Dexys Midnight Runners

Too-Rye-Ay (1982)

Thoughts Before Listening

Scott

Things I knew about Dexys Midnight Runners prior to writing this:

  1. Theyโ€™re from the UK – England, to be specific, although my brain really wants them to be from Ireland.
  2. Their hit was fun and folksy, with lots of strings.
  3. There isnโ€™t an apostrophe in Dexys, which makes me twitch.

Things I know about Dexys Midnight Runners now that Iโ€™ve done a bit of research:

  1. Too-Rye-Ay has a string section and a horn section. I have high hopes.
  2. The word Dexys is derived from Dexedrine, which is essentially Speed (the drug, not the movie). Midnight Runners indeed.

I didnโ€™t know they had a horn section before this – Iโ€™m psyched now. To the headphones!

Weh-Ming

Everyone knows โ€œCome On Eileenโ€. Everybody. I bet you could go into the deepest darkest forests of the Amazon and hum a few bars and within a few minutes youโ€™ll have a party. 

This is our first foray into a new decade, and Iโ€™m excited about that. I love the music of the 80โ€™s. Check that – I love the music that I listened to in the 80โ€™s, which admittedly were only the hits. The rest that didnโ€™t surviveโ€ฆ well, this is a good chance for us to really put our little experiment to the test.


Other Songs of Note

The icing on the cake

โ€œThe Celtic Soul Brothers (More Please)โ€ – 8 points

Scott (5 points)

This one comes right at you – it is punchy and dynamic. The strings are right there in the front. I canโ€™t hear the horns, but the strings are prominent. This doesnโ€™t really sound like anything else I can think of. I say this very positively – so much of music tends towards homogeneity that itโ€™s delightful to hear something different, as long as it is as well executed as this is.

Weh-Ming (3 points)

It reminds me of a Maritime kitchen band. I donโ€™t have a great sense of what theyโ€™re saying most of the time – thankfully there are lyrics. I liked this song. I am going to start off with a strong 3 points for this track, and weโ€™ll see where the rest of the album goes.


โ€œJackie Wilson Said (I’m in Heaven When You Smile)โ€ – 7 points

WEh-Ming (4 points)

I like this song. It sounds like what youโ€™d expect this kind of song to sound like from the 80โ€™s if that makes any sense at all. If youโ€™d told me that he was singing โ€œIโ€™m in heavenโ€, I would have been just as surprised as I was when I read the lyrics.

Scott (3 points)

Another one with fantastic string / horn interplay. Itโ€™s actually kind of neat to have rock music with the guitar so downplayed in the mix. I mean, I know itโ€™s there (the credits tell me so) but Iโ€™m not sure I can hear it at all. Bass? Lots and lots of bass. Banjo sometimes? Yes. Guitar? I donโ€™t hear it. I think this song is actually the horn section highlight for me.


โ€œAll in All (This One Last Wild Waltz)โ€ – 6 points

Scott (4 points)

One two three, one two three, one two three. Yep, itโ€™s a waltz. I really enjoy the female backing vocals in this one, along with the violin/banjo. Oh no. The lead vocals remind me of half of The Flight of the Conchords (Bret McKenzie) and now thatโ€™s all I can hear.

Weh-Ming (2 points)

I like the weirdness of this song and his voice (which I can sort of understand better here). Someone who knows music better than me can tell if this is actually a waltz, but going back to my 8 AM Movement class in university, it has the beat of a waltz. This is a closing time song.


โ€œLet’s Make This Preciousโ€ – 3 points

Scott (2 points)

There are the horns! Strings and horns! And barely intelligible singing! You donโ€™t hear strings and horns playing off of each other very often in music, and I really enjoy it. A flute outro! Special shout out to the very capable bassline that holds this whole thing together. The song even calls out guitars as โ€œtoo noisy and crude.โ€ I should have taken this as a sign that electric guitar would be nowhere to be found.

Weh-Ming (1 points)

I liked the strings and the horns are crazy in this, but it didnโ€™t make me as happy as the first track.

What we would put on our personal mixtapes

Old

Scott (1 point)

Lovely message about listening to and respecting the elderly – learning from their wisdom. I really enjoy the violin line in this one. Very methodical song, with its progression and various instrument parts, and it works very well. Cough cough. Get off of my lawn!

Weh-Ming Comment

You know how much I like when two tracks lead into each other, and while this isnโ€™t seamless it was a nice transition.

This is a morality song – we donโ€™t treat our elders very well. The message is good along with a good riff, but itโ€™s a little heavy handed and slow for my liking. But then again, Iโ€™m not old so the song isnโ€™t directed to me. Itโ€™s directed to old people who like slow songs that pander to themโ€ฆ Cough cough Scott. Old people, yeesh.

