Hidden treasure: A Lost Classics re-run

I’m going to be traveling internationally over the next few weeks, so I’ll be re-running a few posts of “lost classics” from the first few years of “Hack’s Back Pages” (2015-2018). I’m fairly certain many of my current readers weren’t seeing my blog at that point, so these entries may very well be new to you. In any case, I’m offering some great “diamonds in the rough” from albums in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, and I think you’ll find them well worth your attention.

*****************************

“Thunder Island,” Jay Ferguson, 1977

Jay Ferguson was a founder and key player of the wonderful ’60s San Francisco group Spirit, who had FM radio exposure with “I Got a Line on You,” “Fresh Garbage,” “Mr. Skin” and “Nature’s Way.”   Ferguson then fronted a pop band called Jo Jo Gunne, who had a sort of “one hit wonder” success with “Run Run Run” in 1971.  In 1977, Ferguson went solo and hit the Top Twenty with the great “Thunder Island,” carried by the guitar work of Joe Walsh.

“Holdin’ on to Yesterday,” Ambrosia, 1975

The L.A.-based group Ambrosia is known mostly for its three hit singles in the 1978-1980 period: “How Much I Feel,” “You’re the Only Woman” and “Biggest Part of Me.”  But the 1975 debut LP had a much more progressive rock feel to it, and two tracks from it got a lot of FM radio play:  “Nice, Nice, Very Nice” (with lyrics by novelist Kurt Vonnegut) and the excellent track “Holdin’ On to Yesterday.”  This is an excellent album…

“Your Nashville Sneakers,” The Guess Who, 1972

Once Randy Bachman left in 1970 and went off to form Bachman-Turner Overdrive, The Guess Who was left in the capable hands of Burton Cummings, the amazing singer/songwriter/keyboardist responsible for songs like “Rain Dance,” “Albert Flasher,” “Heartbroken Bopper,” “Dancing Fool,” “Running Back to Saskatoon” and “Star Baby.”  On the overlooked 1972 “Rockin'” LP, there’s a fabulous jazz piano track called “Your Nashville Sneakers” that ranks right up there among the best of The Guess Who’s impressive repertoire.

“Fast Buck Freddie,” Jefferson Starship, 1975

When the Jefferson Airplane crashed and burned in 1972, guitarist Paul Kantner took the Jefferson Starship science-fiction concept he’d used in his 1970 solo project “Blows Against the Empire” and officially launched a new lineup on the 1974 LP “Dragonfly.”  In 1975, the second Starship LP “Red Octopus” ended up at #1, thanks to Marty Balin’s sublime “Miracles” single.  Much better was the rocking leadoff track, “Fast Buck Freddie,” which features the great Grace Slick on vocals.

“What Is and What Shall Never Be,” Led Zeppelin, 1969

Heavy blues rock made up the bulk of Led Zeppelin’s catalog, but each album included songs that showed a mellower acoustic side.  On “Led Zeppelin II,” perhaps the group’s heaviest album, there was “What Is and What Should Never Be,” which has both quiet and bombastic sections. So much great Plant vocals and Page guitar here!  Such an amazing album…

“Duncan,” Paul Simon, 1972

“Mother and Child Reunion” and “Me and Julio Down By the Schoolyard” got all the airplay from Paul Simon’s 1972 solo debut, but I think “Duncan” is the overlooked gem of the album.  It’s one of Simon’s most whimsical songs, with lyrics that tell the story of a guy enjoying sexual exploits (“And just like a dog, I was befriended…”). and (“I was playing my guitar, lyin’ underneath the stars, just thankin’ the Lord for my fingers…”)

“Real Man,” Todd Rundren, 1975

Rundgren was a mastermind — producer, songwriter, singer, multi-instrumentalist — who had a strong solo career (“Hello It’s Me,” “I Saw the Light”) and also spearheaded a band called Utopia.  In 1975, Rundgren’s solo LP “Initiation” included the wonderful “Real Man,” which became a favorite live choice.  He is such an amazing talent, although not necessarily commercially regarded…

“The Witch’s Promise,” Jethro Tull, 1970

Before “Aqualung” made Jethro Tull a hugely successful recording/live act in 1971, the group released three excellent LPs:  “This Was,” “Stand Up” and “Benefit,” all of which showcased Ian Anderson’s flute and vocals and Martin Barre’s sizzling electric guitar.  “The Witch’s Promise” was a single in the UK but didn’t show up in the US until the 1972 #3 LP “Living in the Past,” a collection of great songs which came out in the wake of the extraordinary #1 LP “Thick as a Brick.”

“Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You,” Bob Dylan, 1969

Dylan’s early albums were all recorded in New York, but beginning with “Blonde on Blonde” in 1966, Dylan recorded in Nashville, using some of the city’s finest session musicians like Charlie McCoy, Pete Drake, Charlie Daniels and Kenny Buttrey.  1969’s LP “Nashville Skyline” was Dylan’s most “country” album, including the #3 hit “Lay Lady Lay” and the wonderful “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You.”

“Damned If I Do,” Alan Parsons Project, 1979

Parsons was an engineer/producer at the Abbey Road studios, playing a key role in the recording of The Beatles’ “Abbey Road” and Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” before teaming up with songwriter Eric Woolfson to form The Alan Parsons Project in 1976.  Using multiple vocalists and session musicians, the “group” ended up scoring a couple Top Ten albums (“I Robot” in 1977 and “Eye in the Sky” in 1982), and several Top 20 singles (“I Wouldn’t Want to Be Like You, 1977; “Damned If I Do,” 1979; “Games People Play,” 1980; “Time,” 1980; “Eye in the Sky,” 1982;  “Don’t Answer Me,” 1984).  Lenny Zakatek, one of five featured singers, was the voice of “Damned If I Do.”

“Ladyfriends I,” Lazarus, 1973

Bill Hughes was the songwriter, voice and guitar behind a little known but tragically overlooked trio called Lazarus, who released two gorgeous albums in 1971 and 1973 under the tutelage of Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul & Mary.  The second Lazarus LP “A Fool’s Paradise” included two songs, “Ladyfriends II” and “Ladyfriends I,” that both should have been big hits, in my opinion.  Hughes’ song “Walking on a Chinese Wall” was the title track to the 1984 Top Ten album by Philip Bailey (which included the #1 hit “Easy Lover”).   Later, Hughes’ tune “Welcome to the Edge” was the Emmy-nominated theme song for the “Santa Barbara” 1990s ABC soap opera.

“Relay,” The Who, 1972

After “Tommy,” Pete Townshend wrote and recorded demos of many songs in 1971-72 for another rock opera called “Life House” that was never completed, but the bulk of it became the songs for the iconic “Who’s Next” LP in 1971.  Other tracks, like “Join Together” and “Relay,” ended up as modestly successful singles in 1972.  “Relay,” in particular, was a favorite of the band and often played in concert during that period leading up to the amazing “Quadrophenia” LP in late 1973.

*******************************

Are you ready, boots? Start walking

The medical profession has been telling us for decades, even centuries, that daily walking is an excellent way to maintain our good health, particularly as we grow older and lead more sedentary lifestyles. It helps pretty much all of our internal systems — muscles, bones, lungs, cardiovascular — and does wonders for our soul and emotional well being too.

Some people jog, or go cycling, or even rollerblading. But more and more people these days are taking morning walks, or afternoon walks, or evening walks, or perhaps all three. Sometimes it’s just a quick stroll around the block to let the dog do his business, and other times it’s a five-mile power walk with a like-minded human companion. Some folks even participate in fundraising walkathons.

Popular songwriters have found walking to be a fertile subject. Below, I’ve selected 20 songs from the classic rock era that mention walking in the title, with another 17 “honorable mentions” as well, bringing the Spotify playlist to more than two hours, which should be a fine soundtrack for a nice long walk!

