Saturday, July 13, 2013

Just Like Paradise by David Lee Roth

A few years before his former (and future) band released a now-forgotten song, once and present lead singer David Lee Roth had one of his own.  He had had a few well-known hits, including a very successful remake of "California Girls", in the mid-1980s.  By the late 80s, however, his solo success was starting to dry up, at least as far as Billboard's Hot 100 was concerned.

In 1988, Mr. Roth hit the Hot 100 one last time as a solo artist with "Just Like Paradise", his highest-charting non-cover.  It was the lead single from his album Skyscraper, a fairly successful album that went platinum.

(Skyscraper peaked at #6 on the Billboard 200.  Album ©1988 Warner Bros. Records.  Photo courtesy Amazon.com.)

"Just Like Paradise" entered Billboard's Hot 100 in January 1988, peaking at #6 the week of March 12, 1988; it also peaked at #1 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart.  It spent a fairly short 16 weeks in the Hot 100, but it still sold well enough to place #97 in the year-end chart.

According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, "Just Like Paradise" had been considered as a potential theme song for a new TV program, "Beverly Hills 90210".  Mr. Roth's management very helpfully rejected this idea before even talking to Mr. Roth about it.  And so, instead of a ten-year run, the song fell rather quickly into obscurity, possibly due to lyrics which, honestly, are not the deepest ever heard (but then, we live in an age in which "Boom Boom Pow", which I am not linking, is considered good music).

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