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psychicdeath

Member
Jan 21, 2015
955
1,521
Dave's Song of the Day

Close My Eyes Forever – Lita Ford (duet with Ozzy Osbourne)

Friday song of the day: Today’s song was written spontaneously in a drunken studio session with the husband of Lita Ford’s manager.




Yesterday’s song was by The Runaways, whose lead guitarist was Lita Ford. After the band broke up, Ford pursued a solo career. She put out two heavy metal influenced albums on Mercury Records in 1983 and 1984 that were only mildly successful. Then she signed with RCA records and took more of a pop-metal sound at the suggestion of her new manager, Sharon Osbourne. In 1988 she released her first album for RCA, Lita.

Lita’s first single was Kiss Me Deadly, which was a hit at #12 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album’s third single was a song that was written “by accident” in the studio. As Lita describes it, “Close My Eyes Forever was a mistake. It was just me and Ozzy and Sharon hanging about in the recording studio. They showed up one day and had a housewarming present for me: a life-size duplicate of Koko the gorilla from the San Diego Zoo. It was freaking huge – I had to strap it in the front seat of my jeep to get it home. Ozzy stayed, Sharon got bored and left, and me and Ozzy had a couple of drinks and we were jamming. We started singing, messing about and we wrote Close My Eyes Forever. Next thing I knew the sun was coming up. I looked at him and went, ‘Uh-oh, we’re in trouble.’ Sharon had been waiting all night. We were a long way from where Ozzy had to go. He said, ‘Can you drive me home?’ I said, ‘No, I can’t.’ We were stoned out of our minds. He got into a cab and I strapped Koko into my jeep and drove home – just barely made it. And then we had this hit song.”

Ozzy thought that with the song written, his part was done. He was wrong, though, and later he returned to record a duet with Lita, which was included on her album. Osbourne later said, “I get on a plane, I go back to England, and then I get another phone call. It’s my wife and she said, ‘Can you come back out? She wants to do it with you.’ I go, ‘Do what?’ And she goes, ‘That f—in’ song!’ I go ‘OK,’ and I record the song, go back to England again, and a couple weeks later they want to do a video. I’m going, ‘This is getting f—in’ ridiculous now!’ So I must have done like five million masters, but it turned out OK and I was pretty happy with the end result and she was.”

The version of Close My Eyes Forever that was released as a single was remixed from the album version, but the remix consisted mostly of cleaning up the sound quality. The remix was released as a single in February 1989 and the duet went to #8 on the Hot 100 chart.

Album version, 1988


View: https://youtu.be/ITojaB8xdnk


Video 1989


View: https://youtu.be/foGkU6x3eSE

Single, 1989


View: https://youtu.be/bhTD0o7_Av4


Tomorrow: I want to reach out and touch the sky
 
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psychicdeath

Member
Jan 21, 2015
955
1,521
Dave's Song of the Day

Supernaut – 1000 Homo DJs

Saturday song of the day: Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails recorded the vocals for today’s song, but they had to be replaced.




Yesterday’s song featured Ozzy Osbourne, and today’s song was co-written by Ozzy in 1972 for Black Sabbath. Supernaut was featured on the band’s album, Vol. 4, but was not released as a single.

Years later, Al Jourgensen of Ministry was working on a side project and recorded an industrial music version of Supernaut. The band became known as 1000 Homo DJs, supposedly because after hearing the music the band produced Jim Nash of Wax Tracks! Records said, “No one’s gonna buy this. It’ll take one thousand homo DJs to play this for one person to buy it.”

Members of the band all appeared under pseudonyms on the 1990 single, but most are known. For instance, Jourgensen was credited as “Buck Satan,” Jello Biafra of Dead Kennedys was called “Count Ringworm,” and so on. A few were not known for certain. It was known that Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails worked on the project. Although Reznor recorded vocals for Supernaut, his label TVT Records, refused to allow the version with him on it to be released. This led to the theory that the version released was in fact Reznor but with his voice disguised under heavy distortion to avoid a lawsuit by TVT.

This turned out to not be the case, and the version with Reznor singing was released later in a 1994 box set from Wax Trax! Records. Vocals on the 1990 release were Al Jourgensen. Listening to the two versions, there really is not all that much difference since the voice is so heavily processed.

