Candy - Whatever Happened To Fun (1985) (Rock Candy Remastered 2012)

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Candy - Whatever Happened To Fun (1985) (Rock Candy Remastered 2012)

Príspevokod užívateľa Horex » 29 Sep 2021, 12:51

Candy - Whatever Happened To Fun (1985) (Rock Candy Remastered 2012)

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Year : 1985 (Rock Candy Remastered 2012)
Style : Pop Rock , Melodic Rock
Country : United States
Audio : 320 kbps + all scans
Size : 269 mb


Bio:

Power pop band from LA. Members of Candy later formed the bands Electric Angels and The Loveless.Candy was a Los Angeles-based rock band, featuring future Guns N' Roses guitarist Gilby Clarke and singer-songwriter Kyle Vincent. Original members were Vincent on lead vocals, bassist Jonathan Daniel, drummer John Schubert, and guitarist Geoff Siegel, who departed the group after six months and later joined the Nymphs. Their music has been described as power pop.Candy started playing live in the LA area and recording demos in 1983. Their only studio album, titled Whatever Happened To Fun, produced by Jimmy Ienner, was released in 1985, when the band toured the United States opening up for Rick Springfield and later Corey Hart. Wally Bryson from the Raspberries served as musical director on the album, which was recorded at Criteria Studios in Miami, FL.The music video for the single "Whatever Happened To Fun", directed by Dominic Orlando, was filmed on location in Hollywood, with Candy performing to a street crowd and a mural of famous old Hollywood stars.In 1986, Vincent left the band to pursue a solo career, with Clarke taking over as lead vocalist and guitarist Ryan Roxie joining the lineup. After Clarke left,[when?] the remaining members joined up with new lead vocalist Shane and became the Electric Angels. Vincent has since enjoyed a successful solo career, releasing over 10 albums, touring, and scoring a Billboard Adult Top 20 single, "Wake Me Up (When The World's Worth Waking Up For)"; Daniel is a music industry manager of many top acts, including Sia, Train, Butch Walker, Fall Out Boy, and others; while Schubert went into university and studied history and education. Since 2006, he's taught middle school history and currently teaches in Carmel, CA.In 2003, SongTree Records released "Teenage Neon Jungle (Rare & Unreleased)", a 25-track collection of the band's demos, live tracks, and post-Candy projects, both solo and band.In 2012, Whatever Happened to Fun was released for the first time on CD on the Rock Candy label.In 2016, Vincent re-recorded and released "Whatever Happened to Fun", as the B-side on his Japan-issued "Narita (Tokyo Girl)" single. The song was recorded in Tokyo using Vincent's Japan Candy band, with Kyle on lead vocals.

Album:

The songs are all extremely catchy and compositionally not as monotonous as many of their power pop or melodic rock comrades-in-genre.There are always surprising turns and varied arrangements.The whole thing is reminiscent of Moving Pictures from Australia in places, but also a little of Cars in others.Even if one would have wished that the label would have given this re-release some bonus tracks (there are probably enough in the archive, as a second album remained unreleased in 1987) - an absolutely recommendable mid-80s jewel.Released on August 26, 1985 (Mercury Records); reissued in 2012 (Rock Candy Records).With family tree branches leading as far forward into rock and roll as touring versions of pop bands Bay City Rollers and Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, alt rockers The Nymphs, rockers Electric Angels and Slash’s Snakepit, as well as legendary acts Alice Cooper and Guns N’ Roses, it’s certainly hard to believe that ’80s power pop rockers Candy barely made a blip on the music world.In a real ’80s world, combining the vocal pop innocence of Kyle Vincent and the infectious yet youthful real life themes of bassist Jonathan Daniel‘s songwriting under the power pop umbrella of former Raspberries producer Jimmy Lenner and ex-Raspberries guitarist Wally Bryson (in the role of musical director) would easily equate into massive radio success. But even adding in the spot on drumming of John Schubert and perfectly placed pop rock guitar of future Guns N’ Roses member Gilby Clarke to create a tight youthful package that not only sounded great but also looked great couldn’t do the trick. On record, ’80s L.A. band Candy arrived packed with the sounds to rock Top 40 radio and a look that should have made them the perfect visual to bridge the gap between Def Leppard and Duran Duran on any ’80s teenage girl’s bedroom wall.Despite seemingly having all of that going for them, Candy and their 1985 record Whatever Happened To Fun left only a mark on those few who to this day hold the nine terrific tracks contained on vinyl to heart. It’s a tale that could in a way be perfect for MTV‘s Behind The Music had they they achieved enough of a rise to even merit a fall made even more tragic by the fact that from start to finish, Whatever Happened to Fun has as many great songs than some of the ’80s biggest albums featuring a hit single or three. Just the fact that this commentary on the awkward jump from the fun, fantasy, and freedoms of youth into the real world struggles of adulthood under the guise of a great, infectious pop record didn’t make Whatever Happened To Fun one of the classic soundtracks of ’80s youth life still for many boggles the mind. Power pop with a taste of subtlety perhaps but still, for a small few who were lucky enough to discover the album at a time well before you could just click a button and have the entire musical universe at your finger tips, Whatever Happened To Fun will always be an important reminder of a special time.Part sign of things to come, part sign of the times, Candy‘s one and only official release in August 1985 landed with a single video for the title track, a look at the vanishing of youthful innocence wrapped up in enough uptempo sing-a-long catchiness to make growing up almost seem fun. Much like Bruce Springteen‘s eighties anthem “Born In The USA”, if you take your attention away long enough you almost forget that there’s actually darker undertones in the subject matter. The crash of realism on a platter of bubblegum goodness is a far cry from the usual nonsensical norm of ’80s pop and glam rock. As mere background music, Whatever Happened To Fun simply comes off as an energetic notch above teeny bopper pop but with concentrated ears, it becomes a historical time stamp of a segment of teen life in the mid-’80s. Yet as much as it works to warn of adult days to come, listening back now it sounds nostalgically magical and while the performances are to be applauded, it’s the songs themselves that deserve the majority of the credit.For those of us with memories of dreamy weekend rock and roll escapes from a near week’s worth of teachers, rules, and various family issues, tracks like “American Kix,” “Kids In The City,” “Weekend Boy,” and “Electric Nights” offer reminders of adolescent struggles and those much needed temporary moments of teenage weekend liberation. “Turn It Up Loud” takes the sneaky teenage action up a notch with a fun take on the classic “parent’s aren’t home” angle complete with innuendo-driven play on words that is as much turn it on as it is turn it up. “Lonely Hearts” explores the isolated flip side of anxiety-laced silence and loneliness. For most who lived their teenage moments through the ’80s ferociously out in the mix of things, the heart pounding roller coaster excitement of being on the edge of heart quake and heartache became an unforgettable experience that regardless of the amount of first kisses and first heartbreaks will always hold a special place in a rock and roll heart. In 1985 on Whatever Happened To Fun, Candy somehow managed to capture the experience perfectly while amazingly not making a commercial splash for their incredible effort.Finishing high school the year Whatever Happened To Fun was released, I fully bought into the songs as themes for the next chapter in life especially “The Last Radio Show.” While my parents more than likely took the simple stance of, “Enjoy this last moment, tomorrow you’re an adult,” the overwhelming feeling of reality was far great standing on the edge of change thinking back to the moments along the way. In his lyrics, Daniel perfectly captures that while Vincent‘s youthful vocals paints an emotional picture of grabbing hold of a last moment in an innocent world filled with the joy and pain experienced along the way. Hearing the song now, it is astonishing how this group made up of these four guys still themselves young, were able to capture such a deep sentiment not only relevant to kids of any time period but adults as well as “The Radio Show” metaphorically could signal the last day of any part of life. Vincent gently drives the point home with the final words “The world’s closin’ down, the world’s closin’ down in memory of the melodies we love, just tune in the last radio show” before an emotionally nostalgic finish of doo wop vocals and saxophone leads to an almost Eddie and The Cruisers type of fade. Even now when I hear this song, I feel like one of the few misses on Whatever Happened To Fun is this song not closing out the record. It is powerful on its own but had it brought the whole thing together at the end, even more so.Come the ’90s, the usual growing pains of youth would take a turn that going forward would be painted much darker musically at times making teen life sound more like a miserable purgatory with adulthood as the only escape rather than what many refer to as “the best years of our lives” leading up to the tough realities of growing up. While the tunes on Whatever Happened To Fun do their best to capture those mixed up feelings of being a teen including the highs and lows of everything from moving on to the many sides of love, it does so in a way that while not taking the impact of moments lightly, also reminds us that the end of adolescence isn’t the end of the world. Yeah, back then, it might have felt like it and sure, I think many of us would kill for a time machine back but over the years, what hasn’t killed us has just made us appreciate those times even more.Even if your last day of high school was in 1985, 1975 or 1995, the songs on Whatever Happened To Fun have that same meaning and fun comfort. Not to mention a great reminder of why the music was, and is so important to us now years later. So yeah, whatever did happen to fun? Nothing. It just grew up and we continue to sing, dance, laugh, and cry along and most importantly, until our last true radio show, turn it up loud.

Line-Up:

Kyle Vincent – lead vocals, piano, saxophone
Gilby Clarke – guitar
Jonathan Daniel – bass guitar, synthesizer
John Schubert – drums, percussion

Production:

Produced by Jimmy Ienner
Mastered by Michael Fuller

Tracklist:

01. American Kix
02. Turn It Loud
03. Whatever Happened To Fun
04. Last Radio
05. Kids In The City
06. Weekend Boy
07. First Time
08. Electric Nights
09. Lonely Hearts

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