I come from a land down under

What do Helen Reddy and AC/DC have in common?

Virtually nothing — except for the fact that they’re both major musical artists from Australia.

In pop and rock music history, the overwhelming majority of artists found on the US charts through the years have been American-born. Beginning in the ’60s with the so-called “British Invasion” led by The Beatles, the United Kingdom established a major beachhead here they’ve never relinquished, holding on to the #2 slot ever since.

Canada — with dozens of artists like Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Gordon Lightfoot, The Guess Who, Bryan Adams, Leonard Cohen, The Band, and Rush — ranks third, in large part because of their close proximity to the US and the shared English language.

Australia comes in at a fairly distant fourth, with bands and artists who generally fall somewhere in the pop and rock genres, but their combined contributions through the years have been substantial in terms of sales and impact.

As English-speaking acts, Australian musicians have had a leg up on those from non-English speaking countries, but, except for the biggest groups, their ability to reach the American market has often been hampered by the substantial costs of travel and sufficient promotion.

Indie pop singer Amy Shark, a relatively new major star in Australia with three #1 albums since 2018, said she understands both the struggles and triumphs musicians face when attempting to establish themselves in the US from the other side of the world.

“I think it’s always a little dangling carrot for us,” she says discussing the dream of ‘cracking’ America. “It’s a romantic thing. We’re like, ‘I can’t believe I get to play in these same venues as these artists that I’ve worshipped.’ It’s wild. The main obstacle is the cost of touring. The crew, the accommodations, the flights. It’s a joke. Have we got anyone doing lights? Production? You’re going to be in the red for ages.”

The question becomes, why bother breaking in America? “Definitely, over the years,” said Shark, “I’ve wrestled with ‘What do I actually want to do it for? Is it for my own ego or is it going to benefit anything?’ I guess it is just the love of it – seeing the world and playing music.”

Here are what I consider the prime examples of Australian artists who achieved commercial success on US charts in the ’60s, ’70s and/or ’80s:

The band with Bon Scott (right)

AC/DC

Formed in Sydney in 1973 by brothers Angus and Malcolm Young, AC/DC was named for the two kinds of electricity (Alternating Current and Direct Current), which band members felt symbolized their raw energy and power-driven performances. Their musical style was inspired by Australian pub rock, which has been described by Aussie music writer Glenn Baker as “rib-crushing, blood-curdling, brain damaging, no bullshit, thunder rock — not like that American sound, smooth and creamy, nicey, nicey.”

Their first two LPs were released only in Australia, and the next four, though distributed internationally, managed to reach only the lower rungs of the US album charts, while they gradually increased their exposure by touring as a supporting act for Black Sabbath, Aerosmith, Ted Nugent, Kiss and Blue Oyster Cult. That changed in 1979 with the release of “Highway to Hell,” which peaked at #17 in the US and propelled them to the top ranks of hard rock acts. The alcohol poisoning death of lead singer Bon Scott in 1980 only served to strengthen their resolve as they replaced him with Brit singer Brian Johnson and dedicated their next LP, “Back in Black,” to Scott. That album has gone to sell 50 million copies worldwide, one of biggest sellers of all time.

The band with Brian Johnson (right)

AC/DC further cemented their formidable reputation among hard rock/heavy metal devotees with 1981’s “For Those About to Rock” and the re-release of 1976’s “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap,” both Top Five albums in America. They have gone on to great success with another nine LPs between 1983 and 2020, most notably the multi-platinum LPs “The Razor’s Edge” (1990), “Ballbreaker” (1995) and “Black Ice” (2008). Always considered more on an album band than a singles band, AC/DC still appeared three times on US Top 40 pop charts (“You Shook Me All Night Long,” “Back in Black” and “Moneytalks”).

I can’t say I’m a fan of the group, largely because I find the banshee vocalizing of Scott and Johnson pretty much unlistenable, but based on album sales alone, I’m apparently in the minority. I guess I’m just not in AC/DC’s target audience. But I sure got a kick out of the way they poked fun at their critics with self-deprecating comments like this one from Malcolm Young in 1988: “I’m sick to death of people saying we’ve made 11 albums that sound exactly the same. In fact, we’ve made 12 albums that sound exactly the same.”

