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eighties music boston - joe viglione's history of new england rock
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Face To Face, The Rings, Jonzun Crew, Robin Lane, Didi Stewart. Rick Berlin, Rubber Rodeo, Mass, Treat Her Right
Just click on the link under each chapter to read the information. Remember, To click on any chapter go to this address:
http://rocktableofcontents.blogspot.com/
1)Didi Stewart 4 Reviews
2)Jonzun Crew
3)The Rings 2 reviews
4)Face To Face 3 Reviews
5)Rubber Rodeo 2 Reviews
6)Michael Fremer
7)The Atlantics
8)Elliot Easton of The Cars
9)Greg Hawkes of The Cars
10)Jeff & Jane Hudson
11)Peter Dayton
12)Connie St. Pierre
13)La Peste
14)John Lincoln Wright
15)The Joneses (see also Jonzun Crew, Willie Loco Alexander, Road Apples)
16)The Nervous Eaters (1980)
Here's my review of Didi Stewart's new disc along with
reviews I've written of
BEGIN HERE
GIRLS NIGHT OUT
SUMMER WE SPENT IN CHINA
ONE TRUE HEART
See also BOSTON DOES THE BEATLES
http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jcfpxql0ld6e
This should post on AMG in the next week or two.
Didi Stewart
Title:Harmonyville 2006 Produced by Anthony J. Resta
Artist: Stewart, Didi
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BEGIN HERE 1982
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Review by Joe Viglione
The urban legend has it that Didi Stewart walked into Don Kirshner's office with a demo tape in hand and got herself a record deal. A Boston delight with her band, the Amplifiers, this brilliant and underrated songwriter/vocalist might have been better off releasing some of the original demos here, since producer Stephan Galfas was unable to bring a hit record out of a woman who is full of potential million-sellers. But isn't that one of the major traumas of the record industry: incredible talents getting lost in the translation? Begin Here has a beautiful cover photo of Didi Stewart with different colors on each finger of one hand -- blue, purple, red, yellow, and green -- and the pastel lettering is just perfect. There are some excellent tracks and "Upward Mobility" is one of them; it should be a hit for someone. With T.O. Sterrett's stirring keyboards
and haunting background vocals like a new wave Shangri-Las, the solid-hook and rocking band make for the funniest moment on the recording. "Girls Night Out" is another bouncy, campy tune, which for a serious artist like Diane "Didi" Stewart is the paradox. The depth on her 1989 Northeastern release One True Heart, 12 songs showing control and power, may have been more appropriate for the CBS-distributed Don Kirshner imprint, at least in terms of potential
commercial success. But "Girls Night Out," "Slipping into Darkness," and "Angelina" are amazing songs in their own right, they just needed a more polished production. The demo of "Angelina" has this spirit which could have translated nicely had that sort of aura been captured again. A few years after this disc was released, Didi Stewart left her Amplifiers to form
Girls Night Out, a band named after the aforementioned song on Begin Here. That band would continue the pajama-party atmosphere that was initiated on this collection. "Saturday Night Special" and "Lightning Never Strikes Twice" are fun pop moments with a lighthearted attitude, but they don't have the dazzle of "Slippin' into Darkness," and despite Stewart's
craftsmanship, it almost sounds like this studio group -- featuring such Boston luminaries as Steven Paul Perry, Dennis Brennan, and Kim Pandapas -- was rushed while recording. A couple of years after this release, Ms. Stewart's voice would conquer the New England region as the highly popular Girls Night Out generated a bidding war among booking agents (they got a
reported 175,000 dollar guaranteed year of bookings from the winner, The Channel nightclub). For a local band that is a staggering sum, but the 1985 release with four new Didi Stewart tunes, like this album, was not representative of the bandleader/lead vocalist. 1989's One True Heart is the album that captures the essence of Didi Stewart, but the importance of Begin Here is that it documents this vital artist and her creative process at this point in time, and despite its flaws, it is something to be proud of.
=====================================================
The Summer We Spent In China 1987 Didi Stewart
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Review by Joe Viglione
Two years after the Girls Night Out EP debacle and two
years before her classic One True Heart album, Didi
Stewart issued this four-song EP, The Summer We Spent
in China, on her own label, much like that other
Boston diva Robin Lane's 1984 post-Warner Bros.
four-song EP, Heart Connection. These talented women
have a lot to say and would not be denied, crafting
more music after the heady times had subsided.
"Problem With Gravity starts things off with a bang; a
determined and revitalized Stewart, if shellshocked by
the tough breaks of her profession, hides it well
here. Bringing in veteran musicians Tim Archibald on
bass (from New Man and RTZ), Wally Poz (who had a
release on a national Playboy talent search sampler
disc), and regional veteran Mark Williamson on
keyboards, Stewart crafts a dynamic and musically
revealing title track. "The Summer We Spent in China"
combines her blues-drenched vocals with the singer's
pop sensibilities. It's a standout song, powerful and
subdued. All the material seems touched by modern
mysticism, a quote from "Little Mi" on the back cover
states: "So I sit in my room and dream/In my
imagination I am free/And I can do wonderful
things...." Perhaps the double trauma of the
Kirshner/CBS label folding after her 1982 release and
the implosion of her local supergroup set Stewart off
on flights of fancy. "Jeremy" is the one love song in
the bunch, and it has that definite November Group
slap-drum sound, only the November Group had a real
percussion player, and Stewart chooses to go with drum
programming here. Her combination of the pop
songwriting she was known for with electric and spacy
themes works on these four originals. The Summer We
Spent in China is not the easiest of Stewart's discs
to find, but it is worth the effort. A nice glimpse of
Stewart's journey when placed chronologically with the
other recordings in her repertoire.
