Once again, a long list of songs for your amusement/enjoyment and my retrospect. 1989 was a rather interesting year of change. I'd been going out with Tracey for a few months and it looked to be a really solid relationship so far, and that brought me out of the self-imposed funk I'd felt earlier my senior year. I seem to remember actually feeling a little frustrated by
not being the doom-and-gloom proto-emo kid anymore, as I'd kinda grown used to it, to the point where I believed it alone fueled my creativity at that point. Yeah, silly, I know, but still...
There was also the first semester of college to deal with. That itself was kind of strange, in that it felt more like being dropped into the middle of Boston to fend for myself--the school part of it I could handle, it was the change in atmosphere, mindset and setting that hit me. Thankfully my discovery of WFNX (and to my roommate's chagrin, since he was against anything remotelly commercial, even if it was good), I was able to follow up on my alternative music.
Pixies, "Here Comes Your Man"Doolittle came out just about the time I was wrapping up my senior year in high school, and though it's not my favorite of theirs (that's reserved for
Bossanova, this track (and its silly video) is probably my choice from it.
The Cure, "Disintegration", "Homesick", "Untitled"These three tracks finish off the
Disintegration album and are the ones I like most. I remember listening to these tracks while sitting on my parents' porch (reading
All Quiet on the Western Front, of all things), just after the last day of
head58's first Fiasco party at his grandfather's cabin. A very much "end of summer" type of feeling.
The Replacements, "I'll Be You"Say what you will about post-Tim 'Mats, I really like this song. I'm sure I'm the only one that remembers this song was used
in a 1989 TV movie called Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again (it's about 3:30 in).
The Godfathers, "She Gives Me Love"The Godfathers's second album
More Songs About Love and Hate may not have been as huge as their first one, but it had a lot of great tracks like this one.
Ministry, "Burning Inside"They had a video for this one? Of course, I missed a lot of videos post-1989 since I didn't have cable during my college years.
The Mind is a Terrible Thing to Taste was kind of a strange album to me, as I was used to their previous one. This one felt more commercial--in its own way, of course. This was a great track to play along with on my bass, though.
Nine Inch Nails, "Down In It"Pretty Hate Machine was a defining moment in my freshman year in college--it was probably the first album that really grabbed at my anger and depression at the time. Anger at my roommate, and depression that I was missing Tracey something fierce. It was probably one of the most played cassettes in my collection that year. I distinctly remember listening to it riding on the commuter train out to Fitchburg with a severe chip on my shoulder. Say what you will about the more-played
"Head Like a Hole", "Down In It" was it for me.
"Terrible Lie" was the big F-You to my roommate, and
"Something I Can Never Have" was the distance from Tracey at the time. So yeah...soundtrack to my life at the end of 1989.
Morrissey, "Ouija Board, Ouija Board"Out of the singles that Morrissey released that year, this is my favorite, even though a lot of critics say it's the weakest.
Robyn Hitchcock, "One Long Pair of Eyes", "Swirling", "Madonna of the Wasps"A lot of critics love 1988's
Globe of Frogs, but personally I LOVE
Queen Elvis. This one's got a lot of great tracks on it, very autumnal-sounding. I remember hearing "Swirling" on WRSI one Sunday autumn afternoon when my dad and I were at an antique store in Winchester NH, and I felt it kind of fit the mood...another "end of summer" feeling.
XTC, "Mayor of Simpleton"Oranges & Lemons got a lot of play on my tape deck for most of the year. Great album, and this was the big hit off it. If anything, this was an album that put me in a
good mood during this time.
Wire, "Eardrum Buzz"It's Beginning to and Back Again is a very odd album for Wire...it wasn't so much new stuff as it was a hodgepodge of new stuff (like this) and reinterpreted older stuff. I only had this on cassette (I didn't pick up a cd player until well after the album was out), so I never got to hear the other single,
"In Vivo" (which I feel in retrospect is a much stronger track), until a few years later when it popped up on the
A List compilation.
Love and Rockets, "So Alive"The BIG hit (it actually hit #1 on certain charts!) of theirs that everyone knows. I love the slinkiness of the song.
Bob Mould, "Wishing Well"Workbook was another tape that got a lot of play on train rides home. I'm not sure if h58 got me into this album or if I picked it up on my own, but this is the track that won me over.
The The, "The Beat(en) Generation"Not my favorite The The track, but it definitely surprised me when this came out, especially when I heard Johnny Marr was on it.
