https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeZR...&start_radio=1
It looks like I have some things in common with 'The Man in Black". I too was in the Air Force and stationed in Germany. I also intercepted Russian transmissions, but was a Russian linguist.
Printable View
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeZR...&start_radio=1
It looks like I have some things in common with 'The Man in Black". I too was in the Air Force and stationed in Germany. I also intercepted Russian transmissions, but was a Russian linguist.
146. Johnny Cash had a number of crossover hits, songs that were hits on both the country and pop charts.. What was his biggest hit on the Billboard Hot 100 ? It peaked at #2 . It was recorded live at San Quentin and hit #1 on the country charts.
A funny, funny song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOHPuY88Ry4&list=RDWOHPuY88Ry4&start_radio =1
147. One of my favorite songs. Period. Features one of the coolest, most iconic guitar riffs of the 1970's. Song has been misinterpreted by many to be a suicide anthem. It was not meant to be that. The band's guitarist and the song's writer was contemplating his own mortality and was thinking about his wife as he constructed a song about a love affair that transcends death. So, it's really a song about love living on in the after-life, rather than a romanticization of suicide.
The second verse is where the controversy arose. "Valentine" is a metaphor for mortal love. Romeo & Juliet was chosen as an example of a couple who had faith to take their love elsewhere when they weren't permitted to love here and now. The 40,000 number reference was just pulled out of thin air as an estimate of the number of people who died everyday worldwide. It had nothing to do with the number of suicides.
Stephen King was heavily inspired by the song. He liked it so much that he quoted lyrics in his novel, The Stand. Actually, he MISQUOTED the lyrics. King said, "Come on, Mary... " when it should have been , "Come on, baby... " . King also included the song in the soundtrack of his miniseries of The Stand.
King wasn't the only one inspired by this 70's classic. Convicted killer Garry Gilmore said that it was a favorite song of his. In fact, the song peaked at #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 just a couple of months before Gilmore was executed by a five-man firing squad at the Utah State prison. It was the highest charting single of just two top 40 hits the band had.
So, now you see why The Big Lebowski termed me "The Oracle of the Sublime and the Macabre." This song has always spoken to me. Is there anyone else besides me , Stephen King , and Mr. Gilmore that fancy this song?
What is the title of this classic tune from the 70's?
My favorite guitarist of all time. Donald 'Buck Dharma' Roeser. Blue Oyster Cult is also one of my favorite bands. Buck Dharma didn't go off on many wild solos like in this song, but his guitar licks always moved the song forward. I read an article once that his solo on 'Don't Fear the Reaper' was rated the 40th-best guitar solo of the 1970's. Balderdash, I say! Only one thing could have lifted that song to #! on the charts - More Cowbell!
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/chziyjhqMgY
Two BOC classics (of which there were many).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pV6F14kdRc&list=RD6pV6F14kdRc&start_radio =1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQBJfQhpw_U&list=RDYQBJfQhpw_U&start_radio =1
One of the greatest rock songs ever.
https://youtu.be/wkwAqG7KTns?list=RDwkwAqG7KTns
Two criminally underrated guitarists, in my mind, are Buck Dharma and Lindsey Buckingham. Those are two guys who can hold my attention for the entire 4 or 5 minute solo. Dharma's extended solo on "Astronomy" and Buckingham on "I'm So Afraid" leave me hanging on every chord, with great phrasing, incredible storytelling, and magnificent improvisation. It's easy to get bored with a long guitar solo but not with those two guys.
"Astronomy" :
https://youtu.be/3NrtyimDTEY?list=RD3NrtyimDTEY
"I'm So Afraid" live from Boston :
https://youtu.be/TDwg28bSjoI?list=RDTDwg28bSjoI
There are just certain songs I never get tired of hearing. EVER. As big of a Elton John fan I am, and I am a huge fan, when "Your Song,"or "Bennie & the Jets" come on the radio, I am apt to change the change the channel. Not that those aren't terrific songs, because they are, but because I've heard them a million times each and have grown somewhat tired of them. But I have NEVER, EVER changed the channel when "Don't Fear the Reaper comes on. I've never grown tired of that song, even after a million listens. Are there songs like that for you? Songs you never get tired of hearing?
