Showing posts with label David Lee Roth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Lee Roth. Show all posts

4.18.2020

Ain't (Done) Talkin' Bout (Van Halen)


Honor demands that since I did a top ten for the Van Hagar era I had to do one for the David Lee Roth era. 

I went ahead and made a playlist rather than linking to each below. Here it is. (God do I hate Grammarly ads.) You can keep it handy and click where applicable/ desired, or you can go for the big prize, Brewster, and crank Van Halen I through 1984, over and over again in your stereo of choice. Repeat as necessary. 

Limiting myself to only ten songs of the DLR era seemed a crime against nature, so here's the top fifteen. I avoided covers as a mild policy (mild meaning I made an exception for this rule almost immediately, below.) 


Without further ado...

15.
"Hang 'Em High"

It was a neck-and-neck finish right up to the end between this one and "Take Your Whiskey Home." What pushed this one ahead is mostly that middle 8. This song is, subject-matter-wise, kind of unlike anything else the band ever did. Unless it's some metaphor I've never unraveled for the usual hi-jinks. 


14.
"Big Bad Bill is Sweet William Now"

Here's my exception to the cover rule. Is it their best cover? Probably not, but it's the one I picked. I love that Mr. Van Halen, Sr. plays clarinet on this, and it's no surprise to discover Eddie sounds as masterful doing Django Reinhardt-type runs and strumming as he does doing everything else. 

My wife and I are watching The Wire. Her first time, my third or fourth. This would make a good, totally-confusing accompaniment to one of the end-of-the-season montages. I'm thinking of the Marlo one at the end of s5, I guess. I keep joking that everytime one of the characters is driving and we see the "rap music playing" subtitle that the funniest thing ever would be if each of those scenes had Aerosmith and Run DMC's "Walk This Way" playing over those parts. You should try this; it's hilarious. I hope some enterprising young junior high kid out there gets on this and uploads such a thing to YouTube. ("Just give me a kiss!")

I say this for the same reason I am writing this: the therapeutic value of finding your own laughter, particularly in the face of absurd and unambiguously-suck-ass circumstances like the ones we find ourselves in, or of cranking Van Halen, cannot be discounted. 




13.
"D.O.A."

This riff is awesome. They simply do not make the Eddie Van Halen model anymore. That factory shut down, probably for good. This isn't as unprecedented as it sounds; they don't make the W.A. Mozart or Glenn Miller or Frank Sinatra models anymore, either. Time and place. We're just lucky to have seen it/ lived it. Crank it!

Captured forever in every Van Halen song of this period, like forty million year old flies preserved in amber, is some endless SoCal late-70s/early-80s house party, where kids are sneaking in more and more booze, the host's house is getting trashed, and kids are skateboarding in the empty swimming pool. 




12.
"Beautiful Girls"

I was not listening to much Van Halen during my years at the University of Rhode Island 1992-1994. This was pretty much my Phish/ The Beatles/ Jane's Addiction phase. (Also Sinatra - so it goes.) And yet: all memories of the years I spent in Kingston, RI (particualrly that first party-drenched year of 1992-1993) seem accompanied by this song. Not sure when or how that happened, but apparently it is the official song to all mental recollections of this era in my life. As a friend reminded me, too, it was the original soundtrack to this politically incorrect but nevertheless harmless and still-funny fake commercial for Schmidt's Gay from back when SNL wasn't just yet another blunt narrative instrument. I'd forgotten about that - definitely funnier with the Van Halen. 

Beyond that, it's a great song, full of sunshine, that expresses an essential truth. And even if you find yourself alone on some world bereft of beautiful people, it still works as an ironic reminder of the ridiculousness of your surroundings. 


11.
"Romeo Delight"

This one comes charging out of the gate. If the whole song kept up the energy of that opening breakout, it'd probably be my favorite Van Halen tune all around. But it kind of falters in some of the other sections. Nevertheless, another in the essential Van Halen arsenal. (And another about sneaking whiskey into the party. Outside of sex, it always seems to come down to sneaking booze in to the party with Van Halen. 

I like when David Lee Roth drawls "I know the law, friend." Woe be to the defendant with David Lee Roth as his or her lawyer.)



10.
"Top Jimmy"

This song - named after, I believe, their coke contact at some New York club - has such a lovely intro. I love when people get unexpected sounds out of a guitar, whether they're Sonic Youth, Yes, or Van Halen, or whomever. Van Halen's whole discography (up to a certain point in the nineties) is like a museum for this phenomenon.

I love the rest of it, too, but that intro - and when it comes back in later - hypnotizes me.


9.
"The Full Bug"

Awesome riff, fantastic energy. Honestly, there's nothing for me to type up.

As I write these words, my two girls are camped in front of the TV in the room next to mine singing along - for the hundredth or thousandth time, I don't know - to their YouTube playlist of Descendants song. (That's Disney, not Milo Goes to College.) "When I say All, you say Day! ALL DAY! ALL! DAY!") They love this crap. My son, on the other hand, awaits his turn for the millionth playing of "Everybody Poops" by the GoNoodle weirdos, or "Wie Sir Die Roboter" by Kraftwerk, which he freaking loves. Over and over. (Two of my three children went through a huge Kraftwerk phase in this two-to-three-year-old range; someone needs to study this.)


I'm just saying, it makes sense why I'm cranking so much Van Halen. Beyond just for its own sake.




8.
"I'm the One"

This is the one I, like a lot of people I bet, always remember as "Show Your Love." Even nowadays, after you'd figure I'd have learned this by now, when looking at my notes for this post (yes, I took notes - which seems a very un-Van-Halen-thing to do) I had to cross out "Show Your Love" from my list of songs to include. 

