Showing posts with label Paul Carrack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Carrack. Show all posts

Friday, August 23, 2024

Paul Carrack: A Retrospective (1974-2024)

Paul Carrack

A Retrospective: 1974-2024

Overview:

Rock singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Paul Melvyn Carrack was born on April 22, 1951 in Sheffield, England. Record Collector said, “If vocal talent equaled financial success, Paul Carrack would be a bigger name than legends such as Phil Collins or Elton John.” WK In the mid-‘70s, Carrack fronted Ace, singing lead on their 1974 hit How Long (#3). Then he served as the keyboardist for Roxy Music in the late ‘70s before launching a solo career which was occasionally interrupted by stints with Squeeze (Tempted, 1981) and Mike + the Mechanics (Silent Running, 1985; The Living Years, 1988). He found solo success with I Need You, Don’t Shed a Tear, and I Live by the Groove.


Resume

  • Ace (1974-1977)
  • Roxy Music (keyboards: 1979)
  • solo (1980-)
  • with Carlene Carter (1981)
  • Squeeze (keyboardist/vocalist: 1981, 1993)
  • Spin 1ne 2wo (1993)
  • Mike + the Mechanics (singer/keyboardist: 1985-2004)


Links

Awards

Studio Albums

  • Ace Five-A-Side (1974)
  • Ace Time for Another (1976)
  • Ace No Strings (1977)
  • Nightbird (1980)
  • Carlene Carter Blue Nun (1981)
  • Squeeze East Side Story (1981)
  • Suburban Voodoo (1982)
  • Mike + the Mechanics Mike + the Mechanics (1985)
  • One Good Reason (1987)
  • Mike + the Mechanics The Living Years (1988)
  • Groove Approved (1989)
  • Mike + the Mechanics Word of Mouth (1991)
  • Spin 1ne 2wo Spin 1ne 2wo (1993)
  • Squeeze Some Fantastic Place (1993)
  • Mike + the Mechanics Beggar on a Beach of Gold (1995)
  • Blue Views (1996)
  • Beautiful World (1997)
  • Mike + the Mechanics M6 (1999)
  • Satisfy My Soul (2000)
  • Groovin’ (2001)
  • It Ain’t Over (2003)
  • Mike + the Mechanics Rewired (2004)
  • Winter Wonderland (2005)
  • Old, New, Borrowed, and Blue (2007)
  • I Know That Name (20008)
  • A Different Hat (2010)
  • Good Feeling (2012)
  • Rain or Shine (2013)
  • Soul Shadows (2016)
  • These Days (2018)
  • One on One (2021)
  • Don’t Wait Too Long (2023)


Compilations

Under each album snapshot, songs featured on the anthologies are noted. If the song charted, the date of the song’s release or first chart appearance and its chart peaks are noted in parentheses. Click for codes to charts.

Ace Five-A-Side (1974):

Ace’s first album gave them a top-5 hit with How Long and started Paul Carrack on the road to fame.

  • How Long (11/9/74, 3 US, 1 CL, 20 UK, 63 AU, 2 DF) CC, 21, SF, CT, B, HL
  • Rock and Roll Runaway (7/26/75, 71 BB, 63 CB, 40 CL, 35 DF)
  • The Real Feeling 21


Ace Time for Another (1976):

Ace’s second album didn’t find the success of their debut. The failure of single, No Future in Your Eyes, to even chart after the success of “How Long” was a definite disappointment.
  • No Future in Your Eyes (48 CL, 37 DF) 21


Ace No Strings (1977):

This was Carrack’s third and final album with Ace. You’re All That I Need was released as a single, but didn’t chart.
  • You’re All That I Need (47 CL, 33 DF) 21


Paul Carrack The Rumour (1980):

After fronting Ace and working with Roxy Music, this was Paul Carrack’s first solo album.
  • The Rumour 21
  • Beauty Is Only Skin Deep CT


Carlene Carter Blue Nun (1981):

Paul Carrack dueted with Carlene Carter on these two cuts from her Blue Nun album.
  • Do Me Lover CC, 21
  • Oh How Happy 21


Squeeze East Side Story (1981):

After one solo album, Paul Carrack joined Squeeze as their keyboardist. He also contributed vocals to what is arguably the group’s best-known song. Read more about this album on its DMDB page.
  • Tempted (6/20/81, 49 US, 8 AR, 3 CL, 41 UK, 45 CN, 85 AU) CC, 21, SF, CT, B, HL


Paul Carrack Suburban Voodoo (1982):

After fronting Ace, working with Carlene Carter, and working with Roxy Music, this was Paul Carrack’s first solo album.
  • I Need You (9/4/82, 37 BB, 26 CB, 20 RR, 20 AC, 22 AR, 30 AU, 4 DF) CC, 21, SF, CT, HL
  • Lesson in Love (10/16/82, 33 AR, 33 DF) CC
  • Always Better with You (11/16/82, 31 DF) CC, 21, CT
  • A Little Unkind (2/7/83, 37 DF) CC, 21


Mike + the Mechanics Mike + the Mechanics (1985):

After another solo album, Carrack returned to a group, this time one led by Genesis’ Mike Rutherford. Carrack and Paul Young shared vocal duties with Carrack singing lead on the top-10 hit Silent Running. Read more about this album on its DMDB page.
  • Silent Running (11/4/85, 6 BB, 5 CB, 5 GR, 5 RR, 1 AR, 7 AC, 21 UK, 8 CN, 23 AU, 1 DF) CC, 21, SF, CT

