80’s at 8: January 17, 2023- Billy Squier & The Tubes
On tonight’s 80’s at 8 we started of in 1981 with the second single that was released from Billy Squier‘s second album Don’t Say No. The album was certified Gold in July 1981 and Platinum two months later.
Multi-platinum awards were not certified prior to 1984, and Don’t Say No did receive a Triple Platinum award in 1992. The album reached #5 on the Billboard 200 album chart and remained on the chart for over two years (111 weeks).
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On July 27, 2010 Shout! Factory released a 30th Anniversary edition of the album complete with newly remastered sound, bonus tracks, and a new booklet.
In early 2018, Intervention Records reissued Don’t Say No on 180-gram vinyl and SACD/CD [4] The reissue is Artist-Approved and according to Squier “arguably the best-sounding version ever.” “In The Dark” reached #7 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Chart and #35 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The Village Voice magazine ranked the song at #6 on their list of 20 Best Arena Rock Songs of All Time.
You can check out the music video for In The Dark by Billy Squier here:
The second track in tonight’s 80’s at 8 came from The Tubes’ 1983 album Outside Inside. This was the first single released from the album titled She’s A Beauty.
It was Co-written by Lead Singer Fee Waybill, producer David Foster, and Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, the song was inspired by Waybill’s experience at a red light district in San Francisco. Waybill says the song was originally inspired when he passed a booth on a San Francisco street outside a peep show, the booth being marked with a sign reading “Pay A Dollar, Talk to a Naked Girl,” and the frustrating conversation that ensued between him and the woman inside the booth.
She’s a Beauty became the band’s biggest chart hit. it reached #1 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Chart and #10 on the Billboard Hot 100. Drummer Prairie Prince said of this pop success, “Well I guess you could say [it was] more commercial. I mean it’s not something that we never wanted to do in the past–it’s just something that never really happened to us before. David Foster, we owe a lot to, because he’s got that ear for a hit.
The Music video for She’s a Beauty became a staple on MTV. The music video was intended to feature a version of a freak show based on the film Freaks; this was ultimately rejected by the record company as “too weird,” so the band instead came up with the idea of the carnival ride.
Other ideas were also blocked by the record company; Waybill recalled, “They constantly censored us…We had a topless mermaid, and of course, that was right out – we had to change that, and a bunch of stuff. It was just a little too weird for MTV. We had a great big paper breast – a big screen with an air-brushed breast on it. And the guy in the ride for ‘She’s a Beauty’ would go crashing through it. Well, that was too weird, and they had to kind of soft-focus that whole thing, so it looked like a big fuzzy ball.”
You can check out the Record Label and MTV’s approved version of the Music Video for She’s a Beauty by The Tubes Here:
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