Below: Cyndi's meal ticket She's So Unusual has sold 16 million since it's release in the fall of 1983.
Move onto 1983 and her debut album She's So Unusual is a blistering and vivid collection of equally emphatic and committed performances. Co-writing the modern classic Time After Time, 80s corporate nostalgia found a song unable to be trampled on by American Idol, funerals and cynical charity commercials asking people who are not gay to give blood - it's a lifeline beyond commercial approach. She fires from all cylinders on Tom Gray's combusting Money Changes Everything, single number 5, and it increases in value with every listen.Below: the pressure of not knowing when Sussanah Hoff's will re-record her hits finally got to Cyndi during a photoshoot.
Cyndi co-wrote the song Steady with Shear, which became his only dent on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 68. The scrambling hot mess Right Track, Wrong Train was the lead single's attractive B-side, and an old Blue Angel track What A Thrill was the second Cyndi track to appear on the Goonies OST, only released in Japan in 1985, and the yodelling Goonies 'R' Good Enough became her 5th US top ten hit.
Below: True Colours featured a cluttered array of guests, including goddess Aimee Mann, and yet was a remarkably elegant affair, and sold 12 million copies worldwide despite not producing many hit singles.
Her sophomore set True Colours kicks off with the statuesque Hi-NRG fireworks of Change of Heart: deafning drums like flashing lightning bolts strike vividly, Nile Rodgers on an equally glitzy bass groove, The Bangles on contractually soulful backing vocals and Cyndi making one not take any notice of them. Its stark clutter of aching melodrama peaked at #3 in the US yet was a disasterous flop in the UK despite shooting its candid video in London with unemployed people staring at her.
Below: lollygagging bopper Lauper danced in London all day to film Change of Heart's cinematic promotional clip.
She re-records the Maybe He'll Know (MHK), which is to be the only track here to retain the brilliant sliced-and-diced organ that made GJWTHF so playful: it is to be a single, yet the adult-contemporary snowballing ballad Boy Blue is chosen instead, which stalls at #71 in America despite the profits going to AIDS, and in 1987 MHK is eventually released in Holland where it becomes a #41 smash. Male doo-wopping backing vocals from man candy Billy Joel are added, and an extra glittery 'Special Mix' originally intended for US radio appears after its sell-by-date on the B-side to 1989's I Drove All Night.
The peroxide mare took another 3 years to follow up a record that was only successful for barely 3 singles, during which her film career bombed, the bullet-proof Hole In My Heart (All The Way To China) performed abysmally stateside despite not being in the country to promote it (Cyn was songwriting in Russia, but it went top ten in Australia), and well Cyndi seemed to take this very personally. It is said Cyn flipped when Hole fell flat: growing weary of recording commerical-sounding pop fluff, the anguish is evident on the stale-but-glamrous nature of 1989's pensive A Night To Remember.
Below: Vibes may have flopped harder than Rosie O'Donnell's flaps, but its soundtrack remains the most sought after collectable movie soundtrack.
Below: Lauper packs her bags and heads for the outer reaches of the Billboard Hot 100.
The album was a stagnant selection of mostly cynical attempts to cluster together 'Cyndi Lauper songs'. Four tracks remain worthy of rescue from the deluge of Bangles cast-off's. The lead off single triggered Lauper's deeper register and first glimpse of the soaring, bluesy been-around-the-block folksy vocal that would propell largely all of her recording since (even for her dance tracks), and is the closes thing to a visceral and intensely compelled performance similar to Money Changes Everything, but sans the immersed yelping.Below: Lauper tries to forget all about the glorious hot mess Hole In My Heart by wearing as much slap as possible.
However, the idea of consensual and unconditional love requiring 'surrender' is a novel idea, but ultimately just misses the point. On the album's worst offenders, such as the dire Insecurious, she just sounds like a hand puppet, and the splintering disco-smaltz Dancing With A Stranger is savagely corportate songwriting at its worst. Whereas Lauper thrust herself into the wanton abandon of her debut, this album is devoid from any of her trademark character and vulnerability.
