The J. Geils Band “Love Stinks”

The J. Geils Band “Love Stinks” 1980. The band’s namesake musician and guitarist, J. Geils (b. John Warren Geils Jr., 1946) died at age 71 yesterday, April 11th. Love Stinks was the bands’ 11th album, reaching #18 on the album charts with three singles: “Come Back” (#32), “Just Can’t Wait” (#78) and “Love Stinks” (#38). Love Stinks is fairly straight-forward rock-n-roll, propelled by a hearty dose of humor, power chords and occasionally some hard-driving harmonica (“Takin’ You Down”) and piano (their cover of “Night Time” – also lots of harmonica). Since this isn’t usually the kind of music I listen to, I’ll quote Allmusic’s take on it:
Released some two years after the band’s EMI debut, Sanctuary, the Love Stinks project would see the J. Geils Band going in an even more commercial-leaning direction than its predecessor. Taking over the main production duties, keyboard player/main songwriter Seth Justman set out to better the band’s gold-plus-selling Sanctuary. And to some degree, he wildly succeeded. Although not as consistent or diverse as Sanctuary, Love Stinks would feature one of the band’s most recognizable FM songs ever – the album’s infectious title track “Love Stinks.” In a live setting, the track would often turn into a veritable tour de force only to be outdone by Peter Wolf’s hilarious rap about “Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden smoking weed together,” which would introduce the song (often on a nightly basis). “Night Time” is another great, although somewhat typical “rave-on” type of J. Geils song; “No Anchovies Please” is a little strange; and closer “Till the Walls Come Tumblin’ Down” is, as the song title hints, just that. Bolstered by “Just Can’t Wait,” another good album opener, Love Stinks turns out to be solid effort, but one that sounds a little outdated at times due to its acerbic, synth textures. Not one of the band’s best overall records but one that would allow the band to outdo itself with the classic Freeze Frame a year later.
Daily (maybe) pulls from the vault: 33-1/3, 45, 78, old, older, classic, new, good, bad. Subjective. Autobiographical. Occasionally putting a record up for sale.