How many times have I heard this song? Going back to when I'd cut lawns with this in my headphones (at a blistering volume so I could hear it over the lawnmower) and I had a Van Halen mix tape with this as song #2 (right after "And the Cradle Will Rock") - I mean, shoot, that summer alone, fifty times at least. Multiply times however many in the thirty years since.

Still rocks! 


This guy definitely agrees.


7.
"Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love"

Like anyone else out there, probably, I'm sick of this song. It's just one of those ubiquitous classic rock radio songs. But I have to give it its due as pretty much a classic tune. I try to listen to it with fresh ears and can think of little to improve.

I have an enduring joke I try to make happen with this song, by the way. It never works and won't work now, but hey, here it is. You remember those rumors about how "In the Air Tonight" was about a real-life drowning that Phil Collins saw? So disturbed, he wrote the song, got the guy who let the girl drown on the beach to come to his concert, then brought him to the concert to expose his crime to the world? I doubt this urban legend is as well-distributed these days as it once was, but it used to. Anyway, I always picture David Lee Roth doing something similar at a concert during the middle 8 where it gets dramatic. ("You know I lost a lot of friends there, baby...")

But what would he be talking about? That's where the joke gets murky. The best I've ever come up with is: he was at The Edge's house, once, hanging out with U2, and he was on his back deck, and they were looking down at the rocks crashing into the surf or something, which I imagine is the view from any successful rocker's backyard, and the Edge told him a Large Marge-type tale of all the people who stood there, looking down, and fell to their deaths, and the experience scarred DLR. 

True story. That happened


6.
"Sunday Afternoon in the Park"

Holy smokes this song is cool. Fair Warning is a bit of an anomaly for Van Halen records. It's also a tad overrated by VH fans, in my opinion. Don't get me wrong, I still enjoy it - listened to it in all its thirty-one-minute glory just yesterday as a matter of fact - but there's a certain type of VH fan who carries on and on about how it's their Sgt. Pepper's or something. It isn't. It's not bad, but it's not their best album. (Of the DLR era, that'd either be 1984 or the first one or Women and Children First. Fight me.) 

My old band did a song called "Saturday Afternoon in the Park" which was about what happens in that park (wait for it) the day before. (Spoiler alert: just a bunch of nonsense.) The song's not at that link, just while we're here.




5.
"Jump"

Here's another one people might be sick of, I don't know. You have to include it, though, or the Van Halen Police will come take you away.

A well-deserved classic of both rock radio and the 80s. It's a breath of mental fresh air. I still crack up at some of DLR's frontman-tourette's, like when he says "AAAA-OOH! (Who said that?) Baby, how you been..." My old band (again!) had a song called "Rock Balls," where I did my best DLR impression during the chorus, just call-and-response-ing random nonsense. Sammy does a good impersonation (maybe even a better one) of this approach on "Source of Infection" later in the band's career.

Another one of those I like: from DLR's "Just a Gigolo" where he's yelling all of that indecipherable gibberish at the end and the band is singing it back at him. "Loop de loo! (loop de loo!) Gottazeewash! (gottazeewash!) Over there! (over there!") Man, that "over there!" cracks me up, like he's directing the band's attention to something happening in the studio or something. 

Anyway, might as well jump.


4.
"Panama"

I thought this one would be number one, prior to ranking these. I've always referred to it as my favorite VH tune. How about that? The covid has taught me something new. 

Anyone who came of age in the MTV era has indelible memories of not just this tune but probably any of their videos from 1984 or Dave's solo stuff. It was just such a part of the cable-television-oxygen back in the day.



What a great tune, though. Some of my favorite rock guitar ever in this tune. As well as in:


3.
"Ice Cream Man"

This tends to be most people I talk to's favorite VH song. Easy to see why. Fun stuff, very sing-along-y, and that freakin' roller-coaster-picking-you-up-and-sweeping-along effect of Eddie's guitar once it breaks in. The band, in some respects, peaked early: never sounded better than on this track. Unless it's:


2.
"Hot for the Teacher"

To quote Dave from near the song's ending "Oh My God....!"

I do love "Ice Cream Man," don't get me wrong. But I feel the "Van Halen"ness of that one is surpassed ever so slightly by the VH-ness of this one. Alex and Eddie mesh together in this one better than just about anywhere in their catalog (and when they mesh, it always rocks) and DLR's David-Lee-Roth-ness is appropriately sleazy. 

In many ways I don't think I've ever gotten over the first time this song really clicked for me. I've liked it from the first - who wouldn't? - but there was a time in the early 90s when I heard it at the right party, I guess, or under the right mix of party accouterments, and that break back into the riff after the first verse hit my head like an electrical storm. Is anything cooler than that? Holy moley. To quote the later singer for the band, it gives me some of that unh-huh unh-HNNNNH-unh! Which is the VH equivalent of "je ne sais quoi" I guess.


1.
"Everybody Wants Some"

And here we go. Like I said, the emergence of this one as my favorite VH song has been something of a surprise, but not really: I've always loved it. This is one of those I cannot simply listen to at a normal volume, as my family has discovered everytime it's been on. Which lately has been a lot. 



Anyone who first heard it - and I'm one of them - in Better Off Dead probably has visions of hamburgers playing metal guitar and John Cusack as some kind of mad scientist (a scene which, according to some, forever split Cusack from Savage Steve Holland, despite their collaborating again on One Crazy Summer). Understandable, but now I've got a new association: mainly my son's crazy dancing when he hears it. Rock and roll - as I mentioned when covering "Best of Both Worlds" from the Van Hagar post - affects him very deeply. ("Like Chris Farley on cocaine," says his mother. And she's very accurately describing the scene in our kitchen from a few nights ago, watching him whirl around.) It's tough to describe except it involves headbanging, holding up both hands in V-salutes, twirling around, spinning himself around on the floor, etc. 