Tracks
1 A Problem With Gravity Stewart 2:59
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
2 Jeremy Stewart 4:20
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
3 Rational World Stewart 3:20
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
4 The Summer We Spent in China Stewart
3:25
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
1987 CD Fun at One HB 1803
Girls Night Out (1985)
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Review by Joe Viglione
One of the greatest tragedies in Boston rock & roll
history, and something the world is the worse for, is
this difficult document of one of the best '80s bands
from New England, Girls Night Out. For a group who
approximately grossed over a quarter of a million
dollars in a two-year period, they were saddled with
arguably the worst cover art in Boston history,
substandard production by the usually reliable Chris
Lannon, and evidence that radio-station politics,
mismanagement, and too many cooks can do more than
spoil the stew; politics can stand in the way of
important art. Nothing on this record jumps out at you
like the eight-track demo of "Matter of Time," the
regional radio hit recording that helped launch GNO's
career. The failure to re-track "Matter of Time," a
song that was like a girl group version of 'Til
Tuesday's "Voices Carry," is the true crime of the
heart here. The great Jimmy Miller produced a cover of
"Baby It's You" for lead guitarist Wendy Sobel in
1983, and the version is sultry, moody, and brilliant,
but is not included here. The three songs Jimmy Miller
did with Wendy Sobel, one-seventh of this band, blow
away this entire disc. "Affair of the Heart," "Love
Under Pressure," "Calling Doctor Love," and "Crime of
the Heart" are studied performances with none of the
excitement the girls displayed on-stage. The precision
is the kind of homogenization one expects from a major
label, not from an independent group, and it feels
like the act was being directed from the pages of This
Business of Music rather than by the creative
instincts of a professional. The results are
disappointing. Didi Stewart wrote all the material,
and there is no doubt she is a genius, but her talent
was inhibited by business forces behind the scenes.
Rumor has it that Madonna/Brian Wilson producer Andy
Paley was interested in signing the group, but the
manager allegedly would not agree to the terms. If
that urban myth is true, it is a shame, for Paley
could have taken "Affair of the Heart" and given it
the Phil Spector treatment. The songs are all
first-rate, it is just that they have nothing to them;
they are two-dimensional recordings with flawed sounds
(listen to the lame drum slap in the middle of "Affair
of the Heart"). These are pedestrian performances from
ladies who bowled people over in concert; a version of
"Love Under Pressure" is included that sounds like it
is stuck in a pressure cooker. There's no mastering
credit, but that essential element is thin at best.
Girls Night Out's exquisite staple, "When You Were
Mine," shows up five years later on the One True Heart
album by Didi Stewart, and it is total vindication,
showing what the songwriter could do away from the
confines of a democracy. Bits and pieces of what this
phenomenal group was all about have surfaced
elsewhere. Alizon Lissance has released discs with her
local group, and other members -- Myanna, Wendy Sobel,
and Didi Stewart -- are off doing their own thing;
reunions of this post-Amplifiers band Stewart fronted
happen once in a blue moon. This writer brought Didi
Stewart to the 1992 Marty Balin sessions in New
Hampshire, and Balin was thrilled at the prospect of
Stewart and her friend, Ellie Marshall of the Modern
Lovers, singing on his album, Better Generation. That
idea was nixed by Karen Deal, Balin's wife, yet
another example of people interfering in important
art. With the cash that was coming in through the high
demand for this group and the combination of originals
and covers packing their shows, Girls Night Out should
have released a superb album on their own and let a
major label pick it up. Seven great artists who should
have had original guitarist Patty Larkin return to jam
with Wendy Sobel on this were left out in the cold
when these recordings failed to generate the same
excitement as the band did live. The original demo
tapes, the Jimmy Miller sessions with Sobel, a live
radio broadcast or recording from a nightclub, and
Didi Stewart solo material -- all combined -- could
have made this affair memorable. Listening to this
decades after it was recorded is still a heartbreak to
those who witnessed the excitement of the girls live.
This EP is a great excuse for these talented ladies to
re-form on their 20th anniversary and create the album
they are still capable of putting together.
1 Affair of the Heart Stewart 2:50
2 Love Under Pressure Stewart 3:50
3 Calling Doctor Love! Stewart 3:58
4 Crime of the Heart Stewart 4:01
======================================================
ONE TRUE HEART 1989
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Review by Joe Viglione
One True Heart is considered the legitimate sequel to
Didi Stewart's brilliant but under-produced
Kirshner/CBS debut with her group, the Amplifiers,
Begin Here; people must be somehow forgetting the
important work she did with the band Girls Night Out,
whom she founded and who rocked Boston to the core
during the '80s. The singer of New England's most
influential and popular female group, a cross between
the power pop of the Go Go's with classy
frontwoman/power vocalist Didi Stewart, who
resembledJanis Joplin with all the sweetness and none
of the growl. There is a Girls Night Out standard
here, "When You Were Mine," concluding the album
(actually performed better than the band did it), but
this project is more than a souvenir from that act's
founder and lead singer, something much more. It is
Didi Stewart out to prove a point with a vengeance.