The Carrack Collection

Paul Carrack


Recorded: 1974-1985


Released: 1988


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock


Rating:

3.809 out of 5.00 (average of 8 ratings)

Tracks:

(1) How Long (2) Tempted (3) Do Me Lover (with Carlene Carter) (4) A Little Unkind (5) Silent Running (6) Lesson in Love (7) I Need You (8) Always Better with You


About the Album:

Although released in 1988, this compilation doesn’t include Carrack’s solo top-10 “Don’t Shed a Tear” (1987) or his chart-topping song, “The Living Years,” with Mike + the Mechanics (1988). Instead this too-slim retrospective stops at 1985. Still, that does mean one gets How Long, Tempted, I Need You, and Silent Running all in one collection.

Paul Carrack One Good Reason (1987):

After the success of Mike + the Mechanics, Carrack’s next solo album gave him the biggest solo hit of his career with the top-10 Don’t Shed a Tear.
  • When You Walk in the Room (5/16/87, 90 BB, 91 CB, 48 UK, 7 AU, 18 DF) 21, SF, CT
  • Don’t Shed a Tear (10/24/87, 9 BB, 9 CB, 9 RR, 36 AC, 5 AR, 60 UK, 33 AU, 6 DF) 21, SF, CT, HL
  • One Good Reason (3/12/88, 28 BB, 33 CB, 24 RR, 20 AR, 38 AU, 23 DF) 21, CT
  • Button Off My Shirt (9/10/88, 91 BB, 12 DF) 21


Mike + the Mechanics The Living Years (1988):

Back with Mike + the Mechanics for their second album, Carrack sang lead on this song which went all the way to the top of the charts in the U.S. Read more about this album on its DMDB page.
  • The Living Years (12/27/88, 1 BB, 1 CB, 2 GR, 2 RR, 5 AR, 1 AC, 2 UK, 1 CN, 1 AU, 1 DF) 21, SF, CT, B, HL
  • Nobody Knows (7/22/89, 41 AC, 21 DF)


Paul Carrack Groove Approved (1989):

Back with another solo effort.
  • I Live by the Groove (18/30/89, 31 BB, 27 CB, 25 RR, 22 AC, 23 DF) 21
  • Battlefield (1/27/90, 27 DF) 21, SF, CT
  • Loveless (28 DF) 21
  • Only My Heart Can Tell (35 DF) 21
  • Dedicated (39 DF) SF, HL, CT

21 Good Reasons

Paul Carrack


Recorded: 1974-1990


Released: January 25, 1994


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock


Rating:

3.527 out of 5.00 (average of 8 ratings)

Tracks:

(1) How Long (2) The Real Feeling (3) No Future in Your Eyes (4) You’re All That I Need (5) Tempted (6) Do Me Lover (with Carlene Carter) (7) Oh How Happy (with Carlene Carter) (8) The Rumour (9) I Need You (10) Always Better with You (11) A Little Unkind (12) One Good Reason (13) Don’t Shed a Tear (14) Button Off My Shirt (15) When You Walk in the Room (16) I Live by the Groove (17) Only My Heart Can Tell (18) Battlefield (19) Loveless (20) Silent Running (21) The Living Years


About the Album:

This update to The Carrack Collection adds classic songs like Don’t Shed a Tear and The Living Years. Somewhere between this overly-hefty compilation and the too-light Carrack Collection lies the perfect Paul Carrack compilation.

Mike + the Mechanics Word of Mouth (1991):

  • Everybody Gets a Second Chance (6/15/91, 24 AC, 56 UK, 21 CN, 20 DF) CT
  • A Time and Place (6/15/91, 58 UK, 37 DF) CT
  • Get Up (single, 24 DF)


Spin 1ne 2wo Spin 1ne 2wo (1993):

This one-time collaboration with Tony Levin found Carrack interpreting rock classics from Blind Faith (“Can’t Find My Way Home”), Cream (“White Room”), Jimi Hendrix (“All Along the Watchtower”), Led Zeppelin (“Black Dog”), and others.
  • Can’t Find My Way Home CT <’ul>


    Squeeze Some Fantastic Place (1993):

    • Loving You Tonight (10/18/93, 4 DF) CT


    Mike + the Mechanics Beggar on a Beach of Gold (1995):

    • Over My Shoulder (2/25/95, 12 UK, 22 CN, 11 DF) SF, CT, B, HL
    • Another Cup of Coffee (6/17/95, 51 UK, 53 CN, 38 DF) CT
    • A Beggar on a Beach of Gold (June 1995, 33 UK, 27 DF) CT


    Paul Carrack Blue Views (1996):

    Carrack’s first solo album in seven years features “Love Will Keep Us Alive,” a song he wrote with Timothy B. Schmit that was first recorded by the Eagles.
    • Eyes of Blue (1/6/96, 24 AC, 40 UK) SF,CT, B, HL
    • Love Will Keep Us Alive (21 UK) SF, CT, B, HL
    • For Once in Our Lives (6/28/97, 72 BA, 3 AC)


    Paul Carrack Beautiful World (1997):

    • Beautiful World (single, --) SF
    • The Way I’m Feeling Tonight (single, --) CT


    Mike + the Mechanics M6 (1999):

    • Now That You’re Gone (6/5/99, 35 UK, 19 DF) CT
    • Whenever I Stop (8/28/99, 73 UK, 20 DF) CT


