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Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia

Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia - This Ain’t No Party?! Edition Part 2

Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia

Slate Podcasts

Music, Music History,

4.82.2K Ratings

🗓️ 27 October 2023

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

HEY! HO! LET’S GO!! Is this chant: (a) a movement of disaffected hipsters, (b) walkup music for a baseball player, or (c) a really catchy bop? How about all of the above?


The legendary New York nightclub CBGB was the birthplace of punk. But it was also the future of pop: the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith, Blondie. To varying degrees, these acts either became hitmakers, tried to reshape their music for the charts, or influenced generations of future multiplatinum stars.


Honestly? Their music was pretty infectious from the jump, even if it was too advanced for the ’70s hit parade. The music we called punk contained multitudes: the improvisatory jazz-rock of Television. The demented anthems of the Ramones. The quirky funk of Talking Heads. The stylistic eclecticism of Blondie—who scored four No. 1 hits in four different genres.


Join Chris Molanphy on a journey back to New York’s dirty days to try to answer: When did CBGB punk morph into chart pop?


Podcast production by Kevin Bendis.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening Ad-Free on Amazon Music.

0:15.4

Welcome back to Hit Parade, a podcast of Pop Chart History from Slate magazine about the hits from coast to coast.

0:23.6

I'm Chris Malanfi, chart analyst, pop critic, and writer of Slate's Why Is This Song Number

0:28.8

One series on our last episode.

0:31.7

We talked about how the New York City nightclub CBGB became the birthplace of punk in the 1970s, and what a wide

0:43.0

range of sounds fell under that term, from the pure punk of the Ramones to the free verse

0:49.7

of Patty Smith, the quirky funk rock of talking heads, to the genre-hopping, Blondie.

0:56.7

We are now at the start of the 1980s, when several of these bands are trying to figure out

1:03.9

how much they can stretch the definition of punk and score some actual pop chart hits.

1:12.0

In early 1980, Blondie pulled one last single from their 1979, Eat to the Beat, LP.

1:21.2

Though it barely scraped the top 40 in America, peaking at number 39, in the UK, this single, Atomic, was a smash,

1:32.3

spending a fortnight at number one.

1:34.8

What was most important about Atomic was how it pointed a way forward for Blondie in the New Wave era.

1:53.7

It had elements of surf rock and even a cowboy-like twang, but it wasn't retro.

2:01.1

It was danceable, but it wasn't disco the way Heart of Glass was.

2:06.8

Fundamentally, it was a rock song.

2:09.8

Danceable rock, a credibly commercial, blondie sound.

2:14.1

Oh, tonight! Bondi Sound. Around the same time, Blondie's Debbie Harry was invited to contribute to the soundtrack of director

2:31.5

Paul Schrader's 1980 Richard Gear Neo-Noir film American Gigolo.

2:37.9

The man in charge of the film's score was Italian producer-composer Georgio Moroder,

2:46.4

whom we've mentioned in several episodes of Hit Parade. He had a very productive 1970s packed with hits.

3:05.6

Maroder had guided Donna Summer to a string of disco number ones,

...

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