15 May 1981
Released: 15 May 1981
Recorded: February - August 1980
Producer: The Clash and Mikey Dread
Track listing[1]
Side A
The Magnificent Seven
Police on My Back
The Leader
Charlie Don't Surf
The Call Up
Somebody Got Murdered
Side B
Rebel Waltz
Let's Go Crazy
Junkie Slip
Up in Heaven (Not Only Here)
Washington Bullets
Broadway
10 July 1981
Released: 10 July 1981
Recorded: Early 1981
Producer: Jeff Lynne
Track listing[2]
Side A
Twilight (Prologue)
Yours Truly, 2095
Ticket to the Moon
When Time Stood Still
The Way Life's Meant to Be
Julie Don't Live Here
Another Heart Breaks
Side B
Rain is Falling
From the End of the World
Lights Go Down
Here is the News
21st Century Man
Hold on Tight
The Bouncer (Epilogue)
Unlike ELO's usual orchestral sound, Jeff Lynne chose to focus on electronics, hence the use of synthesizers to give the album a futuristic sound. It became the second album to not involve Mik Kaminski (violin), Hugh McDowell and Melvyn Gale (cello), all of whom had not partaken on Discovery or the songs featured in Xanadu. The core for ELO had now been reduced to Lynne himself, drummer Bev Bevan, pianist Richard Tandy and bassist Kelly Groucutt, although Mik Kaminski would rejoin for the tour supporting Time, lasting from September 1981 to March 1982.
Summary of single releases from Electric Light Orchestra's Time
- "Hold On Tight" / "When Time Stood Still" - 17 July 1981 (#2 UK, #4 US)
- "Twilight" / "Julie Don't Live Here" - 10 October 1981 (#9 UK, #15 US)
- "Ticket to the Moon" / "Here Is the News" - 11 December 1981 (#17 UK)
- "Rain Is Falling" / "The Way Life's Meant to Be" - 15 January 1982 (#86 US)
August 28, 1981
Elizabeth Peña, the first actress to portray Wonder Woman on the big screen, 1980s. Her performance earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress in 1982. |
Set in the early to mid-1940s, during World War II, United States army pilot Steve Trevor lands himself in Paradise Island[4], a segregated land of women, and meets one of its residents, Diana, the daughter of Queen Hippolyta. After explaining that the world of man is under war, Steve brings Diana to the world outside of Paradise Island, the latter believing that the god of war Ares is responsible for the cause of the war. Along the way, Diana encounters Baroness Paula von Gunther, a cold-blooded Nazi spy for Hitler, who pretends to ally with her and Steve so she can kill them; unknown to everyone, however, she is a pawn in Ares' game to exterminate Diana, who is later revealed to be the daughter of Zeus and Hippolyta. In the end, the Baroness and Ares are killed, and the war comes to an end following the collapse of Nazi Germany. In the present day (1980, according to the film), Diana reunites with an elderly Steve Trevor, and they see a bat-shaped signal in the sky, with Diana going off to see what it could mean.
November 10, 1981
Released: November 10, 1981
Recorded: March - September 1981
Producer: Bob Ezrin
Track listing[5]
Side A
Fanfare
Just a Boy
Odyssey
Only You
Under the Rose
Dark Light
Side B
A World Without Heroes
The Oath
Mr. Blackwell
Escape from the Island
I (Finale)
ACE FREHLEY: "It was an in-between; Kiss didn't really fall apart, but they didn't quite bounce back either. Peter had left, Eric came in, and Paul and Gene had taken over the band by that point. I felt like a man out of place by that point." (1996)
Music from "The Elder" was a concept album, fronted mainly by Stanley and Simmons, and there were hopes that it'd bring the band back to their roots. Bringing in producer Bob Ezrin, having co-produced Roger Waters' The Wall the year prior, they also included medieval horns, strings, harps and synthesizers, making it sound more like progressive rock rather than hard rock. Frehley was constantly frustrated during the sessions, feeling that his voice (and guitar) wasn't being heard during voting decisions.
