Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

HOUSEROCKE­RS’ ICONIC ALBUM

- By Scott Mervis

In February of 1980, the Iron City Houserocke­rs booked a hotel and a studio in New York City to make the follow-up to their debut, “Love’s So Tough.”

Frontman Joe Grushecky has an easy way of rememberin­g exactly when it was all happening.

“The signpost,” he says, “is the Miracle on Ice,” when the U.S. hockey team upset the Russians in the 1980 Olympics.

With “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive!,” Pittsburgh’s premier rock band pulled off a little miracle of its own, with some help from the British team and the Jersey team and the Cleveland team.

When the album came out in June 1980, the Rolling Stone review ran with the headline “New American Classic.” Writing in The Village Voice, Greil Marcus, the dean of rock critics, called it “the strongest album an American band has made this year.”

And yet, “Have a Good Time,” now getting a 40th-anniversar­y reissue, bore little resemblanc­e to the album the Houserocke­rs went there to make, and how they got the alllegend team of Ian Hunter (Mott the Hoople), Mick Ronson (from David Bowie’s bands) and Steve Van Zandt (E Street Band) to produce it remains something of a happy mystery. Steel City tough

“Love’s So Tough,” the Houserocke­rs’ April 1979 debut on MCA Records, had set the stage for bigger things from the gritty Pittsburgh group (Grushecky, Art Nardini, Marc Reisman, Gil Snyder, Eddie Britt and Ned E. Rankin) that had started in 1976 as the Brick Alley Band.

They became the Iron City Houserocke­rs in 1977 after signing a management deal with Steve Popovich, a Nemacolin native who, at Epic Records, had helped launch the careers of Boston, Cheap Trick, Ted Nugent and many others, and was forming his own Cleveland Internatio­nal Records.

Despite becoming hometown heroes and the house band at The Decade in Oakland, the aftermath of “Love’s So Tough” brought challenges for the IC Houserocke­rs.

“We put out our first record in the midst of the huge gas shortage we had when Jimmy Carter was president, and we could only get gas every other day to travel, which made it very, very difficult,” Grushecky says. “The record company in Cleveland saw what great reviews the first record was getting, and then in early fall I had a tumor in my throat near my voice box.”

It was benign, but it left Grushecky unable to perform for a while, “so it was just a combinatio­n of bad factors,” he says. In the clubs, most bands were forced to play covers, so Grushecky wasn’t exactly a veteran songwriter at this point, but in the house he was renting on Southern Avenue on Mount Washington, while teaching at a mental institutio­n, he turned his attention to writing songs for a second album.

The rousing title track, which would open the album and become one of the Houserocke­rs’ signature songs, happened somewhat spontaneou­sly as a reaction to their environmen­t.

“The steel industry here was collapsing,” Grushecky says, “and we were at the tail end of this macho City of Champions feeling that ‘We’re football champs of the world, college champs, baseball champs, and we’ll kick anybody’s ass.’ And it was still a hangover from that thinking. I mean, playing the bars in those days, especially for our fans, they were so blue collar, it was a rough-andtumble town, and the music reflected that.

Of the song’s hook, Grushecky says, “I just blurted it out one night because our fans were so wild that we were practicall­y having riots every night. People would come in, and they would wreck the bars, and it was wall-to-wall people and fights every night. I said to a guy one night, ‘Hey, man, have a good time ... but get out of here alive.’ ”

The city, which was in the midst of a painful transition out of its industrial era and struggling for a new identity, became a canvas for his work. What came out were songs like “Pumpin’ Iron,” which tapped that tough, blue-collar mindset.

“At some point I decided to write about the city,” Grushecky says. “It started happening on the first record, with ‘Dance With Me,’ because the city was just so vivid. I lived in Mount Washington, so I could take the incline on a regular basis, just soaking up the local color and looking at the characters and wondering what their stories were. And then we were playing at the bars, and, you know, there was a lot of local color there, too. So, I started just focusing on writing about what was happening in my little corner of the world at that particular time.”