Love it ! Thanks, gr2. I like both of those. I don't think I've ever turned the channel when either of those were playing. "Kiss an Angel..." was one of those songs that played frequently on the jukebox at the little diner downtown where I played pinball all the time as a kid. Great song! Charlie came through our area all the time to play Tombstone Junction in the 70's and Renfro Valley in the 80's and after. He dropped by Cracker Barrel last time he was in the area , back in the 2010's. Fine gentleman.
148. Most all music fans remember the first video ever shown on MTV. It was "Video Killed the Radio Star" by the Buggles. But what rocker followed the Buggles to become the second artist to appear in a video on MTV?
Oh, hell... 2025... are you kidding me? Forty years too late for me, my man. MTV closed up shop in the 80's as far as I'm concerned. I threw my MTV out the window in 1985. LOL
I'm gold when it comes to 60's (late) , 70's and 80's . After that... um, not so much. :)
I'm gonna take a wild guess(I have no earthly idea) but they should have closed it with the one they opened it with---"Video Killed the Radio Star" --- The Buggles. That's what I would have done. But it's probably someone I've never heard of.
Let's take a trip back My Old School. I mean, Donald Fa gen's old school. Anyone else like this song ? Like "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," this song's origin traces back to Donald Fa gen's days at Bard College in New York. You'll recall that "RDLTN" was inspired by a girl Fa gen had the hots for when he was attending Bard. She was pregnant and married to one of his professors. He ran into her at a Halloween Party on campus and slipped her his number and asked to call him. She was tempted , but never called. Donald lost out on Rikki but we got a classic song in 1974.
"My Old School" was at least partially inspired by a May 1969 drug bust at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY , where both Fa gen and Walter Becker attended. The raid, which occurred early, at about 5 am on a Thursday morning, resulted in roughly 44 or so students, or about 10% of the school's enrollment, being arrested by local authorities for marijuana possession and sale. Sherriff's deputies went up and down the halls of dorms on campus and raided nearby off-campus housing looking for pot smokers. Fa gen and Becker, along with Donald's girlfriend at the time, Dorothy White, were arrested and taken to jail. Fa gan's bail was set at $5,000.
Here's how Fa gen recounted the incident years later:
”These were the days when there was a ‘war on longhairs,’ as they used to call it, and Bard’s in this kind of rural district. They picked up about 50 kids just at random. There were a few warrants, and one was for me, which was based totally on false testimony. They handcuffed our hands behind our backs and put us in a paddy wagon and took us off to the Dutchess County Jail. They took all of the boys, about 35 of us, most with really long hair, and shaved our heads. I remember some of them were crying. I don’t think any of them had seen their head for three or four years. It didn’t make that much difference to me. But it was scary, you know? To hear the cell-block door slam shut, the whole business with the handcuffs and the paddy wagon. I’d never been arrested or put in jail before.
”I asked them to bail my girlfriend out. She had nothing to do with this and was just visiting me. And they refused to do it. So when graduation time came I protested by not going. My case had already been dismissed—they had withdrawn the charges, actually. So I was sitting on a bench in front of Stone Row with my father and lawyer, just watching the graduation. A lot of the students were also angry because apparently the school had let an undercover policeman be planted in the building and grounds department. Their cooperation with the investigation was despicable.”
About "My Old School," Fa gen said:
”I don’t know how serious we were [about never returning], but at the time both of us were very pissed off at the school, that’s for sure.”
In fact, Fa gen did return to Bard("Annendale") in 1985 , when he received an honorary degree. When asked about why he decided to let bygones be bygones and return to his old school, he said with that trademark s**tty Donald Fa gen smirk, "Well, you know, I'm not the one to hold grudges."
149. Here's your trivia question about this song. "My Old School" recounts the drug bust on campus in the spring of '69 and how a female acquaintance betrayed them to a local prosecutor. The pot raid at Bard in '69 was orchestrated by an overzealous local assistant D.A. He is referenced by Fa gen in the lyrics as "Daddy Gee." Who was "Daddy Gee" ? By the way, I met , and interviewed, "Daddy Gee," ironically, back at my old school(Cumberland College) around 1985. He had a very creepy vibe about him . Made me pretty uncomfortable. So, fwiw, there's my connection to Steely Dan's "My Old School."
