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Sports (Huey Lewis and the News album)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Sports |
| type | studio |
| artist | Huey Lewis and the News |
| cover | Huey Lewis and the News - Sports.png |
| border | yes |
| released | September 15, 1983 |
| recorded | December 1982–June 1983 |
| length | 37:46 |
| label | Chrysalis |
| producer | Huey Lewis and the News |
| prev_title | Picture This |
| prev_year | 1982 |
| next_title | Fore! |
| next_year | 1986 |
| misc | {{Singles |
| name | Sports |
| type | Studio |
| single1 | Heart and Soul |
| single1date | August 30, 1983 |
| single2 | I Want a New Drug |
| single2date | January 3, 1984 |
| single3 | The Heart of Rock & Roll |
| single3date | April 10, 1984 |
| single4 | If This Is It |
| single4date | July 10, 1984 |
| single5 | Walking on a Thin Line |
| single5date | October 9, 1984 |
- Fantasy (Berkeley, California)
- Record Plant (Sausalito, California)
- The Automatt (San Francisco)
- Rock
- pop rock
Writing
"The Heart of Rock & Roll" was developed after the band performed at the Agora Theatre and Ballroom in Cleveland, Ohio in 1980, which they had been told was a "great rock & roll town". The following day, Lewis told his bandmates that he felt the heart of rock and roll really was in Cleveland and thought the sentiment would make for a good song, but the band convinced him to slightly alter the lyrics to "the heart of rock & roll is still beating".
"Bad Is Bad" was penned with Lewis' original band, Clover. It was written in the late 1970s while Lewis was working with Thin Lizzy, whose frontman Phil Lynott liked the song so much that he would sing a fast-paced version at some of his concerts. Another version of "Bad Is Bad" appeared on Dave Edmunds' album Repeat When Necessary (1979), featuring Lewis on harmonica.
The idea for "I Want a New Drug" came to Lewis during a car ride to his lawyer's office, and he wrote down the majority of the lyrics upon arriving. After Lewis made an unsuccessful attempt to put the idea to music with bassist Mario Cipollina, guitarist Chris Hayes developed new music for the final song on his own.
"Walking on a Thin Line", written by Andre Pessis and former Clover member Kevin Wells, was about the poor treatment of veterans who returned home from the Vietnam War. "Finally Found a Home", inspired by an offhand comment about "ticky-tacky" houses near an airport, later progressed into a song about having a career in the music business. Saxophonist/guitarist Johnny Colla wrote the music for "If This Is It" alone and gave the song to Lewis, who penned the lyrics on a tour bus. "You Crack Me Up", written by Lewis and Cipollina, was based on various people the band had encountered in the parking lot of Uncle Charlie's, a bar the band had frequently performed at before they achieved mainstream success.
Sports also contains cover versions of "Heart and Soul", written by the songwriting team of Mike Chapman and Nicky Chinn, and "Honky Tonk Blues", written by Hank Williams.
Production
Sports was self-produced by the band after their manager, Bob Brown, felt the band's own demos were better than the producers they had been considering. The ethos behind the production of the album was to meld old techniques and instrumentation with modern technology, inspired by hearing the use of an electronic drum machine on Steely Dan's 1980 song "Hey Nineteen". The juxtaposition of an old style vocal sound with the modern LinnDrum on "Bad Is Bad" provided guidance for the rest of the album's production.
Lewis's idea to record "I Want a New Drug" with a sequenced bass line and drum machine was initially met with displeasure by both bassist Mario Cipollina and drummer Bill Gibson. The first attempt at this was deemed unsatisfactory and the song was re-recorded with the full band, but after the album was mixed, Lewis decided that both "I Want a New Drug" and "The Heart of Rock & Roll" needed to be re-recorded with sequenced bass and drums, adding a slight tempo increase in the process. The band initially used a kick drum to create the simulated heartbeat sound for "The Heart of Rock & Roll" but were unhappy with the results, so engineer Jim Gaines and keyboardist Sean Hopper spent six hours developing a new heartbeat sound using various other means. Lewis later referred to the album's production style as "cut and paste, put together piece by piece".
Lewis approached Gaines with the idea to record "Heart and Soul", which they initially thought was an unreleased song. Gaines later recalled that, while the band was working on the song, an engineer mentioned that it had already been covered by both Exile and the BusBoys. Although the band's recording was ultimately finished, it was initially shelved. However, Lewis later recalled hearing the BusBoys recording their version in an adjacent studio, and that he'd decided his version with the News "had merit" and was "maybe a little better". It eventually became the album's first single. "Honky Tonk Blues" was an attempt to cover the Hank Williams song in the style of Status Quo, and Lewis later stated that Hank Williams Jr. complimented the News on their rendition.