    Paul Carrack Satisfy My Soul (2000):

    • Satisfy My Soul (single, --) SF, CT, B, HL
    • Better Than Nothing CT


    Paul Carrack Groovin’ (2001):

    This collection of covers featured Carrack’s take on songs made famous by the Four Tops (“Baby I Need Your Loving”), Marvin Gaye (“Too Busy Thinking About My Baby”), Ronnie Milsap (“Any Day Now”), Van Morrison (“Crazy Love”), the Rascals (“Groovin’”), James Taylor (“You’ve Got a Friend”), Dionne Warwick (“Walk on By”), Bill Withers (“Ain’t No Sunshine”), and more.
    • Groovin’ (single, --) SF, CT, B, HL
    • Any Day Now (single, --) SF
    • Walk on By B


    Paul Carrack It Ain’t Over (2003):

    • It Ain’t Over (single, --) SF, CT
    • Where Did I Go Wrong? (single, --) SF, CT
    • Empty Space CT


    Mike + the Mechanics Rewired (2004):

    • If I Were You CT


    Paul Carrack Winter Wonderland (2005):

    Carrack’s first Christmas album featured his take on Christmas classics such as “White Christmas,” “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” “The Christmas Song,” “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” “Sleigh Ride,” “Let It Snow” and the title cut alongside the non-Christmas classic “What a Wonderful World.”
    • What a Wonderful World (30 DF) SF

Greatest Hits: The Story So Far

Paul Carrack


Recorded: 1974-2005


Released: October 23, 2006


Peak: -- US, 146 UK


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock


Rating:

2.778 out of 5.00 (average of 8 ratings)

Tracks:

(1) How Long (2) Tempted (3) I Need You (4) Silent Running (5) Don’t Shed a Tear (6) When You Walk in the Room (7) The Living Years (8) Battlefield (9) Dedicated (10) Over My Shoulder (11) Love Will Keep Us Alive (12) Eyes of Blue (13) Beautiful World (14) Satisfy My Soul (15) Groovin’ (16) Any Day Now (17) Where Did I Go Wrong? (18) It Ain’t Over (19) What a Wonderful World


About the Album:

This update to The Carrack Collection adds classic songs like Don’t Shed a Tear and The Living Years. Somewhere between this overly-hefty compilation and the too-light Carrack Collection lies the perfect Paul Carrack compilation.

/table>

Paul Carrack Old, New, Borrowed, and Blue (2007):

This is a bit of a mish-mash, gathering covers (Marvin Gaye’s “What's Going On” and “Ain’t That Peculiar,” Crowded House’s “Don’t Dream It’s Over,” the Beatles’ “Girl”) alongside re-recordings (“Love Will Keep Us Alive,” “I Live on a Battlefield”).


Paul Carrack I Know That Name (2008):

  • I Don’t Want Your Love (I Need Your Love) (single, --) B
  • I Don’t Want to Hear Any More (single, --) CT, HL
  • Ain’t No Love in the Heart of the City (single, --) CT
  • No Doubt About It (single, --) CT
  • Soul to Soul (with the London Community Gospel Choir) CT
  • He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother CT


Paul Carrack A Different Hat (2010):

Once again, Carrack delivers a collection of covers and re-recordings.
  • Moon River B, HL
  • Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying (single, --) CT, B


Paul Carrack Good Feeling (2012):

  • When My Little Girl Is Smiling (single, --) CT, B
  • Good Feelin’ About It (single, --) CT
  • Time to Move On (single, --) CT
  • Long Ago CT

Collected

Paul Carrack


Recorded: 1974-2012


Released: September 11, 2012


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock


Rating:

2.681 out of 5.00 (average of 8 ratings)

Tracks, Disc 1:

(1) How Long (2) Tempted (3) Don’t Shed a Tear (4) The Living Years (5) Love Will Keep Us Alive (6) Groovin’ (7) When You Walk in the Room (8) Empty Space (9) Over My Shoulder (10) When My Little Girl Is Smiling (11) Satisfy My Soul (12) Eyes of Blue (13) Always Better with You (14) The Way I’m Feeling Tonight (15) A Time and Place (16) It Ain’t Over (17) Long Ago (18) Everybody Gets a Second Chance

Tracks, Disc 2:

(1) Dedicated (2) Loving You Tonight (3) Where Did I Go Wrong (4) Silent Running (5) I Need You (6) I Live on a Battlefield (7) Ain’t No Love in the Heart of the City (8) Now That You’re Gone (9) I Don’t Want to Hear Anymore (10) Time to Move On (11) One Good Reason (12) Another Cup of Coffee (13) Better Than Nothing (14) Beauty’s Only Skin Deep (15) No Doubt About It (16) Whenever I Stop (17) Good Feelin’ About It (18) Don’t Let the Sun Catch You crying

Tracks, Disc 3:

(1) She’s Soulful (2) Don’t Dream It’s Over (3) Burning Love (4) Your Own Special Way (5) Love Me As Hard As You Hurt Me (6) If You Believe in Me (7) Too Late (8) Ride On (9) Wish You Were Here (10) Can’t Find My Way Home (10) Soul to Soul (12) He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother (13) Beggar on a Beach of Gold (14) If I Were You


Songs Not Featured on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Wish You Were Here (with Nick Lowe, 1983) CT
  • She’s Soulful (1/27/90) CT
  • Burning Love (with Snowy White, 1995) CT
  • Love Me As Hard As You Hurt Me (1996) CT
  • Your Own Special Way (with Steve Hackett, 1996) CT
  • Ride On (with Gare du Nord, 2007) CT
  • If You Believe in Me (from the movie Beautiful Joe,2008) CT
  • Too Late (with Bill Wyman & the Rhythm Kings, 2012) CT


About the Album:

Box set. Would have been benefited from a chronological presentation and more material from early in Carrack’s career.