1982's Begin Here contained 11 strong compositions and
a great band, somehow missing the mark through
transparent production. The Girls Night Out demo and
subsequent EP suffered from even worse production,
destroying a golden opportunity for all the women
involved to become stars. "Matter of Time" from those
demos hit on local radio and contained the same vital
elements that made 'Til Tuesday's "Voice's Carry" so
special (including similar rhythms). "River of Dreams"
comes back with the power of a 30-foot wave, washing
away the bad feelings caused by the major-label
interest evaporating, and an ex-manager mouthing off
in the press and blaming the star whose voice fed them
all for a couple of years. One can understand why One
True Heart is such a superb disc; it is a triumph,
with Didi Stewart in full control, an elegant cover
photo, marvelous selections, and sound quality this
great singer's voice deserves. C. Franklin's "Ain't No
Way" is a capella, a showcase for Stewart's pipes, a
powerful instrument which floored producer Jimmy
Miller during nightclub appearances when he negotiated
to produce her (GNO guitarist Wendy Sobel worked with
Mr. Miller on three titles, one of the reasons he was
constantly at Girls Night Out performances). The
remarkable songs, vocal prowess, and soul of Diane
Stewart get support on the almost country-pop of her
original, "Still Waters," by New Man's bassist and
drummer, Tim Archibald and Brock Avery. One has to
wonder about the subliminal message here, replacing
the all-girl group who almost got signed with a band
with such a masculine name, New Man, who did sign with
Epic Records. The only member of Stewart's former band
who makes an appearance is Cercie Miller on alto
saxophone for the finale, "When You Were Mine." In
between these grooves the singer covers gospel, Rod
Argent, Barry Mann, and Cynthia Weil, and has a great
time in the process. One True Heart is the product of
an artist who keeps punching against the odds. It's
that true rock & roll spirit which makes One True
Heart such a work of art. With the passion of a great
jazz singer, which she doesnt get credit for, but is,
Stewart tackles Madeira/Dorsey's "I'm Glad There Is
You" as well as Rodgers and Hart's "This Funny World."
Didi Stewart can do it all, and does it all on this 1989 release. That the idea for this album came from executive producer Brian Flood while he and the singer were in the middle of a Polaroid jingle session is just so fitting, just so rock & roll. What developed (it took more than 60 seconds) is a timeless look at a major singer and finally, a true representation of what she's all about.
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THE JONZUN CREW
Down To Earth
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Cosmic Love
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BOSTON DOES THE BEATLES
with Rick Berlin, Didi Stewart
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EXPERT RATING:
From AMG Reviews
This enormous project was coordinated by the crew who would go on to do a single-disc tribute to Mick and Keith entitled Boston Gets Stoned but, where that album was inconsistent, the 31 tracks here make for a cohesive unit and compelling history of Boston music circa 1988. In his usual deranged fashion, A.J.Wachtel, cousin of guitarist Waddy Wachtel, allegedly lined a hundred bands up for this (same as with Boston Gets Stoned) -- an admirable but implausible goal. Michail Glassman and the late Mickey O'Halloran pulled the reins in on A.J. and, in doing so, helped to realize important versions of Beatles tunes by some Boston artists who obtained major-label deals at different points in time. Berlin Airlift's "Eleanor Rigby" is stunning, and one of their finest moments; Girls Night Out vocalist Didi Stewart, herself a former Kirshner/CBS recording artist, delivers a wonderful "You're Gonna Lose That Guy," changing the gender. Barry Cowsill of the legendary Rhode Island band the Cowsills was making the scene in the late '80s, and he contributes "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey." Powerglide delivers a pretty good "Revolution," but their mainstream leanings make them a little out of place here, and not as hip as the Barry Cowsill madness that follows them. There is so much activity covering the songs of Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison that the novelty can wear off. All This and World War II, music executive Russ Regan's vision for a double-LP compilation of major acts performing songs of the Beatles, and Brad Delp, lead vocalist from the band Boston, who tours the region with the Beatles cover band Beatlejuice when he's not performing with Tom Scholz, provide two examples of the success that can be achieved when emulating this popular music. This collection on an obscure and tiny Boston record label actually deserves a place in history as one of the better Beatles collections. Sure, One Four Five isn't Aerosmith covering "I'm Down," but the sheer volume of scenemakers documented by covering familar music, and doing it so well, makes Boston Does the Beatles a real treasure. Mr. Curt's Camaraderie released its exotic version of "It's Only Love" on Curt's solo CD, and other tracks may resurface as the artists see fit, but it would be a shame for this remarkable look at the Fab Four by an important music community to just fade away. Worth seeking out.