**************************

“Walk Away,” The James Gang, 1971

Joe Walsh wrote this rock/funk tune for “Thirds,” his final studio album with The James Gang before going solo. The lyrics describe a relationship that’s on its last legs, in which the man doesn’t want it to end but the woman no longer appears interested: “Seems to me you don’t want to talk about it, /Seems to me you just turn your pretty head and walk away…” Although it stalled at #51 when released as a single, “Walk Away” has endured as a hard rock classic, and has been a mainstay in The Eagles’ concert setlist after Walsh joined that band.

“Walking on Broken Glass,” Annie Lennox, 1992

Like many of the songs she sang and co-wrote as part of The Eurythmics, this hit single from Lennox’s 1992 debut LP “Diva” takes a depressing topic like romantic abandonment and attaches it onto an irresistibly danceable beat. Critics called it “a gloriously intoxicating pop song that focuses on the emotional upheaval of a shattered relationship” that makes the narrator feel as if she’s walking on broken glass. It peaked at #14 in the US, #8 in her native UK and #1 in Canada.

“Walk of Life,” Dire Straits, 1985

Mark Knopfler had originally planned for this whimsical rocker to be merely a B-side for one of the intended singles from the Dire Straits LP “Brothers in Arms,” but the band’s manager persuaded Knopfler to include it on the album, and it ended up a popular single in its own right. It peaked at #7 in the US and at #2 in the UK, the group’s highest charting single there. The lyrics refer to a busker in the London subway, playing old rock and roll songs like “Be-Bop-a-Lula,” “What I’d Say” and “I Gotta Woman” in order to make a few bucks “and do the walk of life.”

“Walk Like an Egyptian,” The Bangles, 1986

In 1985, songwriter Liam Sternberg was on a ferry crossing the English Channel in choppy waters, and watched as passengers stepped carefully and moved their arms awkwardly while struggling to maintain their balance. He compared their movements to the depiction of human figures in ancient Egyptian tomb paintings and was inspired to write an uptempo tune with lyrics that mentioned more modern scenes in which people walked in similar fashion. David Kahne, who was producing The Bangles’ second LP “Different Light,” urged the group to record it, and it ended up an international #1 hit in 1986-1987.

“Walkin’ My Baby Back Home,” Nat King Cole, 1952

More than 100 artists have covered this charming ditty since the songwriting team of Fred Ahlert and Roy Turk wrote it way back in 1930, when four different singers put it on the “Hit Parade” the same year. Nat King Cole reached #8 on the US pop charts with his definitive rendition in 1952, and it became the title song of a 1953 film of the same name. Since then, everyone from Ella Fitzgerald and Bing Crosby to Judy Garland and Dean Martin wrapped their voices around it, as have rock-era artists like James Taylor, George Benson, Willie Nelson and Van Morrison.

“Walking on the Moon,” The Police, 1979

Sting recalled this song came into being when he was drunk one night in a Munich hotel room. “I was feeling nauseous, but I had a riff in my head, and got up to walk around the room, singing the nonsense words ‘Walking ’round the room,'” he said. “In the morning, I changed it to ‘Walking on the moon,’ which was how I remember feeling years earlier, walking home from my girlfriend’s house.” The reggae-based tune became The Police’s second #1 single in their native England, but it failed to chart in the US, although the album it came from, 1979’s “Regatta de Blanc,” reached #25 on US album charts.

“Walking in Memphis,” Marc Cohn, 1991

Cohn was a struggling Ohio songwriter in 1985 when he went to Memphis in search of inspiration. He visited the church where Al Green preached, and Elvis Presley’s Graceland mansion, and walked the streets and visited the blues and gospel nightspots of the downtown area. The song “Walking in Memphis” came pouring out upon his return home, and attracted enough attention to gain a record deal, and the song turned into not only his debut single, reaching #13 on US charts and #3 in Canada, but also garnered a Song of the Year Grammy nomination that earned Cohn the Best New Artist Grammy in 1991.

“Walk Away Renée,” The Left Banke, 1966

Keyboardist Michael Brown has said he was inspired to write this piece of baroque pop about a girl he had fallen for named Renée Fladen. He said it was an unrealized relationship because he was too timid to approach her, so he mythologized her instead. Brown’s band, The Left Banke, had a big #5 hit with “Walk Away Renée” in the summer of 1966, and a #15 follow-up single (also about the same girl) called “Pretty Ballerina” in early 1967 rescued the group from being “one-hit wonders.”