Paul Carrack Rain or Shine (2013):

  • Stepping Stone B
  • I’m Losing You (single, --) B
  • One in a Million B
  • Come Rain or Come Shine B

The Best of

Paul Carrack


Recorded: 1974-2013


Released: September 7, 2014


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock


Rating:

2.695 out of 5.00 (average of 8 ratings)

Tracks:

(1) The Living Years (2) How Long (3) Love Will Keep Us Alive (4) Eyes of Blue (5) Over My Shoulder (5) Tempted (6) Satisfy My Soul (7) Groovin’ (8) Walk on By (9) What's Going On (10) I Don’t Want Your Love (I Need Your Love) (11) Don’t Dream It’s Over (12) Moon River (13) Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying (14) When My Little Girl Is Smiling (15) I’m Losing You (17) Stepping Stone (18) One in a Million (19) Come Rain or Come Shine


About the Album:

This collection strangely ignores Carrack’s early solo years (“I Need You,” “Don’t Shed a Tear,” “I Live by the Groove”), omits one of his biggest hits (Mike + the Mechanics’ “Silent Running”), and substitutes re-recordings of “The Living Years,” “How Long,” and “Tempted” instead of the originals. This appears to be a case of trying to assemble a compilation without having the rights to all of the material.

Paul Carrack Soul Shadows (2016):

  • Sleep on It HL
  • Let Me Love Again HL


Paul Carrack These Days (2018):

  • none


Paul Carrack One on One (2021):

  • You’re Not Alone HL


Paul Carrack Don’t Wait Too Long (2023):

  • Don’t Wait Too Long HL

How Long Has This Been Going On

Paul Carrack


Covers: 1974-2024


Released: August 23, 2024


Peak: --


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: pop rock

Tracks:

(1) How Long (2) Groovin’ (3) Eyes of Blue (4) Satisfy My Soul (5) Don’t Shed a Tear (6) Dedicated (7) The Living Years (8) Moon River (9) Don’t Wait Too Long (10) Love Will Keep Us Alive (11) Sleep on It (12) Let Me Love Again (13) Tempted (14) I Don’t Want to Hear Any More (15) You’re Not Alone (16) I Need You (17) Over My Shoulder (18) Don’t Dream It’s Over (19) Raining in My Heart


About the Album:

This is another odd attempt at pretending to be a career retrospective but substituting some of Carrack’s earlier works with re-recorded versions.


Not Featured on a Previously Noted Album:

  • Raining in My Heart HL

Resources/References:


Related DMDB Links:


First posted 10/12/2020; last updated 4/9/2026.

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Book: Songs That Made a Mark

Songs That Made a Mark:

100 of Mark Whitaker’s Favorites

For Christmas 2022, I told my brother I’d make a book – just for him – of 100 of his favorite songs. We worked together to come up with the list offered here. Songs are not ranked; they are listed alphabetically by the recording acts. While the book is not available for purchase, all the songs are listed here with links to dedicated Dave’s Music Database pages, each with information about the song’s chart, sales, and airplay statistics as well as links to awards won by the songs, videos, and lyrics.

Click here to see other lists from critics and individuals and here to see other lists from publications and/or organizations.


Spotify Playlist:

You can listen to all these songs via the Spotify playlist Songs That Made a Mark.


1. Ace “How Long” (1974)
2. Adele “Skyfall” (2012)
3. Aerosmith “Janie’s Got a Gun” (1989)
4. Alabama “Mountain Music” (1982)
5. Animal Logic “I’m Sorry Baby (I Want You in My Life)” (1989)
6. Asia “Heat of the Moment” (1982)
7. Asia “Only Time Will Tell” (1982)
8. Asia “Don’t Cry” (1983)
9. The Beatles “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” (1968)
10. Pat Benatar “Shadows of the Night” (1982)

11. Clint Black “Killin’ Time” (1989)
12. David Bowie “Changes” (1971)
13. Boyz II Men “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday” (1991)
14. Garth Brooks “> Unanswered Prayers” (1990)
15. Kate Bush “This Woman’s Work” (1988)
16. Johnny Cash “Hurt” (2002)
17. Harry Chapin “Cat’s in the Cradle” (1974)
18. Chic “Le Freak” (1978)
19. Chicago “If You Leave Me Now” (1976)
20. Eric Clapton “Wonderful Tonight” (1977)

21. Eric Clapton “Tears in Heaven” (1992)
22. Phil Collins “In the Air Tonight” (1981)
23. Commodores “Three Times a Lady” (1978)
24. Robert Cray “Smoking Gun” (1986)
25. Bing Crosby with David Bowie “Peace on Earth/The Little Drummer Boy” (1977)
26. Crowded House “Don’t Dream It’s Over” (1986)
27. Crowded House “Better Be Home Soon” (1988)
28. Charlie Daniels Band “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” (1979)
29. Def Leppard “Photograph” (1983)
30. Depeche Mode “Somebody” (1984)