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Barry, Robin and Maurice in 1960

The Bee Gees

Although they were born in Britain, the Brothers Gibb (Barry, Robin and Maurice) were raised near Brisbane and first achieved fame as teenage recording artists in Australia and New Zealand. Barry Gibb wrote the singles and nearly all the songs on the trio’s early albums, reaching the Top 20 on Australian pop charts in 1965 and 1966 with “Wine and Women” and “Spicks and Specks,” but these never saw the light of day in the US or the UK.

Eager for success internationally, they returned to England in 1967, signing with impresario Robert Stigwood, who had the audacity to promote them heavily as a pop vocal band on par with The Beatles. Incredibly, many critics tended to agree, and The Bee Gees ended up charting four Top 20 LPs in the US in 1967-1969, based on the strength of a handful of popular singles — “To Love Somebody,” “Holiday,” “Massachusetts,” “I Gotta Get a Message to You” and “I Started a Joke,” among others.

The brothers in 1970

I think their finest moment came in 1970 when their single “Lonely Days” peaked at #3 on US charts. To me, its melody and harmonies truly resembled The Beatles, especially Barry Gibb’s Lennonesque singing on the chorus. I was far less enamored by their first US #1, “How Can You Mend a Broken Heart,” which featured Robin Gibb’s warbly, affected vocals.

By the mid-’70s, The Bee Gees hopped onto the disco music train and became one of the biggest groups in the world. “Jive Talkin’,” “Nights on Broadway” and “You Should Be Dancing,” all Top Ten singles here, put Barry Gibb’s falsetto front and center, setting the stage for the worldwide success of their songs from the soundtrack to “Saturday Night Fever,” one of the top sellers in music history, and their “Spirits Having Flown” LP in 1979 (with the three #1 singles “Too Much Heaven,” “Tragedy” and “Loving You Inside Out”).

They lived to regret becoming the poster boys for the disco genre once it died an ignoble death in the early ’80s. Barry Gibb had more success as a songwriter and occasional solo artist than The Bee Gees did as a group in the 1980s and 1990s, although their 1989 single “One” gave them one last US Top Ten chart appearance. Maurice and Robin died in 2003 and 2012, respectively, while Barry is now regarded as a bonafide elder statesman of pop/rock.

Meanwhile, their much younger brother, Andy Gibb, had a first-class ticket on that same disco train his brothers were driving, enjoying a simultaneous solo career with eight hit singles during that same 1977-1979 period (most notably “I Just Want to Be Your Everything,” “(Love is) Thicker Than Water” and “Shadow Dancing”). Unfortunately, being marketed as a teen idol got the better of him, and he sadly fell victim to drug addiction and clinical depression, dying in 1988 at age 30.

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INXS

Emerging from Sydney in 1980 with a new wave/ska/pop style, INXS found success on Australian charts with the single “The Loved One,” which attracted the attention of A&R people at Warner Music. In 1982, INXS broke into the Top 30 in the US with “The One Thing,” from their third LP, “Shabooh Shoobah,” which performed respectably at #52 on US album charts. INXS toured the US and Europe relentlessly in 1984, and their LP of that year, “The Swing,” became one of the biggest selling domestic albums in Australia up to that point.

Beginning in 1985, INXS, led by charismatic lead singer Michael Hutchence, became major stars in the US with a string of top-selling albums and singles. “What You Need” from their “Listen Like Thieves” album peaked at #5 on US singles charts, which became the opening salvo of an impressive run of upbeat, confident rock songs in the late ’80s: “Need You Tonight,” “New Sensation,” “Devil Inside” (my favorite), “Never Tear Us Apart,” “Suicide Blonde” and “Disappear” all made the Top Ten, and they gained significant exposure on MTV then as well.

In a 1988 interview, Hutchence spoke about the differences between Australian fame and US fame. “There’s one thing that working in Australia a long time doesn’t prepare you for, and that is what they call in America ‘becoming a star,'” he said. “We don’t really have a star system in Australia. It doesn’t exist. There’s no use in becoming one, or acting like one, or pretending you’re one, because it doesn’t get you anywhere. In fact, it’s really the worst thing you can do there. When we’re on tour in the States, though, I get pretty terrified, to be honest. You really have to muster a lot of ego to go out there and bigger than a huge crowd of 20,000 people, which I find rather draining. Sometimes I just want to curl up on stage and just lie there for a while.”