Can you identify the man who orchestrated the raid on Bard College in 1969 that inspired Steely Dan's "My Old School" ?
Great live performance from the Midnight Special. "Skunk" Baxter is just a monster on those three or four guitar solos in this performance. What a hippie and what a freaking guitarist!!! The two lovely female backup singers are terrific. They were David Cassidy's backup singers. Even Fa gen, who notoriously disliked performing live, seemed to be having a blast here. Great vibe! Enjoy!
Let me know what you think of this track and this performance...
https://youtu.be/GCX635Z7_PE?list=RDGCX635Z7_PE
Ky, great post! I didn’t know about what led to the song “My Old School.” Smoking performance!
I actually do know this one. Daddy Gee is G. Gordon Liddy of Watergate fame.
Mrs Tucker #1 was a big Steely Dan fan and their albums were often played on the nice stereo I lost in the divorce.
Donald Fa gan's "Daddy Gee":
https://cloudfront-us-east-1.images....PCF7SMAVRA.jpg
Our school paid for our history club to invite Liddy to speak back in the mid -80's(around the same time Donald Fa gen went back to Bard to receive an honorary degree). The guy made me nervous. Arrogant as all get out, creepy, but very, very smart.
150. Got a good one for you. Another one from the spring and summer of my freshman year in college.
Imagine being a founding member of a well known English band and writing a huge hit song, only to have your bandmates hate the song so much that they fire you from the band. Well, that's essentially what happened when the band's bass player wrote a song for his first wife back in 1980, thanking her for encouraging him and being there for him as he pursued his music career. He wrote the song in just a couple of hours in his home studio, made a demo, and played it for the band. They hated the song. I mean, they REALLY despised the song. They felt like the song was just mushy musical tripe that took the band in a direction they had no interest in going. They did everything they could to sabotage the song's success, even refusing to perform it live. It's really a lovely little song.
It probably didn't help that the songwriter received 100% of the royalties of the song, leaving the other bandmates jealous of the song's success and not wanting to contribute to furthering the success of the song's singer/ writer. They refused to tour America as the song was climbing the charts here , where it peaked at #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1981. Key members of the band didn't want to "go on the road" to support this specific song, which was more pop-oriented than their usual blues-rock style. The major U.S. tour in 1981 was cancelled and a major opportunity to promote the record was lost.
The decision to not tour with a major hit climbing the charts led to tension with the band's record label, which stopped promoting their albums after that, essentially leading to the demise of the band. This song might very well had been a top 5 hit (or even a #1 hit) had the band agreed to tour America. The song's singer/writer has said he felt cheated that he never got to perform his huge hit song live. Band members made his life a living hell and eventually forced him out of the band early in 1982, following a tour of the Far East.
The only other major hit the band had produced , prior to 1981, was a song that was released late in 1976 and reached #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the spring of '77. Most ironically, that song captures the travails of traveling the roads in America , with the chorus referring to searching for Holiday Inn signs ("I kept on looking for a sign in the middle of the night"). I love that song , by the way. It's a fantastic groove. Interestingly enough, that song only became a hit by accident. It was originally just a "filler" song for the band's ninth studio album, created when the band's producer demanded a radio- friendly_commercial hit, resulting in a song that was written "from absolutely nowhere." The song featured lead vocals by the band's deep baritone singer and saxophonist.
As I mentioned above, the singer/ writer of the 1981 song has expressed some bitterness about never getting the opportunity to sing his huge hit song before a live audience back when the song was climbing the charts in 1981. Fact is, he never once sang the song live until decades later. In 2005, he and his wife stopped in a karaoke bar in Clearwater , Florida to have some liver & onions and enjoy some English beer . One of the songs that was in the Karaoke songbook at that bar was his song that he'd written about his first wife back 25 years before.. Exactly a quarter century since he first penned the song in his home studio back in 1980, he finally sang the song before a live audience at that little bar in Florida. The song has gone on to become a popular song for weddings, particularly a first dance song after a wedding, primarily because of the line in the song("Ooh babe, you got what it takes so I made you my wife").