So, I have a new reason to love it, above, but beyond that, holy crap, this song would be a more enlightened America's theme song. I don't know what it is, even, but I want it when I hear it, and I want to punch a damn communist in the face to get it, and to make sure everyone can get it. A good test of someone's economic literacy is to play this and see if they feel compelled to Marxist word salad. If so, keep cranking it until you can't hear them anymore or drive them back to Ho Chi Minh City. 

Was this one of the songs they blasted at the embassy to drive Noriega out, now that I think about? Or to get Revolutionary Guard officers to spill their secrets? It should've been. Every enemy (or in the case of Noriega, re-captured asset) of America will fall before "Everybody Wants Some." In a perfect world, it would be screamed from the rooftops to let the heavens know the afterworld has received another present from Uncle Sam. 


All right, maybe not! Your mileage may vary. One thing that does not: the perfection of this song. In whatever Voyager aircraft we send to the stars that exclusively showcases the hair metal of our third rock from the sun, this one should be cranked above all others. 


~

I think that might be all I have to say on this topic. I don't see one of these materializing for the Gary Cherone era. Keep on rockin' in the free world, my friends; don't let the bastards grind you down.


10.20.2015

Hair Metal: The 30 Essential Albums

Rolling Stone recently compiled its "50 Greatest Hair Metal Albums." Here's how it introduced the subject:

"Visually flamboyant and prone to shout-along hooks in ways that made them salable in a video-single format, bands like Def Leppard, Quiet Riot, Twisted Sister and Ratt owed way more to British glam-rock or Aerosmith than to Black Sabbath. In any other era they might've just been labeled "hard rock," but at some point somebody came up with the probably pejorative term "hair-metal," and the name stuck.


"Swept under history's rug and summarily dismissed as fake when thrash and grunge came along, hair-metal's been out of the spotlight long enough by now to be forgiven for all but its sleaziest sins. More holds up musically than you might guess: Trimming this list to a mere 50 albums was so tough that in the long run Guns N' Roses had to be disqualified for transcending the form and W.A.S.P. for sounding too legitimately heavy."

G'n'R's "transcendence" prompted a few remarks on my facebook wall. The consensus seemed to be that they were a breed apart from this animal called hair metal. I agree for the most part, but in 1988, there would have been absolutely no question that Guns n Roses was of the same genre as any band no one in 2015 would think twice of designating "hair metal." W.A.S.P., too. They're right in saying W.A.S.P., musically, might have been more straight-up heavy metal, but their subject matter - at least in the period under examination (roughly '82 to '92) was unabashed cock rock. And scientifically speaking, cock rock is more hair metal than heavy metal.



The Rolling Stone list is quite good overall; I reluctantly raise the sign of the horns in their direction. Nevertheless, it got me thinking. We know the Black Crowes don't belong in the discussion, but we're not exactly sure why. What is hair metal, exactly? Or better yet, where is it? If musical genres were represented on a map, what would the capitol of Hair Metal be? What are its borders and what genre-lands lay beyond them? Is there an army of guitarists that lets visitors know when they've crossed the border?

To answer some of these questions - for myself, sure, but I'm dragging you along - I made myself a spreadsheet and listed all of the albums listed in the Rolling Stone article for starters then added any hair metal album I could think of. (Full disclosure: I spent most of the 80s convinced hair metal was the natural evolution of humanity and its best bet for a maximum-rocking future.) I solicited friends and the internet to accumulate as many choices as I could.

Then I made columns (riff, production, badassedness, context, degree-of-chauvenism - not as cut-and-dried as you might think! Some hair metal gets so extreme in this regard that it might legitimately cross over into Shaktism -, any "YAAAAAAA!!"s (ex: 0:13), calls to reject any external restriction on the amount of rocking that you might want to do, reckless living, confused occultism, and more), assigned points, you-tubed the crap out of everything, and voila. 

This is a Public Service not quite from the frontlines (as the war ended long ago) but from somewhere near where the war once raged. A dispatch from a once fully-embedded correspondent.  

Without further ado:

Honorable mentions: Warrant's Cherry Pie (probably pretty essential, but do you prosper from having the whole album instead of just the singles?), and Firehouse's Firehouse (which may be more emblematic of hair metal than some of the selections below, but is it something I consider "essential?" Apparently not, as I don't feel the need to own it. But lest we forget - this is a pretty airtight example of what hair metal sounded and looked like when it ruled the roost.) And there are plenty of essential hair metal songs (like "Loud and Clear" by Autograph, or "Save Your Love" by Great White) that don't appear below because the album's they appear on don't live up to those particular songs. 

You want to hear a completely off-the-radar precursor to Hair Metal that is instantly recognizable as everything tc come? Look here. Stay for the solo round 1:40. "Within that document" (blam!) "lay the Vietnam war."

I'd recommend not clicking every link. I really went overboard - but that's more or less required any time the topic of discussion is Hair Metal. 

30.
Grim Reaper - Rock You To Hell (1987)

With the band's name and that cover, you'd be forgiven for thinking this belongs on a different list: Best Death Metal or something so-named. But it's very much not. I might as well get this out of the way upfront: metal that sincerely attempts to be scary is a) never scary, b) sillier for the attempt, and c) pointless. This is very much not pointless, though it is very silly. Ridiculously awesome and awesomely ridiculous, let's consider this album a border town that officially announces to weary travelers that they have left other genres and crossed over into Hair Metal proper. Case in point: "Waysted Love."