In the ’90s, INXS’s popularity dropped off somewhat in the US, but British and Australian audiences continued to give them major support. The release of “Elegantly Wasted” in 1997 proved to be their last big success, largely due to Hutchence’s apparent suicide later that year in a Sydney hotel room. The rest of the band attempted to proceed with a new singer but never came close to matching their late ’80s success, particularly in the US.

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Men at Work

Lead singer-songwriter Colin Hay had emigrated from Scotland to Melbourne at age 14, and by his mid-20s had formed an acoustic duo with Australian guitarist/singer Ron Strykert. They soon saw the wisdom in adding a drummer and keyboardist and, later, multi-instrumentalist Greg Ham and forming a band they called Men at Work, performing hundreds of shows in Australia and New Zealand in 1980 until being signed by CBS Records. With this major label support, they completed their debut LP, “Business As Usual,” and reached #1 in Australia with both the debut single, “Who Can It Be Now?”, and its follow-up, “Down Under.” Critics were kind to the band, saying the album “generally stays at a high level, tight and jerky. There is also a delicacy about this music, which isn’t something often said about Australian rock groups. The flute and reeds of Greg Ham do much to further that.”

Still, it took some sustained cajoling for more than a year to convince the US parent company to release the album in North America. Men at Work toured Canada and the US as a support act for Fleetwood Mac in the summer of 1982, which gave them the exposure they needed for “Who Can It Be Now?” to climb the charts, reaching #1 in the fall. Even bigger was the catchy “Down Under,” featuring Ham’s flute, which held on to the #1 slot for five weeks in the US in early 1983. The lyrics, which tell the tale of an Australian man travelling the globe meeting people who are interested in his home country, captured the imagination of US listeners who had known next to nothing about Australia. Said co-writer Hay, “The chorus is really about the selling of Australia. It’s really about the plundering of the country by greedy people. It’s ultimately about celebrating the country, but not in a nationalistic, flag-waving sense. It’s more about the culture.”

The band’s second album, “Cargo” — recorded in ’82 but held back because the debut was doing so well in the US — reached #3 in May ’83 and spawned three more big singles, “Be Good Johnny,” “Overkill” and “It’s a Mistake.” Internal tension between band members and their manager caused a rift which negatively affected their momentum and resulted in their third and final album, “Two Hearts,” stalling at #50. It featured too many drum machines and synthesizers and not enough sax and flute, with the result being no charting singles. Men, it seems, were no longer At Work.

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Crowded House

Singer/guitarist/songwriter Neil Finn, who had headed the New Zealand band Split Enz in the ’70s, formed a new band called The Mullanes in 1985 in Melbourne. After getting signed by Capitol Records and moving to Los Angeles to record their debut LP, they changed their name to Crowded House, after the tiny place they were renting together there. Capitol initially failed to promote them adequately, but their second single, “Don’t Dream It’s Over,” was an instant smash in the US, reaching #2, followed by “Something So Strong,” another US Top Ten hit.

Finn’s engaging vocals and keen sense of pop song structure served Crowded House well with a handful of catchy tunes like “Weather With You,” “Into Temptation,” “Chocolate Cake,” “Fall At Your Feet,” “It’s Only Natural,” “Pineapple Head” and “Private Universe.” By the third LP, “Woodface,” Finn’s brother Tim (who had been in Split Enz) joined the lineup briefly. The band toured internationally until dissolving in 1996 following the release of “Recurring Dream,” a hugely popular “Best Of” collection that reached #1 in Australia and New Zealand.

Finn went on to release some solo albums and collaborations with his brother over the next 20 years, and Crowded House occasionally reunited for short tours to promote new albums like “Time On Earth” (2007) and “Intriguer” (2010).

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Air Supply

The soft rock duo of Englishman Graham Russell and Australian Russell Hitchcock, who formed in Melbourne in 1975, hit the big time on US charts as Air Supply in the early ’80s. The duo had met while performing in the chorus of the Australian production of “Jesus Christ Superstar” and went on to form Air Supply as a five-man band.