Heading to New York, Grushecky was particular­ly proud of two other songs — “Struggle and Die” and “Don’t Let Them Push You Around” — that were both heavy, midtempo pieces with extended jams suitable for FM play. He saw those as the centerpiec­es of the album.

At Media Sound Studios, on 57th Street in

New York, they were both chopped up and reconstruc­ted. Slimmer Twins plus 3

The plan going up was that Popovich and his partner Marty Mooney, who dubbed themselves The Slimmer Twins, would produce the album, as they had the first one.

“The first record we were playing our stage show,” Grushecky says. “Steve and Marty produced it, but they weren’t really music guys. They didn’t know how to dissect a song and arrange the parts and talk to musicians in musical terms that you can really translate into workable ideas. They were more feel guys: ‘This feels good,’ ‘that feels good,’ you know. So we had really no experience with people deconstruc­ting our songs.”

Enter the Spider from Mars. Cleveland Internatio­nal was working with Hunter, the former Mott the Hoople frontman, who in 1979 had released the album “You’re Never Alone With a Schizophre­nic” (the one with “Cleveland Rocks”), which was co-produced by Ronson and featured members of the E Street Band.

“So either the first or second day of rehearsal, [Popovich] shows up with Mick Ronson, you know, a world-class musician. We would practice all morning and take a break for lunch. After lunch one day, Popovich shows up with Steve Van Zandt. He brought them both in, sort of unannounce­d, and they jumped right in and started working with us.”

Which raises the question: What exactly was the budget for this record?

Grushecky doesn’t even know. “Steve Popovich was the ringmaster of the whole thing and how he even got them all to agree to do it, I haven’t the slightest idea,” Grushecky says. “I was still living in Mount Washington, driving a 20-year-old car. I wasn’t going to the bank too often.”

By this point, Grushecky hadn’t met future friend and writing partner Bruce Springstee­n, but he had met Van Zandt. When Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes were out touring with Boz Scaggs, Popovich had brought Van Zandt to see the Houserocke­rs at the Gazebo on West Liberty Avenue.

“Steve had found Joe and thought he had something special, so I came in and helped out with the arrangemen­ts, helped out as a friend,” Van Zandt told the PG last year. “Once we got to know Joe, he was such a joy, and the whole band were great guys. It became missionary work to kind of establish this bar band idea everywhere we could.”

To Grushecky, there were some aesthetic difference­s in their concept of what bar-rock was. “We weren’t horn-driven here because the environmen­t was way tougher than the Jersey Shore. They had the beach, the ocean, the boardwalk, the sand, girls in bikinis. Here, you had the steel mills, the rivers and [expletive] bubbas in babushkas, you know what I mean?”

As fans well know, Van Zandt has a particular fondness for soulful and garage-y rock ’n’ roll as now heard on his Sirius channel Little Steven’s Undergroun­d Garage.

“He’s one of these guys that’s ‘don’t bore us, get to the chorus,’” Grushecky says.

He put a new stinging riff on “Don’t Let

Them Push You Around” and turned it into the almost thrashy punk song it deserved to be.

Likewise, Ronson took “Struggle and Die,” which Grushecky saw as his epic “Free Bird”-type jam, and turned into the churning rocker “We’re Not Dead Yet.”

“I was resistant to a lot of stuff,” Grushecky says, “but I kept my mouth shut. I was trying to be a team player and, plus, you know, I was low man on the totem pole as far as experience and knowledge about everything. I can remember being mortified when ‘Struggle and Die’ went down, like, ‘Oh my God, they’re ruining my songs.’ ”

Part of him knew that wasn’t true, and fans can now hear the transforma­tion on the new “Have a Good Time” reissue, which features the 12 songs plus 16 tracks of demos, outtakes and bonuses.

Some of the album’s highlights were more or less created on the spot. Working with Grushecky’s lyrics based on an idea from pianist Gil Snyder about TV mind control, Hunter would take charge of the funk workout “Hypnotized.”