31. Dennis DeYoung “Desert Moon” (1984)
32. Eagles “Take It Easy” (1972)
33. Eagles “Desperado” (1973)
34. Foreigner “Waiting for a Girl Like You” (1981)
35. Peter Gabriel “Biko” (1980)
36. Genesis “Mama” (1983)
37. Hootie & the Blowfish “Only Wanna Be with You” (1995)
38. Billy Joel “Movin’ Out (Anthony’s Song)” (1977)
39. Billy Joel “The Stranger” (1977)
40. Billy Joel with Ray Charles “Baby Grand” (1986)

41. Elton John “Candle in the Wind” (1973) / “Candle in the Wind 1997 (Goodbye England’s Rose)” (1997)
42. Journey “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)” (1983)
43. Journey “Faithfully” (1983)
44. Journey “Ask the Lonely” (1983)
45. Kansas “Carry on Wayward Son” (1976)
46. Kansas “Dust in the Wind” (1977)
47. Jonny Lang “Lie to Me” (1997)
48. Led Zeppelin “The Battle of Evermore” (1971)
49. John Lennon “Imagine” (1971)
50. Huey Lewis & the News “Naturally” (1986)

51. Linkin Park “In the End” (2000)
52. Little River Band “Lonesome Loser” (1979)
53. Nick Lowe “Cruel to Be Kind” (1979)
54. Manfred Mann’s Earth Band “Blinded by the Light” (1976)
55. Paul McCartney & Stevie Wonder “Ebony and Ivory” (1982)
56. John Cougar Mellencamp “Rain on the Scarecrow” (1985)
57. Metallica “One” (1989)
58. Metallica “Nothing Else Matters” (1992)
59. Mike + the Mechanics “Silent Running” (1985)
60. Mike + the Mechanics “The Living Years” (1988)

61. Mr. Mister “Broken Wings” (1985)
62. Night Ranger “Four in the Morning” (1985)
63. OutKast “Hey Ya!” (2003)
64. The Alan Parsons Project “Old and Wise” (1982)
65. The Alan Parsons Project “Let’s Talk About Me” (1985)
66. Dolly Parton “Jolene” (1973)
67. Pearl Jam “Jeremy” (1991)
68. Steve Perry “Oh Sherrie” (1984)
69. The Police “Roxanne” (1978)
70. The Police “Message in a Bottle” (1979)

71. Elvis Presley “Can’t Help Falling in Love” (1961)
72. Prince & the Revolution “Purple Rain” (1984)
73. Queen “We Will Rock You” / “We Are the Champions” (1977)
74. Queensrÿche “Empire” (1990)
75. Queensrÿche “Silent Lucidity” (1991)
76. The Rainmakers “Downstream” (1986)
77. Bonnie Raitt “Nick of Time” (1989)
78. R.E.M. “It’s the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)” (1987)
79. REO Speedwagon “Can’t Fight This Feeling” (1984)
80. Lionel Richie “Hello” (1984)

81. Lionel Richie “Say You Say Me” (1985)
82. Kenny Rogers “Coward of the County” (1979)
83. Rush “Free Will” (1980)
84. Kenny Wayne Shepherd “Blue on Black” (1998)
85. Rick Springfield “Affair of the Heart” (1983)
86. Bruce Springsteen “Dancing in the Dark” (1984)
87. Squeeze “Tempted” (1981)
88. Styx “Come Sail Away” (1977)
89. Styx “Renegade” (1978)
90. Tears for Fears “Mad World” (1982) / Michael Andrews & Gary Jules “Mad World” (2002)

91. Toto “Africa” (1982)
92. Toto “Stranger in Town” (1984)
93. Tina Turner “We Don’t Need Another Hero (Thunderdome)” (1985)
94. Bonnie Tyler “Total Eclipse of the Heart” (1983)
95. U2 “Sunday Bloody Sunday” (1983)
96. U2 “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” (1987)
97. Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble “The Sky Is Crying” (1985)
98. Madisen Ward & the Mama Bear “Silent Movies” (2015)
99. Stevie Wonder “Superstition” (1972)
100. Stevie Wonder “Isn’t She Lovely” (1977)


Resources/Related Links:


First posted 12/26/2022; last updated 1/19/2023.

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Paul Carrack - Happy 70th birthday! His Top 30 Songs

Paul Carrack

Top 30 Songs

The pop/rock singer and keyboardist Paul Carrack was born April 22, 1951 in Sheffield, England. Fronted the band Ace, offered guest vocals for Squeeze, and worked with Mike + the Mechanics. Also worked as a solo singer. For a complete list of this act’s DMDB honors, check out the DMDB Music Maker Encyclopedia entry.

Click here to see other acts’ best-of lists.

Awards:


Top 30 Songs


Dave’s Music Database lists are determined by song’s appearances on best-of lists, appearances on compilations and live albums by the featured act, and songs’ chart success, sales, radio airplay, streaming, and awards. This list includes songs by Ace, Squeeze, and Mike + the Mechanics which featured Carrack on lead vocals. Unless otherwise noted, songs are by Paul Carrack as a solo artist.

Songs which hit #1 on the following charts are noted: Billboard Hot 100 (US), Cashbox (CB), Billboard adult contemporary chart (AC), Billboard album rock track chart (AR), Canadian pop chart (CN), and Australian pop chart (AU).