They struggled on the Australian music scene for several years until two big breaks occurred. When they opened for Rod Stewart on his Australian dates in 1978, he invited them to continue on the North American legs of his tour. That exposure caught the attention of Clive Davis at Arista Records just as the bulk of the band chose to drop out, but Davis proceeded with just Russell and Hitchcock and session musicians.

Four consecutive LPs reached the Top 30, spurred on by a string of eight Top Ten singles between 1980 and 1983: “Lost in Love,” “All Out of Love,” “Every Woman in the World,” “The One That You Love,” “Here I Am,” “Sweet Dreams,” “Even the Nights Are Better” and “Making Love Out of Nothing at All.” By the late 1990s, Air Supply’s US audience had dwindled, but they remained popular in several Asian countries for years to come.

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Midnight Oil

Formed in the early ’70s, Midnight Oil began recording in 1978, developed a fiercely loyal cult audience and evolved into one of Australia’s most beloved bands. In addition to their studio albums, they have been celebrated for their energetic live shows, sparked by lead singer Peter Garrett‘s frenetic dancing and commanding vocal delivery.

Their fourth LP, 1982’s “10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1,” was their first to crack the Top Ten in Australia and their first to appear on US album charts, albeit in the lower registers. “Red Sails in the Sunset,” their first #1 LP in Australia, began a three-album run of chart-topping albums at home. The band truly broke through in North America with their “Diesels and Dust” LP in 1987 and “Blue Sky Mining” in 1990, propelled by the hit singles “Beds Are Burning” (#17) and “Blue Sky Mine” (#1 on US Mainstream Rock charts) and “Forgotten Years.” US critics were at first lukewarm about the group, but eventually cottoned to them to the point where they wrote things like, “If Midnight Oil were from New Jersey, they’d be bigger than U2. Finally someone is playing stuff that’s musically idiosyncratic, fresh and strong, and authentic.”

One more LP, 1993’s “Earth and Sun and Moon,” fared well in the US before they pretty much dropped off American charts. They have continued making an impact domestically and in Europe in the years since, and have been admired enough by other bands (Pearl Jam, U2, The Killers, Imagine Dragons) that they have recorded cover versions of some of their songs.

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Little River Band

The six members of Little River Band had all been in other groups when they formed in Melbourne in 1975, making them a sort of Australian supergroup. They chose to set up shop in the US in order to crack that market. They give credit to their savvy manager Glenn Wheatley, who had been involved in the US and UK music industry in the ’60s and knew how to navigate the potential pitfalls. They didn’t click immediately with US audiences, but they persevered and ending up being the first Australian band to enjoy continued commercial success in the US.

With guitarist/vocalist Graham Gobles handling the chief songwriter role, Little River Band scored six albums of likable pop rock that made the Top Ten in Australia between 1976 and 1985, three of which reached the Top 20 in the US: “Sleeper Catcher” (1978), “First Under the Wire” (1979) and “Time Exposure” (1981). The group charted an impressive 12 times with singles in the Top 30 on US pop charts, most notably “Help Is On Its Way,” “Happy Anniversary,” “Reminiscing,” “Lady,” “Lonesome Loser,” “Cool Changer” and “The Night Owls.”

Having sold upwards of 30 million records, Little River Band is considered one of Australia’s most significant musical exports.

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Olivia Newton-John

Born in Cambridge, England, Newton-John was just six when her family moved to Melbourne. She was 14 when she formed her first group, Sol Four, with three girls from school. Program directors at local Australian TV stations began featuring her in solo performances under the name “Lovely Livvy.” At 18, she came in first in a talent contest and won a trip to Britain, where she recorded her first single, “’Til You Say You’ll Be Mine” (although it failed to chart).

Her first chart appearance came in 1971 with a cover of Bob Dylan’s “If Not For You,” which reached #7 in the UK, #25 on the US pop chart and her first #1 on the US “adult contemporary” chart. This kicked off a run of five featherweight, quasi-country singles that established her presence on Top 40 radio through the mid-’70s: “I Will Be There,” “If You Love Me (Let Me Know),” “I Honestly Love You,” “Have You Never Been Mellow” and “Please Mr. Please.”

