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LIFE IS A HIGHWAY (by Tom Cochrane: Mad, Mad World)

SUMMARY:                                RUNNING TIME: 4:26 Min.

Canadian musician Tom Cochrane’s “Life Is a Highway” track comes off his 1991 album, Mad, Mad World.  In addition to inspiring a music video, this country-rock tune would peak at # 6 on the U.S. charts and # 3 in the United Kingdom. 

Its subsequent covers include Chris LeDoux’s 1998 version for his One Road Man album and by Rascall Flatts for the 2006 Cars animated film soundtrack.       

REVIEW:

Combined with a catchy, upbeat melody, Tom Cochrane’s rollicking vocals delivers a welcome treat.  This original version of “Life Is a Highway” is definitely a must-have for any road trip playlist.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           8 Stars

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VOICE OF AMERICA’S SONS (by John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band: Tough All Over)

SUMMARY:                           RUNNING TIME: 4:35 Min.

Originally off John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band’s 1985 debut album, Tough All Over, this upbeat rock tune ultimately peaked at # 62 on the U.S. charts.  Its release as a single, however, stemmed from the tune’s prominent appearance in the 1986 Sylvester Stallone action film, Cobra.  Hence, “Voice of America’s Sons” appears as the first track for both albums.

Today, the song still occasionally resurfaces through radio airplay.        

Note: “Voice of America’s Sons” is also available digitally.

REVIEW:

No matter how unremarkable it may sound, the rollicking “Voice of America’s Sons” is still undeniably catchy.  Hence, saving it a spot somewhere on your road trip playlist makes good sense.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     6 Stars

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DOUBLEBACK (by ZZ Top: Recycler)

SUMMARY:                        RUNNING TIME: 3:53 Min.

From its 1990 album, Recycler, this ZZ Top rock tune would accompany the closing credits of Back to the Future, Part III that same year.  In one of the film’s 1885 sequences, the band makes a cameo appearance performing an instrumental version of the song.  Unsurprisingly, ZZ Top’s “Doubleback” music video is a commercial for the movie.     

Note: “Doubleback” is not included with composer Alan Silvestri’s score on the 1990 soundtrack.  Re-imagined with a country music twinge, the same-named acoustic rendition (as heard in ‘1885’) appears in its place.  This track lasts under ninety seconds.  The acoustic version’s extended 3:13 minute cut was subsequently added to the soundtrack’s 25th Anniversary Edition.

REVIEW:

Appropriately enough, “Doubleback” is its own nostalgia time machine.  Vividly conveying Marty McFly’s Old West adventure, ZZ Top sounds near the top of their game.  Working off a rip-snorting melody, the catchiness of this pulsating tune remains undiminished.  Even if “Doubleback” isn’t a priority download, adding it sometime to a favorite rock, soundtrack, or workout playlist makes good sense.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                            7 Stars

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WHAT WE’RE ALL ABOUT – ORIGINAL VERSION (by Sum 41: Music From and Inspired by Spider-Man)

SUMMARY:                  RUNNING TIME: 3:35 Min.

For Tobey Maguire’s 2002 Spider-Man movie, this Sum 41 rock tune appears on the official soundtrack entitled Music From and Inspired By Spider-Man.  On the album, it is Track # 3.

Note: DC Comics’ Legion of Doom amusingly gets a Sum 41 shout-out in the lyrics.    

REVIEW:

Loudly melding rap, rock, and metal, one might best describe this song’s genre as alternative rock.  Trying too hard to reach the high school crowd, “What We’re All About” sounds awfully dated twenty years later.  While Sum 41 concocts a catchy rock/metal jam, the song’s repetitiveness exudes an obnoxious and shallow vibe.  It’s hardly a surprise that “What We’re All About (Original Version)” wears out its brief welcome.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     3 Stars

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I HATE MYSELF FOR LOVING YOU {Cover} (by Adanna Duru: American Idol Season XIV)

SUMMARY:                            RUNNING TIME: 4:08 Min.

In 2015, American Idol contestant Adanna Duru covered Joan Jett’s 1988 rock hit, “I Hate Myself for Loving You.  Duru’s rendition was subsequently released as a single and as a track for the season’s Top 11 album.  

Note: Duru finished in 10th/11th place in American Idol’s fourteenth season.

