Showing posts with label Eternal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eternal. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 May 2024

Eternal: "Just a Step from Heaven"


"We've probably lost them to America but Eternal are a jewel well worth keeping."
— Mark Frith

A look at the Billboard Hot 100 for the week of April 13, 1994 gives an indication of how British artists were doing on the other side of the Atlantic. Starting down at the bottom, there's either I to I or 1 to 1 with "The Right Thing" which was taken from the Richard Curtis rom-com Four Weddings and a Funeral. I have seen this movie many, many times over the years and I have no memory of this song. Perhaps it's "featured" in the closing credits as the names of various "key grips" are mentioned but I'd have to check on that. Also, I'm not completely sure this I to I group is even British though I'm inclined to include them anyway.

Moving up into the seventies we find James with "Laid". I thought it had been a hit earlier in the year and, given the amount of radio play it got at the time, I would've figured it did better than its modest sixty-one peak. Then, there's the Brand New Heavies who I'm a bit surprised to encounter on here. "Dream on, Dreamer" is a terrific song but it seems rather out of step with all that post-grunge, frat boy indie rock and formulaic R&B which dominated the US at the time. Rod Stewart is one step up on ver Heavies with a single and don't recall and have no interest in investigating. For spite.

Heading up the Top 60 is Morrissey with "The More You Ignore Me the Closer I Get" which surprised many by doing as well as it did. Juliet Roberts is a few spots higher than Moz, then there's Gabrielle's "Dreams", Rod the Bod and Sting in their horrible team up with Bryan Adams from some stupid movie and Phil Collins making a final push for relevancy before we get to the highest placing hit by a UK act. And look who it is: Eternal with "Stay" at number thirty-three. Yes, Mark Frith appears to be correct, the Americans were about to steal them away.

I think that makes ten UK singles on the Hot 100 that week. A tenth of the chart but nothing in the Top 30. The bulk of these are songs few in North America remember and some they probably weren't even aware of at the time. I personally have no memory of Eternal being on the charts in North America but I do recall the quartet appearing on MuchMusic, the Canadian equivalent to MTV. Easther, Kéllé, Louise and Vernie looked delighted to be living their lives as they answered the VJs questions. What I wasn't to know was that this interview was probably the only one they gave during their promotional trip across the Atlantic that didn't leave a sour taste in their mouths.

While the picture painted by longtime Hits writer Alex Kadis is of the foursome enjoying themselves on their first promotional tour of the US, the group would later admit that the Americans didn't quite know what to make of them. Being a multi-racial vocal group, it was said that black radio stations tended to focus on their questions on Easther, Kéllé and Vernie while the white pop stations would zero in on Louise. Hard to imagine this happening to Hootie & The Blowfish around the same time. This schism isn't discussed by Kadis and indeed it seems like music industry types described in the piece treated them respectfully and didn't even seem surprised by their unusual black-white dynamic. But this sunny account contrasts with that of Q's Robert Yates which has less of the faint whiff of PR spin to it.

Mark Frith had already made an Eternal record his Best New Single at the start of 1994 and he's even more impressed with "Just a Step from Heaven". Admitting it is more of a grower than their previous hits, he nevertheless feels it has "the best of both" in one cracking song. I can't agree. It's a perfectly fine third single from their Always and Forever album but it doesn't come close to "Stay" or "Save Our Love" — and this isn't a knock against it. There's plenty to dig in this one but the effortless pop hooks just aren't present to the same extent. The first two hits had videos but didn't even need them; in the case of "Just a Step..." it's the promo that is the biggest take away.

With the outlook on their promotional jaunt being mostly positive, it must have seemed like the British were indeed about to "los[e] them to America". Yet, the encouraging chart performance of "Stay" wouldn't be repeated even by the equally wonderful "Save Our Love". The video for "Just a Step from Heaven" had the glitzy US production values but it did little to aid their cause Stateside. No doubt appearing on MTV and Arsenio Hall and Entertainment Tonight and at the Soul Train Awards did the them a world of good but they were as good as forgotten by the time they got back to Britain. 