Newton-John’s career took on a different arc in 1978 when she was cast in “Grease.” She not only turned in a winning acting performance but also gave the mega-platinum soundtrack album its biggest hits: “Summer Nights,” “Hopelessly Devoted to You” and especially “You’re the One That I Want,” her duet with Travolta that served as the film’s finale after she’d morphed into the tough chick in skintight black pants and red stiletto heels. She had become Australia’s most successful artist on US charts.

By 1981, she was doing workout videotapes, based on the runaway success of the album “Physical,” the title track of which claimed the #1 spot on US pop charts for an astounding ten weeks. She died in 2022 at age 73.

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Helen Reddy

Another child star from Melbourne, Helen Reddy was pushed into singing and dancing on the vaudeville circuit there, eventually rebelling at age 16 against her parents’ plans for her stardom. Still, she returned to singing in her early 20s and won several Australian TV talent contests, earning her a one-off record deal with Capitol. In New York, she recorded “I Don’t Know How to Love Him,” which had been sung by Yvonne Elliman on the “Jesus Christ Superstar” project, and both versions competed for airplay in the spring of 1971, with Reddy’s version reaching #13 on US charts. That paved the way for a long-term contract that launched a successful career as a recording artist and entertainer in the US and elsewhere.

In 1972, the iconic “I Am Woman” became her first of Reddy’s three #1 hits (along with “Delta Dawn” and “Angie Baby”), plus another ten in the Top 40 here, culled from six Top 20 albums between 1972 and 1976. At the first-ever American Music Awards in 1974, Reddy won Best Pop/Rock Female Artist, and she was also a frequent guest on TV variety shows and an occasional host of the “Midnight Special” music showcase. She served as a mentor and cheerleader for Olivia Newton-John when she was still a relative unknown. Reddy continued performing well into the 1990s before switching gears to become a motivational speaker in the 2000s.

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Rick Springfield

At age 22, the Sydney-born Rick Springfield left the Australian band Zoot to begin a solo career, getting a hit on his first try with “Speak to the Sky,” which not only reached #6 in Australia but also #14 on US charts. When his singing career stalled, he pursued acting opportunities throughout the 1970s, getting episodic work on programs like “The Six Million Dollar Man,” “The Rockford Files, “Wonder Woman” and “The Incredible Hulk.”

In 1981, Springfield’s dual career exploded in a big way. Almost simultaneously, he scored a #1 single with “Jessie’s Girl” and secured a lead role on the daytime soap “General Hospital.” He went on to chart four albums in the Top 20 in the 1980s, with more Top Ten singles like “I’ve Done Everything For You,””Don’t Talk to Strangers,” “Affair of the Heart” and “Love Somebody.” In 1984, he reached #27 with a self-parody tune called “Bruce,” with comical lyrics about being mistaken for Bruce Springsteen.

When his recording career waned, he focused on acting, appearing on shows like “True Detectives,” “Californication,” “American Horror Story” and even returned to his role as Noah Drake on “General Hospital.”

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The Seekers

This wholesome, folk-influenced vocal group from Melbourne featuring lead singer Judith Durham scored nine chart hits in their native land, and had the distinction of being the first Australian group to reach the charts in the US. Three of The Seekers’ hits made the US Top 40 — “I’ll Never Find Another You” (which reached #4 in 1965); “A World of Our Own” (a #19 hit in 1965); and “Georgy Girl,” a popular #2 single from the soundtrack of the 1967 Lynn Redgrave film of the same name.

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The Easybeats

Comprised of five transplanted Brits who formed in Sydney in 1965, The Easybeats had ten solid hit singles in Australia in the 1965-1969 period. In the US, though, they qualify as a “One-Hit Wonder,” thanks to the iconic hard rock nugget “Friday On My Mind,” a working-class anthem that peaked at #16 here in 1966. In 2001, it was voted Best Australian Song of all time by a panel of 100 Australian music industry personalities. (Other stars like David Bowie and Peter Frampton recorded covers of the tune in 1973 and 1981, respectively.)

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The following bands were relegated to my “Honorable Mention” list, mostly because their fame came after the ’60s-’70s-’80s period that this blog typically covers. I’ve included a second Spotify playlist for a sampling of their music.

