I want to make it perfectly clear—there is NO such thing as too much Graham Parker. None. Zero. The concept simply does not exist. I could turn this entire blog into a 24/7, non-stop Graham Parker Appreciation Network and shrine—album by album, song by song, lyrical breakdowns, deep cuts, live versions, B-sides—and it would not only be justified, it would be a public service and would feel completely normal, healthy, and possibly even medically recommended (in my world, anyway).
If
SiriusXM had even an ounce of decency, there would already be a dedicated
Graham Parker channel and I would be not just a charter member, but probably
calling in daily like some kind of obsessive lunatic requesting the same songs
I already own five versions of. Until that glorious day arrives, Underground
Garage is basically the lone outpost keeping the faith alive, and for that, I
salute them.
Stick to Me drops in 1977, right as Graham is starting
to get some traction in the U.S., and where am I? Twelve years old, listening
to whatever watered-down, focus-grouped nonsense my local radio stations were
spoon-feeding me. And let me tell you—they were NOT playing Graham Parker. No,
no, that would have required taste, courage, and possibly a functioning spine. Apparently, that was considered “too
interesting” for daytime programming.
My
real introduction came later—late-night radio, when the DJs would go rogue and
clearly decide, “You know what? Let’s actually play good music for a few
hours.” That’s when Graham sneaks in, and suddenly it’s like—what IS this? Who
IS this? Why does this sound about 1,000 times better than everything I hear
during the day? I immediately realized that my daytime listening consisted
mostly of what can only be described as premium-grade “el crapo.”
From
that point forward, it’s game over. You don’t casually listen to Graham
Parker—you fall down the rabbit hole. Hard. Naturally, this led to a daily
routine: stay up late, discover amazing music, then spend the next day
wondering why the radio suddenly sounded like it had given up on life.
And
yes, Graham has already shown up on this blog four times. FOUR. Honestly, I’m
showing admirable restraint. I do need to go back and add some photos to those
posts, especially now that I’ve picked up a few items that further justify—if
not outright demand—additional Graham content. Not that I need justification,
but it’s nice to pretend.
Because
this isn’t just appreciation anymore. This is a full-blown Graham Parker
situation.


















