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1986 E ELO Non-Soundtrack Music

Electric Light Orchestra – Balance Of Power

1 min read

Order this CD in the StoreThis was the last real album recorded by ELO, and don’t let Bev Bevan – who now fronts ELO Part II – tell you otherwise. This modest album, as aptly described in the liner notes of the Afterglow box set four years later, doesn’t sound a whole lot like what you’d come to expect from ELO. It is as different from the mid-70s ELO signature as the group’s classical-heavy-metal-fusion first album was, but moves steadily into the 80s. The great vocal harmonies are still there, but the orchestra is not (unless emulated by keyboards), and the sound just doesn’t seem as full as it3 out of 4 stars once did. The songs aren’t bad, though – “Without Someone”, “Is It Alright” and “Calling America” sticking out as my favorites and the most authentically ELO-ish – but perhaps this should have been Jeff Lynne’s first solo album instead of the last ELO album.

  1. Heaven Only Knows (2:54)
  2. So Serious (2:41)
  3. Getting To The Point (4:29)
  4. Secret Lives (3:28)
  5. Is It Alright (3:24)
  6. Sorrow About To Fall (4:03)
  7. Without Someone (3:51)
  8. Calling America (3:29)
  9. Endless Lies (2:58)
  10. Send It (3:39)

Released by: Epic
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 34:56

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Categories
1986 Film H Highlander Q Queen Soundtracks

Queen – A Kind Of Magic

Queen - A Kind Of MagicThis was about as close as the original Highlander film ever came to having an official soundtrack release, and many people didn’t blink an eye in the absence of score material from the movie. Not that this is a bad album – on the contrary, it’s rather good. This is the only place you’ll find the song “Princes Of The Universe”, by the way, as well as my favorite Highlander-themed song, “It’s A Kind Of Magic”. Some of the other Highlander tunes don’t trip my trigger quite as much; “Don’t Lose Your Head” 3 out of 4is okay at best, and “Gimme The Prize”, despite its killer mock-Scottish guitar solo, is filled with soundbytes from the movie, and I’m not a big fan of mixing soundbytes in with the music. Worth a listen.

  1. One Vision (5:08)
  2. A Kind Of Magic (4:23)
  3. One Year Of Love (4:26)
  4. Order this CD Pain Is So Close To Pleasure (4:19)
  5. Friends Will Be Friends (4:07)
  6. Who Wants To Live Forever (5:13)
  7. Gimme The Prize – Kurgan’s Theme (4:32)
  8. Don’t Lose Your Head (4:35)
  9. Princes Of The Universe (3:30)
  10. Forever – instrumental (3:20)
  11. One Vision – extended vision (6:23)

Released by: Hollywood Records
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 50:31

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1986 C Crowded House Neil Finn Non-Soundtrack Music

Crowded House

Crowded HouseThe debut album from Neil Finn’s very own post-Split Enz trio was quite a surprise in the synthesizer/drum machine-dominated mid-1980s. Instead of veering to the opposite extreme – thundering hard rock – Crowded House embraced a unique sound of only a few instruments and Finn’s trademark vocals. The biggest hit Crowded House ever had, “Don’t Dream It’s Over”, comes from this album, as do its moderately successful follow-ups, “Something So Strong” and “World Where You Live”, a somewhat less well-known number. Other tracks to listen for are “Hole In The River”, a harsh song inspired by the suicide of Finn’s aunt (this could also be the basis of the later song “Catherine Wheels” from the band’s fourth album), “Mean To Me”, which Neil wrote after a particularly amusing incident with a rabid American fan who crossed the globe to see him, and “I Walk Away”, a cover of a song that originally appeared on the final rating: 3 out of 4Split Enz studio album only a year earlier. CDs of the Crowded House album also contain a bonus track, “Can’t Carry On”, which is obviously a remnant of those final Split Enz sessions, as it sounds almost nothing like Crowded House. A very good album, though Temple Of Low Men may be a better introduction to Crowded House.