The Church; Nick Cave & Bad Seeds; Kylie Minogue; The Divinyls; Natalie Imbruglia; The Vines; Keith Urban; Jet; Tame Impala; Gotye; Vance Joy; For King & Country.

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I also offer the names of a handful of bands from that period that have been very popular in Australia but made little or no inroads in the US market. Feel free to explore them on your own:

John Michael O’Keefe; The Angels; Hoodoo Gurus; Tommy Emmanuel; Powderfinger; The Avalanches; Grizzard and the Lizard Wizards.

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Say I’m old fashioned, say I’m over the hill

It’s time once again for another dive deep into the long-ignored waters of the albums of the 1960s and 1970s to remind you all of the great hidden music to be found there.

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Classic rock stations are happy to overexpose you to the same two or three or four songs from a band’s repertoire that you know all too well.  You know the tired old format:  If they play Led Zeppelin, you can be sure it’ll be “Stairway to Heaven,” “Whole Lotta Love,” “Black Dog,” “Immigrant Song,” “Fool in the Rain” or “D’yer Ma’ker” (or, if you’re lucky, “Kashmir”).  But good God, there are another five dozen great Zep tracks just sitting there, waiting to be exhumed!

My job here, as I see it, is to select a dozen or so great “lost gems” from classic albums and entice you to dig them out, look them up, and savor their deliciousness.

I urge you to send me your suggestions of other excellent forgotten tracks I can include in future blog posts about these wonderful old songs.

Rock on, everybody!

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“It’s Up to You,” The Moody Blues, 1970

It’s no secret that guitarist/singer Justin Hayward has always been the songwriting wizard of The Moody Blues, one of the true pioneers of what became known as progressive rock.  Their collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra on 1967’s “Days of Future Passed” (including the eventual worldwide hit “Nights in White Satin”) was an unprecedented merger of disparate musical genres. By 1970, the band had already shown a keen knack for crafting album-length song cycles, and their #3-ranked LP “A Question of Balance” was the best yet, an intelligent, challenging musical lesson in coping with a world ravaged by war and environmental indifference.  Songs like the hit single “Question” and “Dawning is the Day” were Hayward compositions that asked sobering queries about our future, and the clincher, “It’s Up to You,” is the appealing, hopeful apex, urging us all to get involved and help save the planet from extinction.

“Georgia,” Boz Scaggs, 1976

Born in Ohio, raised in Texas, Scaggs met up with Steve Miller as a teenager, and they eventually collaborated in San Francisco on The Steve Miller Band’s first two albums, “Children of the World” and “Sailor.”  Boz went out on his own in ’69 with a self-titled debut that included the legendary 10-minute “Loan Me a Dime,” anchored by a smokin’ lead guitar performance by the late great Duane Allman.  Always rooted in R&B, Scaggs’ solo albums leaned toward blue-eyed soul, culminating in 1976 in the trendsetting #2 LP “Silk Degrees,” with four hit singles, most notably “Lowdown” and “Lido Shuffle.”  The LP also included Scaggs’ fine ballad “We’re All Alone,” made famous by Rita Coolidge.  The hidden gem on this album could be the sensual “Harbor Lights,” which is music to undress to, but I prefer the joyous, upbeat “Georgia,” which, by the way, is a tribute to a woman, not the state.

“Chain Lightning,” Steely Dan, 1975

You can make a convincing case that Steely Dan’s seven albums during its 1972-1980 period represented the most consistently excellent music of the Seventies.  By far the most underrated of the those LPs, in my opinion, is 1975’s “Katy Lied.”  The band’s songwriting masterminds, Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, have forlornly disparaged the album because of a studio mishap that allegedly damaged the master tapes and rendered it “unlistenable” (to their audiophile ears), but frankly, I can’t figure out what they’re talking about.  To me, it sounds incredible, full of killer pop/jazz hooks, stunning vocals, standout instrumental passages (dig the Phil Woods sax solo on “Doctor Wu”) and some of the best dark-humor lyrics in the entire Dan catalog.  Almost any track would be a worthy candidate for this “lost gems” list, but I’m going with the sublime, blues-based “Chain Lightning.”

