An elaboration of the previous selection and Blondie’s
musical legacy–Ed.

'Maybe I'm Lost'/ 'I Can See Clearly': Deborah Harry Goes Solo
These two seemingly contradictory song titles reflect
the ups and downs of Deborah Harry's solo musical efforts. Following the
demise of Blondie and a few years out of the limelight, Deborah Harry launched
a solo career, which at least partially represented her attempt to escape
from the character she created--so much like David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust
problem, except that Bowie, like Madonna, was able to discard the character
and continually reinvent himself. Try as she might, however, she never
achieved the notice and success as when she was the lead singer of Blondie
and the same is true of the other band members. This relative lack of success
is by no means Harry's fault. Rather, it reflects the attitudes of the
male-dominated record industry which collectively believed that there was
little, if any, room for more than one female artist at a time, which reflected
a sexist attitude. Talk about a glass ceiling! Pat Benetar is hot so there
is not any room for another female artist like Harry, the reasoning seemed
to be. Then, of course, Madonna, who essentially appropriated Harry's act
and took it to dizzyingly new heights, overshadowed Harry--made even more
apparent since both Madonna and Harry were on the same record label (Sire/Warner),
which slighted Harry attention-wise due to the focus on promoting Madonna.
And, speaking of promotion, a painful lesson of Harry's was that an artist
needs to be constantly in the limelight and to be promoted and promoting
herself. Harry's hiatus (largely due to her helping Chris Stein in his
long recovery from a rare disease), while saying a lot about her strength
of character and personal loyalty, hurt her career. It's hard to come back
"cold" into the music industry. Another factor in explaining Harry's solo
career is that, first and foremost, she wanted to be an artist above all
and to maintain her artistic control and integrity. She did not have that
burning desire to be a star as Madonna did. The bottom line is that with
Blondie, the whole was greater than the sum of its parts. This is not uncommon.
Other great bands like the Rolling Stones (and, perhaps to a lesser extent,
The Beatles) have released comparatively mediocre solo material that just
can't compete with the spectacular sounds they create together. This observation
was true of Blondie originally, during its hiatus period, and now during
its reunion....