Rick Springfield: Greatest hits LP. Top A.O.R. “Jessie’s Girl”, “I’ve Done Everything for You”, “Don’t Talk to Strangers”, “Affair of the Heart”. Check videos

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his hits were always acceptable as lightweight pop. “Jessie’s Girl” was the big track (with “I’ve Done Everything for You” the follow-up), but only timing prevented “Don’t Talk to Strangers” or “Affair of the Heart” from crossing over even bigger.


Rick Springfield – Jessie’s Girl

US Number 1 – Two weeks from August 1, 1981 (Reached Number 43 in the UK)

A pop rock classic about that age-old problem of coveting your mate’s missus. “She’s lovin’ him with that body I just know it,” fumes Springfield, clearly in turmoil. He may have started out as a teen idol, but this fella sure knew his way around an ear-wormy AOR tune.

Rick Springfield attends the ceremony honoring him with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Friday, May 9, 2014, in Los Angeles


Rick Springfield, Dave Grohl, Stevie Nicks


Dave Grohl and Rick Springfield LIVE


Rick Springfield performs at Irving Plaza, New York, July 17, 1993


Rick Springfield in Philadelphia, Pa.


Rick Springfield on 1983 in Chicago, Il.


Label: RCA ‎– PL 90394
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation
Country: UK & Europe
Released 1989
Genre: Rock    Pop Rock

Tracklist:

Label: RCA ‎– PL 90394
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation
Country: UK & Europe
Released 1989
Genre: Rock    Pop RockTracklist:
A1 –Rick SpringfieldJessie’s Girl

Producer – Keith Olsen

3:14
A2 –Rick Springfield

I’ve Done Everything For You

Producer – Keith Olsen

2:42
A3 –Rick Springfield

Love Is Alright Tonight

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:18
A4 –Rick Springfield

Don’t Talk To Strangers

Producer – Keith Olsen

3:00
A5 –Rick Springfield

What Kind Of Fool Am I

Producer – Keith Olsen

3:20
A6 –Rick Springfield / Blaise Tosti / Danny Tate

Affair Of The Heart

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:34
B1 –Rick Springfield

Human Touch

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:45
B2 –Rick Springfield

Love Somebody

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:30
B3 –Rick Springfield

Bop ‘Til You Drop

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:58
B4 –Rick Springfield

Celebrate Youth

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:51
B5 –Eric McCusker / Rick Springfield / Tim Pierce

State Of The Heart

Producer – Bill Drescher, Rick Springfield

3:58
B6 –Rick Springfield

Rock Of Life 3:28

Producer – Keith Olsen, Rick Springfield

5.0 out of 5 stars Someone who can SING and WRITE!,
This album proves why he has a greatest hits LP! He has proved why he has been around for 3 decades and is still releasing new material. Although he took a break for his family and health, his Grammy winning “Jessies Girl” to “Rock of Life” about his sons birth leave you moving and “moved.” If you want to hear a true performer and songwriter who writes ALL his songs, this is the LP!
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5.0 out of 5 stars What have you started!,
Oh dear, Oh Dear, Rob O’Connor – What have you started! Without a doubt Rick Springfield is an icon of the 80s, and the fact that he is still going strong in the year 2001 must say something for the man himself. Not many bands or artists (or Actors!) can boast such a feat. This album contains some of Ricks Classic Tracks that made the man, but to fully appreciate the mans talent in singing & writing (Don’t forget he does write his OWN material!) maybe listen to TAO, Rock of Life, or Karma amongst other LPs out there. Bare in mind as an example that ‘TAO’ was released in 1985 and even today it is still ahead of its time! In the years ‘RS’ has matured in his singing & writing (‘Karma’ being a good example), but has not compromised anything. You may say “oh… hes biased towards this guy”, DAMN RIGHT!, believe me, upon seeing this man perform in the UK in ’85 (Not been back since! – HINT! HINT!) I was hooked. I have all the LPs this man has released and trust me; this man has talent oozing from every pore. Listen to his music! Listen & Read the Lyrics! (He hasn’t thrown these words together because they sound good! they actually mean something!). Believe me, nowadays listening & understanding lyrics and there meanings, are something that is rare in today’s musical climate. Enclosing, if you have not got any of this mans work, you can do no wrong than sample genius at work. Forget that the majority of these tracks were released in the 80’s; this man was way ahead of his time…
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5.0 out of 5 stars If you miss Rock and Roll–buy this .
Rick Springfield writes deeply passionate lyrics,amazing guitar driven music, and he his voice is for real. What more could the man do? I think a lot of critics don’t want to admit to liking his music, because so many women like it, and male music critics seem to think that if women like an artist, it couldn’t possibly be because he can sing, play and write music. Guess what fellas we can vote and own property now too!