“I’m Walkin’,” Fats Domino, 1957

Domino, one of the original rock and roll pioneers out of New Orleans, had 20 hits on the R&B charts between 1949 and 1955 before he finally broke through on the pop charts with the iconic “Ain’t That a Shame.” He followed that with three more consecutive Top Ten hits — “Blueberry Hill,” “Blue Monday” and “I’m Walkin'” — in 1956 and early 1957. The latter, co-written by Domino and jazz great Dave Bartholomew, was covered by Ricky Nelson later the same year, reaching #17.

“Walk This Way,” Aerosmith, 1975

Guitarist Joe Perry and vocalist Steven Tyler, struggling for lyrics as they recorded this track for their “Toys in the Attic” LP, took a break and went to see the Mel Brooks comedy “Young Frankenstein,” in which Marty Feldman’s Igor character told Gene Wilder’s Dr. Frankenstein character to follow him as he limped off, saying “Walk this way.” They decided it would make a great title and lyric for the chorus, and the song ended up a Top Ten hit in 1977. Then in 1986, “Walk This Way” returned to the Top Ten in a collaboration with the rap group Run-D.M.C.

“Walk the Dinosaur,” Was (Not Was), 1989

In 1981, Don Fagenson and David Weiss formed a group they called Was (Not Was) based on Fagenson’s toddler son’s propensity to talk in contradictions. They struggled through the 1980s until their 1988 LP “What Up, Dog?” spawned the quirky #7 tune “Walk the Dinosaur,” which became a big music-video hit in 1989, utilizing scenes from the cartoon “Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur.” Randy Jacobs, one of the song’s cowriters, said that although the lyrics were about nuclear Armageddon, “it became a singalong dance anthem because of the Flintstones-like video that probably got played too much.”

“Walking the Dog,” Rufus Thomas, 1963

Thomas was a singer/songwriter/DJ/comedian in the 1940s and 1950s who made his first chart appearance on the US pop charts at age 46 when his bluesy tune “Walking the Dog” peaked at #10 in December 1963. The Rolling Stones recorded a cover version for their debut LP three months later. Soon enough, another dozen artists took their turns at it, including Johnny Rivers, Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels, the Everly Brothers, Aerosmith, Spirit and Roger Daltrey.

“Walk a Mile in My Shoes,” Joe South, 1968

South was a ubiquitous session guitarist in the 1960s, appearing on albums by Bob Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel and Aretha Franklin. He was also a successful songwriter, writing hits like “Down in the Boondocks” for Billy Joe Royal, “Hush” for Deep Purple and “Rose Garden” for Lynn Anderson. When he penned more socially provocative songs, he became a recording artist in his own right, enjoying chart success with “Games People Play” as well as “Walk A Mile in My Shoes,” a plea for compassion and tolerance between those of different backgrounds.

“Walk on the Wild Side,” Lou Reed, 1973

Inspired by the 1956 Nelson Algren novel of the same name, Reed wrote “Walk on the Wild Side” for his second solo LP “Transformer,” and it became a surprise hit in the spring of 1973, reaching #16. Its lyrics pushed against boundaries for its time, touching on formerly taboo topics like male prostitution, transgender people and oral sex. “I always thought it would be kinda fun to introduce people to characters they maybe hadn’t met before, or hadn’t wanted to meet,” said Reed.

“Walk on By,” Dionne Warwick, 1964

The legendary songwriting team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David came up with this tearjerker classic for song stylist Dionne Warwick, one of many the duo wrote for her in the 1960s. It peaked at #6 on US pop charts. The lyrics urge the narrator’s former lover to just keep walking by if they’re about to encounter each other: “Make believe that you don’t see the tears, just let me grieve in private, /’Cause each time I see you, I break down and cry, so walk on by…” A few dozen artists have recorded the song since then, including Isaac Hayes, Gloria Gaynor, The Stranglers, Average White Band, Melissa Manchester and Cyndi Lauper.