Between albums she releases the twinkle-little-star power ballad The World Is Stone, which becomes a massive #2 in France and bows at #15 in the UK, yet leaves no skidmarks in America. Similar in style to the single version of What's Going On, Tina Arena and Celine would have been proud Eurovision entries with this gem. It is a wonder it never appeared on her next studio set, which badly needed a notable selling point. Its B-side is the ballad You Have To Learn How To Live Alone.
Below: the 4 million selling Hat Full of Stars was written as a message to ex-partner David Wolff, and its meditative 30s inspired cover art later came into comparison with that of Stars by Simply Red.
Returning to full action after 4 hefty years of bad acting, Hat Full of Stars represents the proper stage 2 of Cyndi Lauper and presents the naked outline of an ambitious songwriter. For the first time Cyndi has a proper 'voice' in her songs and isnot merely interpreting those written by men albeit terrifically. The wounded estrangement of Who Let In The Rain is a divine suspension of stifled heartbreak and would streak if it were palpable.
Below: Cyn sells 6 million copies of her greatest hits and deliberately creates a cartoon image of herself to promote the CD.
After Cyndi Lauper's sensational greatest hits campaign successfuly reminded people who she was a mere 10 years into her career, her next studio album looked as if it could not fail. Given that 12 Deadly Cyns ... and then some recieved a belated US release a whole year later than in Europe, there were already signs that Sony were quite content to hold her as a heritage artist, to successively feed off diminishing compilation returns instead of fully supporting her artistic and commerical development. The celtic I'm Gonna Be Strong re-records a Blue Angel cover single and effectively tinges the project with the next phase of her 'I can really sing' singing style.Below: the solid work of Sisters of Avalon ranks as one of her best albums and yet sold little over a million copies, and Lauper gives her producer a complex
And so Sisters of Avalon has all the qualifications behind it: Lauper's dazzling world-concquering signiture anthem has been re-invented with the post Hat Full of Stars stamp all over it, her demons have been cremated and with Jan Pulsford as her writing partner creates her most confident set of songs to date whilst managing to twist some of the same tricks as on its predecessor's best moments.Below: Lauper says those earings 'weigh me down, weigh me down'.
Instead, single number 2 was a rather eccentric choice, the seam-bursting title track - it remains a live favourite to this day and when Cyndi's trembling flame-flickering vocal gristles as she sings 'reverberating' and is the album's finest moment. However, released to radio it just sounds cluttered and like a badly executed lesbian anthem - it effectively killed any chance of the album getting out the gutter. Hot Gets A Little Cold was the only track on the album not co-written by Pulsford, which for reasons I shall get into when I reach the Shine album are retrospectively satisfying.
Below: Lauper is gently nudged out of her contract with a folky festive album containing half a dozen inviting numbers (Home On Christmas Day) and a few hilarious disasters (Minnie & Santa).
Below: the outstanding Shine album was as vibrant as her debut, and remains arguably her very best. Yet her record company folded and the singer was left stranded to release a makeshift E.P until the album was set free in Japan.
Highlights included the gallant title track, revving up Tom Gray's well-oiled engine ferociously well on It's Hard To Be Me (written about Anna Nicole Smith, who requests to use it as her reality show's theme and is turned down), the very clumsy albeit Don't Tell Me sounding Madonna Whore, the TLC bee-stung vocal on This Kind of Love, the clunky dancefloor muscle of Higher Plane (which sounds like a Living Proof track), the glass sharp speed-ballad Eventually, Rather Be With You's eyesquinting gaze, Comfort You's scarred regret, and the almighty reunion between Cyndi and her Time After Time co-writer Rob Hyman on the sweeping Water's Edge which dillutes all confusion and drove lesbians crazy at some festival back in the day (I used to have the live file and it would prick hairs on my arms).
