The parade of K-Tel albums from 1982 continues with Neon Nights - Rock's Danceable Side. The album sports a stylish cover but for the life of me I cannot figure out what's going on wth that shoe or is it a boot on the cover? And why is the neon sign clipped on the right on the cover and then clipped at the top on the back cover? And am I the only one who gets this is indeed rock music under its broadest definition, the same standard the much-mailgned Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame uses? Speaking of which, there are actually two RHOF acts on Neon Nights: Prince and Hall & Oates. Looking at the tracklist, this is clearly an upbeat R&B album. I can say there are a few Top 10 Pop hits here but I honestly can't say how well the songs did on any of the other charts except to say absolutely none of these songs crossed over to the Country chart. Let's set we can find video-wise for some of my favorite songs on Neon Nights.
You can listen to Neon Nights via player below or hit up incomplete Spotify playlist a little further down.
The last Summer I spent away from home was 1982. The way I remember it, my Grandma was waiting for me when I got home the last day of school, along with my then 13 year old cousin, Mike. We spent a few days seeing the sights of Tucson as it was their first time out here and then I rode back to Texas with them in her navy blue Delta 88 with an 8 track deck and a console full of Herb Alpert and Donna Summer tapes. My Texas Grandma bought Mike a replica pilot/space helmet from one of the museum gift shops here and he wore that thing 24/7. The trip back to Texas was filled with minty smoke from Grandma's Salem cigarettes as they sat in the beanbag ashtray on the dash. That Summer, I worked with my Texas Grandpa, Uncle Sam, Uncle Sammy and Uncle Homer building barbed-wire fences, installing cattle guards and sand-blasting buildings, making pretty great (tax-free) money for a sixteen year old kid. Also spent several weekends just outside Bryan where my Grandpa's baby brother "Selze" (given name Sylvester) had built a lovely custom home for his wife and three children, all of whom were close to my age it seemed. Long games of hide and seek on their multi-acre property were broken up by record listening parties in their bedrooms, which I remember as being the biggest bedrooms I had ever seen in my life. (I'd be willing to bet that my palatial office space here at The Hideaway is a third of the size of one of their bedrooms!)
The youngest brother, Daryl, was already a big fan of R&B and it was on his record player that I first heard Dazz Band's "Let It Whip", he even had a dance he did while the song played, said he had seen it on Soul Train. I would go on to hear the song many times over that Summer while out in the pastures with Grandpa Harold, who let me leave radio on and doors open in his truck while we worked sometimes. Heard a lot of great songs on a soul station out of Bryan or maybe Houston. Gap Band, Zapp, One Way, Stevie Wonder, Donna Summer, Patrice Rushen and Ray Parker, Jr. I can almost swear I heard Queen's "Body Language" on that station a couple of times as well. Oh and this song.
The newly convened intern research team here at The Hideaway could find no evidence of a Canadian version of Neon Nights but they did turn up both cassette and 8-track formats. As the album only has a dozen tracks, it may have been easier to establish a uniform tracklist across the three formats without the need for the usual jumble required for 8-track. The stats at discogs marketplace say the average selling price for Neon Nights in ten transactions has been $2.70 with the median pegged at $2.94. Currently there are thirteen at least VG copies for sale, starting at $3.00. My younger sister had this album on cassette before I bought a vinyl version but I still have mine and she has no idea whatever became of her tapes.
As for the songs themselves, they had an average debut on the Hot 100 during first week of February 1982 and peaked on average nine weeks later on the second chart published in April 1982. Based on the dates, I'd say an educated guess would place the release date of Neon Nights around late Spring or early Summer 1982.
debut date | peak date | wks to pk | ||
Let It Whip | Dazz Band | April 24, 1982 | July 17, 1982 | 12 |
Super Freak | Rick James | August 8, 1981 | October 24, 1981 | 11 |
Call Me | Skyy | January 16, 1982 | March 6, 1982 | 7 |
Controversy | Prince | October 24, 1981 | November 21, 1981 | 4 |
You Got The Power | War | April 3, 1982 | April 17, 1982 | 2 |
Don't You Want Me | Human League | March 6, 1982 | July 3, 1982 | 17 |
Get Down On It | Kool & the Gang | February 27, 1982 | May 22, 1982 | 12 |
I Can't Go For That (No Can Do) | Hall & Oates | November 14, 1981 | January 30, 1982 | 11 |
A Night To Remember | Shalamar | April 10, 1982 | May 29, 1982 | 7 |
Circles | Atlantic Starr | March 27, 1982 | May 22, 1982 | 8 |
Murphy's Law | Cheri | April 10, 1982 | June 5, 1982 | 8 |
Mama Used To Say | Junior | February 13, 1982 | April 24, 1982 | 10 |
averages | February 6, 1982 | April 10, 1982 | 9 |
NEON NIGHTS [1982]
| 18.38 | |||||||
Billboard Top 40s | ||||||||
Pop | COU | R&B | Disco | Rock | AC | CB | ||
Let It Whip | Dazz Band | 5 | 1 | 2 | 13 | |||
Super Freak | Rick James | 16 | 3 | 1 | 17 | |||
Call Me | Skyy | 26 | 1 | 3 | 27 | |||
Controversy | Prince | (70) | 3 | 1 | (72) | |||
You Got The Power | War | (66) | 18 | 6 | ||||
Don't You Want Me | Human League | 1 | 3 | 4 | 1 | |||
Get Down On It | Kool & the Gang | 10 | 4 | 16 | 12 | |||
I Can't Go For That (No Can Do) | Hall & Oates | 1 | 1 | 1 | 28 | 12 | 1 | |
A Night To Remember | Shalamar | (44) | 8 | 15 | 31 | |||
Circles | Atlantic Starr | 38 | 2 | 9 | (48) | |||
Murphy's Law | Cheri | 39 | 5 | 1 | 37 | |||
Mama Used To Say | Junior | 30 | 2 | 4 | 30 |
With three songs missing the Top 40 on the Pop chart, Neon Nights was doomed to a low score on the K-Tel Scale™. Four Top 10s, including a pair of Number Ones on the Pop chart, one Top 20 on the Adult Contemporary chart and two crossovers to the Rock chart. All but two songs made the R&B Top 10 and if that was the primary factor in the algorithm instead of Pop Top 40, this album would surely be ranked among the Top 10 of All-Time here on the K-Tel Kollection. And it did slightly better still on the Disco chart. Neon Nights is a better than good listen as long as you know and like the danceable tunes which are presented in radio friendly edited versions on the album. The playlist below features full length album cuts or extended remix versions for an overall better dancing experience lasting nearly half an hour longer than the playlists above.
Wow. The good 'ol internet did it again. I remember borrowing this album from my best friend's sister at the time. It was the summer of '82 and my favorite tracks on this album were Murphy's Law, A Night to Remember, Mama Used to Say and of course No Can Do. I haven't seen the cover of this album since 82. Thanks for the memories. By the way, I own all of those songs except the Circles and You Got the Power.
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