“Walking Man,” James Taylor, 1974

Bruce Springsteen may have been “born to run,” but it seems as if Taylor was more the “born to walk” type. His catalog has a few delightfully uptempo tunes, but most of his songs, especially from his first four or five albums, are mellow, tuneful reflections on a more chill lifestyle. The title track from his 1974 LP “Walking Man” is a case in point, celebrating the man who strolls through life in contemplation: “The walking man walks, doesn’t know nothing at all, /Any other man stops and talks, but not the walking man, /Born to walk, walk on, walking man…”

“I Walk the Line,” Johnny Cash, 1957

Cash had approached Sam Phillips at Sun Records in the hopes of recording gospel songs, only to be told Phillips was more interested in “rockabilly” artists at that point, including Elvis Presley and Carl Perkins. Cash adapted the songs he was writing, speeding up the tempo of his ballads, and in 1957 he scored his first #1 hit on the country charts, “I Walk the Line,” which was also a #17 crossover hit on the pop charts. The song’s lyrics discuss resisting temptation, being accountable, and remaining faithful to his wife, though they would later divorce and he married June Carter in 1968, to whom he remained married until both died with five months of each other in 2003.

“Walking on Sunshine,” Katrina and The Waves, 1985

British guitarist/songwriter Kimberley New came up with this effervescent tune in the early ’80s as he was joining the band Katrina and the Waves. “I’d love to say ‘Walking on Sunshine’ relates to a significant event in my life, like walking out of my front door and seeing a comet or something,” he said, but it’s just a piece of simple fun, an optimistic song,” The group recorded it themselves in 1983, but after getting a record deal in 1985, they re-recorded it with a horn section for their Capitol Records debut, and it became a Top Ten hit in the US, the UK and Australia.

“Walk Between Raindrops,” Donald Fagen, 1982

Following Steely Dan’s decision to take a break after their seventh LP “Gaucho” in 1980, Fagen recorded the polished jazzy solo effort, “The Night Fly,” in 1982. Fagen had been inspired by jazz music of the ’40s and ’50s when he was growing up, and the songs he wrote for the album reflect that, none more so than the album’s closing track, “Walk Between Raindrops.” The lyrics describe a memorable romantic encounter in Miami during which a couple take an evening walk and dodge a rainstorm as they return to her apartment.

“These Boots Are Made For Walkin’,” Nancy Sinatra, 1966

Appearing in a 1963 comedy western, Frank Sinatra uttered the line, “They tell me them boots ain’t built for walkin’.”  Country singer-songwriter Lee Hazlewood composed this song around a modified version of the phrase, and intended to sing the song himself, but Sinatra, a friend of his, persuaded him to give it to his daughter Nancy to record.  “Coming from a guy, the words sound harsh and abusive, but it’s perfect for a young girl to sing,” he reasoned.  The song, interpreted as a girl serving notice to her boyfriend that she refused to be pushed around, struck a nerve, reaching #1 on US pop charts in the spring of 1966.

*************************

Honorable mentions:

The Walk,” Mayer Hawthorne, 2011; “Walking on the Sun,” Smashmouth, 1996; “Walk Like a Man,” The Four Seasons, 1963; “Walk on the Ocean,” Toad the Wet Sprocket, 1991; “Walking on a Thin Line,” Huey Lewis and The News, 1983; “Walk on the Water,” Creedence Clearwater Revival, 1968; “Walking Through Fire,” Mary Chapin Carpenter, 1992; “Walk in My Shadow,” Free, 1970; “Walk Right In,” Dr. Hook, 1977; “When You Walk in the Room,” Jackie DeShannon, 1963; “Walking in the Wind,” Traffic, 1974; “Walkin All Night,” Little Feat, 1973; “Walking Slow,” Jackson Browne, 1974; “Walkin’ and Talkin’,” The Marshall Tucker Band, 1975; “Walk Into Light,” Ian Anderson, 1983; “Walking in the Rain,” The Ronettes, 1963; “Walking On Air,” Stephen Bishop, 1989.

*****************************