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Songs that defined the 70s

There's that song we can hear in Saddam's limo in Three Kings. But i can't put my finger on!
It goes like this "Ooooooooooooooooh baby please don't go"
"If You Leave Me Now"

This was the point where Peter Cetera's ego went over the edge and pretty much marked the end of Chicago having anything worthwhile to say, as a band.
That was their first #1 single. What was the band supposed to say with their music? Were they supposed to be political like CSNY? Spare me those pretentious "message" bands.
 
There's that song we can hear in Saddam's limo in Three Kings. But i can't put my finger on!
It goes like this "Ooooooooooooooooh baby please don't go"
"If You Leave Me Now"

This was the point where Peter Cetera's ego went over the edge and pretty much marked the end of Chicago having anything worthwhile to say, as a band.

It reminds me of another band, but God, who might that be???
All I remember are hammers, worms and a judge with hanging balls...

;)


Oh and thanks for Chicago!
 
These were my teen years so every song posted in this thread screams the 70s -- I couldn't possibly choose one over the other as far as "definition" is concerned ;)
 
Gouge ear with rusty spoon Sharak.
voggmo's right-I can stand the cheesy Chicago but Muskrat Love? Pass the rusty spoon.
Naah, "Muskrat Love" was such silly and insubstantial fluff that it barely registered for me at all.

Besides, Toni Tenille was way prettier than Peter Cetera. :)

There's that song we can hear in Saddam's limo in Three Kings. But i can't put my finger on!
It goes like this "Ooooooooooooooooh baby please don't go"
"If You Leave Me Now"

This was the point where Peter Cetera's ego went over the edge and pretty much marked the end of Chicago having anything worthwhile to say, as a band.
That was their first #1 single. What was the band supposed to say with their music? Were they supposed to be political like CSNY? Spare me those pretentious "message" bands.
Chicago had plenty of political songs in the early years, but that isn't what I meant at all. They'd been sputtering creatively after Chicago VII, but from "If You Leave Me Now" onward, their output had no musical value (and Terry Kath would be dead less than two years later.) They were through.

Have a nice message.

It reminds me of another band, but God, who might that be???
All I remember are hammers, worms and a judge with hanging balls...

;)
I actually liked that one and still do (and without equal the best live show I ever saw.) Pretty much the end of the road, though. I didn't like The Final Cut at all, and the post-Waters stuff I've found... unsatisfying.

Oh and thanks for Chicago!
:techman:
 
As much as I admire Waters, he just hasn't come up with the goods musically without Dave & Rick. To be fair, I haven't heard ALL of his solo stuff, but his lyrical direction is too repetitively dark. Amused to Death etc.
 
Well I have my own personal reasons for selecting these but here are few more to add to the list.


Comfortably Numb - Pink Floyd

Your Song - Elton John

We've Only Just Begun - The Carpenters

Here You Come Again - Dolly Parton

Diamonds Are Forever - Shirley Bassey

I Will Survive - Gloria Gaynor

What's Going On - Marvin Gaye

Born to Run - Bruce Springsteen

Starman - David Bowie

Bohemian Rhapsody - Queen

Superstition - Stevie Wonder

Takin' It To The Streets - The Doobie Brothers

Hello Darlin' - Conway Twitty


Most people automatically think of Disco when you say "The '70s". But a lot of superb music came out of this period, especially in R&B and Country, which tends to be overlooked for the more flashy rock and pop of the decade.
 
Dust in the Wind.

Fame by David Bowie.

Evil Woman ELO.

From 1972 to 1986, ELO accumulated more combined U.K. and U.S. Top 40 hit singles than any other band in the world, with 46.
 
Well I have my own personal reasons for selecting these but here are few more to add to the list.

Comfortably Numb - Pink Floyd

Dude, I beg to differ. The Wall was released November 30, 1979 in Britain, December 8, 1979 in the US. Not enough time to define a decade! :p
 
Well I have my own personal reasons for selecting these but here are few more to add to the list.

Comfortably Numb - Pink Floyd

Dude, I beg to differ. The Wall was released November 30, 1979 in Britain, December 8, 1979 in the US. Not enough time to define a decade! :p

I don't think it matters when it was released. The song itself is about the drugged disconnected lifestyle of the time period. To me it basically defines the decade by being a product of it. :bolian:
 
I was teasing you, amigo! Comfortably Numb is one of my favorite songs and it's also the title of one of my novellas!
 
Jeez, no one's mentioned poor old Lawrence Welk. I heard this was his new house band.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bUhLG0vMmI&feature=related
Dude, didn't anyone tell you? Larry Welk's been dead for more than 15 years.

Besides, "defining the 70s"? He was already square in the 50s. (Check out the great Lenny Bruce routine about the strung-out jazz cat reduced to taking a job on the Lawrence Welk Show. :D )
 
Altho mentioned already, I have to say anything from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, Chicaco's 25 or 6 to 4, and anything Osmond would take me back to the 70's. And my favorite, Peter Frampton's Do you feel like we Do. Did anyone not have Frampton Comes ALive?
 
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