*** 

MTV started broadcasting in August of 1981. Music videos had already existed, in one form or another, for more than a decade. Some artists, like Queen, had already figured out how to use videos to juice up their personas. MTV didn’t immediately conquer popular culture, either; it would be more than a year before the network really started to shape the charts. But the beginning of MTV still stands as a landmark in pop-music history — the genesis of an era when flash and spectacle became pop-stardom prerequisites. So it feels karmically appropriate that the man who had the #1 song in America on MTV’s first day was some guy from TV.

The Australian-born Rick Springfield grew up between his homeland and the UK. As a young man, he led a few bands. One of them was Zoot, which became an early-’70s teenybop sensation in Australia. Zoot broke up in 1971, and Springfield had an Australian hit with his debut solo single “Speak To The Sky.” Shortly thereafter, Springfield moved to the US and signed with Capitol. “Speak To The Sky” is a weak oompah-fart bubblegum song, but it did well in the US, peaking at #14. Springfield kept making records after that, but most of them landed with dull thuds, something he attributes to record companies who wanted him to fit into the unthreatening teen-idol mold better than he could.

After a few years of struggling, Springfield, on the advice of an actual teenager, got into acting. For a while in the mid-’70s, Springfield was dating the Exorcist star Linda Blair. (She was 15, and he was 25. Not great! They’re still reportedly friends, though.) Blair encouraged him to try out acting, and for a while, Springfield became the sort of stiffly good-looking guy who would show up for a week on The Rockford Files or The Incredible Hulk. In 1981, Springfield became one of the stars of the massively successful soap opera General Hospital, where he played the perfectly named Dr. Noah Drake. His timing was good.

Around the time that Springfield started his General Hospital run, he came out with Working Class Dog, an album of solidly punchy power-pop that had a bit of a muscly, Springsteenian tinge to it. This was Springfield’s fifth album, and it could’ve easily fallen flat the way his others had. But Springfield had written a direct, plainspoken lead single about a debilitating crush on a friend’s girlfriend — a classic bubblegum-pop scenario. That song, combined with his new TV exposure, made Springfield, however briefly, into a pop star. The cover of the “Jessie’s Girl” single advertised Springfield as Dr. Noah Drake from General Hospital.

Springfield says that he wrote “Jessie’s Girl” about a particular girl, though he doesn’t remember her name or anything else about her. (Springfield was once a guest on Oprah, and the producers tried to find the “Jessie’s Girl” girl, but they didn’t have any luck.) Springfield had been taking a class on making stained-glass windows, and he’d gotten to know a guy named Gary, as well as Gary’s girlfriend. Springfield was into this girl, this girl was into Gary, and Springfield knew that “Gary’s Girl” was not a good name for a song.

“Jessie’s Girl” pretty much rules. It’s not new wave, exactly, but it’s driven by the same sense of simplicity that powered a whole lot of new wave. Producer Keith Olsen, former bassist for ’60s garage-rock greats the Music Machine, urged Springfield to shorten and tighten the song. The studio craftsmanship just sparkles: The clicking guitars, the bleating synths, the way the vocals explode out on the chorus. And it’s got hooks piled up on top of hooks; it’s’ the sort of song where the melodies on the verses are good enough to be choruses. The song’s tension-and-release dynamics serve a purpose. Springfield is both horny and upset, and that goes from low boil to frustrated tantrum at all the biggest, most dramatic moments.

