Nevertheless, Christie, Herbert and Calello never entirely tip their hand as to the song’s true meaning. It also evokes the electrical flash that brought Frankenstein’s monster to life. His choice of words – “lightning striking me again!” – links him with the violence of a sudden, unpredictable burst of energy that burns hot and leaves destruction in its wake. The switch from his teen idol croon to the manic, otherworldly falsetto signifies that he has transformed into some unknown thing incapable of being controlled. When Christie spots “lips begging to be kissed,” his voice mutates into a shrill keen, completely unrecognizable from the charmer he posed as just seconds earlier. Of course, as in any horror story, this perfect world exists only to be shattered. Even the backing vocals are so exaggerated in their sweetness that they verge on grotesque. The crashing piano chords opening each verse suggest distant cracks of thunder, warning of a coming storm. Christie’s transparent phoniness implies there’s something in his true nature that needs concealing. Its verses are a burlesque of innocence, thick with tinkling piano, church bells and an idyllic “chapel in the pines.” Even so, there are hints that things aren’t quite as they appear. “Lightnin’ Strikes” even borrows the format of a horror story. Is our narrator an unrepentant Casanova or something far more sinister? The prechorus, where Christie’s strained voice shouts “I can’t stop myself!” while female backing singers cry “Stop! Stop!,” is notoriously ambiguous. Further, “Lightnin’ Strikes” seems geared to emphasize an association between sexism and violence. The song was co-written by Christie with longtime collaborator Twyla Herbert, a self-described mystic and bohemian more than two decades his senior – not a woman all that concerned with conforming to social norms. In fact, the lines Christie smarmily croons in “Lightnin’ Strikes” are so brazen that you have to wonder if they’re meant to be ironic. (Likewise, he’s careful to imply he’ll marry her without ever quite committing to it.) Even given the era’s gender norms and rock’s pervasive misogyny, the shamelessness of a line like “for the time being, baby, live by my rules” is really something else. “Lightnin’ Strikes” is the pop epitome of the double standard, where Christie can plead for “a girl he can trust to the very end” while at in the same breath try to justify his own infidelity through condescension (“you’re old enough to know the makings of a man”) and bathos (“believe it or not, you’re in my heart all the time”). On one hand, it rivals “ Leader of the Pack” for sheer melodrama, courtesy of the song’s shifting multi-part verses, the kitchen-sink production (by ex-Four Seasons arranger Charles Calello) and Lou Christie’s octave-scaling vocals. Since I am also a girl group fan I have now ordered the Lou Christie and The Tammys CD on RPM.“Lightnin’ Strikes” is a difficult record to get a handle on. I will continue to listen to the different versions. For those who want to know, the difference between peak value and RMS value is 16.6 dB on "Baby Boomer" and 15.7 dB "45's on CD" as compared to 16.4 dB on a mono needle-drop. It was licensed by Polygram Special Products, has an even but not disturbing noise level and the best dynamics of the versions examined so far, even though comparing crest values on mono vs stereo versions can be a bit tricky. My favorite version at the time of writing is a mono version on the CD "Baby Boomer Classics Vol 1" on the Trax label, made in Switzerland in 1988, which I bought recently. I am overwhelmed by the response! I have received a couple of needle-drops and, having searched through my CD collection which is in plastic bags due to renovation, I found two more CD versions to compare.Īfter yesterday's initial listening I must say that "45's on CD" sounds better than I remembered, but as I listen to the intro and the "there's a chapel in the pines" vocal piece I do get the impression that the song has been noise suppressed.
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