Highlighti­ng side two would be the future fan favorite combo of “Old Man’s Bar” and “Junior’s Bar.” Most fans would guess that “Junior” came first, but that wasn’t the case. During the three-week stay there, pianist Gil Snyder and soundman Bob Boyer brought in “Old Man’s Bar,” a grizzled paean to The Decade, into the studio, and Ronson dug the way Snyder sang it in that rough voice.

“A little bit later, maybe even later on that day,” Grushecky recalls, “Steve Van Zandt came in and said, ‘We could rock that,’ so he came up with that signature guitar riff,” and the strange key modulation that Grushecky says “theoretica­lly, shouldn’t work.”

The words, though, didn’t fit the tempo, so Grushecky went off and wrote new lyrics about a younger man on the prowl. The night he did the vocals, Popovich had brought Ellen Folly, who sang on Meat Loaf’s “Paradise by the Dashboard Light,” and with her was Mick Jones from The Clash.

“He was a big Mott the Hoople fan, and Ellen was dating him at the time, so he came and hung out,” Grushecky says.

Now, they had two different similar songs — one slow, one fast — “and there was debate about which one we we’re going to use. At first I wasn’t sold on ‘Junior’s Bar,’ to tell you the truth, but I had my head twisted, because everything was coming at me quickly.”

The Houserocke­rs showed up at the studio with “Charlena,” which turned into “Blondie,” a bitter rocker about the New York punk band that played off the track “Angela.” The making of that song led to a defining moment in Grushecky’s career as a songwriter.

“We were having this discussion,” Grushecky says, “and [Steve Van Zandt] said, ‘Why are these lyrics so good over there, and these lyrics are not so good here?’ And I said, ‘Well, it’s just the rock song,’ and he said, ‘Nah, nah, nah. Every lyric you put forth has to be good. You have to make every lyric count.’ ”

The next day they met for breakfast and spent nearly three hours at a restaurant poring over all the lyrics to the album, with Van Zandt — who was in the midst of making “The River” album with the E Street Band just four blocks away at The Power Station — emphasizin­g that settling for mediocrity wasn’t OK.

Says Grushecky, “I remember what he said: ‘What are you going to say? How are you going to say it? And, at the end of the day, is it worth saying?’ That was a moment in my becoming a writer.”

And then, moments later, Grushecky went and left the lyric book at the restaurant.

“We get back to the hotel, and I don’t have the lyrics,” he says. “We’re in the lobby, and I’m like, ‘Oh my God.’ You know, I felt like an a--hole. We spend all this time and I lose everything, so I’m heading back to the restaurant, walking through the streets of New York, and you know how they have those metal garbage receptacle­s attached to parking meters you can see through? About a block from the restaurant, I see the lyrics lying in a garbage can.

“It was a minor miracle, so Steve said this record is going to be something special because that was a miracle in itself.”

Get out alive

What we’ve always heard about the production of “Have a Good Time” is that the Van Zandt-Ronson-Hunter team ran into the proverbial “creative difference­s.” It’s even in the Wiki entry that Van Zandt produced five songs and then left the project.

Grushecky says there was a sense of “too many chefs,” but it never got chaotic or tense.

“Not at all. For me, it was, occasional­ly, because you know they would take some of these songs and just totally just rip them to shreds.”

If that contribute­d to the ferocity of Grushecky’s vocal performanc­e, the album was all the better for it. From the opening of “Have a Good Time” to the gentle closer of “Rock Ola,” there’s no point where the Houserocke­rs and their ace session players sound disengaged.

When they wrapped up recording, Grushecky says, “I thought it was [expletive] great. Sounded great. Forty years later, still sounds great. The reviews came out, and it gave us instant credibilit­y.”

And the Houserocke­rs sold millions and everyone lived happily after.

Of course not.

This is the part of the story we hate to tell. “I hate this part, too,” Grushecky says, laughing. “I hate it more than you do, believe me.”

Despite having an album loaded with potential singles, The Houserocke­rs never got the national airplay, thanks in part to … Meat Loaf.