And really, you can't really improve on the title track. It's just the dumbest piece of metal genius ever written. I mean this with admiration.

29.
L.A. Guns - Cocked and Loaded (1989)

The Venn diagram comprising the early years of L.A. Guns and Guns 'n' Roses is interesting reading. I used to love piecing together that story from interviews in Circus and Hit Parader back in the pre-internet day. The Guns circled the bigtime but never quite hit the bullseye. They might have come closest with this, though some might nominate 1991's Hollywood Vampires. These guys were never a personal favorite, but I always loved  "Never Enough" and still do.

28.
BulletBoys - BulletBoys (1988)

"Smooth Up in Ya" immediately and belligerently blares from my mental subwoofers whenever hair metal is mentioned. Such a classic call-and-response slice of sex devotional. Reducing such sentiments to their crudest form (pretty much 50% of hair metal is a paean to anonymous alleyway sex) and churning them through the standard hair metal format (YAAA! verse/bridge/chorus/solo YAAA!) was just part of the gig back then.

I hadn't heard this album from start to finish since '89 or so, but I gave it a spin in prep for this post. Ditto for Hurricane's Over the Edge, Britny Fox's Britny Fox, Winger's Winger, and Kingdom Come's Kingdom Come. And some others, too, but of the aforementioned, only BulletBoys made the Essential cut. I can't believe I forgot this one over the years.
Another compass reading: we are moving deeper into Hair Metal now, about to come up on a large settlement:

27.
Whitesnake - Whitesnake (1987)

"Still of the Night" was one of my favorites back in the day. Man, that video still looks so cool. (It's completely ridiculous, but it looks cool. That goes for practically everything on here.) And another arrest by the Sex Police! Someone needs to stop those guys. 

When I was in 7th grade, my buddy Jay was a grade ahead of me. He was the kind of self-nominated PR man-on-the-ground that was essential to the old record label distribution of product. (Still today, really - I mean, what are blogs? Touché, universe.) He campaigned for bands in the letters columns of any fanzine that would print him and transmuted impressive amounts of allowance and paper route money into a cassette mini-empire in North Smithfield, RI. I was a beneficiary of this *, and so I was already a Whitesnake fan by the time this self-titled album came out.

* Later, Jay excommunicated me for calling Dirty Looks, a band he loved, a bunch of dicks. Listening to that now, I was totally wrong - that song rocks. Sorry, Jay.

This sold 8 million copies in the United States. I seem to remember reading at some point that Tawny Kitaen - the model in the album's three vidoes - sued for profits from it at some point. But I can't seem to find corroboration for this.


Tawny had a curious relationship with hair metal. She's on Ratt's Out of the Cellar cover, as well. I think she might be right about her video personality greatly popularizing Whitesnake, but whether or not she was entitled to her own royalties from album sales, I don't know. She was married to David Coverdale at the height (I assume) of Whitesnake's earning years, so I'm sure she did okay.

Anyway, these guys had a few years history before '87. "Slow and Easy" is perhaps their most well-known pre-Whitesnake song, but I always liked "Take Me with You." Older metal fans (guys with lots of Deep Purple albums) always seemed to turn their nose up at the "new" Whitesnake when this (and its follow-up, Slip of the Tongue, where they again re-appropriated one of their older songs, "Fool For Your Loving" for the late 80s crowd) was popular.

26.
Kiss - Revenge (1992)

I've covered this album before, but this is the one where Kiss out-Hair-Metaled the Hair Metal era on its own terms. And on the band's own terms, as well.

And I can't let the album go past without a shoutout to the greatest Kiss cover of all time, Die Artze's version of "Unholy." One of Gene's best. Gene often phoned it in during the Hair Metal era, but on Revenge, he shines. 

25.
Tesla - Mechanical Resonance (1986)

I wasn't sure whether to pick this one or its follow-up (The Great Radio Controversy) or even Five Man Acoustical Jam. All are worth having. Their two best-known songs are probably "Love Song" (from Great Radio) or their cover of "Signs" (from Five Man) but my personal favorites are all from this one. So Mechanical Resonance it is.

Tesla always had cool videos. The one for "Modern Day Cowboy" still cracks me up. (I remember all the repurposed old movie footage but forgot they had Strangelove in there.) And because of this song, anytime I see "the U.S.A." in print, I hear it in my head the way Jeff Keith sings it in this song. (3:54 "The U.S.A.! THE U.S.A. now!") 

I actually like this one (and Tesla) much more than the next nine or ten entries, but there's terrain probably closer to the heart of the Hair Metal beast. Speaking of: 

24.
Damn Yankees - Damn Yankees (1992)

This album had a very short shelf life with me. I loved it intensely for a month or two, then never played it again until earlier this week. Of the era in question, this one dominated the rock radio (94 HJY and 107.3 WAAF) of my later high school years more than any other album except for #23. One or other of its songs was just always on the radio, it seemed, every 20 minutes. It's funny to think that the first stirrings of Alice in Chains and Nirvana and Pearljam were in this radio mix, as well. By the end of the year, hair metal was practically memory holed.

Anyway, this one is textbook hair metal stuff, here. Again with the map metaphor: this is the industrial region of Hair Metal. I don't mean industrial-sounding, like NIN or Sisters of Mercy or something. Damn Yankees was assembly-line perfection from veterans of bands both hair metal (Ted Nugent) non-hair-metal (Tommy Shaw of Styx) and hair-metal-curious (Jack Blades of Night Ranger).

23.
Ozzy Osbourne - No More Tears (1991)

Again, this isn't a personal favorite. The only solo Ozzy I really need is his first three. But the list feels incomplete without it, and it's arguably solo-Ozzy at its best. It definitely encapsulates the genre into one package and as filtered through one of its most enduring statesmen. 