The real legacy of their trip to America was that it proved to be the first step towards Louise's departure just a year later. In turn, this would lead to the now trio Eternal becoming a boring and predictable R&B act while Louise proved to be out of her depth as a pop diva. They all did pretty well for themselves but there was always the feeling that they had been better off as a foursome. The group's manager Denis Ingoldsby predicted four potentially great solo careers for his charges ("You see, we've already got our Madonna in Louise," the pop svengali told Q. "Vernie can be Anita Baker, Kéllé can be Janet Jackson, Easther can be Whitney.") but the emphasis — especially at what was still a very early stage — should have been on continuing to focus on what made Eternal special. Even a rum old thing like "Just a Step from Heaven" was quite brilliant in the context of the '94 pop charts. They had plenty to work with whether America cared to know or not.

~~~~~

Also Reviewed This Fortnight

Crash Test Dummies: "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm"

Conventional wisdom states that everyone loved the global breakthrough smash for Crash Test Dummies up until the point that they suddenly didn't. Reviews were positive and it was played to death on radio stations all over the place. Then, it began appearing on Worst Songs Ever and Most Annoying Hits lists. (The Dummies would even pop up on Worst Bands of All-Time surveys which had clearly been put together by people who never bothered listening to anything else they ever recorded) Yet, "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" had its detractors even from its earliest days. Frith is none too impressed by it ("being a Grandad is all about this" reckons the same bloke who one gave his seal of approval to old farts in waiting River City People) and it proved to be only a modest hit in their native Canada where their countrymen had far more time for fellow God Shuffled His Feet singles "Swimming in Your Ocean" and the masterful "Afternoons and Coffeespoons". As far as it stood with me, I found it to be a lesser "Superman's Song", the group's Canadian Top 5 hit from the summer of 1991. They proved they could make novelty songs sound poignant but they weren't up to repeating the trick.

Wednesday, 27 March 2024

Eternal: "Save Our Love"


"A few more listens and you realise it's a truly great, cool and bang up-to-date pop record, the sort you'll remember as one of your favourites of the year next Christmas."
— Mark Frith

Now That's What I Call Music 13Now That's What I Call Music 18Now That's What I Call Music 22Now That's What I Call Music 26Now That's What I Call Music 27Now That's What I Call Music 28Now That's What I Call Music 29Now That's What I Call Music 30Now That's What I Call ChristmasNow The Anthems: Live Forever

As you may have guessed, this is my collection of Now albums in full. I no longer have all of them, mind you. I never really took to Now 30 so I hardly missed it when it disappeared. Plus, the cassettes of Nows 13, 18, 22 and 28 no longer play properly. (This list doesn't include volumes 12, 17, 19 and 21 which I borrowed from friends at various points nor Now 14 which I randomly found at a used CD shop in the South Korean city of Gwangju about twelve years ago and which I ended up giving to my sister) The only Nows that I still listen to are relatively recent purchases Christmas (bought the last time I was in Britain back in 2012) and The Anthems (which I found up in Seoul at the start of the year for a bargain price). Anyway, it's not a bad batch of Nows for a Canadian kid who balked at the stupid import price tag on Now 32 at Calgary's old downtown HMV store (I opted for a pricey but manageable CD single of The Beautiful South's forgettable "Pretenders to the Throne" instead; it was yet another disc that I didn't miss when it too went missing).

In retrospect, Nows 26 through 30 ought to have shown listeners the landscape of the coming Brit-pop movement. With Blur and Oasis each appearing twice, there is a glimpse of this but there's little else that suggests what's in store. (Rather than being placed on Now 27, Suede's Top 5 smash "Stay Together" was relegated to the far less relevant Hits 94) Instead, there's an emphasis on, well, what was popular. Dance pop of various stripes was what most of the kids were after and they weren't to be disappointed when they went into their local Woolworth's to get the latest Now release.