The end of the song tricks you into thinking that itโ€™s the start of the next song? I donโ€™t get it. Maybe itโ€™s because old people forget what theyโ€™re listening to?


Final Thoughts

Scott

Iโ€™ll be honest – It took a minute to adapt to this album. Iโ€™m used to rock music where horns and strings are the supporting players, while the guitar (and even keyboards) take center stage on the melodies. This is, well, different. Thereโ€™s guitar on this album – I know this because the credits tell me so. If they didnโ€™t, Iโ€™m not sure I would have known. The strings and horns are the primary melody makers here, with banjo, organ, accordion, and even flute (!) helping out. Thereโ€™s a great rhythm section laying down the backbone of most songs – a traditional electric bass player and drummer doing what one would expect.

With this in mind, I went through a couple phases of listening to Too-Rye-Ay:

  1. Oh neat, horns and strings!
  2. Hey, whatโ€™s the deal, where are the guitars?
  3. Iโ€™m not sure I can do this.
  4. Oh, the horns and strings are filling in for the guitars. Interesting.
  5. Iโ€™ve fully come to terms with this divergence from standard band structure, and Iโ€™m down with it.

At the end of this journey, getting five songs that I enjoyed wasnโ€™t too difficult. Itโ€™s a little odd that it ended up being the first five songs on the album. Iโ€™m thinking these songs have the most traditional structure – once you get into the back half of the album, things get a little more experimental and non-standard.
This is the sort of album I love to discover – Iโ€™d never likely have listened to more than the hit without this exercise. But because of it, Iโ€™ve got a bunch of songs now that I had never heard that I can pull out when the mood strikes me. Too-Rye-Ay, indeed.

Weh-Ming

Overall, I liked the album. It was completely different than I anticipated – I had no idea they were not from the US. I think the first half of the album is better than the second before finishing with โ€œCome On Eileenโ€.

Also, now that I understand why I had so much trouble understanding the words to โ€œCome On Eileenโ€ – roughly 80% of the entire album is unintelligible to me. But itโ€™s entertaining gibberish!


Yeah But What Else

Scott

Down the Rabbit Hole (Additional listening inspired by this weekโ€™s review.)

Dexys Midnight Runners – โ€œGenoโ€ – Pre-Too-Rye-Ay Dexys. Listening to how prominent the horns are in this one, itโ€™s easy to see why they werenโ€™t super-pleased when the strings were brought in and given such high billing. 

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – โ€œThe Skin of My Yellow Country Teethโ€ – American vs. British. Guitar driven vs. virtually no guitar. This song came to mind a couple times through listening – I think itโ€™s just because both use their wailing voices as instruments. I can see how it wouldnโ€™t be everyoneโ€™s jam, but this one gets its hooks into my brain in a powerful way.

Flight of the Conchords – โ€œRobotsโ€ – About as far from Dexys as it gets, but I mentioned them due to Bret McKenzieโ€™s vocal similarities to Dexysโ€™s lead singer. This song cracks me up every time.

Weh-Ming

Weird Al has never done a parody of Dexys Midnight Runners. It could have been, as Too Rye Ay came out in 1982 and Weird Alโ€™s first album came out in 1983. But at 4:47 long, itโ€™s 50% longer than the longest song on his debut album. 

Iโ€™d be tempted to cut โ€œStop Dragginโ€™ My Car Aroundโ€, but it is the only Tom Petty parody heโ€™s done and that would be a shame. It could also be argued to cut โ€œRickyโ€, but that was also his first music video ever and Tress MacNeille is in it too. No, you canโ€™t cut any of the parodies out, they have to stay.

Which only leaves his originals. While I love them, some of them arenโ€™t awesome. โ€œGotta Boogieโ€ is, I believe, the weakest original Al song ever – even though I loved dancing around as a kid pretending to have a boogie on my fingerโ€ฆ Yes, I was definitely pretendingโ€ฆ

Iโ€™ve done the math, and the closest you can get to the 4:47 of โ€œCome On Eileenโ€ is to cut both โ€œSuch a Groovy Guyโ€ and โ€œMr Frump in the Iron Lungโ€. And while many people may say that losing โ€œSuch a Groovy Guyโ€ is not a huge loss, there is no way that I can fathom a world in which โ€œMr Frump in the Iron Lungโ€ does not exist.

2 Comments

  1. Another great review. I bought this on vinyl years ago, for the one hit nostalgia. This album was sadly undervalued on a global scale.
    Also, 4+2 does not equal 7, so were you guys on ‘Dexy”? ๐Ÿ˜

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