Not just me, not just you, it’s all around the world

Rock and roll is, without question, an inherently American musical genre, born in the mid-1950s as a hybrid of blues, country, jazz and R&B.  But it very quickly developed a global reach.

Britain and Canada eagerly accepted it almost right away, and other European countries and Australia soon followed suit.  People in other regions of the world — Central and South America, the Far East, Africa — had very strong allegiances to their own vibrant, indigenous music, so they took a little longer to join the party.  Communist governments refused to allow their people to be exposed to free-thinking pop music until well into the 1980s.

It’s a different ball game these days.  “Best World Music Album” is a Grammy category.  Certain artists have enthusiastically embraced and pushed rhythms and instruments (reggae, ska, sitars, wooden flutes, etc) that have expanded American pop music like never before.  Paul Simon’s “Graceland,” with its infusion of South African vocal and percussive elements, won Album of the Year in 1987.  Peter Gabriel has shown a deep interest and appreciation for the music of other cultures — African, Asian — evidenced by numerous tracks on his solo LPs, most notably 1980’s “Biko.”  Many dozens of artists in the ’90s and beyond have given credit to musicians like Simon and Gabriel for leading the way, and influencing their music and their interests.

One of these days, I’ll assemble a set list of pop songs from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s that show the obvious and subtle influence on American pop music of musical genres from around the world, but today, my focus is simpler.  In this blog post, I offer a sweet sixteen playlist of songs that pay tribute to various major and minor world cities.

Rock and roll is all around the world!  

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“Leningrad,” Billy Joel, 1989

When Billy Joel appeared in concert in Russia in 1987 as the first major Western artist to shoot an in-concert video there, he befriended a performing clown named Viktor, and they shared common experiences growing up in the USA and the USSR.  The lyrics compared the wildly disparate lives of Russian and American kids growing up in opposing cultures, and how they became friends despite these differences:  “And Cold War kids were hard to kill, under their desks in an air raid drill, haven’t they heard we won the war, what do they keep on fighting for?…  Viktor was sent to some Red Army town, served out his time, became a circus clown, the greatest happiness he ever had was making Russian children glad…  We never knew what friends we had until we came to Leningrad…”   

“Free Man in Paris,” Joni Mitchell, 1974

You might think Joni was singing about a boyfriend, or some fictional guy, but in fact, the “free man in Paris” is manager/mogul David Geffen, who guided her mid-’70s career and those of many others.  She thought he worked too hard and enjoyed seeing him relax in the carefree “City of Lights” environs, and wrote about Paris from his point of view: “If I had my way, I’d just walk through those doors and wander down the Champs d’Elysees, going cafe to cabaret… I felt unfettered and alive, there was nobody calling me up for favors, no one’s future to decide, you know, I’d go back there tomorrow but for the work I’ve taken on, stokin’ the star-maker machinery behind the popular song…” 

“Katmandu,” Bob Seger, 1975

“It’s a song of exasperation,” Seger said. “It was written for my ‘Beautiful Loser’ album in 1975 at the end of that seven- or eight-year period when I was going nowhere fast. I was in that defeatist mentality and you can hear it in there. It’s like: ‘I’m never gonna make it, I’m just gonna go to Katmandu, the remote city in Nepal.” “I’m tired of lookin’ at the TV news, I’m tired of drivin’ hard and payin’ dues, /I figure, baby, I’ve got nothing to lose, I’m tired of being blue, /That’s why I’m goin to Katmandu, up to the mountains where I’m going to…” It’s a solid rock ‘n roll song with Chuck Berry-style guitar and Seger’s vocal growl lasting more than six minutes on the LP, but the single was edited down to 3:16 and stalled at #43, which frustrated him no end. Within a year, though, he formed The Silver Bullet Band and went multi-platinum with his “Night Moves ” album, kicking off a strong career arc over the next two decades.

