Makin’ love was just for fun, those days are gone

In the summer of 1972, a song started getting airplay that grabbed my attention. It had strong power chords like The Who, a vocal chorus like The Beach Boys, and lyrics that boldly talked about “going all the way.” As a teenager growing up in Cleveland, I was jazzed to discover the tune was by a local group called The Raspberries, who had been playing gigs at area high schools and teen clubs since 1970.

“Go All the Way” reached #5 on the national pop chart in October, followed by a second big hit, “I Wanna Be With You,” within a month or two. Despite these Top Ten successes, some critics and hipster album buyers turned their noses up at the group, calling them “wimpy Beatles imitators,” which hurt their momentum and reputation at a time when more complex music by progressive rock bands was in vogue.

Too bad. The band cranked out four LPs and managed one more Top 20 hit before frustration and internal dissension caused them to throw in the towel. Today, The Raspberries are praised as one of the pioneers of the “power pop” sub-genre that inspired many dozens of groups in the years since, from The Cars and Squeeze to The Bangles and The Posies.

The group’s lead singer and chief songwriter, who embarked on a solo career in 1975 and enjoyed worldwide fame for a half-dozen popular singles over the next 15 years, was Eric Carmen, who passed away this past week at age 74.

Although he is more broadly known as a balladeer for his solo work — particularly the 1975 power ballad “All By Myself” and his #3 hit from the 1987 “Dirty Dancing” film soundtrack, “Hungry Eyes” — I want to focus first on what Carmen was trying to do with The Raspberries.

Artists like Badfinger (“No Matter What,” “Baby Blue”) and Todd Rundgren (“We Gotta Get You a Woman,” “Couldn’t I Just Tell You”) and even early songs by The Who (“Substitute,” “I Can’t Explain”) exemplified the power pop sound, but many industry insiders have cited The Raspberries as the quintessential power pop band. “They are THE great underrated power pop masters,” Bruce Springsteen wrote in 2007. “Their best records sound as fun and as fresh today as when they were released. Soaring choruses, Beach Boys harmonies over crunchy Who guitars, lyrics simultaneously innocent and lascivious — that’s an unbeatable combination.”

The Raspberries in 1972: Jim Bonfanti, Wally Bryson, Eric Carmen; Dave Smalley in front

Referring to “Go All the Way,” Carmen once said, “I wanted to write an explicitly sexual lyric that the kids would instantly get but the powers that be couldn’t pin me down for. So I turned it around so that the girl is encouraging the guy to go all the way, rather than the stereotypical thing of the guy trying to make the girl have sex with him. I figured that made us seem a little more innocent. We decided, ‘Let’s start it out like The Who, but when we get to the questionable part, we’ll do it like choir boys and maybe they’ll let it slide.”

Carmen had shown musical talent early, taking violin lessons from an aunt who played in The Cleveland Orchestra, and also learned piano and dreamed of writing songs. In high school, he was the lead singer in a series of bands, playing piano and guitar. While attending nearby John Carroll University, he cut one record (“Get the Message”) with a group called Cyrus Erie, which included guitarist Wally Bryson, who joined him in forming The Raspberries. Capitol Records signed them to a four-album deal.

“We got noticed by going completely against the grain in 1972,” Carmen said years later. “Prog rock and glam rock were ‘in,’ and FM radio embraced it, but I hated it. I loved the Beatles, The Who, the Byrds, the Stones, the Beach Boys and the Small Faces. Most of their songs were instantly appealing.”

The 1972 debut LP with scratch-and-sniff cover; the second LP, “Fresh Raspberries”

I can’t fail to mention the gimmick employed upon release of their “Raspberries” debut album: The shrink wrap was adorned with a scratch-and-sniff sticker that smelled strongly of raspberries. The sticker must’ve been drenched in some potent concoction, because my copy of the album STILL has a faint raspberry aroma more than 50 years later!

The Raspberries’ catalog had great hook-filled power pop tunes like “Let’s Pretend” and “Tonight,” but sprinkled in there were mellower ballads like “Don’t Want to Say Goodbye” and “I Saw the Light,” dominated more by piano and string arrangements that recalled Paul McCartney’s oeuvre. That, apparently, was part of the problem, Carmen said.

“There were a lot of people in 1972 who were not ready for any band that even remotely resembled the Beatles,” he noted. “Critics liked us, girls liked us, but I guess their 18-year-old, album-buying brothers said ‘no.’ We got pretty frustrated, and things got a little intense.”