DMDB Top 5%:

1. The Living Years (Mike + the Mechanics, 1988) #1 US, CB, AC, CN, AU
2. Tempted (Squeeze, 1981)
3. How Long (Ace, 1974) #1 CB

DMDB Top 10%:

4. Silent Running (Mike + the Mechanics, 1985) #1 AR
5. Don’t Shed a Tear (1987)

DMDB Top 20%:

6. I Need You (1982)
7. One Good Reason (1987)
8. I Live by the Groove (1989)
9. Everybody Gets a Second Chance (Mike + the Mechanics, 1991)
10. Over My Shoulder (Mike + the Mechanics, 1995)

Beyond the DMDB Top 20%:

11. When You Walk in the Room (1987)
12. Button Off My Shirt (1987)
13. Rock and Roll Runaway (Ace, 1974)
14. Now That You’re Gone (Mike + the Mechanics, 1999)
15. Nobody Knows (Mike + the Mechanics, 1988)
16. Loving You Tonight (Squeeze, 1993)
17. Whenever I Stop (Mike + the Mechanics, 1999)
18. Romance (Paul Carrack with Terri Nunn, 1989)
19. Another Cup of Coffee (Mike + the Mechanics, 1995)
20. Eyes of Blue (1996)

21. Lesson in Love (1982)
22. Revolution (Mike + the Mechanics, 1989)
23. Battlefield (1989)
24. For Once in Our Lives (1997)
25. A Time and a Place (Mike + the Mechanics, 1991)
26. Love Will Keep Us Alive (1997)
27. Do Me Lover (Carlene Carter with Paul Carrack, 1981)
28. Beggar on a Beach of Gold (Mike + the Mechanics, 1995)
29. A Call to Arms (Mike + the Mechanics, 1985)
30. Oh How Happy (Carlene Carter with Paul Carrack, 1981)


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First posted 12/23/2019; updated 6/5/2022.

Monday, September 13, 1993

Squeeze released Some Fantastic Place

Some Fantastic Place

Squeeze


Released: September 13, 1993


Peak: 182 US, 26 UK, 65 CN


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: new wave


Tracks:

Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Everything in the World [4:30] (9/18/93, 9 MR)
  2. Some Fantastic Place [4:32] (8/30/93, 73 UK)
  3. Third Rail [3:39] (7/12/93, 39 UK)
  4. Loving You Tonight [4:49] (10/18/93, --)
  5. It’s Over [3:45] (2/28/94, 89 UK)
  6. Cold Shoulder [5:48]
  7. Talk to Him [3:46]
  8. Jolly Comes Home [5:00]
  9. Images of Loving [4:10]
  10. True Colours (The Storm) (Wilkinson) [3:39]
  11. Pinocchio [4:42]

Songs written by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook unless noted otherwise.


Total Running Time: 48:17


The Players:

  • Chris Difford (vocals, rhythm guitar)
  • Glenn Tilbrook (vocals, lead guitar, keyboards)
  • Paul Carrack (keyboards, vocals)
  • Keith Wilkinson (bass)
  • Pete Thomas (drums, percussion)

Rating:

3.435 out of 5.00 (average of 16 ratings)


Quotable: “Another in a series of commercial sleepers, but definitely worth a listen” – Chris Woodstra, All Music Guide

About the Album:

Paul Carrack, who’d previously made his name as a solo artist as well as stints with Ace, Mike + the Mechanics, and, back in ’81, with Squeeze on East Side Story, returns to the fold. Along with regular members Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford, he is joined by “drummer Pete Thomas [of] Elvis Costello & the Attractions.” AMG “The record's oddest aspect is Difford's near-absence; he doesn't play a note on several tracks and he takes none of the lead vocals.” JA

Carrack’s vocal contribution, though, is the absolute “blue-eyed soul” AMG gem Loving You Tonight. It is one of the best vocals ever delivered by Carrack and, while it doesn’t feel like a Squeeze song, does take on that classic it’s-a-phenomenal-pop-song-but-won’t-go-anywhere-vibe that has so maddeningly plagued the band’s entire career.

Once again, Squeeze shoot themselves in the foot with their choice of Third Rail as the first single, at least in the U.K. While a decent slice of “melodic power pop,” AMG it is nowhere close to the more obvious Everything in the World. That song is the album’s easiest listen; it jumps out and says “I’m a pop hit waiting to happen!” Then again, like most of Squeeze’s pop hits, it is still waiting to happen. The song was released in the U.S. and, not surprisingly, went nowhere.

The title cut was a single as well and it fits better. This is a wonderfully crafted song that catches the listener’s attention with its smooth style and lyrics a cut above the average song.

There’s also ”Keith Wilkinson’s surprise vocal spotlight” JA on True Colours (The Storm), a song that startling “turns out to be a reggae sendup.” JA

Elsewhere on the album is the cleverly titled Pinocchio, which never mentions its namesake, but eludes to the famous puppet with one line: “I used to come home late and lie, lie, lie.”

The album is peppered with a few more songs that the listener will tap or sway along with as the song plays (It’s Over, Cold Shoulder, and Jolly Comes Home), but fail to list as entries in the canon of Squeeze classics.

Which pretty much sums up the album. This is hardly vital; it is, after all, “another in a series of commercial sleepers, but definitely worth a listen.” AMG

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First posted 3/6/2008; last updated 2/7/2022.