Mind Bomb ended up getting a lot of play on my walkman that summer when I mowed cemeteries for the DPW.
Colorblind James Experience, "Considering a Move to Memphis"This weird yet goofy little ditty had some big airplay on WAMH. One of those tracks you hear on the radio and sort of stare at it with a look of "uh...oookay...?" but somehow you learn to like it. To this day whenever someone mentions pieroshkis or Memphis, I think of this song.
Sigue Sigue Sputnik, "Success"How do you react when you hear that one of your favorite weird 80s bands teams up with the dreaded Stock Aitken Waterman production team? I really did want to hate this song for that reason...but damn it, it was catchy enough to like.
Dress for Excess wasn't the best follow-up to
Flaunt It (and it did take three years!), but it had its moments, like
"Is This the Future", the hauntingly beautiful closing track I could totally see being played in a space opera anime.
Fuzzbox, "International Rescue"Speaking of favorite weird bands from '86, Fuzzbox followed up their punky sorta-self-titled album with
Big Bang...and upon first listen, I was totally let down. How could they go from snarky punks
("Love is the Slug") to Jem and the Holograms
("Pink Sunshine")?!?? But somehow I was still drawn into it...it was poppy to a J-Pop degree, and soon became one of my favorites of the year. They even managed to get extra credit for doing a great cover of
"Walking on Thin Ice"...a Yoko Ono song!
Max Q, "Way of the World"Michael Hutchence's side project yielded only one album and this was the single. A rather interesting take on politics of the time.
He Said, "Could You...?"Graham Lewis from Wire released
Watch Take Care when I wasn't looking, and I actually enjoyed this one more than Wire's
IBTABA. Very moody and sparse, and very unlike the stuff he did with Wire at the time.
Xymox, "Obsession"Twist of Shadows has always been one of those "oh yeah, forgot about that album!" sort of releases, but it's always been a big favorite of mine, and in the top 10 of 1989. They grew out of their gloomy 4AD sound somewhat, went a little poppier, but it's an awesome album, well worth picking up.
"Imagination" was the other single.
Jorge Ben, "Umbabarauma"It's a track from the 70s, but David Byrne released it on one of his
Brazil Classics compilations, and it's got one hell of a funky riff. WAMH played this a lot, as did 120 Minutes.
Public Image Ltd, "Disappointed"To be honest, an ironically titled song from
9, which I didn't like nearly as much as their previous one,
Happy?. It's kind of grown on me, though. I saw that tour PiL did with the Sugarcubes and New Order, and it was a rather interesting, if slightly boring, show. Personally I liked
"Warrior" better.
Severed Heads, "All Saints Day"A band I'd only heard of but never heard until I bought their
Rotund for Success album and it quickly became one of my favorites. It's weird and lo-fi electronica, but it's got some absolutely great tracks on it like this one.
Tin Machine, "Under the God"Say what you will about Bowie's side project, I really liked this album--it was SO much better than his last few albums which were bordering on snoozefests. Another tape that got a lot of play during my DPW tenure.
Dinosaur Jr., "Just Like Heaven"Hee! This video still cracks me up. Great trashy cover of the big Cure hit.
The B-52s, "Channel Z"I'm really not a big fan of
Cosmic Thing--I've heard "Love Shack" enough in one lifetime, thankyewverymuch--but I've always liked this track.
Red Flag, "Russian Radio"These guys were definitely Depeche Mode clones, more so than Camouflage ever was, but this is a great track nonetheless.
Ciccone Youth, "Into the Groove(y)"I'd never been a big fan of Sonic Youth, but this album changed that. Originally a late 1988 album but rereleased in 1989, this track got quite a bit of play on WAMH.
Michael Penn, "Brave New World"March was such an unexpectedly great album that came from nowhere. WFNX used to play this track a lot and it's my favorite from it. One of those almost nonsensical "Subterranean Homesick Blues" sort of tracks, really.
The Smithereens, "A Girl Like You"Never dawned on me until the third or fourth listen of this song that the lyrics are basically the plot to
Say Anything, which this was originally written for. Another great Smithereens track!
Bill Pritchard, "Tommy & Co."Very few people remember this one, but it's from one of my other favorite albums of '89. Folksy and poppy with quite a bit of moody-bastardness thrown in, I listened to this album quite a bit deep into 1990.