Two members of The Raspberries, drummer Jim Bonfanti and bassist Dave Smalley, left the group in 1974 and were replaced by Michael McBride and Scott McCarl, respectively, for their fourth and (as it turned out) final LP, “Starting Over.” Ironically, due to its harder rocking leanings (check out the Who-like “I Don’t Know What I Want”), Rolling Stone picked it as the best rock album of the year, but it flopped on the charts despite its superb single, the hopeful “Overnight Sensation (Hit Record).” Bryson’s tune, “Party’s Over,” chronicled his disillusionment with the music business: “When we started, it was a lot of fun, and the times we had I’ll never forget, /But now I’m older and wiser and a bit of a miser, and it’s crazy, but I don’t want to quit, /Ain’t it a shame, the party’s over…”

It’s telling that the song “Starting Over,” a piano-driven ballad, gave strong hints about the direction Carmen’s solo career would take when he released his “Eric Carmen” debut LP on Arista Records in late 1975. While there were several irresistible pop tracks that would have fit comfortably on any Raspberries album, the massively successful “All By Myself” (which I liked but grew sick of through overexposure) was often described as maudlin and overly sentimental. The fact that it was derived from a piano concerto by Sergei Rachmaninoff, covered by Frank Sinatra and later became a hit for Celine Dion indicates the kind of non-rock audiences that enthusiastically welcomed it.

The rest of the debut LP, though, is consistently strong and gorgeously produced by Jimmy Ienner, who had manned the boards for all four Raspberries albums as well. Great stuff here: the effervescent opener “Sunrise,” the Top 20 hit “Never Gonna Fall in Love Again,” the Brian Wilson-ish “My Girl” (no relation to the Temptations hit) and the dynamic cover of the ’60s chestnut “On Broadway.” Teen idol Shaun Cassidy had a big hit covering the album track “That’s Rock and Roll” two years later, and the hard-rocking “No Hard Feelings” did a nice job of summarizing the end of The Raspberries: “Four years on, and things were really gettin’ too intense, /Critics raving ’bout our album, but we’re makin’ fifty cents, /We gave it everything we had to give, but it was gettin’ so tough, /Too much frustration makes it hard to live, I think enough is enough, /I hope there’s no hard feelings ’cause there isn’t anyone to blame…”

Carmen decided to up his game in 1977 with the more artful album “Boats Against the Current,” which didn’t do as well commercially but sported more sophisticated songwriting on tracks like “Nowhere to Hide” (featuring The Guess Who’s Burton Cummings sharing vocals), “Marathon Man” and the title song.

His career arc took a dip when his three subsequent LPs in 1978 (“Change of Heart”), 1980 (“Tonight You’re Mine”) and 1984 (another LP entitled “Eric Carmen”) flopped on the album charts, although he managed two Top 40 chart appearances for the somewhat slight “Change of Heart” and “I Wanna Hear It From Your Lips,” which sounded suspiciously close to Springsteen’s lost classic “Fire.”

Interestingly, his next move was to collaborate with lyricist Dean Pitchford to write “Almost Paradise,” which became a #7 hit from the 1984 “Footloose” film soundtrack as sung in a duet by Loverboy’s Mike Reno and Heart’s Ann Wilson. That project led rather seamlessly to two more major successes for Carmen as a recording artist: The 1987 hit “Hungry Eyes” from the “Dirty Dancing” soundtrack, which peaked at #4, followed by another co-write in 1988 with Pitchford, the #3 smash “Make Me Lose Control.”

Those hits proved lucrative enough for him to back away from the business in 1990, abandoning the Los Angeles scene to return to his roots in Cleveland, where he spent most of the past 30 years laying low with his family in his high-end digs in Gates Mills.

Although his American audience proved rather fickle, running hot and cold in turn, Carmen was as surprised as anyone when he developed a rabid following in Japan, where crowds greeted him in Beatlemania-type frenzy. In 1982, I interviewed Carmen as he played host to a half-dozen Tokyo-based contest winners, who visited him in his Cleveland home, checked out some childhood landmarks and sat in on a mixing session in a local recording studio.

He was only sporadically active during recent decades. Carmen released one last LP in 1998, “Winter Dreams,” only in Japan, which included his own version of “Almost Paradise,” more co-writes with Pitchford, and cover versions of ’60s classics “Caroline, No” and “Walk Away Renee.” (The album was eventually released in the US as “I Was Born to Love You,” but it’s no longer available.)