“Jessie’s Girl” is a fundamentally silly song — a guy in his early thirties venting his rage about an extremely teenage romantic dilemma. Some of the lyrics are awkward and ungainly: “You know I feel so dirty when they start talking cute/ I wanna tell her that I love her, but the point is probably moot.” Springfield is presumably a smart enough guy to know how goofy he sounds, but he never smirks. Instead, he brings all his soap-opera hamminess to the song, smoldering through the quiet bits and firing up to rock harder on the hook. He knows how to sell that silliness.

Springfield presumably made the “Jessie’s Girl” video before MTV, but it’s still a great example of early-MTV aesthetics at work. Springfield looks faintly ridiculous in a stereotypical-greaser leather jacket, mooning after the girl in the video. He makes his intentions plenty clear, and he and Jessie don’t seem to like each other much. (Steve Antin, the actor who played Jessie, would go on to play the asshole Troy in The Goonies. He also directed 2010’s Burlesque, a vehicle for both Number Ones all-star Cher and future Number Ones subject Christina Aguilera.) During one melodramatic beat, Springfield acts out his frustration by smashing his bathroom mirror with his guitar. And then there’s the final-shot plot twist, where Jessie and his girl are watching Springfield play “Jessie’s Girl” — the two of them sitting behind the formally-dressed bull terrier from the Working Class Dog album cover.

In some ways, the Rick Springfield of “Jessie’s Girl” might be an early example of a durable ’80s type: Square-jawed sub-Springsteen mainstream rockers who played around with synths and set their sights fully on the radio. Others, like John Cougar Mellencamp and Bryan Adams, will eventually appear in this column. (Springsteen himself never will, unless you count “We Are The World.”)

Springfield never had another smash on the level of “Jessie’s Girl,” but he had a decent run as a consistent hitmaker for a few years in the early ’80s. He got to #2 with the 1982 single “Don’t Talk To Strangers.” (It’s a 5.) And Springfield was able to land a single in the top 10 as late as 1984, when “Love Somebody” peaked at #5. (It’s a 7.)

After Springfield’s pop career faded, his acting picked back up, and he went back to his old life as a guy who was on TV sometimes. He starred on mostly-forgotten shows like Nick Knight and High Tide. He spent time on Broadway. He went back to General Hospital for a few years in the ’00s. He played a sexed-up version of himself on a few episodes of Californication. Springfield had a pretty big year in 2015, acting opposite Meryl Streep in Jonathan Demme’s Ricki And The Flash and showing up in season two of True Detective. He also wrote a reportedly-pretty-good memoir in 2010. He’s still out there, still working.

BONUS BEATS: Here’s pro-wrestling manager Jimmy Hart’s “Jessie’s Girl” parody “Eat Your Heart Out, Rick Springfield,” a contribution to the WWF’s 1985 compilation The Wrestling Album:

(Jimmy Hart has never had a top-10 single as a solo artist, but in his pre-wrestling life, he was a singer for the Gentrys, whose 1965 single “Keep On Dancing” peaked at #4. It’s a 5.)

BONUS BONUS BEATS: Here’s the extremely tense scene from 1997’s Boogie Nights where Alfred Molina sings along with “Jessie’s Girl” and claims to be a friend of Ricky Springfield:

(Mark Wahlberg will eventually appear in this column.)

BONUS BONUS BONUS BEATS: Here’s Craig Robinson singing “Jessie’s Girl” and playing keyboard with his tongue in 2010’s Hot Tub Time Machine:

BONUS BONUS BONUS BONUS BEATS: Here’s the “Jessie’s Girl” cover that the Finnish metal band Children Of Bodom released in 2012:

BONUS BONUS BONUS BONUS BONUS BEATS: Here’s Rick Springfield playing “Jessie’s Girl” with the Foo Fighters at one of Dave Grohl’s Sound City shows in 2013:

(The Foo Fighters don’t have any top-10 hits. The band’s highest-charting single, 2005’s “Best Of You,” peaked at #18.)

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Weight 0.25 kg

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