REVIEW:

Despite Idol’s instrumentals reasonably mimicking Joan Jett and the Blackhearts’ hard rock melody, Adanna Duru’s vocals are initially bubblegum tame.  Hence, one is left anticipating a weak rendition of Jett’s tune directed at Disney+ programming.  Yet, once she gets comfortably warmed up, Duru’s second half of the song comes alive.  Duru doesn’t echo Jett so much as she finally pushes her vocal efforts to fit the lyrics, not to mention the song’s energetic vibe. 

Even if her cover doesn’t justify a solo download, Duru’s take on Joan Jett is still fairly solid.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                          6 Stars

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WITH OR WITHOUT YOU {2016 Cover} (by Amy Lee: Recover, Volume 1)

SUMMARY:                          RUNNING TIME: 4:09 Min.

Covering U2’s “With or Without You,” Evanescence’s lead vocalist, Amy Lee, performs this track for her 2016 solo album, Recover, Volume 1.

REVIEW:

If not for the familiar lyrics, one might not even recognize Lee’s Halloween-ish take on such a seminal U2 hit.  She certainly deserves credit for re-imagining the ballad through the lens of Evanescence’s indie rock sound.  The closest comparison one might draw is to Ciara’s version of The Rolling Stones’ “Paint It, Black,” when hearing Lee’s slow-paced vocal performance merge with the creepy melody.  

Still, Ciara has nothing on Lee, musically speaking, as far as producing a eerie vibe.  Lee’s cover, in that sense, is in a league of its own.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        8 Stars

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THE WARRIOR (by Scandal featuring Patty Smyth: The Warrior)

SUMMARY:                                   RUNNING TIME: 4:00 Min.

As the lead cut off their same-titled 1984 album, “The Warrior” endures as Scandal’s signature radio hit.  Although credited as a featured vocalist, Patty Smyth was in fact the band’s lead singer.

Note: The song’s co-composer is Holly Knight.  Knight’s resumé includes writing/co-writing multiple Tina Turner hits, such as “The Best” and Grammy-winning “Better Be Good to Me;” Aerosmith’s “Rag Doll;” and Animotion’s “Obsession.” 

REVIEW:

The primary reason this energetic tune sounds so reminiscent of Pat Benatar and Joan Jett isn’t just Patty Smyth’s vocal style; rather, it’s attributable to songwriter/musician Holly Knight.  Having composed both 1985’s “Invincible” and, before that, 1983’s Grammy-winning “Love is a Battlefield” for Benatar, Knight’s assertive fingerprints are evident on “The Warrior.” 

Hearing the way Patty Smyth croons its aggressive lyrics, there’s no mistaking that this formulaic tune came from Knight’s arsenal of high-powered 80’s female empowerment rock.  While Scandal’s instrumentals are terrific, they are frankly indistinguishable from similar bands of this era.  What readily sells “The Warrior” is Smyth’s knockout delivery.  Even if the song falls short on originality, this track is still worth adding to any workout or dance party playlists.            

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:               7½ Stars

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SOMETHING JUST LIKE THIS (by The Chainsmokers with Coldplay: Memories … Do Not Open)

SUMMARY:                                  RUNNING TIME: 4:07 Min.

For their 2017 album, Memories … Do Not Open, The Chainsmokers get an assist from Coldplay on this rock homage to super-heroes.  The credited composer is Guy Berryman.   

REVIEW:

Echoing the romantic analogy to play grown-up in a relationship vs. just reading kiddie comic books, it’s an excellent track.  Not only are the lyrics spot-on, The Chainsmokers & Coldplay take full advantage of this song’s appealing melody.  “Something Just Like This” is a worthwhile choice for any number of contemporary rock playlists.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        8 Stars

Note: Thematically, another download option is 2014’s “Superheroes” by The Script, from the album: No Sound Without Silence.

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SMOKE AND MIRRORS (by Jim Johnston: WWE single)

SUMMARY:                                     RUNNING TIME: 3:07 Min.

This 2011 hard rock/metal track from World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) was deployed at one time as wrestler Cody Rhodes’ entrance theme.  “Smoke And Mirrors” has appeared on some WWE multi-media projects, i.e. compilation CD’s and video games.