Brown became concerned about Sports being promoted properly when the band's label, Chrysalis Records, fired much of its production staff. As a result, the band made a decision to withhold the finished record from the label until the issues were resolved.
Packaging
The title of the album was a play on the band's name. The cover art features a photo of the band at the 2 AM Club, a bar located in Mill Valley, California, where the band had performed during its early days. A bar was chosen for the shoot because the band reasoned that most people watched televised sporting events in bars.
Release and reception
In June 1984, Sports hit number 1 on the Billboard 200 and would ultimately spend 160 weeks on the charts. The fourth single from the album, "If This Is It", was released shortly thereafter, peaking at number 6 on the Hot 100. The fifth and final single from the album, "Walking on a Thin Line", was released in October 1984 and peaked at number 18.
Sports was the second biggest selling album on *Billboard'''s 1984 end-of-year sales chart, after Michael Jackson's Thriller. "Heart and Soul" was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal by a Group at the 26th Annual Grammy Awards in 1984, while "The Heart of Rock & Roll" was nominated for Record of the Year at the 27th Annual Grammys in 1985. *Sports'' charted in the top 40 in many countries outside the United States, including Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. On July 20, 1987, the Recording Industry Association of America certified the album 7× Platinum for sales exceeding 7 million units.
Music videos were created for the singles "Heart and Soul", "I Want a New Drug", "The Heart of Rock & Roll", "If This Is It" and "Walking on a Thin Line". The band later filmed a music video for "Bad Is Bad" on the streets of San Francisco in March 1985, although the song was not released as a single.
"I Want a New Drug" became the focus of a lawsuit against artist Ray Parker Jr., who was accused of plagiarizing the song for his 1984 hit, "Ghostbusters". The case was eventually settled out of court for an undisclosed sum, although Parker later countersued Lewis for breach of a confidentiality agreement, after Lewis discussed the lawsuit on VH1's Behind the Music in 2001.
Legacy
The album is critiqued by the character Patrick Bateman in both the book (1991) and film (2000) versions of American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis. According to Bateman, Sports marks the point in the band's career in which they "really came into their own, commercially and artistically." In 2013, Lewis, along with "Weird Al" Yankovic, parodied this scene in a video for Funny or Die, wherein Lewis mirrors Bateman's character and chats with Yankovic about American Psycho.
On May 10, 2013, Huey Lewis and the News embarked upon a Sports 30th Anniversary Tour, in which they performed the album in its entirety, as well as other songs. On May 14, a two-disc 30th Anniversary Edition of Sports was released, featuring the remastered album in addition to archival live versions of every song on the album.
Track listing
Personnel
;Huey Lewis and the News
- Huey Lewis – vocals, harmonica
- Mario Cipollina – bass guitar
- Johnny Colla – vocals, saxophone, guitar
- Bill Gibson – drums, vocals, percussion
- Chris Hayes – lead guitar, vocals
- Sean Hopper – keyboards, vocals
;Additional musician
- John McFee – pedal steel guitar ("Honky Tonk Blues")
;Technical
- Huey Lewis and the News – producers
- Jim Gaines – engineer
- Jeffrey (Nik) Norman – additional engineer, assistant engineer (tracks 1–3, 5–9)
- Jesse Osborne – assistant engineer (tracks 1–3, 5–9)
- Bob Clearmountain – mixing (tracks 1–3, 5–9)
- Larry Alexander – mixing (track 4)
- Bob Greenberg – assistant engineer (track 4)
- Mark Deadman – sound engineer
- Ted Jensen – mastering
- Bennett Hall – creative director, cover art, handtinted photography, photo montage
- Bunny Zaruba – graphic and logo design
Charts
Weekly charts
| Chart (1984–1985) | Peak | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| position | Australian Albums (Kent Music Report) | Canadian Albums (RPM) | European Top 100 Albums | Japanese Albums (Oricon) | UK Albums (OCC) | Chart (2013) | Peak | |
| position | ||||||||
| 22 | ||||||||
| 3 | ||||||||
| 47 | ||||||||
| 55 | ||||||||
| 23 |
Year-end charts
| Chart (1984) | Position | Canadian Albums Chart | New Zealand Albums Chart | Norwegian Albums Chart (Julen Period) | US Billboard Top Pop Albums | Chart (1985) | Position | Canadian Albums Chart | US Billboard Top Pop Albums |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | |||||||||
| 44 | |||||||||
| 7 | |||||||||
| 2 | |||||||||
| 88 | |||||||||
| 14 |
Singles and tracks
| Year | Single | Chart | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | "Heart and Soul" | Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 1 |
| The Billboard Hot 100 | 8 | ||
| "I Want a New Drug" | Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 7 | |
| 1984 | The Billboard Hot 100 | 6 | |
| Billboard Hot Dance/Disco | 1 | ||
| "The Heart of Rock & Roll" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 6 | |
| Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 5 | ||
| "If This Is It" | Billboard Adult Contemporary | 5 | |
| Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 3 | ||
| The Billboard Hot 100 | 6 | ||
| "Finally Found a Home" | Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 41 | |
| "Walking on a Thin Line" | Billboard Top Rock Tracks | 16 | |
| The Billboard Hot 100 | 18 |
Certifications
References
References
- Graff, Gary. (April 2, 2013). "Huey Lewis Talks 'Sports' at 30: 'We Just Knew We Needed a Frickin' Hit'".
