Ten Great Asia Songs That Never Hit the U.S. Top 40

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That’s right. I said “Ten Great Asia Songs That Never Hit the U.S. Top 40.”

I for one am sick of the near-monolithic critical disdain for the band Asia. The latest noogie is from a post titled The 15 Most Disappointing Supergroups Of All Time in this week’s NME:

Imagine how bad a supergroup consisting of old lags from King Crimson and ELP would have been. Now add in ex-members of Yes. And all of them trying to hang on to their prog-pop stylings well into the 80s. Asia, presumably, being where they should’ve been exiled to at birth.

Critics usually go even further and slag supergroups as a whole, as if it’s pre-ordained to be a bad idea each time talented musicians who made their reputations in other bands decide to band together. But Blind Faith and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young weren’t exactly artistic disasters. And who are we to begrudge rock veterans doing something fun on the side, e.g. the Traveling Wilburys? (It wasn’t supposed to sound like a Dylan album. It was a lark, more like Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band, only making studio LPs.) If you don’t like it, let it be. At least allow that perhaps your expectations were the problem.

I’ll add that if you have a hard-bitten anti-prog bias, you have no business writing critically about a supergroup made up of prog musicians. It would be like me panning a Riverdance show: It’s really none of my business.

And Asia wasn’t meant to be Yes II, or a re-launching of ELP or King Crimson. Those bands, love ’em or hate ’em, were the original Progfathers, the ones who birthed the genre. Apparently the guys wished to do something that relaxed the prog tendencies somewhat, something more streamlined. Perhaps they wanted a piece of the Styx-Journey-Boston audience (and some of their money). Maybe (gasp!) they even wanted to be played on the radio.

And so they created a band that made four- and five-minute rock songs with layered harmonies and strong, anthemic choruses, tastefully rendered by consummate musicians. And they were almost universally reviled by critics.

But fans don’t carry around as many issues as critics–they simply like what they like. And “Heat of the Moment” is nearly as beloved by fans of 80’s pop rock as is Toto’s “Africa”. Asia’s debut album went four times platinum in the U.S. alone, and they consistently sell out concert halls in many parts of the world to this day.

With friends like that, who needs NME?

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1. “Sole Survivor”

From their debut. This one got U.S. airplay, but never dented the pop charts. It’s very cinematic, in the same 80’s sci-fi sort of way as Mike + The Mechanics’ “Silent Running”.

2. “Wildest Dreams”

Also from their first LP. If you were a fan of muscular AOR, Asia’s first delivered the goods in spades. It wasn’t the last time Geoff Downes and John Wetton would visit an anti-war theme. Again, this song never saw the pop charts, although it was played on rock stations.

3. “Summer”

Here’s where things start to get interesting. Asia was a band of many lineup changes (the original lineup only survived two albums) and by 1994 John Payne had taken over John Wetton’s duties as lead vocalist and bass player. The Payne-era albums don’t get much respect today, to say the least. And they weren’t particularly good records. But most had at least a quality track or two, such as “Summer”, which offered a strong hook of a chorus, the kind that sticks with you like one of those Foreigner ballads the radio played incessantly.

4. “Ready to Go Home”

With the band including some material from outside writers by 2001’s Payne-era Aura album, they could do a lot worse than look to Andrew Gold and 10cc alum Graham Gouldman, who wrote this gorgeous ballad. Perhaps the overlooked gem of the band’s entire repertoire, “Ready to Go Home” speaks of the end of life in a poignant way, emotional but not maudlin. This is the kind of song most rock bands wouldn’t touch; it takes balls, frankly, to sing about the surrender of earthly cares and the forgiveness of sins within the rock arena. This is the kind of song that makes Asia’s John Payne era matter. With none of the Wetton-Downes power harmony bluster Asia is known for, “Ready to Go Home” might actually be the boldest artistic statement in their catalog.

 5. “Come Make My Day”

From the same Aura album, “Come Make My Day” is just a well-delivered welterweight rock tune with a nice chorus. If the MOR rock genre isn’t for you, neither is this song. But again, if you liked bands like Foreigner and late-period .38 Special, this is right up your alley.

6. “Never Again”

In 2008 the four original members of Asia returned with a vengeance. With John Wetton back in the fold, the trademark big harmony choruses were back, and with the return of his songwriting the aptly-titled Phoenix album was the band’s best since their debut. Simply put, if you liked Asia in 1982, you’ll like Phoenix.

7. “Alibis”

Of all the tracks on Phoenix, “Alibis” most made you want to check the date on the back of the CD, as it perfectly recaptured the “Heat of the Moment” sound. It’s like the years 1983-2007 never happened.

8. “Parallel Worlds/Vortex/Déyà”

This 8-minute epic in three parts allowed the guys to “prog out” a little. Carl Palmer and Steve Howe in particular get to show some chops here, but all in tasteful service of the song.

9. “An Extraordinary Life”

Yes, I realize four of these ten songs are from the Phoenix album, and yes, it’s that good. If the album had a potential single, this album-closer was probably it. With Wetton having come through some serious troubles with alcohol and recent major heart surgery, this song had to have real meaning for him, and it comes through in the lyric and performance: a simple statement of appreciation for life from a man who’d nearly lost his in more ways than one.

10. “Holy War”

All four original members reconvened for another strong album with 2010’s Omega, and its lead track is certainly one of the best songs the band has ever recorded. Again, it’s a sound, and theme, straight from Asia circa 1982. Their platinum-selling days are long behind them, of course. But musically at least, Asia was one band that accomplished the ultra-rare feat of a credible return to their glory years of decades earlier.