Friday, October 28, 1988

Mike + the Mechanics Living Years released

Living Years

Mike + the Mechanics


Released: October 28, 1988


Peak: 13 US, 2 UK, 12 CN, 10 AU


Sales (in millions): .05 US, 0.1 UK


Genre: mainstream rock


Tracks:

Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Nobody’s Perfect (Rutherford, B.A. Robertson) [4:48] v: Young (11/5/88, 63 US, 58 CB, 3 AR, 29 AU)
  2. The Living Years (Rutherford, Robertson) [5:32] v: Carrack (12/31/88, 1 US, 1 CB, 2 RR, 1 AC, 5 AR, 2 UK, 1 CN, 1 AU)
  3. Seeing Is Believing (Rutherford, Robertson) [3:13] v: Young (4/8/89, 62 US, 53 CB, 18 AR, 46 CN, 91 AU)
  4. Nobody Knows [4:24] v: Carrack (7/22/89, 41 AC)
  5. Poor Boy Down [4:33] v: Young
  6. Blame [5:24] v: Young
  7. Don’t [5:45] v: Carrack
  8. Black & Blue (Rutherford, Robertson, Young) [3:27] v: Young
  9. Beautiful Day (Rutherford, Neil, Young) [3:39] v: Young
  10. Why Me? (Rutherford, Robertson) [6:26] v: Carrack

Songs are written by Mike Rutherford and Christopher Neil unless noted otherwise. V indicates who sang lead vocals.


Total Running Time: 47:11


The Players:

  • Mike Rutherford (guitar, bass)
  • Paul Carrack (vocals)
  • Paul Young (vocals)
  • Adrian Lee (keyboards)
  • Peter Van Hooke (drums)

Rating:

3.730 out of 5.00 (average of 12 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

After the enormous success of Genesis’ Invisible Touch in 1986, Mike Rutherford returned to his side project, Mike + the Mechanics, for a second album. It didn’t seem likely that he’d find the same magic again. After all, that first album surprised people by landing two top-10 hits.

Instead, Rutherford and crew topped themselves, going all the way to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with the title cut. Rutherford and co-writer B.A. Robertson had both lost their fathers recently. However, the lyrics were solely by Robinson, whose son was born three months after his death. Paul Carrack, who tackled lead vocals on the track, lost his father when he was eleven years old. WK

The song was Carrack’s fourth trip to the top 10. He’d previously been there with Mike + the Mechanics when he sang lead on “Silent Running” and had also hit the top 10 back in 1974 with Ace and the song “How Long.” After his profile was upped with “Silent Running,” he also found top-10 success with his own solo hit “Don’t Shed a Tear” in early 1988.

“On mid-tempo tracks with Rutherford’s trademark bubbly bass such as Nobody’s Perfect and Beautiful Day and on the infectious Poor Boy Down the group display a soulfulness that many in the genre lack even while there is a distinct lack of individuality present in their musicianship.” AMG

Overall, the album “moves smoothly between anthemic ballads such as the title track and more up-beat numbers such as Seeing Is Believing. The band even shows a trace of Mike Rutherford’s prog rock roots with Genesis on the epic-like Why Me?AMG It didn’t find quite the success of its predecessor, though. “Nobody’s Perfect” and “Seeing Is Believing” both fell far short of the top 40, although the former reached #3 on the album rock chart and the latter got to #18.

“When the group try their hands at funk, as on Don’t, or harder rock, as on Black and Blue, they sound quite out of their element.” AMG The latter did have the credentials of Rutherford’s Genesis bandmates Phil Collins and Tony Banks behind it, though. It used a sample from a riff they played during sessions for the Invisible Touch album. WK

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First posted 1/17/2009; last updated 9/1/2021.

Monday, November 4, 1985

Mike + the Mechanics “Silent Running” released

Silent Running (On Dangerous Ground)

Mike + the Mechanics

Writer(s): Mike Rutherford, B.A. Robertson (see lyrics here)


Released: November 4, 1985


First Charted: November 9, 1985


Peak: 6 US, 5 CB, 5 GR, 5 RR, 7 AC, 15 AR, 21 UK, 8 CN, 23 AU, 2 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 10.9 video, 13.81 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

Bassist/guitarist Mike Rutherford was a founding member of the British rock band Genesis in 1967. He stayed with the band throughout their history, watching them move from their artsier, progressive side with Peter Gabriel on vocals to their more commercial style with Phil Collins at the helm. In the early 1980s, Rutherford released two solo albums. The most successful song from either effort was “Maxine,” a #39 album rock hit in 1982.

At the same time, Genesis was reaching its commercial peak. Their self-titled 1983 release was the group’s third straight of five consecutive chart-toppers in the UK and second of four consecutive top-10 albums in the U.S. “That’s All,” from 1983, became the group’s first top-10 hit in the United States, preceding five top-5 hits from their 1986 Invisible Touch album.

In between the two Genesis albums, Rutherford formed a side project, Mike + the Mechanics. The group featured Paul Carrack and Paul Young on vocals, Adrian Lee on keyboards, and Peter Van Hooke on drums. Their 1985 self-titled debut produced two top-10 hits, “Silent Running” and “All I Need Is a Miracle.” Carrack, who’d previously taken the mike for hits like Ace’s “How Long,” Squeeze’s “Tempted,” and his own “I Need You,” sang lead on “Silent Running.”

