A WHAM FROM BAM: If you’ve always...
- Share via
A WHAM FROM BAM: If you’ve always wondered why so many pop stars are willing to sell their songs to the highest TV commercial bidder, don’t miss the new issue of Bam magazine, which has a terrific special section on “Rock and Advertising: The Selling of a Revolution.” You can’t miss the issue--its cover features a drawing of the Beatles crossing Abbey Road (with Michael Jackson--armed with a Pepsi bottle--in Paul McCartney’s place), each wearing Nike sneakers.
The best stuff includes Dave Zimmer’s in-depth lead story, which reveals that Nike’s controversial “Revolution” ads have never run in England (as a publishing company spokeswoman explained, “That’s where Paul lives, so we considered his feelings”); a list of rock stars and their ads--Randy Newman has sold four songs to TV, including “Short People” to Ford Trucks, and a great section where popsters sound off about ads. Here’s a couple of highlights:
Jello Biafra: “The biggest impact of Bruce’s ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ album wasn’t on . . . the plight of Vietnam vets or the unemployed. It was on the music used in TV commercials.”
Jerry Garcia: “The reason I did (a Levi’s commercial) was because I had some friends that needed work.”
Mojo Nixon: “I don’t think anyone’s had a chance to do a commercial for something they really like. Maybe Elvis should have done ads for jelly doughnuts or Percodan. (Imitating Elvis) ‘Well, this is Elvis here and I personally recommend you do as much Percodan as possible.’ ”
Randy Newman: “You know what really bothered me? They (United Airlines) did a synthesized version of ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ where they changed the tempo, cut bars, cut beats. Bad! Really bad! They screwed up the music.”
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.