- Joe Viglione, All Music Guide
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THE NERVOUS EATERS 1980
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Nervous Eaters is a very good record on its own. That producer Harry Maslin did not know what to do with the band is an understatement. "By Yourself," the second track on their 1980 debut, is exquisite pop/rock by a band that wrote a classic underground riff rock anthem, "Degenerate," not on this recording. The fan base in Boston that launched "Dream On" for Aerosmith never had the opportunity to get behind the Nervous Eaters' Elektra debut. Sure, Steve Cataldo authored all the songs, and rumor has it, he gave up the gig as guitarist for Lou Reed to do this record. Rumor also has it that Ric Ocasek of the Cars produced a ten-song demo that got the ear of Elektra. The Eaters were managed by former Cars manager Fred Lewis. "No Sleep Tonight" is closer to Sire artist the Paley Brothers, and Jonathan Paley joined the band in time for this album. His brother, producer Andy Paley, who put Madonna on the Dick Tracy soundtrack, guest stars here, as does Rolling Stones' keyboard player, the late Nicky Hopkins, and legendary guitarist Steve Cropper on the song "No Time." This is an amazing example of a band honing its craft in the trenches of a regional music scene, and doing an about face for their record label and producer. That they pulled it off musically is a testament to the skills of drummer Jeff Wilkinson and bassist Robb Skeen along with Paley and the great rock & roll voice of Steve Cataldo. Their classic "mellow" tune, "Last Chance," gets sped up by Maslin. It is OK, but nowhere near the majesty of the demo tapes that got the band attention in the first place. "Loretta," "Get Stuffed," and "Girl Next Door" are R-rated and lovingly sexist. But the Eaters' people knew and loved were a gritty, down and dirty Boston band. Cataldo's jangly guitar is not up in the mix enough, his wonderful axe underlines buoy the songs, but are downplayed. They were the Rolling Stones of Boston, and this album sounds like the group trying to be -- The Eagles, or, dare it be said, the Hollies. The hard rocking, riff-blasting, tongue-in-cheek rock band created a long-player with tunes that fall somewhere between the Ronettes and the Four Seasons. When you expect a band to crunch with the enthusiasm of Mott the Hoople and hear pure pop, it is culture shock. This album is kind of like dressing Charles Manson up like Mother Theresa. The pervert lyrics that made them famous regionally are replaced by something else. The verdict on the album? Surprisingly, like Farrenheit, released on Warners in 1987, the disc works despite being a slight misrepresentation of the artist. It is still Steve Cataldo writing and singing "Walkout"; there are 12 songs from a prolific Boston artist.
http://rocktableofcontents.blogspot.com/
1)Didi Stewart 4 Reviews
2)Jonzun Crew
3)The Rings 2 reviews
4)Face To Face 3 Reviews
5)Rubber Rodeo 2 Reviews
6)Michael Fremer
7)The Atlantics
8)Elliot Easton of The Cars
9)Greg Hawkes of The Cars
10)Jeff & Jane Hudson
11)Peter Dayton
12)Connie St. Pierre
13)La Peste
14)John Lincoln Wright
15)The Joneses (see also Jonzun Crew, Willie Loco Alexander, Road Apples)
16)The Nervous Eaters (1980)
Here's my review of Didi Stewart's new disc along with
reviews I've written of
BEGIN HERE
GIRLS NIGHT OUT
SUMMER WE SPENT IN CHINA
ONE TRUE HEART
See also BOSTON DOES THE BEATLES
http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jcfpxql0ld6e
This should post on AMG in the next week or two.
Didi Stewart
Title:Harmonyville 2006 Produced by Anthony J. Resta
Artist: Stewart, Didi
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| Review | by Joe Viglione |
Harmonyville has vocalist/songwriter Didi Stewart sounding very much like a former bandmate of Harriet Schock than the lead singer of Boston's legendary girl group Girls Night Out. Stewart eases her fans into her Jackie DeShannon-style New Arrangement by opening up the disc with the most rocking' tune, "Love and Learn," chock-full of Stewart philosophy and elements of her regional hit, "Matter of Time," in the thumpa thumpa Cars riff. Stephen Sadler plays lap steel, mandolin, dobro and fiddle on the album, and if you think it's GNO (Girls Night Out's nickname for the non-Bostonians) meets Swinging Steaks you're not that far off — Jim Gambino of the Steaks is on keyboards and adds much to the experience. "Sally's Garden" is a cross between Andy Pratt's "Grey, Chick and Malda," Lynn Anderson's "Rose Garden" and Bonnie Tyler's "It's a Heartache" with some twists and turns to take the formulas to new places. The ballad "House for Sale" tugs at the heartstrings, an ode to moving on from the family homestead that is splendid in its melancholy. "Heaven on a Sunday Morning" is where Elaine "Spanky" McFarlane took her Spanky & Our Gang on the Change album when they went country in 1975, while "Something Wicked" puts Ray Bradbury's fantasy into a square dance setting. None of the dozen songs is over four-and-a-half minutes, with one coming in at two-and-a-half and, yep, she's still writing pop tunes only they are now leaning towards the new pop that is the world of country. That vibe can be found on "Dose of You," a good choice for a single, but then again, so is the aforementioned "Love and Learn" or the tender "You Had to Be There." Seventeen years is a long time in between discs and with the help of Duran Duran producer Anthony J. Resta, he of the '70s Boston area group Astra, the singer seems to be as fun and youthful as ever. It may take a slight adjustment for her older fan base to hear with clarity, but it's pure Stewart and has a lot to offer. A formidable songwriter, each melody is distinct and different while the song placement sets moods and makes for a quite complete work. Interesting to note that photography is done by Ellie Marshall of Jonathan Richman's Modern Lovers andthe Marshalls as well as Alizon Lissance of Girls Night Out. Why they are not credited here on the musical side is the question! Still, it's another fantastic work from an underrated and important Boston area legend that deserves its day in the sun on country radio.