In 2000, Carmen signed on for a stint in Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band, performing 40 concerts with the likes of Dave Edmunds, Jack Bruce, Simon Kirke and, of course, Starr. Carmen was featured on “Hungry Eyes,” “Never Gonna Fall in Love Again,” “Go All the Way” and “All By Myself.” In 2014, as part of the release of “The Essential Eric Carmen” 2-CD compilation, he recorded and released his last new song, “Brand New Year.”

The Raspberries’ Smalley, Bonfanti and Carmen in concert, 2004 (Bryson out of frame)

As for The Raspberries, any ill will between the members was eventually forgiven long enough for the group to reunite in 2004 for a well-received special show in Cleveland to commemorate the opening of the House of Blues location there, which precipitated another half-dozen shows at other House of Blues venues in 2005. The band’s legacy got another boost in 2014 when “Go All the Way” was used prominently on the “Guardians of the Galaxy” film soundtrack, exposing them to a whole new generation of fans.

Carmen and his third wife, Amy Murphy, 2018

Out of the small handful of rock musicians who have Cleveland connections, Carmen is a native who arguably achieved greater fame than anyone else on the list. (Joe Walsh lived in five other cities while growing up before attending nearby Kent State University and becoming a star in The James Gang; Chrissie Hynde is from Akron, not Cleveland; same goes for The Black Keys; Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails began his music career in Cleveland but grew up elsewhere; Benjamin Orr of The Cars and Neil Geraldo of Pat Benatar’s band grew up as proud Clevelanders and sold tons of records, but their names aren’t well-known outside rock music circles; artists like Tracy Chapman and Marc Cohn grew up in Cleveland but left early and haven’t had much nice to say about the city since leaving; and Michael Stanley, a Clevelander who was wildly popular there, isn’t all that well known elsewhere.)

In my view, The Raspberries (and probably Carmen as a solo artist) are every bit as deserving of induction in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as many bands that are already in there, but they’ve never even been nominated. It would be nice if Cleveland’s biggest rock star had his name on the wall.

Rest In Peace, Eric.

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Come on in and cover me

When I was in my teens and early 20s, I had a peculiar aversion to cover songs. If I loved a tune, I had no interest in hearing someone else record the same song, whether it was a note-for-note copy or a radically different arrangement. I thought it was lazy of the artist to rip off a song already made famous when there were so many unknown songs waiting to be recorded and popularized.

Eventually, I saw how shortsighted this attitude was. I felt sheepish when I discovered that a song I loved — James Taylor’s “How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You,” for instance — was in fact a cover version of Marvin Gaye’s original from a decade earlier.

A great song is a great song, and it will almost certainly stand up to multiple re-imaginings. This truth has been driven home to me hundreds of times in recent years as newer artists have been returning time and time again to songs from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. Some of these cover versions, of course, have been failed experiments, to my ears, but so many more have been resoundingly successful as valid art, regardless of whether they made any impact on the charts.

I have enjoyed combing through the releases of the past two decades, searching for the best cover renditions of classic rock tracks by current singers. Some I knew already but others were brand new to me, and I felt compelled to select 15 and present them here to my readers. As always, I have included a Spotify playlist so you can listen to these new versions of old favorites as you read along. If you have your own favorite cover songs, I’d be very interested to hear about them for a future blog post.

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“Someday We’ll Be Together,” Bruce Springsteen, 2022

Since his earliest days as a performer, Springsteen has often covered classic R&B and roots rock tunes in his concerts, most notably “Devil With the Blue Dress,” “Raise Your Hand,” “War,” “Quarter to Three,” “In the Midnight Hour” and “Twist and Shout.” In 2022, he finally got around to recording “Only the Strong Survive,” an entire studio album of soul covers like “Turn Back the Hands of Time,” “What Becomes of the Broken Hearted” and “Do I Love You (Indeed I Do).” My favorite from that collection is his version of The Supremes #1 hit from 1969, “Someday We’ll Be Together.” One critic praised the LP as “an ideal opportunity for a new audience to discover glorious classics as interpreted by a rock ‘n’ roll stalwart.”