Rutherford explained that the song, which he wrote with Scottish musician B.A. Robertson, was about “time travel. The story is about the idea that this father of this family is ahead in time, so he can look back and see what’s going to happen…He’s trying to get a message back to his family to warn them that impending disaster is coming. Hence the line, ‘Can you hear me, can you hear me calling you?” SF According to Casey Kasem’s American Top 40, he titled it after the 1972 sci-fi movie Silent Running because he thought the song had a spacey feel to it, WK although he also told Songfacts.com he hadn’t heard of the movie before writing the song. SF

The song was given the subtite “On Dangerous Ground” after it was chosen to be featured in the 1986 movie of the same name, although the movie was retitled Choke Canyon in the United States. WK The video featured clips from the movie. The BBC banned the song during the Gulf War because of its message regarding war, nationalism, and religion, including a direct reference to weaponry (“There s a gun and ammunition / Just inside the doorway.”). WK


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First posted 11/19/2022; last updated 12/28/2022.

Saturday, October 5, 1985

Mike + the Mechanics released self-titled debut

Mike + the Mechanics

Mike + the Mechanics


Released: October 5, 1985


Peak: 26 US, 78 UK, 10 CN, 36 AU


Sales (in millions): 0.5 US


Genre: mainstream rock


Tracks:

Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Silent Running (On Dangerous Ground) (Rutherford, B.A. Robertson) [6:10] v: Carrack (11/9/85, 6 US, 5 CB, 5 RR, 6 US, 1 AR, 21 UK, 8 CN, 23 AU)
  2. All I Need Is a Miracle [4:10] v: Young (2/1/86, 5 US, 9 CB, 3 RR, 6 AR, 27 UK, 10 CN, 6 AU)
  3. Par Avion [3:36]
  4. Hanging by a Thread (Rutherford, Neil, Robertson) [4:40] v: Young
  5. I Get the Feeling [4:27] v: Carrack
  6. Take the Reins (Rutherford, Neil, Robertson) [4:18] v: Young
  7. You Are the One [3:41]
  8. A Call to Arms (Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Rutherford, Neil, Robertson) [4:38] v: Carrack, Young
  9. Taken In [4:17] v: Young (6/28/86, 32 US, 30 CB, 22 RR, 39 CN)

Songs by Mike Rutherford and Christopher Neil unless noted otherwise.


Total Running Time: 39:57


The Players:

  • Mike Rutherford (guitar, bass)
  • Paul Carrack (vocals)
  • Paul Young (vocals)
  • Adrian Lee (keyboards)
  • Peter Van Hooke (drums)

Rating:

3.776 out of 5.00 (average of 12 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

Mike Rutherford had been the bassist for British prog-rock group Genesis since its formation in 1967. In 1980, he branched out with his first solo album, Smallcreep’s Day and followed it with Acting Very Strange in 1982. The albums reached #13 and 23 in the UK respectively, but neither made much noise in the United States, peaking at #163 and 145 respectively.

It was hard to know what to expect from Rutherford’s side project, Mike + the Mechanics, in 1985. Genesis was coming off the success of its second consecutive top-10, multi-platinum album in the United States and the most successful single of their career thus far with “That’s All” (#4). Still, Rutherford hadn’t exactly proven himself as a chart juggernaut outside of Genesis. It was hard not to assume this would only be a one-off vanity project.

Instead, Mike + the Mechanics surprised the pop and rock worlds “with the somber stir of Silent Running, the album’s first release.” AMG The song reached #1 on the album rock chart and #6 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also put Paul Carrack in the unique position of having provided lead vocals to successful songs for three different groups. Ace reached #3 with their 1974 song “How Long” and Squeeze had a new-wave classic with “Tempted” in 1981. He’d also reached the top 40 on his own with “I Need You” in 1982. “Carrack sounds just as sharp as he did with Ace or Squeeze throughout” AMG the album.

Paul Young, the other lead singer for the Mechanics had previously charted in the UK with his band Sad Café, most notably the #3 hit “Every Day Hurts” in 1979. He was fairly unknown in the United States, however. None of that prevented Mike + the Mechanics from breaking the one-hit wonder curse with second single All I Need Is a Miracle. With “its Genesis-like tempo and polished chorus,” AMG the song bettered “Silent Running” on the pop charts, hitting #5 and gave Rutherford & Co. another top-10 hit on the album rock chart.

Taken In, “a simple ballad that’s bettered by Paul Young’s genuine emotional charm,” AMG made the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was a top-10 adult contemporary hit. Par Avion wasn’t a single, but did get noticed because it was featured in the Miami Vice episode “Yankee Dollar.” WK

A Call to Arms was an unfinished Genesis song. It emerged out of the sessions for the band’s self-titled 1983 album, but Rutherford’s bandmates didn’t like it. Rutherford got their permission to use it and developed it into a full song with help from Neil and B.A. Robertson. WK

“The songwriting comes out on top before anything else.” AMG Rutherford presented demo tapes, sometimes with nothing more “than isolated riffs and fragments” WK to producer Christopher Neil who pinpointed which he considered worthy of more development. Rutherford then built them into “full-fledged songs.” WK His “guitar work isn’t overwhelming, both his six-string and bass guitar contributions complete a sound foundation for the vocals.” AMG

“Rutherford’s overseeing of the entire project is apparent” AMG but it benefits from “all of its members exercising their expertise.” AMG In addition to the two accomplished vocalists, “the mood setting drum work of Peter Van Hooke and the keyboard fills from Adrian Lee play a large part in setting the album’s tone, and add some pop zest to the majority of the tracks.” AMG

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First posted 1/17/2009; last updated 9/1/2021.