Order this CD

  1. Mean To Me (3:16)
  2. World Where You Live (3:04)
  3. Now We’re Getting Somewhere (4:06)
  4. Don’t Dream It’s Over (3:57)
  5. Love You ‘Til The Day I Die (3:32)
  6. Something So Strong (2:52)
  7. Hole In The River (4:00)
  8. Can’t Carry On (3:57)
  9. I Walk Away (3:07)
  10. Tombstone (3:30)
  11. That’s What I Call Love (3:39)

Released by: Capitol
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 39:00

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Categories
1986 M Moody Blues Non-Soundtrack Music

Moody Blues – The Other Side Of Life

Moody Blues - The Other Side Of Life Like Long Distance Voyager, this album is a rare case of the Moodies concentrating on style over substance, with keyboardist Patrick Moraz starting to contribute to the songwriting some. The best song is, by miles, “I Just Don’t Care”, a much more traditional Moody Blues love song that wouldn’t have been out-of-place in their ’60s repertoire, and of course everyone remembers “Your Wildest Dreams”, or at least the video from it.

Something else interesting I’ve noticed about this album is the design of the back cover and CD booklet – 3 out of 4everything is slanted leftward in a sort of reverse-italic style. This in itself is unremarkable, but it’s odd when you look at the similar stylings on the 1986 album by ELO, another band from Birmingham – their album sleeve and inner sleeve also sported a reverse italic motif. I think there’s a conspiracy at work here somewhere.

Order this CD

  1. Your Wildest Dreams (4:50)
  2. Talkin’ Talkin’ (3:55)
  3. Rock ‘n’ Roll Over You (4:50)
  4. I Just Don’t Care (3:25)
  5. Running Out Of Love (4:25)
  6. The Other Side of Life (6:50)
  7. The Spirit (4:14)
  8. Slings and Arrows (4:29)
  9. It May Be A Fire (4:56)

Released by: Threshold
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 41:54

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Categories
1986 G Genesis Non-Soundtrack Music

Genesis – Invisible Touch

Genesis - Invisible TouchThis album is one of my guiltiest pleasures in my entire music section. Part of me cringes at how far Genesis fell from its progressive roots to this penultimate studio album – well, penultimate so far, anyway – which consisted largely of typical mid-’80s rock/pop numbers and the crooning ballads with which Phil Collins was becoming more associated at the time. And for that harsh assessment, I’m reluctantly forced to admit that I like the ballad “In Too Deep”. There are actually a few hints of the band’s more progressive 3 out of 4roots, such as the instrumental “The Brazilian”, but longer track times don’t always equate to art rock…sometimes, as in the case of “Tonight Tonight Tonight”, they’re just flat boring.

  1. Invisible Touch (3:26)
  2. Tonight, Tonight, Tonight (8:49)
  3. Land of Confusion (4:45)
  4. Order this CD In Too Deep (4:59)
  5. Anything She Does (4:06)
  6. Domino (10:42)
  7. Throwing It All Away (4:41)
  8. The Brazilian (4:49)

Released by: Atlantic
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 45:45

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Categories
1986 Film O Soundtracks

Out of Africa – music by John Barry

 soundtrackThis is an absolutely sublime score, one of the very few movie soundtracks which radiates enough simple beauty to rank up there with the classical repertoire. Whether you’ve seen the movie or not, you’ve probably heard the first few wistful minutes of the main theme before. The secondary theme, which resurfaces in other cues, is no slouch either. I can’t recommend this highly enough, nor can I even come up with a description that adequately describes the beauty of it all.

