Loverboy | |
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Loverboy at the Juno Awards 2009 |
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Background information | |
Origin | Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
Genres | Rock, hard rock |
Years active | 1980–1988, 1989, 1991–present |
Labels | Columbia, CMC International |
Associated acts | Streetheart, Moxy |
Members | |
Mike Reno Paul Dean Doug Johnson Ken "Spider" Sinnaeve Matt Frenette |
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Past members | |
Scott Smith |
Loverboy is a Canadian rock group formed in 1980 in Calgary, Alberta. Throughout the 1980s, the band accumulated numerous hit songs in Canada and the United States, earning four multi-platinum albums and selling millions of records. After being rejected by many American record labels they signed with Columbia/CBS Records Canada and began recording their first album March 20, 1980, with Mike Reno on lead vocals, Paul Dean on guitars, Scott Smith on bass guitar, Doug Johnson on keyboards, and Matt Frenette on drums. The band's hit singles, particularly "Turn Me Loose" and "Working for the Weekend", have become arena rock staples and are still heard on many classic rock radio stations across the United States and Canada. They are currently based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
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It's been reported their name was chosen while browsing through a magazine, where they saw a Cover Girl ad.[1] Cover Girl became Cover Boy became Loverboy. Originally rejected by all the major record labels in the United States, the band signed with Columbia Records of Canada, and on March 20, 1980, Loverboy went into the studio with producer Bruce Fairbairn and engineer Bob Rock to record what would be their self-titled debut album.
Over that summer, the record became a huge hit with eventually over 700,000 records sold in Canada alone. The album made its American debut in November 1980, and would go on to sell two million copies.[2] The band went on a touring spree that year putting on over 200 shows with bands such as Cheap Trick, ZZ Top, Kansas, and Def Leppard.
The band's follow-up album, Get Lucky, released in 1981 when they were opening for Journey, included the hit tracks "Working for the Weekend" and "When It's Over". It became their best selling album in the U.S., reaching #7 on the Billboard album charts[3] and selling over four million copies.[2] In the same year Loverboy received six[4] Juno Awards (Canada's highest award for music) in one year, a record that still stands today. The band would later receive an additional three Juno Awards, bringing their total to nine, which is the most received by a single group or individual.
Loverboy released their third album, Keep It Up, in 1983. Its first single "Hot Girls in Love" became their most successful to that date, reaching #11 on the U.S. charts. The video for the song as well as for the follow-up single "Queen of the Broken Hearts" were hugely popular on MTV, and the band embarked on its first tour as headliners.
In 1984 Loverboy recorded the United States Team theme for the 1984 Summer Olympics, "Nothing's Gonna Stop You Now". The song appeared only on The Official Music of the 1984 Games not on any of their albums or compilations. It can be heard here.[5] They would often play it on tour mixing it in during the performance of "Queen of the Broken Hearts".
Also in 1984 Loverboy recorded a song called "Destruction" which appeared on the 1984 soundtrack of a re-edited version of the 1927 film Metropolis.[6]
Lovin' Every Minute of It, the band's fourth album, and the first not produced by Fairbairn (it was produced by Tom Allom, best known for producing Judas Priest) was released in 1985, with the title single written by Mutt Lange and "This Could Be The Night" co-written by Journey's Jonathan Cain becoming their first U.S. Billboard top 10 hits respectively. In 1986 the band recorded "Heaven In Your Eyes", a song featured in the movie Top Gun, which peaked at #12 on the Billboard charts. However, Doug Johnson refused to appear in the video as he felt that the film glorified war.[7]
The 1987 release of Wildside followed. While the band scored a minor hit with "Notorious", co-written by Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora, the album sold relatively poorly and the band broke up in 1988 due to the departure of Johnson and creative and personal differences between Dean and Reno. A greatest-hits album, Big Ones, was released in 1989 to fulfill Loverboy's obligation to Columbia Records. The group briefly reunited in late 1989 to tour to promote it (with Geraldo Valentino Dominelli on keyboards in Johnson's place) but broke up again at the tour's conclusion.
In 1991, the band re-united to join fellow rockers Bryan Adams and Bon Jovi to help raise money for a friend and fellow recording artist Brian MacLeod of Chilliwack who was fighting cancer. The band reportedly recalled that the concert was the most fun that they had had in years and decided that they wanted to do it again. The band went on another live touring spree in Canada the following year before launching a 64-concert tour in the United States in 1993.[8] The band's record label released their second and third compilation albums, Loverboy Classics and Temperature's Rising, in 1994. Loverboy Classics went Gold in 1998, coinciding with another American tour. During this time Doug Johnson was not with the band; former Trooper keyboardist Richard Sera replaced him. Following the releases of Six and Super Hits in 1997, the band continued touring (Johnson rejoined the band in 2000) until November 30, 2000, when bassist Scott Smith was declared dead after being lost at sea.[9] The band went on to release their first live album, Live, Loud and Loose in 2001, which consisted of refurbished early live concert recordings from the band's intense touring years from 1982 to 1986. 2001 also brought another round of touring, this time dedicated to their late band member Scott Smith.
Loverboy celebrated 25 years together in 2005, and began to perform in selected cities to commemorate this milestone. That tour continued with live concerts scheduled well into August 2006. Also in 2005, Loverboy was one of the featured bands on the American version of Hit Me Baby One More Time. They performed "Working for the Weekend" and a cover version of "Hero" by Chad Kroeger/Josey Scott on the show. Currently the band features all the original members except for Scott Smith, who is now replaced on bass by Ken Sinnaeve (a former member of Dean and Frenette's pre-Loverboy band Streetheart).[10][11]
In 2006, twenty-five years after its initial release, Get Lucky was remastered and re-released with several previously unreleased songs, including the original demo of Working for the Weekend.[12]
In a video interview from March 2007, lead singer Mike Reno confirmed that the band finished recording a new studio album released in 2007.[13] The new album is titled Just Getting Started and was released in October, with a clip of the first single "The One That Got Away" available on the band's MySpace page. The band continues to tour throughout Canada and the United States.