| |
BEGIN HERE 1982
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Review by Joe Viglione
The urban legend has it that Didi Stewart walked into Don Kirshner's office with a demo tape in hand and got herself a record deal. A Boston delight with her band, the Amplifiers, this brilliant and underrated songwriter/vocalist might have been better off releasing some of the original demos here, since producer Stephan Galfas was unable to bring a hit record out of a woman who is full of potential million-sellers. But isn't that one of the major traumas of the record industry: incredible talents getting lost in the translation? Begin Here has a beautiful cover photo of Didi Stewart with different colors on each finger of one hand -- blue, purple, red, yellow, and green -- and the pastel lettering is just perfect. There are some excellent tracks and "Upward Mobility" is one of them; it should be a hit for someone. With T.O. Sterrett's stirring keyboards
and haunting background vocals like a new wave Shangri-Las, the solid-hook and rocking band make for the funniest moment on the recording. "Girls Night Out" is another bouncy, campy tune, which for a serious artist like Diane "Didi" Stewart is the paradox. The depth on her 1989 Northeastern release One True Heart, 12 songs showing control and power, may have been more appropriate for the CBS-distributed Don Kirshner imprint, at least in terms of potential
commercial success. But "Girls Night Out," "Slipping into Darkness," and "Angelina" are amazing songs in their own right, they just needed a more polished production. The demo of "Angelina" has this spirit which could have translated nicely had that sort of aura been captured again. A few years after this disc was released, Didi Stewart left her Amplifiers to form
Girls Night Out, a band named after the aforementioned song on Begin Here. That band would continue the pajama-party atmosphere that was initiated on this collection. "Saturday Night Special" and "Lightning Never Strikes Twice" are fun pop moments with a lighthearted attitude, but they don't have the dazzle of "Slippin' into Darkness," and despite Stewart's
craftsmanship, it almost sounds like this studio group -- featuring such Boston luminaries as Steven Paul Perry, Dennis Brennan, and Kim Pandapas -- was rushed while recording. A couple of years after this release, Ms. Stewart's voice would conquer the New England region as the highly popular Girls Night Out generated a bidding war among booking agents (they got a
reported 175,000 dollar guaranteed year of bookings from the winner, The Channel nightclub). For a local band that is a staggering sum, but the 1985 release with four new Didi Stewart tunes, like this album, was not representative of the bandleader/lead vocalist. 1989's One True Heart is the album that captures the essence of Didi Stewart, but the importance of Begin Here is that it documents this vital artist and her creative process at this point in time, and despite its flaws, it is something to be proud of.
=====================================================
The Summer We Spent In China 1987 Didi Stewart
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Review by Joe Viglione
Two years after the Girls Night Out EP debacle and two
years before her classic One True Heart album, Didi
Stewart issued this four-song EP, The Summer We Spent
in China, on her own label, much like that other
Boston diva Robin Lane's 1984 post-Warner Bros.
four-song EP, Heart Connection. These talented women
have a lot to say and would not be denied, crafting
more music after the heady times had subsided.
"Problem With Gravity starts things off with a bang; a
determined and revitalized Stewart, if shellshocked by
the tough breaks of her profession, hides it well
here. Bringing in veteran musicians Tim Archibald on
bass (from New Man and RTZ), Wally Poz (who had a
release on a national Playboy talent search sampler
disc), and regional veteran Mark Williamson on
keyboards, Stewart crafts a dynamic and musically
revealing title track. "The Summer We Spent in China"
combines her blues-drenched vocals with the singer's
pop sensibilities. It's a standout song, powerful and
subdued. All the material seems touched by modern
mysticism, a quote from "Little Mi" on the back cover
states: "So I sit in my room and dream/In my
imagination I am free/And I can do wonderful
things...." Perhaps the double trauma of the
Kirshner/CBS label folding after her 1982 release and
the implosion of her local supergroup set Stewart off
on flights of fancy. "Jeremy" is the one love song in
the bunch, and it has that definite November Group
slap-drum sound, only the November Group had a real
percussion player, and Stewart chooses to go with drum
programming here. Her combination of the pop
songwriting she was known for with electric and spacy
themes works on these four originals. The Summer We
Spent in China is not the easiest of Stewart's discs
to find, but it is worth the effort. A nice glimpse of
Stewart's journey when placed chronologically with the
other recordings in her repertoire.
Tracks
1 A Problem With Gravity Stewart 2:59
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
2 Jeremy Stewart 4:20
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
3 Rational World Stewart 3:20
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
4 The Summer We Spent in China Stewart
3:25
Composed by: Stewart
Performed by: Diane Stewart
1987 CD Fun at One HB 1803
Girls Night Out (1985)
http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=ADFEAEE47319DD49A87520E8BB0C65F68652DE39F670DAB73F08657A92961E65913E65CA46F68BA5DBB674B666ADF731A65A0FD586EF57F6D960373F8DFEC61D&sql=10:scddyl43xpbb
Review by Joe Viglione
One of the greatest tragedies in Boston rock & roll
history, and something the world is the worse for, is
this difficult document of one of the best '80s bands
from New England, Girls Night Out. For a group who
approximately grossed over a quarter of a million
dollars in a two-year period, they were saddled with
arguably the worst cover art in Boston history,
substandard production by the usually reliable Chris
Lannon, and evidence that radio-station politics,
mismanagement, and too many cooks can do more than
spoil the stew; politics can stand in the way of
important art. Nothing on this record jumps out at you
like the eight-track demo of "Matter of Time," the
regional radio hit recording that helped launch GNO's
career. The failure to re-track "Matter of Time," a
song that was like a girl group version of 'Til
Tuesday's "Voices Carry," is the true crime of the
heart here. The great Jimmy Miller produced a cover of
"Baby It's You" for lead guitarist Wendy Sobel in
1983, and the version is sultry, moody, and brilliant,
but is not included here. The three songs Jimmy Miller
did with Wendy Sobel, one-seventh of this band, blow
away this entire disc. "Affair of the Heart," "Love
Under Pressure," "Calling Doctor Love," and "Crime of
the Heart" are studied performances with none of the
excitement the girls displayed on-stage. The precision
is the kind of homogenization one expects from a major
label, not from an independent group, and it feels
like the act was being directed from the pages of This
Business of Music rather than by the creative
instincts of a professional. The results are
disappointing. Didi Stewart wrote all the material,
and there is no doubt she is a genius, but her talent
was inhibited by business forces behind the scenes.