    4 out of 4
  1. Main Title – I Had a Farm in Africa (3:07)
  2. I’m Better At Hello – Karen’s theme (1:15)
  3. Have You Got a Story For Me? (1:12)
  4. Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra in A, K.622 (2:46)
  5. Safari (2:40)
  6. Karen’s Journey / Siyawe (4:46)
  7. Flying Over Africa (3:22)
  8. Order this CD I Had a Compass From Denys – Karen’s theme II (2:27)
  9. Alone on the Farm (1:55)
  10. Let the Rest of the World Go By (3:12)
  11. If I Know a Song of Africa – Karen’s theme III (2:11)
  12. End title – You Are Karen (4:03)

Released by: MCA
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 33:34

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1986 F Non-Soundtrack Music Tim Finn

Tim Finn – Big Canoe

1 min read

Order this CDTim Finn’s songs are usually easy to enjoy, though time has cost many of this album’s drum-machine-and-dance-beat-laden tracks some of their charm. Not to worry, though – some of this stuff is great for the mid-’80s synth-pop sound, and it’s a wonder they never crossed the Pacific and became bigger hits in America. “Don’t Bury My Heart”, “Big Canoe” and “No Thunder, No Fire, No Rain” are among Tim’s best, and the high-energy dance rhythm of “Spiritual Hunger” is not easily ignored. Some of the songs miss their mark 3 out of 4entirely, though – some probably due to the passage of time. The incomparable Anne Dudley arranged the orchestral passages and accompaniments, ensuring that at least that much of it is worth a listen. “Big Canoe” comes out as my favorite, a sweeping ode to the Maori heritage and history of New Zealand.

  1. Spiritual Hunger (4:36)
  2. Don’t Bury My Heart (4:25)
  3. Timmy (3:44)
  4. So Deep (3:17)
  5. No Thunder, No Fire, No Rain (5:21)
  6. Searching the Streets (4:11)
  7. Carve You In Marble (5:40)
  8. Water Into Wine (4:10)
  9. Hyacinth (4:58)
  10. Big Canoe (4:39)
  11. Hole In My Heart (3:12)
  12. Are We One Or Are We Two (3:51)

Released by: Virgin
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 52:06

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1986 Artists (by group or surname) F Non-Soundtrack Music

Fine Young Cannibals

 Fine Young CannibalsTalk about a brief reign as the king – these guys had it made in the chart-topping department in 1989, but now they’ve gone almost completely silent. Their self-titled first album has some of their best material on it, particularly the acoustic-guitar and sax driven Funny How Love Is and a wonderfully unpredictable song called “Couldn’t Care More” which also ranks as my favorite song by FYC. The early single “Johnny Come Home” is also here, along with a surprisingly well-executed cover of Elvis’ “Suspicious 3out of 4Minds”. I have to give this album higher marks than the later The Raw & The Cooked by a long shot. And whatever happened to these guys anyway, aside from lead singer Roland Gift’s occasional villainous guest appearances on the Highlander TV series?

Order this CD

  1. Johnny Come Home (3:35)
  2. Couldn’t Care More (3:30)
  3. Don’t Ask Me To Choose (3:05)
  4. Funny How Love Is (3:28)
  5. Suspicious Minds (3:56)
  6. Blue (3:35)
  7. Move To Work (3:26)
  8. On A Promise (3:06)
  9. Time Isn’t Kind (3:12)
  10. Like a Stranger (3:28)
  11. Johnny Come Home – extended mix (5:45)
  12. Suspicious Minds – suspicious mix (7:54)

Released by: I.R.S.
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 48:00

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1986 S Soundtracks Star Trek Television

Star Trek: Symphonic Suites from the Original Series

3 min read

Order this CDReleased around the 20th anniversary of Star Trek, these two CDs contained new recordings of the original Trek’s music, this time in the form of long suites in which the entirety of particular episode’s score is performed in the form of a long, interconnected orchestral piece. The arrangements are faithful, but you have to have a stomach for 15 or more minutes of music in the classic Trek vein; remember, compared to the almost atonal sophisticated stuff that passes for music on the current Star Trek shows, the old Trek’s scores were pretty wildly bombastic. Both discs were performed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Tony Bremner. Volume 1 features the music of the third-season episodes Is There In Truth No Beauty? and The Paradise Syndrome, composed by, respectively, George Duning and Gerald Fried, while Volume 2’s more diverse selection includes Joseph Mullendore’s The Conscience Of The King and Sol Kaplan’s The Enemy Within from the first season, the whimsical I, Mudd score by Samuel Matlovsky from the second year, and the third year’s Spectre Of The Gun, composed by Jerry Fielding. The shortcomings of these discs are some very irritating synthesized approximations of the organ tones used in the very 1960s original 3 out of 4renditions. On the other hand, these are the only available copies of these specific episodes’ music, and a lot of it is very good indeed, particularly since, unlike the GNP Crescendo releases, much of the music comes from the third season, and therefore was not reused over and over again as often as the earlier music from the first and second seasons.

