Oh dear!
What are you listening to now? Page 1,148
Johnnie Walker's Sounds of the 70s, and he happened to play one of the soppiest, most schmaltzy, gut wrenching load of drivel ever recorded:-
Tammy Wynette's "Stand By Your Man" (Apparently she says her name is not pronounced Win-et, but Whine ett - how apt!)
Featured in the Blues Brothers film as well, of course.
The sobbing broken voice throughout just makes me laugh as I think of Milligan's piss-take of C & W and performed here by The Goons:-
Quote: Gordon Bennett @ 7th September 2014, 9:09 AM BST
I am rather taken with that.
Curved Air Second Album. "Young Mother".
A couple of Joni Mitchell covers -
Minnie Riperton - Woman of Heart and Mind
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wdeeqadtabs
Tom Rush - Urge For Going
Clocks - Coldplay on Yesterday
Ed Askew's second album from 1971. A man and his Martin Tiple.
Just bought my first ever ACDC album
It's that good I've actually got goose bumps listening to it
Some classical piano music - not sure of the composer. Sounds French.
It was a nocturne by Fauré.
Tonight, A Horseradish reveals the results of his painstaking research to find the lead singers of great Scottish bands who are bucking the arty trend and - whisper it quietly - secretly for "Better Together":
Jim Kerr (Simple Minds)
Promised You A Miracle - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tX55HEX0hb0
Bobby Gillespie (Primal Scream)
Come Together - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUjW82je_38
Roddy Frame (Aztec Camera)
We Could Send Letters - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKjm5hW5Bnk
Just heard this on local radio - WOW, brought it all back to me - those heady days of the mid 60s.
GOT to be one of the best ever pop songs - has to be in the Top Ten somewhere.
Tina's fabulous voice with Phil Spector's Wall of Sound treatment.
Here is the original...............
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uj0wPrN_Y_4
BUT check out the opening intro sequence of this 1971 version with the Ikettes..............PHEW!!!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhkIh4x4mmM
Jeeeeezus!...........Seriously HOT!!
Love's Forever Changes concert. Live double CD.
Quote: JohnnyD @ 10th September 2014, 12:11 PM BSTEd Askew's second album from 1971. A man and his Martin Tiple.
Enjoyed all the recent contributions. I just caught up with this one JohnnyD. It's fascinating - and very affecting. There are obviously some key years in rock music - 1955-56, 1967, 1977 - and those of us who were quite involved in 1989 tend to talk that one up too. But I have always sensed that the 1970-1 period going into 1972 was seriously underrated. Often viewed as a lull, it has a distinct mystery all of its own.
In more practical terms, there is also a hell of a lot of "stuff" from that time - far more than is immediately obvious which is good as it still means new discoveries. But I wonder now if the number of records being released suddenly increased during those years and I may well try to check on the figures to find out.
Anyhow, thanks for another interesting piece.