Topic: New Tab Postings
Lee Aaron wasn't always Lee Aaron; she was born Karen Lynn Greening. Early in her career she was in a band called Lee Aaron, and she ultimately adopted the moniker as her own. But by whatever name, for years she carried the label of "Metal Queen", due to both her musical style and her song of the same name. While this gave her a distinctive and memorable image throughout the early to mid-80's, it didn't necessarily translate into chart success.In 1987, Aaron released a self-titled album, aiming for a more commercial sound. The plan worked, as she had a successful single with the ballad "Only Human". Her 1989 album Bodyrock (pictured) continued in the same vein -- amping up the commercial aspect even more -- and produced hits that year in "Hands On" and "Whatcha Do To My Body". In 1990, a third single was released from the album, the heavy metal power ballad "Sweet Talk". The song was edited/shortened for release as a single, but I've tabbed the full album version. I couldn't find the full version online anywhere, so I've linked to the video of it at YouTube. This is the edited version, about two minutes shorter than the album version.
Bodyrock became Lee Aaron's most succesful album, selling 200,000+ copies. Since then, she's gone on to reinvent herself once more, this time as a jazz stylist, but she continues to perform songs from her full catalogue. Which is probably a wise decision, because for many people, she'll always be the Metal Queen.
The tab:
https://www.angelfire.com/planet/zerofret/cantab/aaronlee-sweettalk.txt
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9y2CXHHiP8
You don't tug on Superman's cape. I am Superman and I know what's happening. Superman never made any money saving the world from Solomon Grundy. So say/sing Jim Croce, R.E.M. and The Crash Test Dummies respectively. When it comes to comic book superheroes, the pop/rock world clearly thinks Superman is where it's at. Sure, there's a handful of Batman songs, and I can remember an old Katrina & The Waves song called "Spiderman". But overall, Superman is the undisputed champ. As a matter of fact, the Superman Homepage cites 460 (!) different songs that are either about or refer to Superman or Clark Kent. (
In 1977, San Francisco band Journey were at a transitional point in their career. After three albums, no breakthrough success had yet come. The band, which previously hadn't had a bona fide frontman, then added lead vocalist Robert Fleischman and opted for a more commercial sound. But the new vocalist's stay in the band would turn out to be relatively brief. Within a year he had been replaced by vocalist Steve Perry.
This one took awhile, but now "the Douce is loose". "Mama Let Him Play" -- Jerry Doucette's most succesful single -- was drawn from his 1978 debut album of the same name (pictured). The disc was recorded for the ill-fated Mushroom Records, (whose roster also included Chilliwack and Heart). It rapidly achieved platinum status in Canada, and in 1979 Doucette landed the Juno Award for Most Promising Group. The follow-up album The Douce Is Loose (1979) went gold in Canada.
Mad Mad World (1991) was Tom Cochrane's first solo album after his departure from Red Rider. From that album came his most successful single, "Life Is A Highway". The single gave him a runaway #1 hit in Canada, reached #6 on the US Hot 100, and was successful worldwide. The album achieved rare 'diamond' status in Canada, for sales of over one million, and it also sold two million internationally. All of this netted Cochrane four Juno Awards in 1992, for Album Of the Year, Songwriter Of the Year, Male Vocalist Of the Year, and Song Of the Year for "Life Is A Highway". Added to this were three other awards from songwriters'/publishers' associations (SOCAN and ASCAP).
A few days ago when posting a Coney Hatch tab, I wrote about how Kim Mitchell had played a key role in helping the band in their early days. It got me thinking: guess who hasn't been done in the riffs section yet? If you guessed Kim Mitchell, you just might be smarter than a 5th grader. (No guarantees, though.