The only cut on their LP not written by the duo, “You've
Lost That Lovin' Feeling”—released in late September and climbing the charts
rapidly in October 40 years ago—fit perfectly with the aural tone they were
trying to achieve in their first self-produced album. More important, it marked
a turning point in their careers, launching a string of platinum-selling albums
and helping them sell out arenas in the first half of the Eighties.
It marked quite a turn from the start of 1980. After
Top 10 hits such as “Rich Girl,” Sara Smile,” and “She’s Gone,” Daryl Hall
and John Oates had struggled in their albums of the late Seventies to
stay at that level. The best they could manage was the single “Wait for Me,” which
only reached No. 18 on the charts.
Part of the problem was how to mesh their interest in
“new wave” music with the “Philadelphia Sound” of rhythm and blues that they
had grown up with—or, as the title of their greatest hits album several years
later put it, “Rock and Soul.”
Hall and Oates and their record label, RCA, could have
been forgiven for thinking the first single from Voices, the
optimistically titled “How Does It Feel to Be Back,” would mark their return to
their pop peak. With its use of a jangly Rickenbacker guitar, it was, as I
heard a WNEW-FM refer to it at the time, “The Beatles Meet Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers.” But it only made it to the Top 30, down a bit even from “Wait
for Me.”
Ultimately, the duo’s instinct for the song they
needed to complete their album proved fortunate. Subsequently, they differed
slightly on exactly where they heard “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” (Hall
recalled it being played in a downtown nightspot called the Mudd Club, while
Oates remembered in his 2017 memoir Change of Seasons that they
were in a pizza joint). But each recollected that the Righteous Brothers hit came
at the end of their recording sessions, that they recognized how compatible it
would be with their own vocal style, and that they recorded the song with the
rest of their band the next day in only a few hours.
Only the year before, for his 52nd
Street album, Billy Joel had paid lavish tribute to the Righteous Brothers
with “Until the Night,” matching his own lyrics and melody to the grandiloquent
“Wall of Sound” employed by their producer, Phil Spector. This time,
though, Hall and Oates set the classic Barry Mann-Cynthia Weil composition in
what Oates called the “punchy and sleek” style of the rest of their LP—one that
avoided overdubs.
For all the difference in aural arrangements, Hall and
Oates harked back to the vocal style of their predecessors as purveyors of “blue-eyed
soul”: Oates emulating the dark baritone of Bill Medley, Hall finding his
groove in an approximation of Bobby Hatfield’s falsetto.
Their instinct for the right song for them was
justified by events in the fall of 1980. “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling”
climbed to Number 12 on the charts, bettering the performance of “How Does It
Feel to Be Back” and giving Voices continued radio exposure—and then the
deluge:
*“Kiss on My List,” Hall’s collaboration with Janna
Allen, sister of his girlfriend Sara, vaulted to Number 1 shortly after the new
year;
*The ebullient “You Make My Dreams” jumped to Number
5;
*Propelled by its four singles, Voices spent
100 weeks—nearly two years—on the Billboard chart.
Having achieved success themselves with a cover song,
Hall and Oates a few years later saw a younger artist score a hit with one of
their Voices songs: the ballad “Every Time You Go Away,” which British singer
Paul Young took to Number 1.
As the British singer Joe Jackson would do in a couple
of years with his albums Steppin’ Out and Body and Soul, Hall and
Oates felt that their sound benefited from exposure to the polyglot sounds of
New York City:
“Living in New York at the time, you had punk and New
Wave,” Oates told David Chiu in an interview for the Web site Ultimate
Classic Rock. “We were living in the Village. We were in the vortex of
all this energy that was happening. And so the music reflected it. It always
has reflected where we were at the moment and the environmental and social
influences of what was going on around us, because as songwriters, that's all
you really have to use as your inspiration.”
The pair continued to record in the same vein in their
subsequent LPs in the next few years: Private Eyes, H2O, and Big Bam
Boom. Buoyed by MTV videos that, though laughable by their own admission,
gave them additional exposure, they achieved superstar status.
“The momentum and success of Voices ushered in
the next wild chapter of our career,” Oates recalled in Change of Seasons.
“We had done it. We had produced ourselves and in doing so, tapped into the
core of who we were as writers, artists, and producers. We’d once again found a
sound. There was no turning back, but we had no idea what lay ahead. As it
turned out, this new phase was, for many fans, the beginning of Hall and Oates.”
Amazingly, unlike, say, the Everly Brothers and Simon
and Garfunkel, Hall and Oates have been able to maintain their partnership
unfractured. Each was adept not only at singing, but also at songwriting and
playing multiple instruments. Neither, then, felt threatened or jealous of the
other’s skills, and they have not differed radically over the direction of
their music. The result is that they have stayed together long enough to become
the most successful duo in rock ‘n’ roll history.
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