Friday, February 20, 2026

Songs That PEARL HARBOUR Taught Us

Cowgirl Pearl
Do you love Pearl Harbour as much as we do?  It's not a contest -- but if it was, this blog would win!  Here's a deluxe edition custom combo compilation thingy of songs that Pearl has covered, as well as a couple cover versions of songs from Pearl's solo debut (Don't Follow Me, I'm Lost Too)!

If you don't know her story, Pearl is the daughter of a Filipina and an American serviceman, so "Filipino Baby" is almost autobiographical.  As a teenager, Pearl emigrated from Germany to San Francisco, where she became the singer for Pearl Harbor And The Explosions.  She left the band after a difference of opinion in musical direction.  "I wanted the show to be more wild rock & roll. They were more interested in jazz, funk, and rhythm & blues," she later recalled.  In concert, The Explosions covered the rockabilly classic "Black Slacks" as well as Ron Wood's "I Can Feel The Fire" and Nick Lowe's "Let's Eat".

Pearl traveled back across the Atlantic in search of that wild rock & roll sound, and cut her 1980 solo debut in London with Nigel Dixon, Steve New, and Wilko Johnson on guitar (all of whom have been featured here).  Geraint Watkins played keyboards, and his music has been compiled here by Koen.  

Ian Dury with Pearl

Mickey Gallagher produced the album, and Pearl covered Ian Dury's "Rough Kids", as well as "Losing To You" (from Nigel Dixon's band Whirlwind) and "Cowboys & Indians" from Geraint Watkins & The Dominators.   Another cover she recorded (which became a signature song of her career) was "Fujiyama Mama".  

Pearl married Paul Simonon (whose brother Nick briefly played drums for Pearl), and she toured Japan with The Clash.  Today's comp includes a live "Fujiyama" and "Hit The Road Jack" from that tour (with a descending bassline similar to "Stray Cat Strut").  Speaking of the Stray Cats, Pearl and Wilko joined them onstage at Montreux for a version of "Be Bop A Lula" (you can barely hear Wilko near the end).  Pearl also covered "Wrong Em Boyo" with The Mods, a Japanese punk band who played on her third solo album. She later sang "Brand New Cadillac" with The Colts, another Japanese band.

Pearl with The Mods
Pearl and Paul eventually divorced, and she returned to San Francisco.  Her last solo album (so far!) was recorded with East Bay Ray (whose guitar work with the DK's and other bands has also been featured here).  

Here Comes Trouble was recorded as a tribute to Phillip Bury, the beloved frontman of Buck Naked & The Bare Bottom Boys. Phillip was tragically killed in 1992.  Stinky LePew (aka Stinky Naked) joined Pearl on the album, and the title track was a Bare Bottom Boys original.  

The "jukebox" portion of today's share includes several other originals that Pearl recorded, and the "songbook" section features two covers of Pearl Harbour originals: "Do Your Homework" by Supersnazz and "Heaven Is Gonna Be Empty" by Hanoi Rocks.  There was a Swiss band called Satellits who covered "Alone In The Dark" (also from Don't Follow Me), but I can't afford their EP and I've never found an mp3 online.  Help me, internet!

19 comments:

  1. PEARL HARBOUR JUKEBOX: https://pixeldrain.com/u/H1oyW8T6

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  2. Good stuff. I remember watching her video for the song Drivin. Sad the Explosions never got any real exposure.
    Best regards
    Zippy

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  3. Great compilation. Thank you.

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  4. Susanna Hoffs recorded "So Much in Love" for her first solo record. (She also cut a Robin Lane and the Chartbusters song, so the album is a bit of a new wave tribute, released just in time to be overwhelmed by the grunge breakthrough. ).

    "Drivin'" is a staple of 80s new wave compilations. It was definitely included on Rhino Record's great Just Can't Get Enough: New Wave Hits of the 70s series. I love that collection, all 15 volumes and the four spin-offs.