Around this time, too, I was really into Gary Moore, before he reinvented himself (quite successfully) as a bluesman. He and Ozzy collaborated on a great track, "Led Clones," that eviscerates those bands and producers taking too many pages from the Led Zeppelin playbook. By crafting the song in exactly the sort of structural-swiping as the objects of their criticism, the point is brought home all the more.

Gary Moore (and particularly this album, After the War) was underrated then and now. I considered him for this list, but he has homes in too many genres. Good for him and all, but it made him an uneasy candidate for the company we look at today. Nevertheless, when I think of hair metal, his cover of "Friday on My Mind" and stuff like "Over the Hills and Far Away" or "The Loner" casts a long shadow. He'd have placed quite high.

Did I just exploit Ozzy's entry to link to four Gary Moore tunes? I guess I did. Sorry, Ozzy. But I think your place in all-metal history is secure enough.

(23.5 If Aerosmith's Permanent Vacation and Pump belong somewhere in this countdown - and a few friends / readers made a compelling case that they should - this is where I'd place them.)



22.
Poison - Look What the Cat Dragged In (1986)
Poison - Open Up and Say Ahh (1988)

Okay, any exploration of Hair Metal is incomplete with Poison. They were both enthusiastic acolytes of the genre (Exhibit A: their just-prior-to-megafame coked-up enthusiasm in The Decline of Western Civilization, pt. 2: The Metal Years) and familiar icons of the era. But the truth is: the only time you're really going to love the music is in junior high, or if you first heard it in junior high. If that's you, bonus. If it's not you, you've got about as much chance of getting into Poison as you do getting into the Bay City Rollers or Leif Garrett or Fabian. 

And it's 100% possible to get into any/all the above at any age, of course. But I think you'll agree there are levels of appreciation. The stuff that's new and cool and aimed at you when you're in junior high is For Your Eyes/ Ears if-not-"Only"-then-First. That was the case for me and Poison, so I've no difficulty accepting sublimely ludicrous tracks like "Talk Dirty To Me", "Every Rose Has Its Thorn", "Unskinny Bop" or "Something To Believe In" at face value. You might not be able to get there - I get that. I can't get there with, say, Nicki Minaj. It's all relative.

This is a good place to bring up the Less Than Zero soundtrack, where you can find Poison's rather-flimsy version of "Rock and Roll All Nite," as well as some much better covers, like Slayer's "In-a-Gadda-da-Vida" and the Bangles' "Hazy Shade of Winter." 

21.
Skid Row - Skid Row (1989)

Skid Row secured their place in Hair Metal history with "Youth Gone Wild," which when it came along sounded like everything had been waiting for it to appear. We suddenly realized how incomplete our Hair Metal education had been. I bet when Paul Stanley heard it he punched himself in the face for not writing it first. The importance of that track overshadows all else on the album for me personally - I'll never forget cranking this from the VFW Post jukebox the first night I closed by myself and answering each "WHOAH-OH-OH-WHOAH-OH-OH!" call-and-response at the end - but the band hit it even bigger with "I Remember You" and "18 and Life." 

Their follow-up (Slave to the Grind) debuted at #1. Hair metal was so huge in '91. I was outgrowing it day-by-day, though. I never picked up Slave to the Grind, whereas had it come out a few years before, I'd have at least borrowed it and made a copy. But outside of G'n'R and a couple of others we'll get to, I was moving into other genres by then.

20.
Faster Pussycat - Faster Pussycat (1987)

Sheesh - lots of self-titled albums on this list, eh? I'm only just realizing it now.

Faster Pussycat was, like LA Guns, one of those bands that always seemed to be on the periphery of the bands I loved in the mid-to-late 80s. And like LA Guns, their best-known work probably came later on, rising with the just-mentioned tide of Hair Metal popularity. FP's best-known song (and probably even their best - genuine pathos, not just imitated) was "House of Pain." But this earlier album has my three favorites, "Cathouse," "Babylon," and "Bathroom Wall." This album has a real Billy and the Boingers quality to it.

Chuck Klostermann's described them memorably in Fargo Rock City as the kind of music someone high on weed would find physically painful. I'm not sure that's true, but it very well may be that Faster Pussycat is the antipode of something like Pink Floyd. 

(19.5 - if Queensryche counts as hair metal - please see comments for additional details - this is where I'd put Empire. They had a string of singles from it, my favorites being either the title track or "Jet City Woman.)


19.
Cinderella - Once Upon A... (1997)

Whoah whoah whoah - a compilation CD? Isn't that cheating? Maybe. But I'm going to make a judgment call here - Hair Metal is probably a genre ideally suited for the Greatest Hits package. Put charitably, few bands embraced the album-as-art approach. It was about cranking out new product built around a couple of signature tunes / music videos and touring. 

So while late-80s Bryan would very much disagree ("This doesn't even have 'Falling Apart at the Seams' or 'Take Me Back,' kid!") I'm fine saying this collection here has all the Cinderella you're ever going to need or want. "Heartbreak Station" used to be great beach-acoustic-singalong music and that or "Don't Know What You Got (Til It's Gone)" is probably their enduring legacy. But I always preferred their rockier numbers like "Gypsy Road" or "Somebody Save Me," the video for which ended with the girls from the Greatest Hits cover pushing their way past the band to get to Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora, who (in real life) helped Cinderella get a record deal.

And speaking of:
18.
Bon Jovi - Slippery When Wet (1986)
Bon Jovi - New Jersey (1988)

I couldn't decide which of these to occupy this spot. New Jersey is arguably more polished, but Slippery When Wet probably packs a bigger punch. And both have the same number of essential tracks vs. filler. But the level of essential (all their big hits) is great. 

