Yesterday,
in the one-shot edition of the Saturday Timeline, we took a trip back
in time to the year 1981. And, on this edition of the Sunday
Jukebox, we're going to be going back in time to the year 1981 as
well.
(Hey,
it's this blogger's birthday weekend! I think I can celebrate it for
however long I want!)
Of
course, here's a bit of a quandary for myself. I had a hard time
picking a song for this week.
Don't
get me wrong. I love 1980s music. I think that whole decade between
1980 and 1989 was one of the most creative periods in the music
industry, and I would say that the vast majority of my music
collection is from that decade.
This
being said, of all the ten years that make up the 1980s, ironically
enough the year 1981 is my least favourite.
I'm
not entirely sure as to why this was the case, but looking through my
collection of 1980s music, 1981 is the year that is least
represented.
I
can only speculate why this is the case based on what was happening
at the time. You see, 1981 was kind of one of those transitional
years. Disco was long dead, and New Wave was on its way to becoming
the standard for pop music. But that period in between that
transition was a real mosaic of different genres. I guess it could
be best described in the words of Donny and Marie Osmond, as in that
the charts were “a little bit country, a little bit rock and roll”.
And,
maybe a little bit of new wave, a little bit of dance music, a little
bit of rock, and yes, even a dash of disco.
That's
how muddled the Billboard Charts of 1981 were. When else in history
can you see Rick Springfield, Alabama, Blondie, Joan Jett, Olivia
Newton-John, Kim Carnes, Air Supply, and Sheena Easton charting in
the same year? Not often, I bet.
Still
though...there were some classic gems coming out of the music scene
the same year that I was born. Duran Duran released their debut
album that year, as did the Stray Cats and Kim Wilde. One of John
Lennon's final singles, “Woman” was released just weeks after his
death, and it remains one of my all-time favourite songs of '81.
Phil Collins was also coming into his own as a solo artist after
years of performing with Genesis with “In The Air Tonight” and “I
Missed Again”. And, I'll readily admit to being a “not-so-closet”
Hall & Oates fan, as 1981 was one of the duo's biggest success
years to date.
And,
then there's the Top 20 hit by an all-girl group from Los Angeles,
California in which two of the band members launched solo careers,
and as of 2013 are still performing gigs today.
ARTIST:
The Go-Go's
SONG:
Our Lips Are Sealed
ALBUM:
Beauty and the Beat
DATE
RELEASED: June 12, 1981
PEAK
POSITION ON THE BILLBOARD CHARTS:
#20
Now,
there's a couple of reasons why I chose this song in particular.
One, it fits with the “Made in '81” theme, and two, it's probably
the one song that helped establish this group in the pop music scene.
The
Go-Go's were formed in Los Angeles circa 1978, and the original
line-up consisted of four members. They were Belinda Carlisle
(vocals), Jane Wiedlin (guitar/vocals), Elissa Bello (drums), and
Margot Olivarria (bass). But, they didn't exactly adopt the classic
pop image and retro 1950's stage look right off the bat. Believe it
or not, they started off as a punk rock group, and in the late 1970s,
the group were regular fixtures at Whiskey A Go Go and The Masque.
During this time, there was a brief turnover in band members. A
fifth member, Charlotte Caffey, was hired as the band's new
keyboardist, while Gina Schock replaced Elissa Bello in early 1979.
The
band began to get noticed right around the time they cut their first
demo record. In late 1979, the band recorded their five track
cassette in Los Angeles, and spent most of the first half of 1980 on
tour in England, supporting ska revival band Madness. The band
gained a following in the UK, and even released a rough copy of their
single “We Got The Beat”, a single that was a big success in
early 1982 in North America.
But
in 1980, another band member would have to be replaced. Margot
Olavarria contracted Hepatitis A, and was forced to leave the band to
seek treatment. She was replaced by Kathy Valentine. But there was
a lot more to Olavarria's departure from the band than what was let
on. Belinda Carlisle later revealed that Olavarria was shown the
door for skipping out on rehearsals, with Olavarria not meshing with
the pop sound the Go-Go's were experimenting with at that time. A
lawsuit was launched by Olavarria against the rest of the band soon
after, and was settled in 1984.
In
April 1981, the Go-Go's landed a record deal with I.R.S. Records, and
just three months later, the band released their debut album “Beauty
and the Beat”, which included “We Got The Beat” and today's
featured song, “Our Lips Are Sealed”.
“Our
Lips Are Sealed” was a collaboration between Jane Wiedlin, The
Specials, and Terry Hall of Fun Boy Three, and the song is
semi-autobiographical. According to Wiedlin, she and Hall had
embarked on an affair. The problem was that Hall already had a
girlfriend in his native UK. So, the song title was basically a
response to that affair...that neither one would say a word about it.
Their lips were sealed.
(Well,
apparently not anymore.)
The
music video was filmed entirely in Los Angeles, California, and
according to Wiedlin, the band was less than enthused about filming a
music video in the first place. When I.R.S. Records President Miles
Copeland informed them that they had to film a promotional video for
the single, they were not enthusiastic about the project at all.
Then again, when you consider that the video's budget was whatever
was left over from the video budget of The Police (of which Miles'
brother Stewart was a member), I guess you can't really blame them.
Here's
the thing though. Sure the video appeared to be on the low-budget
side, even for 1981 standards...but you'd never really know that the
Go-Go's weren't gung-ho for video making. The convertible that
Belinda drove was a 1960 Buick, and the girls really seemed to have a
ball riding around in it. The Go-Go's even came up with the idea to
have the video ending be centered around the girls splashing around
in the Electric Fountain that was situated on the corner of Wilshire
Boulevard and Santa Monica Boulevard.
Now,
the band stayed together for four more years after that video was
released. Over those four years, they released hit after hit with
songs such as “Vacation”, “Head Over Heels”, and “Turn To
You”. But by the end of 1984, Jane Wiedlin had decided to part
ways with the rest of the Go-Go's. She was out by October, and was
replaced with Paula Jean Brown in January 1985. The band tried the
new line-up for a few months before splitting up in May 1985, with
Carlisle and Caffey believing that they had gone as far as they could
go.
This
didn't mean that certain members of the band didn't go on to
greatness as solo artists. Belinda Carlisle's solo career kicked off
in 1986 with the single “Mad About You”, and throughout the late
1980s/early 1990s had several chart toppers in both the United States
and United Kingdom. And, this was in spite of the fact that she had
struggled with drug addictions for the better part of three decades.
She has been on the road to recovery since 2005.
Jane
Wiedlin also had minor success with a solo career in the 1980s, and I
would say that this single from 1988 was her most successful single.
In
the case of the Go-Go's, they have reunited many times since their
original 1985 break-up, and have been regularly touring since 1999.
As of May 19, 2013, the current line-up is comprised of Carlisle,
Wiedlin, Caffey, and Schock, and I'm sure that as long as their fans
still have love for the band, they will continue to provide great
music to everyone.
And,
that's my blog entry on The Go-Go's. And, in this case, my lips
AREN'T sealed.
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