Many pop acts make multiple appearances on these comps with the likes of Meat Loaf, Reel 2 Reel featuring The Mad Stuntman and China Black among those on two of them. Italian dance organization Cappella (who I was previously familiar with due to the '89 Top 20 hit "Helyom Halib") are on three while both Chaka Demus & Pliers and M People are on four. But it is the London pop/R&B quartet Eternal who are the most represented by running the table with spots on all five.

As I have already stated, female vocal groups of the early to mid nineties tended to have the upper hand on their male counterparts, particularly in the United States. En Vogue, SWV and TLC made far sturdier records than the likes of Boyz II Men and Color Me Badd. Their sultriness wasn't as creepy, their sincerity didn't come across as sickly and the girls didn't seem bothered about having to resort to inserting supposedly macho raps into the middle of songs that didn't need them. This was far less of an issue in Britain, however, where the all-singing groups were boy bands. Eternal wasn't quite a girly equivalent of Take That or East 17 (something that wouldn't fully emerge until 1996 in the form of The Spice Girls) but more of hybrid: a bit of Bananarama, a bit of Mel & Kim, a bit of En Vogue.

Mark Frith is absolutely captivated by second single "Save Our Love" and it's easy to see why. Picking up all those Nows from '93 and '94, Eternal's many contributions were generally a highlight and none more so than this one. While there's nothing about it that pushes the boundaries of pop, it's just so superbly sung and produced that it hardly matters. Had Stock Aitken Waterman still been active, creative and relevant by 1994, they might have written "Save Our Love". This is where Eternal differ from American R&B acts of the time: there's a certain joy and optimism in their many songs about heartbreak. Melodrama? They had some set aside for a timely future release but it was something that was otherwise best left to the "keepin' it real" types on the other side of the Atlantic. Eternal clearly did swingbeat but with much more of a pop uplift.

Frith's predicted Top 3 hit failed to materialize with "Save Our Love" peaking at number eight and spending just a solitary week in the Top 10. Yet it did help push their debut album Always & Forever up the charts as it went on a lengthy journey from sleeper to genuine hit over the next fifteen months. It even seems like predecessor "Stay" and future hits "Just a Step from Heaven" (more on it in a few weeks) and — for some reason — "Oh Baby I..." are all much better remembered nowadays. Still, for me this is their finest single. Vernie Bennett belts out a vocal that is indeed "shouted out with gusto" while her sister Esther, Kéllé Bryan and the future Louise Redknapp add charm and lightness to the chorus and their backing vocals. "Stay" might come back to me from time to time but "Save Our Love" has seemingly never left.

As a teenager in the nineties I was frequently at odds with my taste in music. If I was going through an indie phase, pop was always tugging at me as if in need of attention. If mainstream chart music was my bag, I'd feel pangs of guilt about turning my back on the fringes. Occasionally having a Now collection come into my life was often a good way to recalibrate. Now 17 opened my eyes to Madchester while 22 got me out of the mire of tired alternative rock in the middle of 1992. Eternal wasn't the sort of thing I should've been listening to as a seventeen year old (aside from my fondness for the photogenic pair of Kéllé and Louise) but they would do while I waited for the next thing to arrive.
 
~~~~~

Also Reviewed This Fortnight

One Dove: "Why Don't You Take Me?"

Sadly not appearing on Now 27 or 28 is the unsettling beauty of One Dove's "Why Don't You Take Me?". Dense sound effects (kind of like Brian Eno recording at Scratch Perry's famed Ark studio only not like that at all), organs and what may or may not be real instruments played to sound as synthetic as possible, this is a record that manages to be as much fun to listen to as "Save Our Love" while being as original as anything you care to name. Never before has the sound of marching band drums been put to such good use. Frith got his Top 3 megahit prediction wrong when it came to Eternal and his fortune telling skills are no more accurate with One Dove. "These people will be very famous", his nibs informs us. They sure deserved to be.

Kim Wilde: "Love Blonde"

21 July 1983 "Now that summer's here, I suppose the charts are likely to be groaning under the weight of a load of sticky, syrupy s...