The band was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame during the 2009 Juno Awards.[14]
On February 21, 2010, the band performed at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics awards ceremony.
In 1990, Loverboy's "Working for the Weekend" was featured in an extremely popular Saturday Night Live sketch involving Chris Farley and Patrick Swayze auditioning to be Chippendales dancers. The song was also featured in the 2002 video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, playing on Rock station V-Rock, as well as the video games Saints Row 2, and Shaun White Snowboarding. It is also featured in the 2001 comedy film Zoolander. The song was also featured, in full, at the end of the Rob Zombie film The Haunted World of El Superbeasto. It was used as the background music to a Diet Pepsi television commercial in which a man is asked what else he would like to experience that is youthful, and he chooses his old van from the 1980s. The song also made a brief appearance in the movie Click. The song was even featured in the third episode of "Regular Show", Caffeinated Concert Tickets as well as the film Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle.
Several of their songs were featured in the 2001 cult comedy Wet Hot American Summer, which takes place in August 1981. In 2006, "Turn Me Loose" was featured in the action movie Crank starring Jason Statham.
An early episode of South Park (An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig) made multiple references to a fictional Loverboy song, "Pig and Elephant DNA Just Won't Splice."
In Aqua Teen Hunger Force's episode Revenge of the Mooninites, Err uses the "Foreigner belt" to "Turn Master Shake Loose" to "Hot Girls in Love" because he's "Working for the Weekend". When it didn't work, it was revealed that "those are Loverboy songs, and Loverboy has always sucked." (although Carl said that he saw them at the Madison Square Garden in 1985 and they "kicked ass".)
"The Kid is Hot Tonight" is featured on the soundtrack of MLB 2K9 by 2K Sports and was included in the closing scenes of an episode of cartoon "American Dad," titled "Office Spaceman," Season 3, Episode 56, May 4, 2008, Production Code 3AJN13, where character Roger posed for a PlayGirl magazine photo shoot.
In an episode of Drew Carey's Green Screen Show, Brad Sherwood remarks to a character called 'Hover-boy', "I loved your album Get Lucky!"
In the 2006 independent film A Dog's Breakfast, there is a Loverboy poster on the childhood bedroom wall of Marilyn (played by Kate Hewlett).
In the 15th episode of season 5 on 30 Rock, "It's Never too Late for Now," Scott Adsit's character Pete Hornberger tells Frank Rossitano he was in the band Loverboy for 3 months before leaving the band for a college scholarship in "TV Budgeting."
In the 9th episode of 5th season of Scrubs Todd imitates Mike Reno's performance of working for the weekend while attending the air-band 'Cool Cats' audition in the beginning of the episode.
Year | Album details | Peak positions | Certifications (sales threshold) |
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CAN | US | NZ | |||||||
1980 | Loverboy
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17 | 13 | 12 | |||||
1981 | Get Lucky
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8 | 7 | 21 |
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1983 | Keep It Up
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9 | 7 | — |
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1985 | Lovin' Every Minute of It
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22 | 13 | — |
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1987 | Wildside
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21 | 42 | — |
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1997 | Six
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— | — | — | |||||
2007 | Just Getting Started
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— | — | — | |||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Year | Album details |
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2001 | Live, Loud and Loose
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Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album | |||||||||||
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CAN | US | US Main | US AC | AUS | NZ | UK | ||||||||
1981 | "Turn Me Loose" | 7 | 35 | 6 | — | 3 | 5 | — | Loverboy | |||||
"The Kid Is Hot Tonite" | 30 | 55 | 42 | — | — | — | — | |||||||
"Working for the Weekend" | 10 | 29 | 2 | — | 16 | 11 | — | Get Lucky | ||||||
1982 | "When It's Over" | 18 | 26 | 21 | — | — | — | — | ||||||
"Jump" | — | 101 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||
1983 | "Hot Girls in Love" | 9 | 11 | 2 | — | — | — | — | Keep It Up | |||||
"Queen of the Broken Hearts" | 29 | 34 | 11 | — | — | — | — | |||||||
1985 | "Lovin' Every Minute of It" | 17 | 9 | 3 | — | — | — | — | Lovin' Every Minute of It | |||||
"Dangerous" | 67 | 65 | 23 | — | — | — | — | |||||||
1986 | "This Could Be the Night" | 44 | 10 | 9 | 30 | — | — | — | ||||||
"Lead a Double Life" | — | 68 | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||
"Heaven In Your Eyes" | 24 | 12 | — | — | — | — | — | Top Gun(soundtrack) | ||||||
1987 | "Notorious" | 24 | 38 | 8 | — | — | — | — | Wildside | |||||
1988 | "Break It to Me Gently" | — | — | — | — | — | — | 97 | ||||||
1989 | "Too Hot" | — | 84 | 27 | — | — | — | — | Big Ones | |||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Year | Album | CRIA | RIAA |
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1989 | Big Ones | — | — |
1994 | Loverboy Classics | — | Gold |
Temperature's Rising | — | — | |
2003 | Love Songs | — | — |
2005 | Rock Breakout Years: 1985 | — | — |
2006 | We Are The '80s | — | — |
2007 | Turn Me Loose | — | — |
2008 | Playlist: The Very Best Of Loverboy | — | — |
2009 | Greatest Hits...The Real Thing | — | — |
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