“Back Stabbers,” Seal, 2011

“In my years in the music industry, two things have remained constants — the voice and the song,” noted Seal upon the release of “Soul 2,” his second collection of R&B covers. “I continue to make music because of the chance that today could be the day I write a memorable song or have the opportunity to sing an all-time classic.” The songs he chose — “What’s Going On,” “Let’s Stay Together,” “I’ll Be Around,” among others — are some of the finest soul tunes ever. His magnificent treatment of The O’Jays’ 1972 hit “Back Stabbers” is the cream of the crop.

“Happy Together,” Weezer, 2019

Since their debut in the mid-1990s, Weezer has been one of the most critically praised and commercially successful alt-rock bands in the country, churning out more than a dozen albums and 15 Top Ten singles on the alt-rock charts. Their fans wanted them to record a cover of Toto’s mid-’80s hit “Africa,” so instead, they released another Toto hit, “Rosanna,” which led to “The Teal Album,” an LP of covers that included not only “Africa” but other iconic tunes like “Billie Jean,” “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” a-ha’s “Take On Me” and The Turtles’ 1967 hit “Happy Together.” They chose to remain faithful to the originals — “straight-ahead paint-by-numbers covers,” as one critic put it, “like something a wedding band might play.”

“Lean On Me,” Keb’ Mo’, 2022

Kevin Moore has been going by the Ebonic “Keb’ Mo'” version of his name since his debut in 1995, writing, recording and performing award-winning contemporary blues music. He has also dabbled in many convincing covers along the way, re-imagining traditional pieces like “America the Beautiful” and pop songs such as The Youngblood’s “Get Together,” Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely” and The Eagles’ “One Of These Nights.” In 2022, his 18th LP “Good To Be…” featured a compelling cover of the Bill Withers #1 hit “Lean On Me.”

“After the Gold Rush,” k.d. lang, 2004

Inspired by poet e.e. cummings and his use of lower-case letters, Kathryn Dawn Lang became k.d. lang upon her debut as a Canadian country singer in the late 1980s. She has won Grammy and Juno awards for her country, pop and folk music in the years since, especially for her 1992 LP “Ingenue” and its hits “Constant Craving” and “Miss Chatelaine.” She paid tribute to fellow Canadian musicians Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell and Neil Young on her 2004 LP “Hymns of the 49th Parallel” (the latitudinal line that comprises much of the border between Canada and the US). Feast your ears on her gorgeous cover of Young’s “After the Gold Rush.”

“Tougher Than the Rest,” Shawn Colvin, 2015

Colvin is best known for the 1997 Grammy Song of the Year “Sunny Came Home,” but there’s so much more in her rich catalog that’s well worth exploring. She typically records her own songs but has twice released albums of other composers’ work — 1994’s “Cover Girl,” on which she sang unknown songs, and 2015’s “Uncovered,” where she attempted familiar tracks like “Baker Street,” “American Tune,” Graham Nash’s “I Used to Be a King” and Creedence’s “Lodi.” From that LP, check out her credible arrangement of Bruce Springsteen’s “Tougher Than the Rest” from his 1987 album “Tunnel of Love.”

“Alone Again Naturally,” Diana Krall, 2014

Krall is an accomplished jazz singer and pianist, winning countless awards for her impressive albums on which she has favored time-honored standards by the likes of Hoagy Carmichael, Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and Sammy Cahn. In 2014, she chose to wrap her voice around some of the better pop ballads of the 1970s by artists as varied as Jim Croce, The Carpenters, 10cc and The Eagles for her album “Wallflower,” produced by David Foster. I was knocked out how she took an eye-roller like Gilbert O’Sullivan’s melancholy 1972 hit “Alone Again (Naturally)” and made it something rather extraordinary.

“Bluebird,” Corrine Bailey Rae, 2014

Since the mid-1990s, several albums have been released that gathered a range of popular artists to each record covers of songs by celebrated songwriters like Elton John and Bernie Taupin, Jackson Browne, Bob Dylan, Don Henley and Glenn Frey. On 2014’s “The Art of McCartney,” 42 different singers (Brian Wilson, Billy Joel, Smokey Robinson, Chrissie Hynde, B.B. King, Roger Daltrey, to name a few) paid tribute to the songs written by Sir Paul as a Beatle and a solo artist. Several of these tracks stood out to me, one being Corrine Bailey Rae’s version of “Bluebird,” the tender ballad from Wings’ 1973 LP “Band On the Run.”

