This song always made me happy.
https://youtu.be/gSP_Jqn5eUM?list=RDgSP_Jqn5eUM
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This song always made me happy.
https://youtu.be/gSP_Jqn5eUM?list=RDgSP_Jqn5eUM
I like the ARS version. Saw them perform at the Electric Ballroom in Atlanta. My then-wife had split up and I went to Atlanta (where she had gone) to make a last ditch effort to save our marriage. It didn’t work. We went to that show and had big fight at it. Every time I hear the song Neon Nights, I remember that night.
And for the record, I’ve been happily married to Mrs Tucker #2 for over 40 years. #1 was a practice marriage where I learned what not to do.
I'm a 70's guy, so I would probably give a nod to ARS, as well. Love the Classic Four and Dusty's version, also. My God, Dusty Springfield could sing a collection of articles from a magazine and release it as an album and I would buy it. Amazing voice... so sensual and soulful. The sax only version by Sharpe is also really good. I love good sax.
I'm sober, so I won't slur the words: "In the Garden of Eden" lol
https://youtu.be/UIVe-rZBcm4?list=RDUIVe-rZBcm4
You know, I'm not a religious person but heaven, to me, would be this for eternity: Lay my head on my pillow every night, while Karen Carpenter and Dusty Springfield alternated nights sitting beside my bed and singing me to sleep. Then one night out of the week, probably Sunday, the holiest of days, Ann Wilson drops in to rock my ass off before I go nighty night.
78. This #1 song was written as a tribute to tennis legend and close personal friend, Billie King King, and her World Team Tennis team. The song spent two weeks at #1 in the spring of '75. Do you know the song?
79. This 1978 hit song originated as a joke by Phil Everly after he had watched an old 1935 horror flick. Everly suggested the singer/songwriter adapt the movie title into a song and dance craze. The song was crafted in , literally, 15 minutes. None of the song's co-writers, including the singer, himself, took the song seriously. The spontaneous composition, which the singer referred to as "a dumb song for smart people," was chosen to be the first single off his third album release, much to the surprise of the singer, who was perplexed at his record label's logic for releasing "that piece of s##t."
Well, "that piece of s##t" became his signature song, an overnight sensation that peaked at #21 on the Billboard Hot 100. Jackson Browne actually performed the song live at some gigs over two years before its release in '78. Fleetwood Mac's John McVie and Mick Fleetwood played played bass and drums on the record . The song helped propel the album to #8 on the Billboard album chart, making it the singer's best-selling and most commercially successful album.
So, yeah, without Phil Everly, you would have never heard this song. Ah-hoo!!!
Can you name the song and singer?
80. According to this song's author, who wrote the song in his early 20's : "My eye trouble was the initial inspiration for the song's lyrics. But as I wrote them, the eye issue became a metaphor for lost innocence and for having seen too much."
The hit song is a melancholic folk-rock song about emotional exhaustion. The lyrics serve as a metaphor for losing innocence and becoming jaded after witnessing too much of the world's pain(my God, I feel that more than ever).
The song was co-produced with Glenn Frey, and featured David Crosby and Graham Nash on backing vocals. The upbeat tempo was designed to contrast with the dark, reflective lyrics. The singer/songwriter's record label originally was hesitant about the song, finding it too depressing. The record-buying public didn't agree. It reached #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1972.
Can you name the song and writer?