“Only a Dream in Rio,” James Taylor, 1985

Soft-rock balladeer Taylor was a hugely successful artist on records and in concert throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, but underneath, he struggled with drug addiction.  When he performed at the inaugural 10-day “Rock in Rio” festival in early 1985, he was overwhelmed by the ecstatic adulation of the million-plus crowd, and had an epiphany that motivated him to quit substances for good.  He wrote about the experience in this stunning song from his underrated LP “That’s Why I’m Here”:  “Well they tell me, it’s only a dream in Rio, nothing could be as sweet as it seems on this very first day down, they remind me, ‘Son, have you so soon forgotten?’, often as not, it’s rotten inside, and the mask soon slips away…”

“Marrakesh Express,” Crosby Stills and Nash, 1969

David Crosby of the Byrds, Stephen Stills of Buffalo Springfield, and Graham Nash of The Hollies knocked the rock music audience on its collective ear with their spectacular “Crosby Stills and Nash” LP in the spring of 1969, with the single “Marrakesh Express” modestly leading the way before conceding chart time to Stills’ masterpiece “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.”  Nash’s song tells the story of his 1966 train ride from Casablanca to Marrakesh, noting that he enjoyed the friendly commoners in the steerage section much more than the stuffy patrons in the first-class compartment to which he’d been assigned: “Take the train from Casablanca going south, blowing smoke rings from the corners of my mouth, /Colored cottons hang in the air, charming cobras in the square, /Striped djellebas we can wear at home, well, let me hear you now, /Wouldn’t you know we’re riding on the Marrakesh Express…”

“Runnin’ Back to Saskatoon,” The Guess Who, 1972

One of Canada’s most successful pop acts, The Guess Who did very well on the charts in the US for several years (1969-1974) with guitarist Randy Bachman’s songs (“Undun,” “These Eyes,” “No Time,” “Laughing”) as well as vocalist/keyboardist Burton Cumming’s tunes (“Share the Land,” “Albert Flasher,” “Rain Dance,” “Star Baby”).  Cummings wrote “Runnin’ Back to Saskatoon,” a Top Ten hit in Canada but a dud on US pop charts in the fall of 1972. It appears on their live LP of that year, “Live at the Paramount,” which peaked at #39 in the US. The lyrics talk of the dead-end life in the small towns of Canada’s Western provinces, name-checking several of them: “I been hangin’ around grain elevators, been learnin’ ’bout food, /I been talkin’ to soil farmers, been workin’ on land, /Moose Jaw saw a few, Moosomin too, runnin’ back to Saskatoon, /Red Deer, Terrace and Medicine Hat, sing another prairie tune…”

“London Calling,” The Clash, 1979

The British punk rock movement exploded in 1975 but petered out by 1977, and by 1979, The Clash was frustrated that perhaps their moment had passed. But they chose to adopt a less chaotic hard rock style for their double album “London Calling” that finally found favor outside the UK, particularly in the US, where it reached #27 on the album charts. The single “Train in Vain” reached #23 on US pop charts with the title track as its B-side. The phrase “London calling” comes from the BBC World Service’s station identification used during WWII to occupied countries, underscoring the concern Joe Strummer and Mick Jones were feeling about world events. “We felt that we were struggling, about to slip down a slope or something, grasping with our fingernails,” said Strummer, “and there was no one there to help us.” “London calling to the faraway towns, now war is declared, and battle come down, /London calling, now don’t look to us, phony Beatlemania has bitten the dust…”

“Still in Saigon,” Charlie Daniels Band, 1982

The veteran Nashville picker/fiddler has always been a very vocal patriot, particularly when it came to supporting military veterans.  In “Still in Saigon,” Daniels took a song written by a Vietnam vet named Dan Daley and recorded a moving country rocker that reached #22 on US pop charts in 1982. The lyrics spoke of the anguishing PTSD and other nightmarish flashbacks the soldiers unwillingly brought home with them from the the jungles and rice paddies of Southeast Asia, where Saigon (long since renamed Ho Chi Minh City) served as the only thing remotely close to the civilization of home the US soldiers longed for: “Every summer when it rains, I smell the jungle, I hear the planes, /I can’t tell no one I feel ashamed, /Afraid some day I’ll go insane, /All the sounds of long ago will be forever in my head, /Mingled with the wounded cries and the silence of the dead, /’Cause I’m still in Saigon…”