Rumor has it that Madonna/Brian Wilson producer Andy
Paley was interested in signing the group, but the
manager allegedly would not agree to the terms. If
that urban myth is true, it is a shame, for Paley
could have taken "Affair of the Heart" and given it
the Phil Spector treatment. The songs are all
first-rate, it is just that they have nothing to them;
they are two-dimensional recordings with flawed sounds
(listen to the lame drum slap in the middle of "Affair
of the Heart"). These are pedestrian performances from
ladies who bowled people over in concert; a version of
"Love Under Pressure" is included that sounds like it
is stuck in a pressure cooker. There's no mastering
credit, but that essential element is thin at best.
Girls Night Out's exquisite staple, "When You Were
Mine," shows up five years later on the One True Heart
album by Didi Stewart, and it is total vindication,
showing what the songwriter could do away from the
confines of a democracy. Bits and pieces of what this
phenomenal group was all about have surfaced
elsewhere. Alizon Lissance has released discs with her
local group, and other members -- Myanna, Wendy Sobel,
and Didi Stewart -- are off doing their own thing;
reunions of this post-Amplifiers band Stewart fronted
happen once in a blue moon. This writer brought Didi
Stewart to the 1992 Marty Balin sessions in New
Hampshire, and Balin was thrilled at the prospect of
Stewart and her friend, Ellie Marshall of the Modern
Lovers, singing on his album, Better Generation. That
idea was nixed by Karen Deal, Balin's wife, yet
another example of people interfering in important
art. With the cash that was coming in through the high
demand for this group and the combination of originals
and covers packing their shows, Girls Night Out should
have released a superb album on their own and let a
major label pick it up. Seven great artists who should
have had original guitarist Patty Larkin return to jam
with Wendy Sobel on this were left out in the cold
when these recordings failed to generate the same
excitement as the band did live. The original demo
tapes, the Jimmy Miller sessions with Sobel, a live
radio broadcast or recording from a nightclub, and
Didi Stewart solo material -- all combined -- could
have made this affair memorable. Listening to this
decades after it was recorded is still a heartbreak to
those who witnessed the excitement of the girls live.
This EP is a great excuse for these talented ladies to
re-form on their 20th anniversary and create the album
they are still capable of putting together.
1 Affair of the Heart Stewart 2:50
2 Love Under Pressure Stewart 3:50
3 Calling Doctor Love! Stewart 3:58
4 Crime of the Heart Stewart 4:01
======================================================
ONE TRUE HEART 1989
http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=ADFEAEE47319DD49A87520E8BB0C65F68652DE39F670DAB73F08657A92961E65913E65CA46F68BA5DBB674B666ADF731A65A0FD586EF57F6D96E373C8DFEC61D&sql=10:7mmtk6ax9krd
Review by Joe Viglione
One True Heart is considered the legitimate sequel to
Didi Stewart's brilliant but under-produced
Kirshner/CBS debut with her group, the Amplifiers,
Begin Here; people must be somehow forgetting the
important work she did with the band Girls Night Out,
whom she founded and who rocked Boston to the core
during the '80s. The singer of New England's most
influential and popular female group, a cross between
the power pop of the Go Go's with classy
frontwoman/power vocalist Didi Stewart, who
resembledJanis Joplin with all the sweetness and none
of the growl. There is a Girls Night Out standard
here, "When You Were Mine," concluding the album
(actually performed better than the band did it), but
this project is more than a souvenir from that act's
founder and lead singer, something much more. It is
Didi Stewart out to prove a point with a vengeance.
1982's Begin Here contained 11 strong compositions and
a great band, somehow missing the mark through
transparent production. The Girls Night Out demo and
subsequent EP suffered from even worse production,
destroying a golden opportunity for all the women
involved to become stars. "Matter of Time" from those
demos hit on local radio and contained the same vital
elements that made 'Til Tuesday's "Voice's Carry" so
special (including similar rhythms). "River of Dreams"
comes back with the power of a 30-foot wave, washing
away the bad feelings caused by the major-label
interest evaporating, and an ex-manager mouthing off
in the press and blaming the star whose voice fed them
all for a couple of years. One can understand why One
True Heart is such a superb disc; it is a triumph,
with Didi Stewart in full control, an elegant cover
photo, marvelous selections, and sound quality this
great singer's voice deserves. C. Franklin's "Ain't No
Way" is a capella, a showcase for Stewart's pipes, a
powerful instrument which floored producer Jimmy
Miller during nightclub appearances when he negotiated
to produce her (GNO guitarist Wendy Sobel worked with
Mr. Miller on three titles, one of the reasons he was
constantly at Girls Night Out performances). The
remarkable songs, vocal prowess, and soul of Diane
Stewart get support on the almost country-pop of her
original, "Still Waters," by New Man's bassist and
drummer, Tim Archibald and Brock Avery. One has to
wonder about the subliminal message here, replacing
the all-girl group who almost got signed with a band
with such a masculine name, New Man, who did sign with
Epic Records. The only member of Stewart's former band
who makes an appearance is Cercie Miller on alto
saxophone for the finale, "When You Were Mine." In
between these grooves the singer covers gospel, Rod
Argent, Barry Mann, and Cynthia Weil, and has a great
time in the process. One True Heart is the product of
an artist who keeps punching against the odds. It's
that true rock & roll spirit which makes One True
Heart such a work of art. With the passion of a great
jazz singer, which she doesnt get credit for, but is,
Stewart tackles Madeira/Dorsey's "I'm Glad There Is
You" as well as Rodgers and Hart's "This Funny World."