REVIEW:

Courtesy of a pulsating dance-rock beat and pitch-perfect vocals, “Smoke And Mirrors” is an underrated gem!  Its instrumental gimmickry is extensive, but the energizing end result pays off.  This track is well worth the download for rock playlists and definitely for workouts.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           8 Stars

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TUNNEL OF LOVE (by Bruce Springsteen)

SUMMARY:                                 RUNNING TIME: 46:00 Min.

Tunnel of Love is Bruce Springsteen’s eighth studio album released on October 9, 1987, by Columbia Records.  This twelve-track album was recorded from January through July of 1987.

Note: Despite the insert’s first paragraph claiming Tunnel of Love as Springsteen’s fourth album, it’s actually his eighth!

Track Number:                                                          Run Time:

  1. Ain’t Got You                                                                2:11
  2. Tougher Than The Rest                                                    4:35
  3. All That Heaven Will Allow                                           2:39
  4. Spare Parts                                                                    3:44
  5. Cautious Man                                                                3:58
  6. Walk Like a Man                                                          3:45
  7. Tunnel of Love                                                                5:12
  8. Two Faces                                                                       3:03
  9. Brilliant Disguise                                                             4:17
  10. One Step Up                                                                   4:22
  11. When You’re Alone                                                          3:24
  12. Valentine’s Day                                                               5:10

REVIEW:

Tunnel of Love had the difficult task of following up Springsteen’s prior album, Born in the U.S.A.In hopes to be original, Tunnel of Love has an almost entirely different sound.  Every track is a love song of some sort — some with a bitter tone and others with a more lighthearted one.  Ain’t Got You is a failed attempt at R&B, and no one would blame you for hitting the skip button.

In Tougher Than The Rest, Springsteen sings about two lovers who have a lot of baggage from their prior relationships. It’s simplistic yet sweet getting its point across to the listener.  The same could be said for the third track on the album, All That Heaven Will Allow.  It’s an upbeat, run-of-the-mill love song, but it does its job.  Spare Parts shows the first signs of Springsteen’s storytelling ability.  The title and chorus are forgettable, but the other verses aren’t so bad.  Even so, other songs like The River have similar messages and are vastly superior to this one.

The fifth song, Cautious Man, is a mellow, Nebraska-esque track that again tells the story of a failing relationship.  The song is pretty good, but it once again feels like already-charted territory with The River’s Stolen Car.  Regardless, it’s worth a listen.  Walk Like A Man describes someone trying to follow in his father’s footsteps by being a caring father and husband. It’s fine but nothing great.

The title track, Tunnel of Love, is where this album really takes off.  Tunnel of Love distances itself from the stripped-down and explicit lyrics of the other six tracks that came before it.  Springsteen compares a tunnel of love to a marriage, and it works beautifully.  Springsteen also fully utilizes synthesizers, Patti Scialfa’s back-up vocals, and Max Weinberg’s drums. The title track is one of the best from Tunnel of Love as it feels more complete than many of the other songs.

Two Faces reverts back to the other five songs’ slow pace and raw tone.  The main character in the song loves his partner yet mistreats her at the same time.  It’s an interesting theme, but there are better songs on the album that do a better job of sending this message.  Brilliant Disguise is arguably Springsteen’s best song from the post-Born in the U.S.A. era.  Like Tunnel of Love, the use of drums, piano, and an electric organ work very well with Springsteen’s vocals and guitar.  Brilliant Disguise is truly one of the best songs of Springsteen’s career.

One Step Up uses multiple analogies to describe a relationship that can’t be salvaged.  It’s more complete than many of the other songs on Tunnel of Love, but it isn’t quite as good as Brilliant Disguise or the title track.  The eleventh track, When You’re Alone, is what it sounds like.  The character is lonely and reminiscing on his past relationship with someone.   Nothing elaborate but it works fine.  The final song, Valentine’s Day, shows a man who is ready to finally settle down.  It’s an okay song but nothing more than that.

The only major flaw with Tunnel of Love is the lack of diversity between its themes.  Many of the songs tell similar stories to others on the album. The majority feel incomplete or come off as filler tracks.  None of them are particularly bad; however, only a few on this album could be considered highlights of Springsteen’s career.

ROSCOE’S ODD MOON RATING:                 7 Stars

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