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See also:

Ten Great Hollies Songs That Never Hit the U.S. Top 40

Ten Great Irish Rovers Songs that Aren’t ‘The Unicorn’

Ten Great Proclaimers Songs that Aren’t ‘I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)’

Ten Great Weezer Songs That Aren’t from the ‘Blue Album’

Synth Wiz Ronald Jenkees Keeps it Crunchy…and Smooth

Electronic keyboard player Ronald Jenkees has parlayed his status as YouTube phenomenon into a website with music downloads and physical CDs. He’s even contributed music to the score of an independent film.

Check out my favorite, “Stay Crunchy”.

Website:  http://www.ronaldjenkees.com/

Fascinating Photos of Famous Musicians in Their Studios

(Source: Flavorwire)

By Tom Hawking

We’re constantly fascinated with the creative process…and one of the most important components of that process is the space in which it takes place. For musicians, at least as far as the recording process goes, this place is the studio, and as such we thought we’d take a look at the studios of some of our favorite musicians. The contrasts on display are intriguing, from the endearingly chaotic to the pristine and very expensive, from analog to digital, from minimalist to decked out in all sorts of crazy-looking gear. We hope you enjoy them as much as we do!

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The Chemical Brothers

Tom Rowlands on the bridge of the Chem Bros’ spaceship.

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Steve Albini

Electrical Audio in Chicago: a space as austere as the man who owns it.

studio 3

Daft Punk

We’d love to believe that Daft Punk really do dress up in their helmets when they’re recording…

studio 4

Lindstrøm

…and we’re delighted to see that Lindstrøm sports his trademark bucket hat!

studio 5

Flying Lotus

All that mess would probably make us scream, too.

studio 6

Dr. Dre

Avec gigantic keyboard.

studio 7

Brian Eno

Back in the 1970s…

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Brian Eno

… and now.

studio 9

Lee “Scratch” Perry

Shortly before he burned his studio to the ground. No, really.

studio 10

Radiohead

Who says Thom Yorke doesn’t have a sense of humor?

studio 11

Lenny Kravitz

Of course Lenny Kravitz has a crazy-beautiful studio.

studio 12

Bob Moog

And of course Bob Moog has a gazllion amazing-looking synths.

studio 13

Jimi Hendrix

The Jimi Hendrix Experience at the newly opened Electric Lady Studios on West 8th Street in New York.

studio 14

J Dilla

With Peter Adarkwah from BBE Records at his home studio in Detroit. Look at all that vinyl!

studio 15

Animal Collective

More controlled chaos.

studio 16

Phil Spector (with Ike and Tina Turner)

Before the crazy.

studio 17

Sly Stone

Before the crazy (II).

studio 18

Johnny Jewel

We’re amused and entirely unsurprised to see that the Chromatics and Glass Candy producer’s neo-disco aesthetic extends to his workspace.

studio 19

King Tubby

The great Jamaican dub pioneer at his self-built home studio in Kingston.

studio 20

Aphex Twin

He even looks terrifying in the studio.

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Daphne Oram

Female electronic pioneers, take one.

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Laurie Spiegel

Female electronic pioneers, take two!

studio 23

Pharrell Williams (with J. Cole)

It’s kind of reassuring to see that Pharrell isn’t above using cheap MIDI keyboards.

studio 24

Michael Rother

Suitably spaced out, some time in the mid-1970s.

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Tom Waits

And finally, the only man who can make a tiny toy piano somehow look cool. Bless.

John Lennon and the Spectacles Man

John Lennon has a permanent chill-out session on a park bench in Havana, Cuba, The Park in Vedado district is called Parque John Lennon, and it was Fidel Castro himself who in 2000 unveiled the life-size bronze statue of the Beatle. Unfortunately, John’s glasses were stolen immediately afterwards, and then stolen again, and so the Cuban government had to find a Spetacles Man who lurks behind the trees and the bushes with John’s glasses in his pocket, and every time someone comes to meet John Lennon the Spectacles Man pops out and puts those famous Lennon glasses on the nose. – Walter de Camp

10 Songs With Hidden Messages

(Source: BuzzFeed)

 zappa prince

These classic songs have a bit more to them than meets the eye. The advent of recorded music also meant the ability to backmask — hiding an audio cue through recording tricks embedded within songs. If you’ve ever wondered what your favorite artist was actually saying, read on.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/rdio/10-songs-with-hidden-messages

Singing as if Prizes Depended on It

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(Excerpted from The New York Times)

By  CORINNA da FONSECA-WOLLHEIM

A singing competition is no ideal biosphere for music to flourish.

That much was clear from the finals of this year’s George London Competition, which offered the unnatural spectacle of opera arias morphing into sales pitches in the hands of 24 young American and Canadian singers. In the presence of a jury including opera greats like Nedda Casei and George Shirley, contestants apparently felt compelled to force out top notes and sing very loudly — notwithstanding the aggressively amplifying acoustics of the Gilder Lehrman Hall at the Morgan Library & Museum

(Read more here: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/05/arts/music/george-london-competition-at-the-morgan-library.html?ref=music )

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As we’ve previously ranted on this site, the current mania for competitive singing may be to the eventual detriment of pop music, if it hasn’t already. And the above excerpt suggests such effects may not be limited to pop, but have been seen in the classical music realm as well.

If young singers can be made to understand the difference between singing as conveyance of emotion and singing as a July 4th fireworks display (in shorthand, the difference between, say, Barbra Streisand and Celine Dion) maybe it’s not unthinkable we’ll see another Karen Carpenter or Roberta Flack on the charts again someday. But as long the prize-givers are in control, it’s unlikely.

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