He was the flagship of Cleveland Internatio­nal, having sold millions (eventually 43 million) of his 1977 debut, “Bat Out of Hell.” But the making of his second album had become a disaster — between drug problems, touring exhaustion and losing his voice — that was cresting in early 1980.

“We lost our creative genius, Steve Popovich, and the whole Cleveland Internatio­nal thing imploded over the follow-up Meat Loaf record,” Grushecky says. Not that it was all bad.

“We got an agent and did better gigs,” he says. “We had guys from Pink Floyd come out to see us play, Patti LaBelle, Neil Young. They wanted to see what the fuss was all about.”

Short of being the next heartland superstars, the Iron City Houserocke­rs lived on to make another fine album with that classic lineup — the “Blood on the Bricks” reissue is in the works for next year — and they got out alive.

“To this day,” Grushecky says, “‘Have a Good Time’ is lumped in with ‘Night Moves’ and ‘Scarecrow’ as one of the best heartland records of all time.”

An All Music Guide review written in the ’00s declares it “a masterpiec­e of hardbitten Rust Belt rock.”

“If you’re a music fan and you want to hear Steve Van Zandt, Mick Ronson and Ian Hunter working together, it sells itself,” Grushecky says. “Take me out of the equation. and it’s still interestin­g.”

The newly expanded and remastered reissue of “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive”— which Grushecky produced with his son Johnny and soundman Brian Coleman — will be released Friday on CD, vinyl (bonus tracks available via a download card) and on all digital streaming outlets.

Grushecky will perform “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive” during his regular 8 p.m. Wednesday stream on his Instagram. He will talk about the album on Little Steven’s Undergroun­d Garage Sirius channel at 2 p.m. Friday. At 1 p.m. he will do a live Q&A on his Facebook page.

Steve Popovich died in 2011 at 68. Mick Ronson died in 1993 at 46. Ian Hunter, who turns 81 in June, and Steve Van Zandt, 69, are still active. The Iron City Houserocke­rs who made the album are all still alive.

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 ??  ?? The Iron City Houserocke­rs in 1980: Eddie Britt, left, Gil Snyder, Art Nardini, Joe Grushecky, Marc Reky, Marc Reisman and Ned E. Rankin.
The Iron City Houserocke­rs in 1980: Eddie Britt, left, Gil Snyder, Art Nardini, Joe Grushecky, Marc Reky, Marc Reisman and Ned E. Rankin.
 ?? MCA Records ??
MCA Records
 ??  ?? Iron City Houserocke­rs’ “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive” reissue celebrates the album’s 40th anniversar­y.
Iron City Houserocke­rs’ “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive” reissue celebrates the album’s 40th anniversar­y.
 ?? Courtesy of the Iron City Houserocke­rs ?? The Iron City Houserocke­rs and friends attend the “Love’s So Tough” release show at the Parkway Tavern, Monroevill­e, in 1979. Top left: Mick Ronson, Ian Hunter, Joe Grushecky, Ned E. Rankin, Stan Snyder of Cleveland Internatio­nal, Gil Snyder, Marc Reisman, a Parkway employee, Gary Scalise and a Parkway employee. Bottom left: Two representa­tives from MCA Records, Art Nardini and two Parkway employees. Top: A Parkway employee.
Courtesy of the Iron City Houserocke­rs The Iron City Houserocke­rs and friends attend the “Love’s So Tough” release show at the Parkway Tavern, Monroevill­e, in 1979. Top left: Mick Ronson, Ian Hunter, Joe Grushecky, Ned E. Rankin, Stan Snyder of Cleveland Internatio­nal, Gil Snyder, Marc Reisman, a Parkway employee, Gary Scalise and a Parkway employee. Bottom left: Two representa­tives from MCA Records, Art Nardini and two Parkway employees. Top: A Parkway employee.
 ?? Barb Summers ?? Joe Grushecky in the “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive” era.
Barb Summers Joe Grushecky in the “Have a Good Time But Get Out Alive” era.

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