Didi Stewart can do it all, and does it all on this 1989 release. That the idea for this album came from executive producer Brian Flood while he and the singer were in the middle of a Polaroid jingle session is just so fitting, just so rock & roll. What developed (it took more than 60 seconds) is a timeless look at a major singer and finally, a true representation of what she's all about.
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THE JONZUN CREW
Down To Earth
http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:dzfoxqthldfe
| Review | by Joe Viglione |
Down to Earth by the Jonzun Crew was originally released on the Tommy Boy label, re-released by A&M, and is now back on Tommy Boy. All confusion aside, this funk/rock/techno album by Michael Jonzun, his former wife Princess Loria, and brothers Soni Jonzun and Maurice Starr is a highly listenable important cornerstone of Boston area music history. "Tonight's the Night" is as melodic as Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus," and as commercial, but Jonzun's work came at least two years prior to Falco. The JC cover the spectrum; "We're Going All the Way" is reshuffled Motown -- the Temptations about to turn into New Kids on the Block. Just a few years after the release of this disc, Starr and Jonzun would unleash NKOTB, the production evolution of their prior discovery, New Edition, with different faces. Here is the sound that was the formula for success. Although Michael Jonzun plays it tongue-in-cheek, this is serious rhythm & blues/pop. A shame that they did not have the opportunity that a Motown or even A&M afforded other acts. Jonzun is every bit as prolific as Prince, and a phenomenal stage performer. "You Got the Lovin'" is crossover pop with jangly guitar and keyboards that crackle. But the vocal work by the Jonzun Crew is truly what set the table for New Kids on the Block, and that vocal work makes the songs come to life. Where Private Lightning on A&M a few years earlier suffered from a less-than-adequate production of a great band -- and could have benefited from Michael Jonzun's skills (just look what he did for Peter Wolf), all the elements for a smash are here. Both record labels involved in Down to Earth had a real masterpiece on their hands, an album that works as a cohesive piece of art, but touches upon many genres. Three tracks, "Redd Hott Mama," "Lovin'," and "Skool Daze" were not on the original Tommy Boy release. "Lovin'" is exquisite R&B: an incessant bed of keys and percussion, with Jonzun's perfect voice gliding over it all. Catchy and smooth. "Mechanism" takes the band into the Kraftwerk world of industrial/dance/techno. For those who wondered why such talented guys would generate the bubblegum that Bobby Brown and the New Edition spawned, all one has to do is look at a record industry that failed to give this essential group the flexibility it deserved, and earned. Billy Loosigian of Atlantic's the Joneses and MCA's Willie Alexander & the Boom Boom Band adds guitar to "Lovin'," "You Got the Lovin'," "We're Going All the Way," and the rocking "Tonight." "Mechanism" should be blasting on classic hits radio to bring that format some much needed flavor. This record is just waiting for a new audience to discover it.
| |
Cosmic Love
http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:a9foxq95ldae
| Review | by Joe Viglione |
The Jonzun Crew's long-awaited fourth album, Cosmic Love, was released on the BMG-distributed Critique label in 1990. Michael Jonzun had -- and still has -- vast archives of songs recorded during this period. Like so many, the very excellent "Baby I Surrender" is not on this collection, but that doesn't stop Cosmic Love from still being an important and highly listenable part of the Jonzun Brothers' history. A band that should have released at least a dozen discs by this point in time, Mission Control Studios owner Michael Jonzun crafted his album over many years, and the precision and care he put into Cosmic Love is obvious from start to finish. The controlled insanity of the band's earlier success is absent, replaced by smooth soul, studied R&B, and no-nonsense funk-rock. The title track shimmers with the vibrations found on the best records by the Commodores, while "Write Me Off" sounds like a direction Stevie Wonder could have chosen. Why the New Kids on the Block weren't brought in to promote this music in TV ads is perplexing -- NKOTB were huge at the time and core fans of Jonzun Crew couldn't wait for their next release. There are ten songs here bookended by a prologue and epilogue, perfectly produced epics culminating in the superb "Wall of Fame." The general public had no idea that this was the co-producer of two hugely popular groups, along with hit recordings by Peter Wolf, and this album drifted into obscurity as one of the best kept secrets in Boston rock & roll. La Vern Baker producer Barry Marshall shows up on guitar, as does Phil Greene from the '70s band Swallow -- there are lots of Boston "underground" names on the disc, yet the band was never embraced by the Boston "critics" and few understood the depth of Jonzun's artistry. "Living in This World" is a nice ballad, while "Playhouse" is powerful dance-funk. The telling moment on the disc, though, the potential hit that never got the attention that it deserved is, as mentioned, the final song, "Wall of Fame." This one tune contains all the finest elements of the Jonzun Crew's best work, and that it didn't take the charts by storm is a sin. "Ordinary Man," "I Do Love You," "Spotlight," "This Time (Let's Talk It Over") could all hit for artists smart enough to seek this material out, but it is at its best when performed by Michael Jonzun. Though Cosmic Love may have a few too many love songs and ballads for fans of the group's earlier hits, "Space Cowboy" and "Pac Jam," it still is an impressive artistic statement, and a beautiful work which deserves a better place in music history.