Below: the competant vocal showcase At Last was an album of standards, accompanied by some of her most impressive photographs yet, and gave the singer her first US top 40 album in over 15 years.
The title track from her standards album At Last is a seductive after-hours ballad and of the finest recordings of her career, which can't be said for much of the other tracks such as her duet with Toni Benett. In 2003 Cyndi records one of her most compelling vocals for the Headwig OST on the track Midnight Radio.Below: making do with record label negotiating, she agrees to cover her hits by putting the blame on other artists with whom she duets on most tracks.
Expenses are spared in 2005 as she takes the piss slightly with The Body Acoustic, and the thoughtful ballad Above The Clouds is more like lying on the front lawn with ants crawling in your hair. My hero Ani Difranco guests, as do many other less noteworthy talent and thankfully Kelly Osbourne's duet is canned.Below: far from her first forray into dance, her unequivocal disco record is a flop despite the emphatic material being her most contemporary ever.
The Japanese top 20 album Bring Ya To The Brink was a redblooded re-awakening for Cyndi. The bursting adrenaline on Into The Nightlife defies gravity, the heavy flow of Lauper's exhausted euphoria on Same Ol' Story is ready to pounce, and both are her most bombastic entries since 1984. The sagging Lyfe may well be regarded as a let-down , but is the only track here that could be on any of her albums from the 90s onwards and burns from the same candle as Say A Prayer (hello again organs - you would think fans would make more of a big deal about Cyndi's Cyndi-isms littered throughout her records). Similarly, on the taut Digital Dog produced Give It Up when she sings 'turn it around' it's hard not to flashback to Change of Heart's memorable lyric.Below: Cyndi thought she could scare gays into buying her high-volume single Into The Nightlife, but forgets to shoot a decent video (this still is perhaps one of the few decent shots).
The spiralling disco of Set Your Heart was Kylie's Step Back In Time with a pulse, Dragonette ejaculate their wet dream for Cyndi on the very Shine-sounding Grab A Hold whilst managing to sound like her missing 1989 lifesaver, and Rain On Me is a whole new level of Time After Time.
Downloads on request.
4 comments:
What a brilliant re-cap of a truly amazing artist. I love Cyndi. Her first two albums are so special to me and "Bring Ya To The Brink" was my favourite album of 2008. I do lose my way somewhere in the 90s but I need to go back and re-discover those gems.
SO much fun to read your thorough retrospective of Cyndi's diverse and illustrious career. I'm a still a fan of most of A Night to Remember's unique pensiveness, including "I Don't Want to Be Your Friend." Cyndi's vocals on that song feel effectively rousing to me; it sure beats Desmond Child's version, even though his more rockin' rendition is also worthwhile.
I can totally understand why Cyndi would be frustrated that "Hole in My Heart (All the Way to China)" didn't become a massive hit. What a brilliant, adrenaline-pumping performance and delivery. SUCH a cool song. I'm sure that you must also already know Cyndi's other rare one-off tracks, like "Unabbreviated Love" and her amazing, very early electronic cover of Fleetwood Mac's "You Make Lovin' Fun." In the unlikely chance that you haven't heard those yet, definitely be sure to check them out. And thanks for this informative, in-depth blog post!
My favourite responce ever - always great to chat Cyndi with people. Unabbreviated Love, I always found to be very Gloria Estefan in production (but then again so are parts of Madonna's song Like A Prayer). Can you believe I've never heard a proper recording of Cyndi's Loving cover? I must track that down, then, if it's electronic (ie, right up my street).
Glad you liked the comments! You're right about "Unabbreviated Love," some very Gloria Estefan elements in there. I have "You Make Lovin' Fun" on CD, thanks to my Los Angeles friend Kieran, who's another die-hard Cyndi fanatic. Let me know your e-mail address, and I'll send that rare track along to you later. I haven't ever even uploaded it yet! Really amazing song, totally electronic, recorded before she was even officially "Cyndi," but it's very obvious that it's her.
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