“Loco in Acapulco,” The Four Tops, 1988

In 1988, Genesis drummer Phil Collins, by then well into a very successful solo career, tried his hand at acting when he starred in the British comedy-crime drama “Buster,” which met with only mixed reviews, but the soundtrack did very big business.  Collins and Motown songwriting/producing titan Lamont Dozier teamed up to write Collins’s #1 hit “Two Hearts” as well as The Four Tops’ alluring comeback, “Loco in Acapulco,” which was a big success in the UK and elsewhere. Curiously, it didn’t do much in the US, despite its tempting words:  “You can hear voices bleeding through those warm Latin nights, memories are lost and found, leaving broken hearts all over town, ’cause you’ll be going loco down in Acapulco if you stay too long…”  

“Woman From Tokyo,” Deep Purple, 1973

This groundbreaking British band, credited with helping create the heavy-metal genre, worked their butts off for five long years, touring relentlessly and recording whenever they could.  By 1972, they added Japan to their itinerary, becoming one of the first Western rock bands to perform there, which inspired the minor hit “Woman From Tokyo” in tribute to their enthusiastic welcome there: “Fly into the rising sun, faces smiling everyone smiling everyone, /Yeah, she is a whole new tradition, I feel it in my heart, /My woman from Tokyo, she makes me see, /My woman from Tokyo, she’s so good to me…” Deep Purple recorded “Made in Japan,” their Top Five live album, during a concert there, which spawned the huge hit single “Smoke On the Water.”

“Roads to Moscow,” Al Stewart, 1973

A master storyteller through song lyrics, Stewart has a robust catalog of material that develops fictional characters while relating factual historical events. One of his most ambitious pieces is “Roads to Moscow,” an eight-minute piece from his 1973 LP “Past, Present and Future” that recounts the various phases of the German invasion of Russia in the 1940s, Russia’s defense and eventual successful counterattack that captured Berlin and defeated the Nazis. It ends with the protagonist soldier returning home only to be imprisoned by Stalin’s forces. Despite its length, critics praised its melodic structure and production, and Stewart often included the epic song in concert over the ensuing years: “And all that I ever was able to see, /The fire in the air glowing red, silhouetting the smoke on the breeze, /All summer they drove us back through the Ukraine, /Smolensk and Viasma soon fell, /By Autumn we stood with our backs to the town of Orel, /Closer and closer to Moscow they come…”

“Jerusalem,” Emerson, Lake and Palmer, 1973

This dramatic piece from ELP’s 1973 top-seller “Brain Salad Surgery” is, to the surprise of most progressive rock stoners who made up the band’s audience, a remarkably effective rock-era amalgamation of William Blake’s 1808 poem set to music by Hubert Perry in 1915.  The original piece has been regarded in some circles as an unofficial alternate national anthem to “God Save the King,” although ELP’s inventive synthesized updating was not widely embraced (it stalled at #56 in the UK and made virtually no impact on US listeners). Technically, it’s not about Israel’s Jerusalem at all, but it hints at the idea that Jesus revisited Earth in 19th Century England:  “I will not cease from mental fight nor shall my sword sleep in my hand, ’til we have built Jerusalem in England’s green and pleasant land…”

“Funky Nassau,” Beginning of the End, 1971

The Bahamas haven’t exactly been known as an exporter of music to the degree of, say, Jamaica and Bob Marley’s reggae, but Caribbean strains can prove irresistible, as “Funky Nassau” proved in the spring of 1971, when indigenous group Beginning of The End took it to #15 on the US pop charts.  The remake/sequel film “Blues Brothers 2000” made use of the song in its popular soundtrack LP.  The lyrics may be a bit cheesy, but great fun when juxtaposed against the contagious funky beat:  “Miniskirts, maxi-skirts and Afro hairdo, people doing their own thing, don’t care about me or you, Nassau’s gone funky now, Nassau’s gone soul…” 