1000 Homo DJs, 1990


View: https://youtu.be/oCWordf7uLQ


1000 Homo DJs (Trent Reznor vocals), 1994


View: https://youtu.be/PPTEbfjeGJw


Black Sabbath, 1972


View: https://youtu.be/7H4PIWBcnYs


Tomorrow: Bow down before the one you serve
 
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psychicdeath

Member
Jan 21, 2015
955
1,521
Dave's Song of the Day

Head Like a Hole – Nine Inch Nails

Sunday song of the day: The writer of today’s song claims that he dashed it off in fifteen minutes.




Nine Inch Nails is an industrial rock band that is basically the project on Trent Reznor, with additional musicians utilized as needed. The band released its first album, Pretty Hate Machine, in 1989. Reznor and his backing musicians, including Richard Patrick of Filter, devoted a lot of time and effort to developing songs for the album, but by contrast one came rather easily.

Reznor wrote Head Like a Hole very quickly, claiming that he came up with the basic music and lyrics in about fifteen minutes. He considered the song, which is about the hold money has over people, pretty much as filler on the album, and not as serious as some of the other songs. Head Like a Hole was musically less heavy than other numbers on Pretty Hate Machine, with some saying it was a lighter introduction to “real” industrial music.

Despite coming easier than other songs on the album, Head Like a Hole ended up being the standout, and was very popular, bringing new fans to Nine Inch Nails. The album came out in October 1989, and in March of 1990, Head Like a Hole was released as a single, and also as an EP with various remixes of the song by Reznor and producer Flood, as well as a few other songs. While mainstream audiences were not quite ready for even a light version of industrial music at the time and it did not break into the overall Hot 100, the song did manage to place at #28 on the Billboard Alternative Airplay chart. Although Trent Reznor was happy for the success of his music, he was a bit miffed that it wasn’t one of his more serious works that broke him to a larger audience, later saying, “The fact that it produced this huge reaction really pissed me off because I hadn’t agonized over it.”


View: https://youtu.be/ZdFaadxJl4g


Video


View: https://youtu.be/ao-Sahfy7Hg



Tomorrow: Cool kids never have the time
 

psychicdeath

Member
Jan 21, 2015
955
1,521
Dave's Song of the Day

1979 – Smashing Pumpkins

Monday song of the day: Today’s song was almost dropped from the album but ended up being the band’s biggest hit.




Yesterday’s song, Head Like a Hole by Nine Inch Nails, was produced by Flood (real name Mark Ellis), who also produced the album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness by Smashing Pumpkins. One of the last songs selected for that album was 1979, a song about nostalgia.

Flood didn’t think that the song in its then-current form was good enough to include on the album, so that night the band’s leader and main songwriter Billy Corgan spent four hours rewriting it. Flood was happy with the improved version and withdrew his objections, and 1979 was included on the album.

The year 1979 was chosen because the syllables fit well and “nine” rhymed with other words Corgan used in the lyrics, as well as for being of the accurate time period. Since the song concerned nostalgia and the transition from childhood into the increased awareness of the world that occurs during the teenage years, Corgan felt that 1979 was appropriate because he had been twelve years old then.

1979 was the second single released from Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, following the #22 hit Bullet with Butterfly Wings. Released on January 23rd, 1996, 1979 peaked at #1 on both the Alternative Airplay and Mainstream Rock charts, as well as #12 on the overall Billboard Hot 100. This made it Smashing Pumpkins’ highest charting single.


View: https://youtu.be/A6M0yLxLCNA


Video


View: https://youtu.be/4aeETEoNfOg



Tomorrow: Yeah, they really want you
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
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Thuglife13

✝➡️👑🍕🍦
Dec 15, 2018
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ShatsBassoon

Throwing bombs & banging moms
First 100
Jan 14, 2015
18,604
33,624
Fucking amazing! My favorite older band of all time followed by the Stones who went legend as well with their cocaine use but we have to give thanks to the drugs for these bands giving us some amazing work...


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbmS3tQJ7Os
Love the stones! Merry Clayton did the backup vocals on gimme shelter while she was pregnant. Stones called her up in the wee hours of the morning to see if she could come in to the studio.
She nailed it, and if you listen at about 3:01 her voice cracks and you can here Mick shout "whooo!" In the background from the mixing room
 

ShatsBassoon

Throwing bombs & banging moms
First 100
Jan 14, 2015
18,604
33,624
Indeed he was.
Lindsey, Stevie, John and Christie McVie, and Mick Fleetwood was the lineup. It was pretty damn good, they still had it.

But I believe Lindsey has left the band again now.
Yeah he had another falling out.
So underrated as a guitar player. Big Love sounds like 2 guitars and the guys singing on top.