“On the Border,” Al Stewart, 1976

The singer-songwriter era — popularized by James Taylor, Joni Mitchell, Cat Stevens, Carole King and others — had peaked by 1976.  Still, there were promising acoustic-based artists in the US and England who continued to press forward, and Glasgow-born Al Stewart was one of them.  He had released four albums in Britain between 1967 and 1972, without much success, and two more LPs (1973’s “Past, Present and Future” and 1975’s “Modern Times”) saw modest exposure on US radio playlists.  And then came his seventh and best LP, “Year of the Cat,” in 1976.  Some found his distinctly nasal voice off-putting, but there was no denying his finely structured story-songs, beautifully performed and produced on this album, with nary a weak moment.  The title track fought through the relentless onslaught of disco music at the time to reach #8 on the Billboard charts, but the track that has always blown me away is “On the Border,” featuring the fine Spanish guitar work of Peter White.

“The Only Living Boy in New York,” Simon and Garfunkel, 1970

At the time of the January 1970 release of the award-winning “Bridge Over Troubled Water” LP, the primary buzz was all about the shimmering title anthem, and the interesting choices for follow-up singles, “El Condor Pasa” and “Cecilia.”  We’d already heard and embraced another album track, “The Boxer,” as a landmark single nearly a year earlier.  But there were three or four other outstanding songs on the album that got no airplay whatsoever, and the best of those, “The Only Living Boy in New York,” ranks among my top four or five Paul Simon compositions of all time.  It tells the story of Tom (a veiled reference to Art Garfunkel’s late ’50s persona, when the duo was known as Tom and Jerry) heading to Mexico to act in a movie (“Catch-22”), leaving his partner behind in New York to work alone on their next album.  It aggravated their tenuous relationship to the point where Simon chose to end it and go solo a year later.  But what a gorgeous final statement, only recently resurrected during the duo’s 2004 “Old Friends” reunion tour.

“Woman of Heart and Mind,” Joni Mitchell, 1972

Nobody can write an autobiographical confession song like Miss Mitchell, whose first six or seven albums (1968-1974) are a virtual diary of her love life and childhood reveries.  Usually with only spare guitar or piano accompaniment, Joni offered up searing portraits of herself and her various relationships on memorable songs like “Blonde in the Bleachers,” “I Had a King,” “My Old Man,” “See You Sometime,” “Little Green,” “A Case of You” and “Car on a Hill.”  It’s difficult to pick which one of her many poignant deep album tracks to bring out into the light here, but I’ve settled on the incredible “Woman of Heart and Mind” from her 1972 “For the Roses” LP.  Joni cuts to the bone by sizing herself up this way:  “You think I’m like your mother, or another lover, or a sister, or the queen of your dreams, or just another silly girl…”  It’s a devastatingly personal piece of work, and beautiful in its simplicity.

“Samba Pa Ti,” Santana, 1970

Mention the Santana LP “Abraxas” and everyone automatically thinks of the #1 hit “Black Magic Woman” (actually written and first recorded by Peter Green’s original version of Fleetwood Mac in 1968), or maybe the Latino-flavored “Oye Como Va.”  Carlos Santana had assembled a delicious brew of African-American, Caucasian and Latino musicians in San Francisco that enjoyed an explosive national debut at Woodstock in 1969, and “Abraxas” was a marvelous smorgasbord of their best work.  Often overlooked, though, was the band’s mellower side on smoldering instrumental tracks like “Samba Pa Ti,” where Carlos’s expressive guitar led the way through a sensual first part into a more upbeat second half that leaves listeners emotionally drained.

“Winter,” The Rolling Stones, 1973

Following the brilliant four-LP dominance of “Beggars Banquet,” “Let It Bleed,” “Sticky Fingers” and “Exile on Main Street,” the Stones found themselves pretty much out of songs, out of vibes and out of gas.  For their mostly disappointing 1973 LP “Goat’s Head Soup,” Jagger and Richards conjured up the acoustic gem “Angie” (which became yet another #1 single for them), and the horn-driven stomper “Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker),” but the rest of the album seemed flat and uninspired.  The obvious exception was “Winter,” a compellingly melancholy collaboration between Jagger and second guitarist Mick Taylor, who ended up leaving the band a year later (replaced by Ronnie Wood).  Taylor’s layered-chord approach offered a striking contrast to the choppy riffs of Richards, who didn’t appear on the track at all.