“Can’t Find My Way Home,” Haley Reinhart, 2017

Reinhart came to the nation’s attention through the “American Idol” TV program, where contestants sing their versions of hit songs to show off their vocal chops. In Season 10 in 2012, Reinhart was a finalist, earning standing ovations for her renditions of songs by The Animals, Led Zeppelin and Adele. She won a record contract and has done well with superb covers of songs like Radiohead’s “Creep,” Elvis Presley’s “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” Janis Joplin’s “Piece of My Heart” and Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth.” From her “What’s That Sound?” LP in 2017, I’ve been impressed by the way she nailed Steve Winwood’s classic “Can’t Find My Way Home” from the 1969 “Blind Faith” album.

“For Free,” David Crosby with Sarah Jarosz, 2021

Crosby played a pivotal role in getting Joni Mitchell discovered back in 1968, bringing her to L.A. and producing her debut LP. In the mid-’70s, he and Graham Nash sometimes performed Mitchell’s song “For Free” (from her 1970 “Ladies of the Canyon” LP), and a recording of one of their performances ended up on the Crosby, Stills and Nash live album “Allies” in 1983. In 2021, Crosby decided to collaborate with singer Sarah Jarosz for a proper studio recording of “For Free” and made it the title track of what turned out to be his final album before his death in 2023. What a song. What a voice.

“Ode to Billie Joe,” Tom Scott with Patty Smyth, 1999

Saxophone great Tom Scott has appeared on more than 200 albums during his storied career, sometimes just contributing sax solos, sometimes as bandleader on his own albums. His work spans multiple genres — jazz fusion, rock, blues, country and pop — and in 1999, a new lineup of the L.A. Express accompanied him on his “Smokin’ Section” LP. It’s an all-instrumental album, with one exception: He invited the great Patty Smyth (formerly with ’80s band Scandal and a solo artist in the ’90s) to offer a potent vocal on a new arrangement of the 1967 hit by Bobbie Gentry, “Ode to Billie Joe.”

“Bell Bottom Blues,” Larkin Poe, 2020

Sisters Rebecca and Megan Lovell, based in Nashville, have built a following under the moniker Larkin Poe, the name of one of their ancestors. They have specialized in blues and Southern rock since their 2010 debut, releasing LPs and EPs and collaborations with other like-minded players. In 2020, they came up with “Kindred Spirits,” an album of covers of songs by Neil Young, The Allman Brothers, The Moody Blues, Elton John and Phil Collins. Not surprisingly, their most effective entry here is the Eric Clapton heartbreaker, “Bell Bottom Blues,” from the Derek and The Dominos’ “Layla” double album.

“Immigrant Song,” Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross with Karen O, 2011

In 2010, filmmaker David Fincher tapped Atticus Ross and Ten Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor to provide the electro-industrial soundtrack for his movie “The Social Network,” and their work earned an Oscar for Best Soundtrack. They were an obvious choice the following year when Fincher needed an edgy soundtrack for his film version of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.” The highlight of the soundtrack LP, featured in the popular trailer as well, was a spectacular take on Led Zeppelin’s chaotic “Immigrant Song” from “Led Zeppelin III,” with Karen O of Yeah Yeah Yeahs shredding the lead vocals.

“Space Oddity,” Brandi Carlile, 2022

Carlile has been everywhere lately, notably as cheerleader and collaborator for the return to the stage of Joni Mitchell, but her albums have been generating lavish praise since her 2005 debut. Each LP has performed better than the one before, and her two most recent works — “By the Way, I Forgive You” (2018) and “In These Silent Days” (2021) — have won awards, notably the anthemic ballad “The Joke” from 2017. She chose to re-release “In These Silent Days” in 2022 with acoustic treatments of the songs, and then added a startling cover version of David Bowie’s landmark “Space Oddity” as the closer.

“The Sound of Silence,” Disturbed, 2015

Surely one of the most unlikely covers recorded in recent years was this heavy metal band’s reinterpretation of Simon and Garfunkel’s 1965 classic. “I was surprised,” said Paul Simon in response to Disturbed’s performance of his song on “Late Night With Conan O’Brien” in 2016. “It was pretty moving.” Disturbed has released four #1 LPs since 2002, mostly original material, and had covered a few tunes from the ’80s like Tears for Fears’ “Shout” and U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” but this was a much bigger departure for them. “We’re aggressive, but also intensely melodic,” claimed lead singer David Draiman, “and the song is about isolation and darkness, so maybe it wasn’t all that strange for us to give it a shot.”

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