“Berlin,” Lou Reed, 1973

Reed was known for dark, even suicidal songs when he was with The Velvet Underground (1966-1971) and in his solo career as well, and his 1973 LP “Berlin” may have been his bleakest of all.  The title track was written after an early 1971 visit to Germany, when he was hounded by nightmarish thoughts of failed relationships and family deaths.  Reed was a troubled kid, with plenty of justifiable anxiety and difficult challenges that he transformed into startling musical statements like the album’s title song:  “In Berlin, by the wall, you were five foot ten inches tall, /It was very nice candlelight and Dubonnet on ice… /You’re right, oh and I’m wrong, you know I’m gonna miss you now that you’re gone, one sweet day, baby baby, one sweet day…”

“Budapest,” Jethro Tull, 1987

In addition to his skills as rock’s premier flautist, Tull’s Ian Anderson has always been a superlative lyricist, telling stories of British folklore as well as personal reflections of life experiences.  During a European tour in 1986, he and his band were mesmerized by a statuesque beauty working behind the scenes at a concert in Budapest, Hungary. Anderson was moved to write this 10-minute beauty about the unrequited lust and longing he and his bandmates felt for the young woman:  “She was helping out at the backstage, stopping hearts and chilling beers, /Yes, and her legs went on forever, like staring up at infinity, /Through a wisp of cotton panty, along a skin of satin sea, /It was a hot night in Budapest…”

“Kashmir,” Led Zeppelin, 1975

Geographically, Kashmir is not actually a city but a region in the northernmost part of the subcontinent of India. The four members of Led Zeppelin, who recorded the song in phases over a two-year period in 1973-1975, were unanimous in their regard for the eight-minute track as “probably the best thing we ever did,” as Jimmy Page put it. It appears on their sixth LP, “Physical Graffiti,” and was performed at every concert they did following its release. Vocalist/lyricist Robert Plant said no one in the group had been to Kashmir at that point, but he was inspired during a drive across a remote desert area in southern Morocco in 1973, and took a few liberties when he wrote: “My Shangri-La beneath the summer moon, I will return again, /Sure as the dust that floats high in June when moving through Kashmir…”

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Game over, I bet the under

Another football season is upon us! (Hey, isn’t this a blog about rock music?)

Why yes, it is, but I often tie in other subjects — cars, weather, sports, you name it — to come up with themed playlists, so this should come as no surprise. A loyal reader suggested this week’s theme of “over/under” and I decided the time was ideal to explore it.

For those who don’t gamble, you may not be familiar with the concept of “betting the over” or “betting the under.” For any given game, the Las Vegas oddsmakers estimate the total number of points that will be scored by both teams added together, and bettors are invited to wager whether the combined score will be over or under that estimate. In fact, bettors sometimes bet the over/under on other things: how many passes the quarterback will throw, how many sacks the defense will tally, how many penalty flags will be thrown, etc.

Still with me? Good. Back to music: This week’s post takes a look at 20 songs that have the words “over” or “under” in the title. There is, of course, a Spotify playlist at the end so you can listen to these tracks as you read along.

Play ball!

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“It’s Over,” Boz Scaggs, 1976

First as a member of The Steve Miller Band in the late ’60s and then as an R&B-leaning solo artist, Scaggs built a solid following that peaked in the late ’70s around the time of his superb “Silk Degrees” LP, which spawned four hit singles: “Lowdown,” “Lido Shuffle,” “What Can I Say” and the buoyant “It’s Over,” which described a romantic breakup.

“Born Under a Bad Sign,” Cream, 1968

Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker wrote most of Cream’s hit singles, but the trio’s catalog was sprinkled with classic blues tunes like Willie Dixon’s “Spoonful” and Robert Johnson’s “Crossroads.” On their #1 double album “Wheels of Fire” in 1968, you’ll find this strong cover version of “Born Under a Bad Sign,” written in 1967 by Stax Records bandleader Booker T. Jones and singer William Bell, and first recorded by blues legend Albert King.

“Over and Over,” The Dave Clark Five, 1965

Robert Byrd, using the stage name Bobby Day, wrote and recorded “Over and Over” back in 1958 and released it as the B-side of his hit “Rockin’ Robin” (later a hit for a young Michael Jackson). Seven years later, the British Invasion band The Dave Clark Five charted their only #1 single in the US with a cover version of “Over and Over,” which was one of eight Top Ten singles for the group here in 1964-66.