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    1. Good call, James! (Hey, the Bangles have a song about you!) I think the Explosions were getting attention and radio play back then. I respect Pearl for pursuing her own musical vision rather than staying in a successful band that wasn't going where she wanted to go.

      The top photo in today's post is from a performance a couple years ago by a band that Pearl assembled to play country music. She had to take a break from performing for health reasons, but she has now kicked cancer's ass, and I really hope to hear her singing country and making another record!

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  5. Like PEARL herself, this compilation did NOT get the love it deserves! It's great!

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    1. Give it time and maybe its popularity will grow slowly, like Pearl's records. Don't Follow Me and the self-titled Pearl Harbor And The Explosions album were recently reissued. We also have BOTH versions of "Pearls Galore" available here at the blog: my rip of the 1983 LP (which was only released in Japan) and PBTHAL's rip of the 1984 LP (same title, similar tracklist, recorded with The Mods and produced by Richard Gottehrer).

      https://jonderblog.blogspot.com/2018/07/everybodys-boring-but-pearl-harbour.html

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    2. Also, the link is still alive for HERE COMES TROUBLE (Pearl's 1995 album with East Bay Ray and Stinky LePew). It includes great versions of "Have Love Will Travel", the Undertones' "You've Got My Number", and "Trouble" (written by Stinky LePew and Buck Naked).

      HERE COMES TROUBLE: tinyurl.com/ydexryvl

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  6. Another great deep dive into music, thanks Jonder! As for Just Can't Get Enough: New Wave Hits of the 70s series, great compilations, no doubt about that.

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  7. As others have said, Great comp! Thanks for keeping Pearl alive in our hearts and ears!

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  8. I am confused. This series Just Can't Get Enough: New Wave Hits I can only find the 80s version, can you direct me to the 70s one
    Pearl Harbour is growing on me. We had this discussion before, and I first only knew the 1980 album, and your continuous effort to point out her greatness is quit inspiring. Thank you

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  9. I did a rip of their Drivin' single back in 2018. I think it's been superseded by an official release, but completists will want it for the 300 dpi scans. https://voodoowagon.blogspot.com/search/label/Pearl%20Harbor%20%26%20the%20Explosions

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  10. Nice one! Coincidentally I heard for the first time "Shut Up & Dance" late last week when someone posted it under her post wishing us a "Happy Year of the Horse' after a bit of a lull in her posts and was super enthralled how good it is from recent years! Good on ya cats!

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  11. There's also video (with poorly centered audio...) of Ms. Harbour at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJ2zUuKar9A

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    1. I hadn't seen that clip before Draftervoi. You've earned yourself a no-prize:
      https://www.mediafire.com/view/gh1ihqh5gw6l2d5/Marvel_No-Prize.jpg/file

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    2. Thank you, Stinky!  I shall bask in the admiration of millions, and I'm sure I'll be able to get a hot date for the sock-hop on Friday night!
      I'm "facebook friends" with "Girl George."  I don't recall her show; I think it was on East Bay cable access and I was over in San Francisco.  The guy at the start....Norm Winer....was a disc jockey on KSAN-FM.

      I have a vague memory of Pearl as one of the many performers working with the Tubes.  Old Waldorf?  She came on as a tap-dancing boxer.  The real memory from that show as Mr. Penguin, who was an older man dressed in a full body penguin costume, whose "act" consisted of yelling "I'm Mister Penguin!"

      Ah, the good old days.....

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  12. When she was with the Explosions, they used to perform a few covers live: Nick Lowe's "Let's Eat" and Ron Wood's "I Can Feel The Fire." Both are included as bonus tracks on Liberation Hall's reissue of their self-titled (and only) album.

    Back in 1979, Pearl Harbour and the Explosions got a lot of airplay on rock radio here in the Bay Area. I thought that was happening everywhere!

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    1. Let's Eat, I Can Feel The Fire, and Black Slacks (another song the Explosions used to cover) are part of this jukebox/songbook combo!

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