- Greene, Andy. (May 17, 2013). "Huey Lewis on 30 Years of 'Sports': 'Our 15 Minutes Were a Real 15 Minutes'".
- (September 13, 2013). "Huey Lewis & The News' "Sports" at 30: Classic Track-By-Track". [[Billboard (magazine).
- (June 1, 2014). "Question of the Week".
- Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Dave Edmunds - Repeat When Necessary Album Reviews, Songs & More".
- (October 17, 2016). "Question of the Week".
- (September 19, 2016). "Question of the Week".
- Zimmerman, Lee. (March 21, 2021). "Good 'Sports': How Huey Lewis and the News Hit a Home Run".
- (January 5, 2022). "Huey Lewis: How 'Sports' Finally Scored". Ultimate Classic Rock.
- (April 27, 2020). "Huey Lewis Breaks Down His Albums, From Huey Lewis and the News to Weather - On the Records". [[Pitchfork (website).
- (January 5, 2015). "Cover Photo Of Huey Lewis And The News' Album Sports".
- Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Sports – Huey Lewis / Huey Lewis & the News". [[AllMusic]].
- Evans, Paul. (2004). "The New Rolling Stone Album Guide". [[Simon & Schuster]].
- Christgau, Robert. (June 26, 1984). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". [[The Village Voice]].
- "Sports (1983)".
- "Huey Lewis & The News - Chart History".
- "Gold & Platinum - RIAA".
- Grein, Paul. (May 14, 1989). "New Golden Rule: 500,000 Sales Mark for All Singles". [[Los Angeles Times]].
- (April 10, 2013). "Huey Lewis & The News Announce Sports 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Plus Spring/summer 2013 Tour".
- "26th Annual GRAMMY Awards".
- "27th Annual GRAMMY Awards".
- (1986). "Huey Lewis and the News: World Tour".
- van Horn, Teri. (March 23, 2001). "Ray Parker Jr. Suing Huey Lewis Over 'Ghostbusters' Comment".
- Hyden, Steven. (May 17, 2011). "Huey Lewis And The News' Sports".
- Taylor, Drew. (April 3, 2013). "Watch: Huey Lewis & 'Weird Al' Yankovic Star In Hilarious 'American Psycho' Parody For Funny Or Die".
- Kent, David. (1993). "Australian Chart Book 1970–1992". Australian Chart Book, St Ives, NSW.
- "RPM: Huey Lewis and the News (albums)". RPM Magazine.
- (December 17, 1984). "European Hot 100 Albums".
- "Oricon Archive - Huey Lewis and the News". Oricon.
- "Huey Lewis and the News Chart History". Official Charts Company.
- "The RPM Top 100 Albums of 1984". RPM.
- "The Top 50 Albums of 1984".
- "The Top 20 Albums of Julen 1984".
- (December 22, 1984). "Talent Almanac 1985: Top Pop Albums".
- "The RPM Top 100 Albums of 1985". RPM.
- "Billboard 200 Albums – Year-end 1985".
- "Huey Lewis & the News Chart History: Hot 100".
- "Huey Lewis & the News Chart History: Mainstream Rock Songs".
- "Huey Lewis & the News Chart History: Adult Contemporary".
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