Can you name this song that divided a band and resulted in the songwriter being forced out , despite the song becoming the band's second biggest hit and the 20th biggest song of 1981 ? For bonus points, what was the band's biggest hit and the 32nd biggest song of 1977 ? These two hit songs , both fine tunes, could not be more different. Many music fans would probably be shocked that the two songs come from the same band.
Both of the backup singer in the above Steely Dan video obtained fame for their own works. Well, relative amounts of fame.
The lady in green's song came in 1963 and went to #14 on the billboard charts. During the recording of the song tape was wrapped around the capstan to make it a faster tempo. The result was a higher-pitched vocal sound. So, the singer did not use her real name, instead using her daughter's name.
The lady in red top, I think it was red I was distracted, also had a hit song of her own. It was co-written and came out in 1974, but the backup singer's version that hit the charts came out in 1981. The song held the top spot on Billboard for 5 weeks, but was interrupted for one week by what I consider a Dutch novelty song that really wasn't a song but included snippets of a bunch of different hit songs.
Name the two backup singers and the two songs that charted for them.
I worried that it might be too hard without the song clues. LOL You guys are awfully good at this, though.
#12 in 1981 - The song that broke up a band :
https://youtu.be/gvDwr9-MlfE?list=RDgvDwr9-MlfE
#3 in 1977 :
https://youtu.be/0n7xu6gmu9M?list=RD0n7xu6gmu9M
Btw, the good-looking blonde lady backup singer in the Steely Dan video married some guy you have probably heard of. Remember the Dodger catcher back in the 70's, the one whose throat was pierced by a jagged piece of Bill Russell's broken bat, damaging his esophagus? Yep, that beautiful blonde is Gloria Yeager(Giaone), who married Steve Yeager. She teaches line dancing in California today. She's around 80, I think. I hate Father Time!
Steve Yeager went to Dayton Meadowdale high school. He was a great star basketball player there and I was surprised when he got drafted and signed by the Dodgers. He was like 4 years older than me. I saw him play in a couple high school basketball games in the state tournament (I used to go watch about 3-5 games straight at the UD Arena).
Steve Yeager was the cousin of Chuck Yeager, the pilot who first broke the sound barrier.
Steve Yeager is the reason catchers today wear that dangling throat protector. He nearly lost his life on September 6, 1976 in San Diego. I remember it like it was yesterday. The jagged shard from Russell's bat narrowly missed his windpipe and main artery. It punctured his esophagus. He had to have emergency surgery.
151. This British R&B and Soul singer was born in Wembley, England to Guyanese parents. Before her pop success, she was a West End performer in London, appearing in productions of Hair, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Godspell. Her first hit was a Motown-inspired song that was famously written in seven minutes by two guys while enroute to a hospital where one of the writers' wives was giving birth .
The singer who was offered the song had to be convinced to record it. She couldn't stand the song at first. Didn't think it was any good at all. She finally agreed to record it, but only if it was released under a pseudonym, That's right, she disliked the song much that she didn't even want it connected to her real name. LOL She also wanted the staggering sum of around $45 US dollars. So yeah, she wasn't impressed by this song, and didn't think it had any chance of success. Boy, was she wrong!
She eventually agreed to have the song released under her real name and she was convinced to take a royalty payment, instead of a small flat fee( that decision was worth millions) . The song peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1976 and was a staple on the charts throughout the spring of '76. The song was prominently featured in the 1977 movie, Slapshot.
The artist remained a one-hit wonder for around three years when she struck gold again in 1979 with a song that was co-written by the same woman who co-wrote "September"(Earth, Wind & Fire) and the theme to the television series "Friends." The song peaked at #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1979 and sat atop the Adult Contemporary chart for seven non-consecutive weeks. The song was pretty much autobiographical for the writer, as she was going through a painful breakup at the time she penned the song. She was inspired by the Samantha Sang song, entitled "Emotion," and wanted to write something along the same lines.
About her second big hit song, the singer would describe it as , "[a] sweet, simple little song", adding that its being chosen as a single was a decision with which she had disagreed.
All I can say is that this lady had very little faith in either of her big hits becoming successful. Fortunately for her and her bank account , she listened to the people around her.
Can you name this singer and her two big top 5 hits from 1976 and 1979 ?