeared the following week at number ninety-six. After hearing the latter, I wasn't all that impressed with it. The song was just okay.

From there, the album took a bit of a nose dive. Even the title track, while okay, wasn't as impressive as I Drove All Night, which would have also made a great album title. Things picked up slightly, I'm talking just a tad bit, with track nine, Insecurious, but then immediately went back to relatively bland with track ten.

Overall, I maybe wanted more from this album than I got. Having my all time favorite song from Lauper on it, I guess I was just expecting more. I wanted to love it from start to finish. This never came to fruition, and it was pretty disappointing that it didn't. I don't hate A Night To Remember. I'm glad I took the time to hear it front to back. However, I don't see myself doing so again in the future.

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Retro Spins: Cyndi Lauper - She's So Unusual



I don't recall which one I heard first - Girls Just Want To Have Fun or Girls Just Want To Have Lunch. I think it was Cyndi Lauper's version, but at this point, I'm not sure.

She's So Unusual came out at a pique time in my life. I was just old enough to be forming my own roots in modern music, and expanding my own tastes in what would become a lifetime fascination with 80's music. Among those artists who shaped the soundtrack to my life was Cyndi Lauper. Her album, She's So Unusual, is crafted masterfully, and while it may not have ten back to back "amazing" tracks, it's so memorable for the era in time in which it is stamped.

It features five amazing hits from Lauper, such as, Money Changes Everything, Girls Just Want To Have Fun, Time After Time, She Bop and All Through The Night. When half of the album hits that hard, it's difficult to find fault in it as a whole when it's already delivered so much.

That said, for as much of a Prince fan as I am, I can't stand her cover of When You Were Mine. She absolutely butchers that song. Straight up kills it. Why did Prince let her do that? Okay, I suppose the sixteen million copies the album sold probably padded his bank account nicely.

For me, Cyndi Lauper hit that same brick wall much like many artists before and after her. For a debut album, her achievements were so high that the only way to go from there was down. Despite having hits after this album, they got fewer and further between, and eventually she just kind of faded into obscurity.

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