GENE SIMMONS: "People were pretty divided about "The Elder"; some loved it, some hated it, and some were very mixed, feeling like it wasn't any better or worse than Unmasked." (2011)
Music from "The Elder" peaked out at #75 in the United States compared to Unmasked's #35, while in the United Kingdom, the former reached #51. Critical reaction was overall divisive, and the album's sole lead single released November 17, "A World Without Heroes" (#55 UK, #56 US), got lost in the crowd. By the end of February 1982, Music from "The Elder" was all but forgotten about, and Ace Frehley, arguably the most beloved member of Kiss, would leave following the release of next year's Creatures of the Night, leaving half of the founding lineup intact. In Ace's place was Vinnie Vincent, formerly of Black Satin and the Hitchhikers, who had partaken in the recording of Creatures of the Night. Once again, personality clashes would rise between the members...
18 December 1981
Released: 18 December 1981
Recorded: Winter 1980 - Summer 1981
Producer: Lindsey Buckingham, Richard Dashut and Ken Caillat
Track listing[6]
Side A
Suma's Walk
The Ledge
Save Me a Place
What Makes You Think You're the One
Book of Love
That's All for Everyone
Not That Funny
Side B
Empire State
That's Enough for Me
Oh Diane
I Know I'm Not Wrong
Goodbye Angel
Tusk
Eyes of the World
The first of these, Tusk, consisted of Buckingham's material from the failed 1979 Fleetwood Mac album as well as new material. Tusk reached #3 in the United Kingdom and #8 in the United States and received positive reviews. The title track was released as a single with "Not That Funny" (#6 UK, #8 US) in November 1981, while the following single, "Oh Diane" / "Teen Beat" (#9 UK, #35 US), would come out in February 1982.
The follow-up album, Law and Order, while recorded during the same sessions, would be released in November 1982.[7] In between solo album releases, Buckingham would find himself mending fences with his former bandmates.
Footnotes
- All tracks are sourced from OTL's Sandinista!.
- All tracks are sourced from OTL's Time. In addition, the track listing is based upon the original double album track listing, although "When Time Stood Still" and "The Way Life's Meant to Be" have swapped positions, and "The Bouncer" is moved towards the end, being combined with "Epilogue". Likewise, "Prologue" and "Twilight" are combined into a single track. "Sad Affair" and "Time Transporter" currently remain unreleased.
- In OTL, Ivan Reitman was attached to direct a Batman film written by Tom Mankiewicz, starring Bill Murray as Batman, David Niven as Alfred, William Holden as Commissioner Gordon, and David Bowie as the Joker. Reitman later left the project following the deaths of Holden and Niven as well as various rewrites to the script; Joe Dante then entered the project, but the film was cancelled altogether. In the mid-1990s, Reitman was attached to direct a Wonder Woman film, but that too never saw the light of day.
- Paradise Island (sometimes called the Amazon Isles) was the original name to Themyscira, Wonder Woman's home island. The current name of Themyscira was given in the first issue of Wonder Woman Vol. 2 in February 1987, and it originated from an ancient Greek town in northeastern Anatolia. According to Greek mythology, it was the capital city for the Amazons.
- The track listing is based upon the intended order; when Music from "The Elder" was first released, the order was rearranged so both sides would start with the songs that Casablanca Records wanted to be singles, explaining why the story on the American edition made no sense. The 1997 reinstates the songs in the proper order.
- Tracks are sourced from The Alternate Tusk and outtakes and early versions from Mirage.
- In OTL, Lindsey Buckingham's Law and Order was released on October 3, 1981, the month before Fleetwood Mac started recording for Mirage.
Author's Comments
Man, this chapter took longer to write up than I was expecting; the stories for Something About England, Time and Tusk both came out fine (although the album cover to the latter did leave a bit to be desired; then again, I've made far worse), but it was the Kiss and Wonder Woman parts of this chapter that kept it from being finished earlier. I had little to no idea what to do with either of them, the latter more so as coming up with fictional movies and their plotlines, cast and crews is difficult, as I soon found out. I wanted to utilize actors who were well known or just starting out during that time, just to keep things as authentic as possible. Hopefully it all came out okay.
I promise that the next chapter will be better and won't come off as a bit half-baked, especially since it'll be the 70th of the story.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteif this series does go beyond 1985, I would be really interested to see you tackle a Pogues studio album with Joe Strummer on lead vocals (IMHO, Joe's stuff for When Pigs Fly sound quite Poguey) in 1992-3.
ReplyDeleteI've been planning for a while to end the first version of the story at 1985. However, when I do the reboot, that is something I'll take into consideration.
Delete