โHeart Of Glassโ by Blondie is effortlessly cool, rhythmically airtight, and evocative of the late 1970s, when rock and disco were swirling together in a whirlwind of drum machines and sparkly lamรฉ. But to be a fly on the wall during the recording process would suggest that this song was going to break the rowdy group of New York City punks once and for all.
At least, thatโs what the bandโs record label wanted to do.
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Recording โHeart Of Glassโ Was an Arduous Process
By the time Blondie was recording their third album, Parallel Lines, they had already achieved commercial success. But the bandโs record label, Chrysalis Records, wanted a No. 1 hit. The label went with Michael Chapman, an Australian producer who had already worked with acts like Suzi Quatro. Speaking to Uncut in August 2008, Chapman remembered Chrysalis telling him, โBreak โem,โ referring to the band.
And that would be no small feat. As frontwoman Debbie Harry said in that same feature, โWe were very unruly. We were all just wild children. Mike was very painstaking. He had a digital brain in an analogue age. So, when we got into the studio, and he was so precise, it was hard.โ Chapman seemed to agree, saying that he โalmost came to blowsโ with bassist Nigel Harrison, who was reluctant to go along with Chapmanโs tedious workflow.
Blondie was, at its core, a New York City punk band. They had no interest in churning out squeaky-clean pop records, and they certainly had no interest in people telling them what to do. Chris Stein likened the whole experience to intense training at the gym. Chapman called it โan experiment from top to bottom.โ
While Blondieโs grungy attitude made it difficult to keep them focused in the studio, Chapman knew thatโs where the bandโs magic was. Instead of flying them out to a cushy West Coast studio to rehearse and record, Chapman kept them in their stomping grounds. โThe rehearsal space was dirty and grungy,โ he said. โIt was pretty crummy. But if I took Debbie and Chris to LA, their dark stuff would disappear in the sunshine.โ
Despite All the Struggles, the Song Worked Out
As arduous and contentious as the writing, rehearsal, and recording process was for โHeart Of Glassโ, it worked. The band found a way to embody a disco groove after Michael Chapman asked Debbie Harry for her most recent influences, and she offered Donna Summer. The song wasnโt quite disco, and it wasnโt quite rock โnโ roll. And in the mixed-up musical world of 1978, that ambiguity paid off in droves.
โHeart Of Glassโ was Blondieโs first No. 1 hit, and it was No. 1 in a major way. The single topped the charts in the U.S., U.K., Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and throughout Europe. Itโs unclear whether Chapman ever actually โbrokeโ the band, as per Chrysalisโ request. But he certainly broke them out into the mainstream.
Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
