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Huey Lewis: Favorite Song (2 Viewers)

Huey Lewis

  • Do You Believe In Love

    Votes: 20 14.6%
  • I Want A New Drug

    Votes: 13 9.5%
  • Power Of Love

    Votes: 19 13.9%
  • Heart Of Rock N' Roll

    Votes: 27 19.7%
  • Walking On A Thin Line

    Votes: 12 8.8%
  • Stuck With You

    Votes: 3 2.2%
  • If This It

    Votes: 11 8.0%
  • Hip To Be Square

    Votes: 3 2.2%
  • Heart & Soul

    Votes: 13 9.5%
  • Jacob's Ladder

    Votes: 7 5.1%
  • Back In Time

    Votes: 2 1.5%
  • Other

    Votes: 7 5.1%

  • Total voters
    137
The band was really good and Huey was a good front man. Hell, even HE knew was square. Those guys looked like they were having the time of their lives and couldn't quite believe it all was happening. They hit #1 in a time when HOFers were throwing absolute hay makers at each other, one after the other.

"Heart & Soul" for me

 
"If this is it" for me. In 1984, as a thirteen year old with a betamax player, there were great opportunities to pause this video and appreciate it.

 
Big BttF geek, so Power of Love gets my vote.

Huey Lewis and the News was the first band I loved as a kid around 9-10 yo. First tapes I bought and played them over and over. Around that time I got two hamsters as pets for my birthday, and of course named them Huey and Lewis. :bag:

 
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.

 
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
I think they used horns as well as anyone in the 80s who was having pop hits. It wasn't just them, but this was about the last gasp of bands using the saxophone. Sucks, IMHO, that horns & piano have gotten banished as viable instruments.

 
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
Tower of Power was the horn section for most of these, weren't they?

 
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
Tower of Power was the horn section for most of these, weren't they?
Really? Now THAT makes more sense as to how good the horns sound.

 
biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
Tower of Power was the horn section for most of these, weren't they?
Really? Now THAT makes more sense as to how good the horns sound.
Yup.

http://www.towerofpower.com/discography/hornsection/

Of course, they followed the Huey Lewis gig up with The Care Bear Movie...

 
I totally forgot what a gigantic collection of turds these guys put out.
I know this is your thing but MAN does it get tiresome in thread after thread.
Sorry you were forced to read that. You going to be able to make it through the rest of the day?
Depends on how many deuces you drop in other threads that are otherwise enjoyable.
Point the way.

 
By far the most profound and meaningful song by Huey Lewis is "I Want a New Drug". The song is a search for a long and lasting happiness without the side effects of destructive vices like drugs that only provide temporary pleasure. Very rare to find this level of existential philosophy in a pop song but Huey Lewis is able to combine Nietzschean philosophy with an undeniably catchy tune better than any musician before or since.

 
Do You Believe in Love. Best arrangement, most complete song, holds up well, and the two guys (the guitarists?) did an excellent job wailing those high backing vocal parts. I think this one was written by Mutt Lange so having interesting vocals behind the lead isn't too surprising.

No denying the appeal of those riffs on I Want a New Drug and Power of Love, though.

 
A go to CD for years was Picture This, every song is good.

My favorite is - I Hope You Love Me Like You Say You Do and a good under the radar song is The Only One

 
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biggie, you're a musician. From a technical aspect, how good do you think the News was?
Arrangements were top notch and the musicianship appeared to be superb (though I'm not in a position to judge the quality of their horn section). Sure, range was limited, but they knew how to stay in the pocket and do what they did extremely well. But that's just my opinion and I'm no expert.
Tower of Power was the horn section for most of these, weren't they?
Really? Now THAT makes more sense as to how good the horns sound.
Yup.

http://www.towerofpower.com/discography/hornsection/

Of course, they followed the Huey Lewis gig up with The Care Bear Movie...
And followed up the BB King gig with Michael Bolton. But still, that list in your link is overall :tebow:

 
Voted Do You Believe in Love.

Nice band, always brings back the 80's, and very good for what they were. The one drawback is I saw them live sometime in 85-86. They sounded almost exactly like the record. Every note, every word, every song played to the same length... it was a little disappointing. The only deviation was a little tease of the opening to Purple Haze before the New Drug riff.

 
Went with Walking on a Thin Line. Can't believe Heart of Rock N' Roll is winning, I freaking hate that song. It seems like a thinly veiled attempt to get into the HoF.

 
Very Smart (800 on Math SAT)

Huge Schlong

Good looking Front man for a Rock band.

#### you god.

 
It was from the end of the run as a chart topping band, and it's not really anything we hadn't heard before from them before, no horns, but I still liked this one - the band plays really well on it - couple days off.

 
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