Tunes Du Jour Presents 1977

If you had to pick a single year that captured popular music at its most creatively overstuffed, 1977 would be a strong candidate. Rock was arena-sized and expensive. Disco was inescapable and, for a certain crowd, irresistible. Punk was arriving like a kicked-in door. And somewhere in between, artists were quietly making records that didn’t fit neatly into any of those categories. The year produced an almost absurd concentration of songs that people still know by heart, not because nostalgia has been kind to them, but because many of them are genuinely excellent pieces of music.

The rock side of ’77 was dominated by songs that have since become impossible to avoid. Eagles’ “Hotel California,” Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams,” and Bob Seger’s “Night Moves” all came from the same general tradition of polished, emotionally direct rock songwriting, the kind that prioritized feel and production in equal measure. Aerosmith’s “Walk This Way” sat a little rougher and looser, and Manfred Mann’s Earth Band’s “Blinded by the Light” was genuinely strange radio fare — a Springsteen cover that became more famous than the original largely on the strength of its own eccentric energy. Meanwhile, David Bowie’s “Sound and Vision” and Peter Gabriel’s “Solsbury Hill” pointed toward something more interior and experimental, both artists having recently untethered themselves from previous identities and clearly enjoying the freedom.

Disco in 1977 wasn’t a single sound so much as a spectrum. At one end, you had Donna Summer’s extraordinary “I Feel Love,” which Giorgio Moroder produced using almost entirely synthesized instrumentation — Brian Eno reportedly told David Bowie it had just changed the future of music, and he wasn’t wrong. Further down the dial were Thelma Houston’s “Don’t Leave Me This Way,” Marvin Gaye’s loose, joyful “Got to Give It Up,” Heatwave’s “Boogie Nights,” and KC and the Sunshine Band’s “I’m Your Boogie Man,” songs that prioritized the floor over the headphones and delivered accordingly. And then there was the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, which arrived in late 1977 and would go on to become, for a time, the best-selling album ever released. It’s remembered as a disco landmark, but its lead single was the Bee Gees’ “How Deep Is Your Love” — a warm, unhurried ballad which doesn’t really fit the disco label. That the song was swept up into the disco phenomenon anyway says something about how powerful that cultural moment was: it absorbed everything in its vicinity, regardless of what the artists themselves thought they were making.

Punk was having none of it. The Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen” was banned by the BBC and still reached the top of the charts, which tells you something about both the song’s impact and the limits of official gatekeeping. Ramones’ “Sheena Is a Punk Rocker” was faster and more fun, but no less pointed. Television’s “Marquee Moon” and Elvis Costello’s “Watching the Detectives” had a punk rock spirit that suggested the genre’s real legacy might not be volume or outrage but a renewed interest in wit and directness — a correction to the perceived excesses of the rock mainstream those same artists were reacting against. These records don’t sound like novelties now. They sound like a genuine argument about what music should be doing.

What’s striking, looking at a year’s worth of this material together, is how little any of these artists seemed to be aware of, or interested in, what the others were doing. “Somebody to Love” by Queen and “Sir Duke” by Stevie Wonder share roughly the same calendar year but almost nothing else. “Solsbury Hill” and “Float On” exist in completely separate universes. That independence — each act pursuing its own idea of what a good record sounded like — might be exactly why so much of this music has held up. Nobody was chasing a trend that would have dated them. They were mostly just making the best version of the thing they already knew how to do, and 1977 happened to catch a lot of them doing it very well.

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Tunes Du Jour Presents Punk

Ask ten people to define punk rock, and you’re likely to get at least fifteen answers. That’s part of its charm—and its challenge. Punk has always been more than a style of music; it’s a way of questioning the status quo, pushing back against complacency, and refusing to color inside the lines. The 30 songs in this playlist represent the genre’s many branches: from the snarling minimalism of the Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen” to the tightly coiled fury of Black Flag’s “Rise Above,” from Patti Smith’s poetic incantations to the danceable paranoia of Talking Heads’ “Psycho Killer.”

The roots of punk go deep, even before the term existed. “I’m Waiting for the Man” by The Velvet Underground and “Kick Out the Jams” by MC5 helped pave the way with their raw sound and confrontational lyrics. By the mid-1970s, punk had taken recognizable form in both New York and London. The Ramones stripped rock to its bare essentials with “Sheena Is a Punk Rocker,” while The Clash’s London Calling album pointed to punk’s potential to absorb and reflect broader influences—including reggae, ska, and politics.

Acts like Gang of Four and Television took the energy of punk and redirected it into jagged rhythms and angular guitars. The B-52’s “Rock Lobster” and Talking Heads introduced eccentricity and art-school sensibilities, while the Dead Kennedys and Sham 69 channeled punk into direct political protest. Meanwhile, bands like The Jam and Buzzcocks added a melodic urgency, and Iggy Pop and the New York Dolls injected glam and danger into the proceedings.

In the decades that followed, punk fragmented and flourished. Rancid’s “Time Bomb” leaned into ska-punk; Blink-182’s “Dammit” helped define a generation’s version of pop-punk adolescence. Bikini Kill’s “Rebel Girl” roared from the riot grrrl movement with feminist fire, and Billy Bragg brought punk’s commitment to social critique to a solo singer-songwriter context. Even grunge touchstones like Mudhoney carried punk’s DNA—loud, unpolished, and emotionally direct.

This playlist doesn’t claim to be definitive—if anything, it’s a conversation starter. It suggests that punk isn’t a sound so much as a stance. Whether it’s The Replacements thumbing their nose at success in “Bastards of Young,” or Green Day channeling disillusionment into “American Idiot,” punk continues to reinvent itself. It may shift forms, but it never goes quietly.

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Your (Almost) Daily Playlist: 7-28-23

Devo’s “Whip It” was inspired by a magazine article about how to be a better wife. The song’s cowriter and bassist for the band, Gerald Casale, said he’d found that story in a 1962 issue of The Family Handyman and thought it was funny. He decided to write a song that parodied the idea of whipping your problems away. Casale also drew from communist propaganda posters and a 1973 novel by Thomas Pynchon called Gravity’s Rainbow, which mocks capitalist slogans with satirical limericks.He wrote lyrics that taken out of context sound like motivational clichés: When a good time turns around, you must whip it. Give the past a slip. Whip it into shape. Get straight. Go forward. Move ahead. And my personal favorite: Before the cream sits out too long, you must whip it.

Jerry Casale turns 75 today. A couple of Devo tracks, including their biggest hit, “Whip It,” are included on today’s playlist.

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Your (Almost) Daily Playlist: 5-14-23

In 1988 or 1989 I saw Talking Heads’ David Byrne walking around in NYC’s Greenwich Village. In my memory of this he was wearing his big suit from the Stop Making Sense movie. That can’t be, though, right? He wouldn’t walk around the city in that get-up, would he?

David Byrne turns 71 today. Lotsa Talking Heads on today’s playlist in his honor.

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