My favorite Bon Jovi is "(I Don't Wanna Fall) To The Fire." Everything about that song (from 7800 Degrees Fahrenheit) is Hair Metal glory. But you could say the same for "Bad Medicine" or "You Give Love A Bad Name," probably their best overall tunes. Some people say "Wanted Dead or Alive," and who am I to argue. (Any time that song comes up I feel compelled to point out the line "I've seen a million faces /and I've rocked them all." Please! Careful with my face, messrs.) 

17. 
The Scorpions - Love at First Sting (1984)

The Scorpions may be best-known for "Wind of Change," which the media mercilessly grafted onto images of the Berlin Wall coming down for many months back at the end of the Cold War. If so, a close second is "Rock You Like a Hurricane," which is as much a banner-waving standard of the genre as "Youth Gone Wild" or any other and seems to be one of two go-tos for quick-metal-reference in commercials, TV or film. (The other being Europe's "The Final Countdown.")

The album it came from, Love at First Sting, looms large in memory. Someone (probably my older brother or his friends) always seemed to have it on. "Big City Nights" is one I associate with an 80s boombox and playgrounds. It's actually a little less hair-metal-y than its follow-ups (The Scorpions seemed to get more and more sexually explicit as the 80s progressed) and doesn't even have my two favorite Scorpions songs ("No One Like You" and "The Zoo.") But essential? Absolutely. 

16. 
Leatherwolf - Leatherwolf (1987)

If you're like most people, your reaction here is "Who the hell are these guys?" If on the other hand you're anyone with whom I've ever talked Hair Metal, you likely have heard me bang on about these guys/ this album before. (In the old days, you'd already have gotten a mix tape from me with Leatherwolf prominently featured.) 

Leatherwolf never made it big, and their follow-ups (starting with the the abysmally-named Street Ready - then again, naming things was not Leatherwolf's strong point) never did it for me. But holy moley this album. Whether it's their blistering cover of "Bad Moon Rising" (which is how I heard of them in the first place; it was a soft vinyl insert in some metal or guitar magazine I bought back then), their bid for power ballad glory with "Share A Dream," or my personal favorite of theirs, "Gypsies and Thieves," this album is another off-the-radar masterpiece. 

15.
Guns n' Roses - Lies (1988)

Ah, the stir this caused in 1988. "Patience" was a huge hit on MTV, "Reckless Life" was huge with me and my friends, the acoustic "You're Crazy" sounds amazing, and "Used to Love Her" and "One in a Million" stoked controversy.

Of the two, "Used To Love Her" was just a joke in questionable taste (hair metal, amirite) about Axl's deceased dog, but "One in a Million" still has the capacity to shock, mainly for Axl's un-PC language. But I've always been under the impression that the song is sung from the POV of a typical xenophobic bigot, not that the lyrics are the POV of Axl or G'n'R or anything. Axl refused to clarify at the time, though - he was and remains a petulant interviewee - so a lot of genuine bigots latched onto it as an anthem of sorts. 

That's really too bad, as it's a great song, and as a parody of xenophobic bigotry, then or now, it's actually pretty insightful. Pretty uncommon for a hair metal band - or for G'n'R. (Someone somewhere is saying "What about 'Civil War?!' Bad example. It's a song I love, but the lyrics are pandering as hell. At least the lyrics to something like "Night Train" have a docudrama quality.) 

14.
Dokken - Under Lock and Key (1985)
Dokken - Back for the Attack (1987)

The most unreasonable part of my brain occasionally wastes time worrying that these two albums are in danger of never being appreciated for the Hair Metal masterpieces they are. I certainly never see them referred to that way. I wonder why? You've got all your bases covered with these two albums: perfect sing-or-sway-alongs like "In My Dreams" or "Heaven Sent", video classics in "Burning Like a Flame" and "Dream Warriors", or all-out axe attacks like "Mr. Scary" or "Lightning Strikes Again," the last minute of which is for better or worse textbook Hair Metal.

Tip of the cap to Jeff Pilsen, who was, outside of Michael Anthony, Hair Metal's best backing vocalist.

13.
Heart - Heart (1985)
Heart - Bad Animals (1987)

I imagine many will balk at my inclusion of Heart in this list. Surely they can't be Hair Metal. And yet they meet every criteria for inclusion with the exception of the sexually explicit lyrics (though "Walk those legs right over here / give me what I'm dying for" is certainly not subtle). Moreover, like other bands that had more traditional rock hits in the 70s, they certainly altered their look and sound to appeal to the Hair Metal crowd. So screw it - here they are. I've heard "Barracuda" described as metal; if that's the case, then "Alone" or "I Want You So Bad" are at the very least in the hair metal tradition. Heart is Hair Metal's older, unattainable female cousin or something. 

And once you accept that Heart belongs in the conversation, it becomes silly to argue against placing them so high on the list. These albums could be combined into one kickass Hair Metal album by getting rid of every Side Two track (with the exception of "Bad Animals," which is a really wild song that Ann Wilson sings the hell out of.) Can you imagine the power of a single album that started with "If Looks That Kill," followed by "What About Love" and "Never" and "These Dreams," then continued with "The Wolf," "Who Will You Run To?" "Alone," "There's The Girl," "I Want You So Bad", "Bad Animals," then closed with "Wait For an Answer?" Such an album could power the whole Eastern Seaboard, and then some.

