Not familiar with the song Tarzan Boy? Where the hell have you been? Really though, Tarzan Boy was a great Italo-disco song that made a surprising amount of impact on American pop charts; not enough to Milli Vanilli levels, which could have potentially exposed that Jimmy McShane was not the main vocalist on that song (although actually being able to speak English certainly would've helped to cover it up), but enough to stay in the hearts and minds of people in the mid-80s. It even showed up in that one really bad Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie where the Turtles went to Japan, and Seth MacFarlane loved it enough to reference it in A Million Ways To Die In The West.
Tarzan Boy was the most famous song by Italo-disco project Baltimora, which was spearheaded by producer Maurizio Bassi with Irish singer Jimmy McShane playing visual performance, as well as background vocals and occasionally songwriting. The surprise success of Tarzan Boy pushed sales of their album Living In The Background to push Bassi to doing a rare feat for Italo-disco: a second album. The resulting album, Survivor In Love, failed to approximate Tarzan Boy's success, but I can't fault Bassi for trying. (Jimmy's actual singing voice shows up to solo on the title track to this album for a couple seconds, if you're curious.)
While Living In The Background was given an official CD release by EMI in Italy, Survivor In Love wasn't given one, as far as I can tell. "What are these CDs then", you may ask? Russian bootlegs, of course! These albums were released through ESonCD, which is an amazing unofficial distributor of Italo-disco albums onto CD; the albums of Max-Him, Wish Key and Video Kids were also re-released through ESonCD, for example.
Although I can't tell if they are actually 24-bit mastered from vinyl copies, Living In The Background seems to be sourced from the EMI CD, since the bonus tracks match up, and Survivor In Love sounds nice, with no noticeable audio dropouts or glitches. It provides a cheap way to obtain these albums digitally, and I will strongly recommend them to anyone interested in Baltimora or Italo-disco in general. The only complaint I have is that my copy of Living In The Background seems to have heavily stripped down liner notes from prior issues of this album: whereas earlier copies had full lyric booklets, my copy only has the first two pages, presumably an unfortunately cheap way to save on production costs.
The tracklisting for Living In The Background is as follows:
2. Pull The Wires
4. Woody Boogie
6. Running For Your Love
7. Tarzan Boy (Summer Version)
9. Up With Baltimora
10. Tarzan Boy (Remix 1993)
11. Jungle Life (Dub)
12. Tarzan Boy (Extended Remix 1993)
The tracklisting for Survivor In Love is as follows:
3. Jimmy's Guitar
4. Come On Strike
5. Set Me Free
8. Eye To Eye
9. Global Love (Mix Version)
NOTE: As a CD-collecting alternative, you can buy a compilation from EMI called The World Of Baltimora, which looks complete at first glance, but the tracks are rearranged out of order, it only has the 3:50 single version of Tarzan Boy, and it's missing Eye To Eye from Survivor In Love, as well as the bonus tracks on Living past Jukebox Boy. If you don't think you'll miss those, go for it, I guess.
I have second-pressed copy... audio is copied from ESonCD - gatefold lyrics sheet.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.discogs.com/Baltimora-Living-In-The-Background/release/2621176
I hope to re-issue remix LP "World Re-Mix" if the disc comes out.
My favorite labels: Rare80 (Best Choice), DWS Records, Disco Magic Melody, and 111 records? IMO I would like to reissue the out-of-print album on the official routes, but it may be difficult because of the copyright / prices wall.
Baltimora's album The World Re-Mix was released on CD in 1986 - only in Canada by the label Manhattan Records.
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