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| FACE TO FACE CONFRONTATION (1985) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jpfuxq85ld0e
GARY PRIVATE SECRET LOVE 1983 Not from Boston but he hit with "Lonely Hearts" and was produced by Bostonian Fred Munao http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:j9frxqlhldhe
Elliot Easton Change, No Change http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jcfexqu5ldae
GREG HAWKES NIAGRA FALLS 1983 http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:kcfuxq85ldke
JEFF & JANE ZETA BREW http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:wnfoxql0ld0e
PETER DAYTON PETER DAYTON http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:wxfrxq9dldae
CONNIE ST. PIERRE BETWEEN THE BRANCHES LEGEND OF THE WILD http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jjfrxqw0ldde
LA PESTE V.2.0. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:dzftxqqsldhe
JOHN LINCOLN WRIGHT HONKY TONK VERITE (see Beacon Street Union) http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:fpfpxqqgldde
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BOSTON DOES THE BEATLES
with Rick Berlin, Didi Stewart
http://shopping.yahoo.com/p:Boston%20Does%20the%20Beatles:1921471656
EXPERT RATING:
From AMG Reviews
This enormous project was coordinated by the crew who would go on to do a single-disc tribute to Mick and Keith entitled Boston Gets Stoned but, where that album was inconsistent, the 31 tracks here make for a cohesive unit and compelling history of Boston music circa 1988. In his usual deranged fashion, A.J.Wachtel, cousin of guitarist Waddy Wachtel, allegedly lined a hundred bands up for this (same as with Boston Gets Stoned) -- an admirable but implausible goal. Michail Glassman and the late Mickey O'Halloran pulled the reins in on A.J. and, in doing so, helped to realize important versions of Beatles tunes by some Boston artists who obtained major-label deals at different points in time. Berlin Airlift's "Eleanor Rigby" is stunning, and one of their finest moments; Girls Night Out vocalist Didi Stewart, herself a former Kirshner/CBS recording artist, delivers a wonderful "You're Gonna Lose That Guy," changing the gender. Barry Cowsill of the legendary Rhode Island band the Cowsills was making the scene in the late '80s, and he contributes "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey." Powerglide delivers a pretty good "Revolution," but their mainstream leanings make them a little out of place here, and not as hip as the Barry Cowsill madness that follows them. There is so much activity covering the songs of Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison that the novelty can wear off. All This and World War II, music executive Russ Regan's vision for a double-LP compilation of major acts performing songs of the Beatles, and Brad Delp, lead vocalist from the band Boston, who tours the region with the Beatles cover band Beatlejuice when he's not performing with Tom Scholz, provide two examples of the success that can be achieved when emulating this popular music. This collection on an obscure and tiny Boston record label actually deserves a place in history as one of the better Beatles collections. Sure, One Four Five isn't Aerosmith covering "I'm Down," but the sheer volume of scenemakers documented by covering familar music, and doing it so well, makes Boston Does the Beatles a real treasure. Mr. Curt's Camaraderie released its exotic version of "It's Only Love" on Curt's solo CD, and other tracks may resurface as the artists see fit, but it would be a shame for this remarkable look at the Fab Four by an important music community to just fade away. Worth seeking out.
- Joe Viglione, All Music Guide
http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jcfpxql0ld6e
THE NERVOUS EATERS 1980
http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:kxfixqr5ld0e
Nervous Eaters is a very good record on its own. That producer Harry Maslin did not know what to do with the band is an understatement. "By Yourself," the second track on their 1980 debut, is exquisite pop/rock by a band that wrote a classic underground riff rock anthem, "Degenerate," not on this recording. The fan base in Boston that launched "Dream On" for Aerosmith never had the opportunity to get behind the Nervous Eaters' Elektra debut. Sure, Steve Cataldo authored all the songs, and rumor has it, he gave up the gig as guitarist for Lou Reed to do this record. Rumor also has it that Ric Ocasek of the Cars produced a ten-song demo that got the ear of Elektra. The Eaters were managed by former Cars manager Fred Lewis. "No Sleep Tonight" is closer to Sire artist the Paley Brothers, and Jonathan Paley joined the band in time for this album. His brother, producer Andy Paley, who put Madonna on the Dick Tracy soundtrack, guest stars here, as does Rolling Stones' keyboard player, the late Nicky Hopkins, and legendary guitarist Steve Cropper on the song "No Time." This is an amazing example of a band honing its craft in the trenches of a regional music scene, and doing an about face for their record label and producer. That they pulled it off musically is a testament to the skills of drummer Jeff Wilkinson and bassist Robb Skeen along with Paley and the great rock & roll voice of Steve Cataldo. Their classic "mellow" tune, "Last Chance," gets sped up by Maslin. It is OK, but nowhere near the majesty of the demo tapes that got the band attention in the first place. "Loretta," "Get Stuffed," and "Girl Next Door" are R-rated and lovingly sexist. But the Eaters' people knew and loved were a gritty, down and dirty Boston band. Cataldo's jangly guitar is not up in the mix enough, his wonderful axe underlines buoy the songs, but are downplayed. They were the Rolling Stones of Boston, and this album sounds like the group trying to be -- The Eagles, or, dare it be said, the Hollies. The hard rocking, riff-blasting, tongue-in-cheek rock band created a long-player with tunes that fall somewhere between the Ronettes and the Four Seasons. When you expect a band to crunch with the enthusiasm of Mott the Hoople and hear pure pop, it is culture shock. This album is kind of like dressing Charles Manson up like Mother Theresa. The pervert lyrics that made them famous regionally are replaced by something else. The verdict on the album? Surprisingly, like Farrenheit, released on Warners in 1987, the disc works despite being a slight misrepresentation of the artist. It is still Steve Cataldo writing and singing "Walkout"; there are 12 songs from a prolific Boston artist.
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