12.
Twisted Sister - Love Is for Suckers (1987)

In more traditional Hair Metal territory, Twisted Sister will forever be best-known for "We're Not Gonna Take It" from Stay Hungry, which was a huge hit. (Is it that albums' best track? Nope - that'd be "Burn In Hell" or "Street Justice.") Their follow-up to that wasn't as well-received (though it contains at least one fantastic addition to the Hair Metal cause in "The Fire Still Burns"), and the band pretty much self-destructed after that. Not before releasing this little gem, though.

Apparently it was conceived as a Dee Snider solo record, but the label convinced him to release it as a Twisted Sister affair. Neither it nor the subsequent tour did well, and the band broke up shortly after. I heartily recommend a re-appraisal, people of Planet Earth. From start ("Wake Up the Sleeping Giant" which would be the perfect song for a Star Trek: WORF! series - just saying!) to finish ("Yeah, Right!") it's baffling to me how this never caught on in a massive way. 

Fun fact: I inked the TS logo onto a tabletop in Study Hall one day in 7th grade. When I returned the next day, someone had circled it and written underneath: "...royally rot. Come on, dude." 

11.
Motley Crue - Decade of Decadence (1991)

Ah, Motley Crue. They were tough to place in this here countdown. If the name of the game was just Hair Metal Bands or Hair Metal Songs, the Crue would be top 3 contenders for both categories, possibly even taking the top spots. But when it came to albums, they never really put out a masterpiece. 

Which would, you think, make a good case for Decade of Decadence, on the Cinderella/ Greatest Hits model mentioned above. But DoD was compiled on the "leave off some of the best ones so they keep buying the old records" model. So if you want to hear "Kickstart My Heart" (one of the best songs ever produced; they do include a live version on DoD but it's not as good as the studio version), "Nona", "Don't Go Away Mad (Just Go Away)", "Take Me to the Top", "Too Young to Fall in Love", or "Keep Your Eye on the Money", you're out of luck.

Your best bet is to just to buy everything from Too Fast for Love through Dr. Feelgood and make do with the filler. 

10.
Blue Murder - Blue Murder (1989)

Some readers may recall my enduring love of New Wave of British Heavy Metal bands. I mentioned Tygers of Pan Tang in that post, who are one of the lesser-known but no-less-seminal architects of that whole scene. Tygers was John Sykes's band before Whitesnake, and after he left them, he formed Blue Murder, handling lead guitars and lead vocals all on his own.

It never really charted in the U.S.A ("The U.S.A.! THE U.S.A. now!" Just seeing if you've been paying attention) and did only marginally better elsewhere. Which is a shame because this is a powerhouse effort. Like Love is For Suckers or the Dokken albums above, whatever kind of Hair Metal you're looking for is represented en force here. How "Jelly Roll" never became at least an underground classic is beyond me. 

And if someone out there could please mash-up scenes from the movie Valley of the Dolls over "Valley of the Kings," I'd be eternally grateful.

9.
W.A.S.P. - W.A.S.P. (1984)

The band Rolling Stone considered too heavy for their Hair Metal list comes in with a crotch buzzsaw at spot #9. What a classic album. Capitol Records bowed to P.R.M.C. pressure and deleted the opening track "Animal (Fuck Like a Beast)" so that meant I never heard it until years after: when I was too old to appreciate it. I still feel ripped off by this - thanks a lot, jerks. 

I'm actually listening to The Last Command, W.A.S.P.'s follow-up to this record, as I type these words and don't want to stop because "Ballcrusher" is on and I'm enjoying it too much to even pause it. But if I were to do so, I'd link you to "L.O.V.E. Machine", "School Daze", or "Sleeping in the Fire." Chris Holmes was a great guitarist back in the day. He's probably best known, though, for his inebriated (and rather sad) interview in The Metal Years

While I'm here, let me give a shout-out to the little-known soundtrack to the littler-known movie Dudes. It's got some great tracks on it, including
W.A.S.P.'s "Show No Mercy". 

8.

I covered both of these in more depth in my Van Halen post. I think both are probably the same level of Essential. To continue the map/ Hair Metal terrain metaphor, Van Halen is probably a semi-autonomous region, buffering against other genres of rock/ metal/ pop.

Ditto for:

7.
Guns n' Roses - Use Your Illusion I and II (1991)

The most anticipated new release of 1991 was G'n'R's long-awaited follow-up to Lies. The story goes that David Geffen feared one of the members would OD before too long, so he wanted to maximize their profit potential while the original members (sans Steven Adler, whose heroin addiction got him ousted from the band between Lies and UYI) were still above-ground. And while no one has (as of yet) died, Geffen was right to do so, as the band's popularity and influence peaked with the Use Your Illusion albums.

It's commonly accepted that there's too much filler in this pair of albums, and while I can see that, there's a wealth of material here. "Back Off Bitch" might be a little uncomfortable given Axl's real-world problems with women (just as "Get in the Ring" is a little too angry to be funny or enjoyable), and the trilogy of "November Rain", "Don't Cry", and "Estranged" overreaches its mark, despite being individually all great songs. And weaving in and out of the mix is a growling monologue, as if Axl was left alone in the studio at production's end and recorded his own surreal commentary track over the tunes.

I'm not sure which of the two is my favorite. Pt. 1 has "Dust and Bones", "Double Talking Jive", "Coma", "The Garden", and "Dead Horse", while pt. 2 has "Pretty Tied Up", "14 Years", "Locomotive", and "Breakdown". All faves - many of which seem to have been forgotten. 

Not "You Could Be Mine," though. Thankfully. 

6.
Extreme - Pornograffitti (1990)

"More Than Words" drove the sales of this album, but it was one of my least-favorite tracks on the record. It's become a placeholder for "Best Power Ballad Ever," but ugh - I mean, it just never did anything for me. (I prefer The Gang's version of it from Always Sunny.) Luckily, tho, every other track (except "When I First Kissed You," which was just Gary Cherone's demo reel for musical theater) is dynamite. 