“Under My Wheels,” Alice Cooper, 1971

I was stunned to learn that Alice Cooper’s “Under My Wheels” never made it past #59 on US pop charts when it was released in 1971. It’s a relentless rocker from their “Killer” album that I always cranked up, but it didn’t come close to the commercial success of “I’m Eighteen” before it nor “School’s Out” or “Elected” after it. The band clearly loved it, because they performed it in every concert from 1971 on.

“Roll Over Beethoven,” The Beatles, 1963

One of Chuck Berry’s best rock and roll songs with his cleverest lyrics, “Roll Over Beethoven” reached #29 on US pop charts in 1956 and was later covered by more than a dozen other artists including Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Mountain, Electric Light Orchestra, Cliff Richard and Johnny Winter. Most notably, The Beatles featured their version on the “With the Beatles” British album in 1963, as the opening track on their 1964 US release, “The Beatles’ Second Album,” and performed it regularly during their 1964 tours, with George Harrison on lead vocals.

“Under the Sea,” Samuel E. Wright, 1989

The re-emergence of Disney as a box-office juggernaut in the 1990s essentially began with 1989’s “The Little Mermaid,” which boasted an award-winning soundtrack anchored by the effervescent “Under the Sea.” It was sung by the actor Samuel E. Wright, who provided the voice for the character of Sebastian the Jamaican crab as he extolled the superiority of life in the ocean, and it won the Academy Award for Best Original Song that year.

“Over Under Sideways Down,” The Yardbirds, 1966

Following Eric Clapton’s departure from the lineup, The Yardbirds brought in guitarist Jeff Beck, who made an immediate impact with fuzz guitar solos on “Heart Full of Soul” and “Shapes of Things,” both popular singles in the US. His guitar intro on the psychedelic “Over Under Sideways Down” helped keep The Yardbirds on the charts here when that song reached #12 in 1966.

“Got Me Under Pressure,” ZZ Top, 1983

Guitarist/vocalist Billy Gibbons wrote and recorded a demo of this rocker in one afternoon, and ZZ Top later recorded it for their multi-platinum “Eliminator” LP in 1983, where it remained a deep album track. The kinky lyrics to “Got Me Under Pressure” are all about a guy who feels pressured by his uninhibited woman to do things he’s not comfortable doing.

“Don’t Dream It’s Over,” Crowded House, 1986

There’s a pained longing that’s at the heart of the lyrics of “Don’t Dream It’s Over,” a hugely popular track by Crowded House, one of Australia’s most successful rock bands. Frontman Neil Finn wrote the song about the dissolution of a romance, and it struck a chord internationally, reaching #2 in the US in early 1987. It’s from Crowded House’s debut LP, the first of eight albums in their catalog.

“Under My Thumb,” The Rolling Stones, 1966

Mick Jagger’s lyrics in “Under My Thumb” speak of taming a previously domineering woman, which was regarded by some as anti-feminist, but one interpretation is that the “girl” being controlled is a guitar. In any event, it’s one of The Stones’ most popular early tracks despite never being released as a single. Brian Jones plays the marimba on the track, which is found on their 1966 LP “Aftermath.”

“(Just Like) Starting Over,” John Lennon, 1980

After a self-imposed, five-year hiatus from the music business to raise his new son Sean, Lennon indeed felt as if he was “starting over” when he re-entered the studio in 1980 to record the songs that became “Double Fantasy,” a new LP with his wife Yoko Ono. As the album’s first single, “(Just Like) Starting Over” was at #6 in the US when he was murdered in December 1980, after which it went to #1 and stayed there for six weeks.

“Down Under,” Men at Work, 1981

Guitarist/vocalist Colin Hay wrote this catchy, semi-autobiographical Men at Work tune about an Australian who travels the globe, meeting people who are eager to know more about his home country (like “what is a Vegemite sandwich?”). It’s almost an anthem there, and also reached #1 in several countries, including the US in early 1983.