    Volume One
  1. Is There In Truth No Beauty? by George Duning:
    Enter Miranda / Ambassador Arrival / McCoy’s Toast / Quite a Woman / Marvick Pleads / Marvick Mad / Marvick Berserk / Marvick Dies / Sentimental Jim /Blind Miranda / No Chane / Miranda Mad / Miranda’s Farewell
    (19:58)
  2. The Paradise Syndrome by Gerald Fried:
    Pine Trees / The Amerinds / Tahiti Syndrome / The Brain Wash / Miramanee / Breath of Life / The New God / Dilithium Problem / Wash Day / Salish Fluffed / Potter Kirk / Naming the God / Joining Day / Challenge / The Ceremony / Birth Announcement / False God / Death of Miramanee (19:54)
    Volume Two
  1. The Conscience Of The King by Joseph Mullendore:
    Spaceship Titles / Lenore / Lenore’s Kiss / Everything Is Later / Ophelia Mania / Last Cue
    (8:43)
  2. Spectre Of The Gun by Jerry Fielding:
    Melkot’s Warning / Tomstone / Teeth Pulling / My Name: Doc Holliday / Love Scene in the Old West / Chekov Gets Killed / Ten Minutes / We’re Trapped / Final Curtain
    (15:15)
  3. The Enemy Within by Sol Kaplan:
    The Rock Slide / The Tired Captain / Bruised Knuckles / An Imposter / Undecisive / Alter Ego / Another Brandy / Double Dog Death / Help Me / Thank You, Yeoman
    (13:14)
  4. I, Mudd by Samuel Matlovsky:
    Alice In Wonderland / Mudd’s Series / Tired of Happiness / Stella / The Last Straw / Stella 500
    (8:38)

Released by: Label X
Release date: 1986
Volume One total running time: 39:52
Volume Two total running time: 45:53

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1986 G Non-Soundtrack Music Peter Gabriel

Peter Gabriel – So

Peter Gabriel - SoThis album, and the singles “Sledgehammer” and “Big Time”, were my first real exposure to Peter Gabriel, which is the case with a lot of people. This is easily Gabriel’s most accessibly mainstream album, but even with that in mind, it bears more than a casual listen. And it’s still my favorite, mainly due to simple personal-significance-in-my-life sort of reasons. But while this may be Peter’s most mainstream album, featuring as it did the singles “Sledgehammer” and the nutso “Big Time” (which therefore makes the latter my favorite of the two), it also has my all-time favorite Gabriel tune, a haunting little number called “Mercy Street” which to this day sends shivers down my spine. How much of that is the song itself and how much is actually just the instinctive correlation between hearing the song and remembering certain events in my life, I can’t tell, because I can’t separate them anymore. Whenever I seek a profound personal catharsis, I put my headphones on, crank the volume, and sing along as best I can. Again, whew. Let’s see, what else? Oh yeah, Laurie Anderson also does a guest vocal on the memorable “This Is The Picture”.

4 out of 4While I give this album my highest recommendations and include it on my DNP Album List, it has one other distinction not shared by many of the other albums I’ve enjoyed and reviewed – it is incredibly important to me personally. Thank you, Pete.

Order this CD

  1. Red Rain (5:39)
  2. Sledgehammer (5:16)
  3. Don’t Give Up (6:33)
  4. That Voice Again (4:53)
  5. In Your Eyes (5:29)
  6. Mercy Street (6:21)
  7. Big Time (4:30)
  8. We Do What We’re Told: milgram’s 37 (3:22)
  9. This is the Picture: excellent birds (4:18)

Released by: Geffen
Release date: 1986
Total running time: 46:21

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