Nuno (the guitarist) had some fine chops. The "wounded Bumble Bee" intro to "He Man Woman Hater" (a reference to the Our Gang, not a political statement of any kind, at least not a very coherent one) is the sort of thing he excelled at, but his riffs and all the bells and whistles were all top notch. 

When I saw Extreme in 1993, Gary performed the whole concert in only his silk boxer shorts. I kept looking around the audience to see if there were any women around, but the ratio was like 10 dudes for every girl. And it was a small-ish venue. Misjudged that one, Gary. And they didn't even play "Play With Me" from Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, which should have been a contractual obligation anytime they appeared anywhere. Ah well. Album still kicks ass.

I think it's safe to say we are nearing the Capitol Cities of Hair Metal. 

5.
David Lee Roth - Eat 'Em and Smile (1986)

I covered this one in that Van Halen post afore-linked, as well, but Essential? I think so. David Lee Roth in general, at least up to and including this album. To understand the hows and whys of Hair Metal, you need to know the MTV Class of '84, Dave TV, the Van Halen schism, and the rise of G'n'R. That'd be my curriculum at the Hard Rock Academy. As well as a twelve-week course in:

4.
Def Leppard - Pyromania (1983)

Yeah, you just can't go wrong with this one. Every song's a classic. As I mentioned when covering Hysteria, if you're ever at a party that doesn't have Prince's Purple Rain or Pyromania in the stacks, find a better party. 

3.
Ratt - Ratt and Roll (1991)
Ratt - Invasion of Your Privacy (1985)

You can mostly make do with just Ratt and Roll, which has everything you probably need, but I'm tacking on Invasion of Your Privacy because the non-Ratt and Roll songs from it (particularly "Give It All", "Closer to My Heart", "What You Give Is What You Get", and "You Should Know By Now") are, in my mind, essential - both to Hair Metal and to Ratt appreciation - in a way the non-Ratt and Roll songs from other albums aren't.

I could be way off on that one, though. But Ratt was another one who never really chased the album-as-art concept. "Dance Dance Dance", "Slip of the Lip", and "Body Talk" are great tunes, but they phoned it for the rest of Dancing Undercover. (An unbelievably stupid album title, that). Ditto for "Way Cool Jr." and "I Want a Woman" vis-a-vis the rest of Reach for the Sky. (Another unbelievably stupid album title.) And ditto for the tracks from Detonator. (Do I even need to say it?)

Whenever power ballads come up, the Crue's "Home Sweet Home" and G'n'R's "November Rain" are often nominated as the best of the lot. I can't argue with either of those, but I always nominate "Givin' Yourself Away." Cotton candy, sure, but for me it's Peak Hair Metal. 

2.
Guns n' Roses - Appetite for Destruction (1987)

And speaking of Peak Hair Metal, here we are. 

I remember my buddy Chris's older brother trashing Appetite when it came out. (He even made me a mix tape filled with Miles Davis and the Dead "to save (me) from any more bad choices.") His problem with it was there was no "variety." I remember him telling me he and his friend threw it on while playing pool with some girls and realizing as the album played out that "there'd be no sex tonight." This demonstrated to me what I already suspected: G'n'R was beyond what metal fans who were a little older than me were prepared to accept. It wasn't just a dividing line - it was an aggressive "Fuck off!" from the upstarts to the older kids. This - as was likely the idea - greatly appealed to my junior high self.

I also remember an interview with Slash in Guitar Magazine where he said he and Duff would listen to "Welcome to the Jungle" over and over, trying to figure out what it was about the song that broke them so big. It baffled me at the time how these guys could write something so self-evidently bad-ass and not know how or why it worked, but less so as the years go on. It's all right place, right time. True for G'n'R, true for life.

What can I say about Appetite that hasn't already been said or isn't immediately obvious once you hit play? Nothing, probably. 


"Here I am / your Rocket Queen / I might be a little young but honey I ain't naive"

(1.5 - if Queensryche counts as hair metal - please see comments for additional details - this is where I'd place Operation: Mindcrime. And what a Top 3 this would make. Between the below, the above, and Mindcrime, you have three very distinct parts of town, each pointing towards other genres. But if we are to consider Queensryche under the hair metal umbrella - and I think the case can be made we should - we have to make room at the top for Mindcrime, unquestionably. 


Since Mindcrime works best as a unified whole - probably the most successfully-realized concept album/ rock opera this side of Tommy - here's a link instead to Queensryche's stalker-song from Rage For Order, "Gonna Get Close to You." I watched that for a full minute, wondering the whole time how I missed this video the first time around and baffled by some of the shots, before scrolling down to see it was a fanmade video. Made more sense in that context. Anyway, that song is great.)

1.
Def Leppard - Hysteria (1987)

Right next door to Appetite in the capitol city of Hair Metal - across the tracks, you might say - is Hysteria. A safer neighborhood, but no less impressive than G'n'R's den of iniquity, and in some ways, even better.

I said pretty much everything I can possibly say about this album when I covered it a few months back. I was happy to see it occupying the top spot on Rolling Stone's list, as well. Like Appetite, I think it has crossover appeal and isn't altogether welded just to Hair Metal. But it's the prettiest bit of Hair Metal ever created. Like I said in the Hysteria blog, that people can go about their daily routine and not stop at least once or twice a day to reflect on how much cooler their lives are for having them around strikes me as damn ungrateful.

~
Thanks for reading. Feel free to tell me what I got wrong in the comments.