“Over My Head,” Fleetwood Mac, 1975

When Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham joined Fleetwood Mac, adding two new singer-songwriters to the mix, the first single from the new album was nevertheless a tune by longtime member Christine McVie. “Over My Head” offered a sunny, romantic groove that put the band on the US Top 40 charts for the first time, peaking at #20.

“Under the Boardwalk,” The Drifters, 1964

Written by the songwriting team of Kenny Young and Artie Resnick, this classic describes a couple’s romantic encounter in a seaside town out of sight of everyone as they snuggle under the boardwalk. The Drifters recorded it in 1964, reaching #4 on US pop charts. It went on to be recorded by a dozen other artists such as The Rolling Stones, Sam & Dave, John Mellencamp, Bette Midler, Billy Joe Royal, Tom Tom Club and Rickie Lee Jones.

“Head Over Heels,” Tears For Fears, 1985

As co-founders of Tears For Fears, Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith found enormous success in the US with two #1 singles, “Shout” and “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” both from their 1985 LP “Songs From the Big Chair.” They followed those with a third single, “Head Over Heels,” which peaked at #3, making the album one of the biggest sellers of the 1980s.

“Under Pressure,” Queen with David Bowie, 1982

By coincidence, both Queen and David Bowie were recording new music in the same studio in Montreux, Switzerland, in the summer of 1981. Freddie Mercury coaxed Bowie to write lyrics and add vocals to two tracks they were working on, one being “Under Pressure,” which had been a scat-singing instrumental before Bowie’s involvement. It went on to reach #1 in the UK and Canada but curiously stalled at only #29 in the US.

“The Song is Over,” The Who, 1971

Pete Townshend’s post-“Tommy” project, to be called “Lifehouse,” proved to be exceptionally challenging for him to bring to fruition. He ended up abandoning the film he had in mind and scaled back the music from a double to a single album…but wow, what an album! “Who’s Next” shows The Who at their peak, with stunning numbers like “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” “Baba O’Riley,” “Behind Blue Eyes” and my favorite, “The Song is Over.”

“Under the Milky Way,” The Church, 1988

Formed in Sydney, Australia in 1980, The Church made surreal soundscapes of alternative rock and “dream pop” that found a sizable audience in their native land, where their first four LPs all made the Top 20. Their fifth LP, “Starfish,” triggered their breakthrough in the US market, where the single “Under the Milky Way” reached #24 on pop charts in 1988. Bassist Steve Kilbey and girlfriend Karin Jansson of the alt-rock band Curious collaborated to write the track.

“Over the Rainbow,” James Taylor, 2020

Everybody knows this endearing tune by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg from the 1939 film classic “The Wizard of Oz,” made famous by Judy Garland. Less known, perhaps, is that there is an introductory verse omitted from the film version but included in many cover versions of the song, such as those by Frank Sinatra, Eva Cassidy, Tony Bennett, Melissa Manchester, Ella Fitzgerald, Mandy Patinkin and Jewel. In 2020, James Taylor recorded the full song for his “American Standard” LP.

“I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” Carly Simon, 2005

Beginning in the 1980s, rock-era singers began recording covers of classic songs of the ’30s, ’40s and ’50s. Linda Ronstadt put three such albums in the Top Ten, and inspired more collections by the likes of Bryan Ferry, Annie Lennox, Boz Scaggs and James Taylor (see above). Coincidentally, Taylor’s ex-wife Carly Simon also released a couple of these packages, including 2005’s “Moonlight Serenade,” which has a beautiful rendition of the Sinatra standard, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.”

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Honorable mentions:

Over the Hills and Far Away,” Led Zeppelin, 1973; “Under Suspicion,” Robert Palmer, 1979; “Move It On Over,” George Thorogood and The Destroyers, 1978; “Under the Bridge,” Red Hot Chili Peppers, 1991; “All Over the World,” Electric Light Orchestra, 1980; “Under Cover of Darkness,” The Strokes, 2011; “Over and Over,” Joe Walsh, 1978; “Under the Weather,” K.T. Tunstall, 2005; “Get Over It,” The Eagles, 1994; “Underneath the Streetlight,” Joni Mitchell, 1982.