If the fact that he’s not CLOSE to being a “one-hit
wonder” is Rick Springfield’s biggest secret, then his even BIGGER secret is
that he has continued to make some amazing post-eighties music. After keeping relatively quiet throughout the
nineties, he returned in 1999 with “Karma”.
The album wasn’t great, but it featured the likeable single “It’s Always
Something”.
“Karma” was not a commercial success, only peaking at
#189, though it did create a spark and prompted Rick to start touring again.
It would be five years before he would release another
album, 2004’s “Shock/Anger/Denial/Acceptance”.
The album would live up to its title with darker themes and a harder edge. The first single was “Beautiful You”, which
managed to crack the top 30 on the adult contemporary chart, although the album
did not chart.
The following year, Rick would release “The Day After
Yesterday”, which was an album of eighties covers that he described as “songs I
wish I had written”. As much as I like
Rick, I would have to describe it as “songs I wish he had left alone”.
It was followed in 2007 with a holiday album entitled
“Christmas with You”. Both albums performed
meagerly, but kept him in the public consciousness to a degree. It was also during this period that he
returned to General Hospital and his role as Dr. Noah Drake after a 23-year
absence.
A year later, Rick stormed back with his best album since
1983’s “Living in Oz”. “Venus in
Overdrive” made it all the way to #28 on Billboard’s Top 200 fueled by the
“Jessie’s Girl”-esque “What’s Victoria’s Secret?”.
Other highlights included the reggae-tinged title track,
the Foo Fighters-ish “Time Stand Still” and the beautiful “Saint Sahara”, which
Rick wrote for a young fan who died of brain cancer.
He would follow that in 2009 with “My Precious Little
One: Lullabies for a New
Generation”. The true follow-up to
“Venus in Overdrive”, however, would be 2012’s “Songs for the End of the
World”. The album was almost as good as
VIO and would also make a considerable dent in Billboard’s album chart, peaking
at #44. The lead-off single was “I Hate
Myself”.
And that pretty much brings you up-to-date on Rick
Springfield. His newest album came out
earlier this year. It’s called “Stripped
Down” and it’s full of acoustic versions of some of his biggest hits. He’s currently on tour with Loverboy and The
Romantics.
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