“Within You Without You,” The Beatles, 1967

I remember, at age 13, pointedly skipping this strange, otherworldly song whenever I lowered the needle onto Side Two of the “Sgt. Pepper” LP, but years later, I developed a deep respect for George Harrison’s thoughtful, sitar-driven piece and its spiritually cosmic lyrics.  The colorful phantasm of “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds,” wistful storytelling of “She’s Leaving Home,” communal warmth of “With a Little Help From My Friends” and unparalleled brilliance of “A Day in the Life” all combine to give the “Sgt. Pepper” album its legendary status as one of the best in rock history.  But take the time to consider Harrison’s boundary-stretching musical arrangement, and his all-knowing words derived from Eastern philosophy:  “Try to realize it’s all within yourself, no one else can make you change, and to see you’re really only very small, and life flows on within you and without you…” Many critics labeled the song as “the conscience of the album” and “its ethical soul,” and I’m inclined to agree.

“Kitty’s Back,” Bruce Springsteen, 1973

It’s hard to imagine the rock landscape without the dominance of Bruce Springsteen’s presence, but in 1973-1974, he and The E Street Band were still struggling mightily for exposure, recognition and stardom.  The Boss’s first LP had stalled at #60 on Billboard’s album charts.  His second LP, the magnificent “The Wild, The Innocent and the E Street Shuffle,” was also largely ignored at the time, despite amazing, epic songs like “Rosalita,” “Asbury Park, Fourth of July (Sandy)” and “Incident on 57th Street.”  In the years since, “Rosalita” has been properly acknowledged as a titanic track full of Bruce’s early exuberance, but we mustn’t overlook the wonder that is “Kitty’s Back,” a seven-minute cauldron of simmering emotion and over-the-top joy, carried by a relentless beat and tight ensemble playing, led by Clarence Clemon’s monstrous sax riffs.

“Fire,” Jimi Hendrix Experience, 1967

What a firestorm Jimi Hendrix was!  The Seattle-born guitarist moved to London in 1966, formed his legendary trio, and recorded one of the most incendiary debuts of all time, “Are You Experienced?”  By mid-summer, the rock music world knew all about this virtuoso, thanks to a show-stopping appearance at the Monterey Pop Festival and the amazing music from that first LP.  The singles “Hey Joe,” “Purple Haze” and “The Wind Cries Mary” had all reached Top Five in the UK, but the fickle US singles market failed to embrace any of them. However, the rock music scene was changing that year, and fans began preferring albums over singles, and they sent “Are You Experienced?” to #5 on US album charts, the first of four consecutive Top Five LPs here before he died prematurely in 1970.  One of the most astonishing tracks, rarely heard on the radio, is the compact 2:34-length song “Fire,” which features The Experience’s guitar/bass/drums mix at its best, particularly the work of drummer Mitch Mitchell.

“When the Levee Breaks,” Led Zeppelin, 1971

By 1971, Led Zep had become the undisputed kings of hard rock, both on record and in concert, and they were eager for their fourth LP to blow everyone’s minds.  With “Stairway to Heaven” leading the way, the album — released without an official title, but known as “Zoso,” “Led Zeppelin IV” or even “Untitled” — is still regarded as their masterpiece.  The complicated syncopation of “Black Dog,” the rollicking onslaught of “Rock and Roll,” the band’s quieter acoustic side beautifully represented by the mandolin-heavy “The Battle of Evermore” and the Page/Plant tribute to Joni Mitchell, “Going to California” — it all came together majestically.  But for many true fans, the earthshaking moment on the LP is the seismic closer, “When the Levee Breaks,” a song which actually dates back to the 1930s and legendary blues woman Lizzie “Memphis Minnie” Douglas.  John Bonham’s drums alone — recorded in a cavernous stone atrium/stairwell in an English countryside castle — are unlike anything you’ve ever heard before or since.

More “lost gems” to come!  There are SO MANY waiting to be rediscovered!