He's been on the trail of that rabid dog for months!
How much it comes out seems to vary in an image search, but as I recall, he had some temple-graying going on as Tigh.I was going to say, is he old enough to have an eight-year-old kid, but holy cow, he's a lot older than I thought.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_ThunderI am unfamiliar with this test.
But at least we've put women in space...whether we'll ever go back to the Moon at all is questionable, and the only people who've been there so far were all men.Better, but not great. There was recently a guest editorial in Analog by the woman who does the recruiting at NASA about the difficulties of getting women to sign up for the Space Program.
I probably picked this up from something that I read, but for the purpose of doing covers, Larry Williams seems to have been John's Little Richard, since Paul had a lock on the Little Richard material in the band.Well, not random for them, I guess....
Longing for the day that he can join his departed love I'd describe as morbid at best.He's gonna be a good boy and go to Heaven!
That Squadron Supreme storyline was really slow to get going thanks to the intervening combination of a parallel Kang storyline going on with another group of Avengers and a couple of fill-in issues that, IIRC, contained what was meant to be the next issue of Giant-Size Avengers before that line was discontinued...but the DC spoofery in 147-148 was pure gold. The only blemish was that both the cover blurbs were still getting them mixed up with the Squadron Sinister, and the writing inside compounded the problem, with Iron Man making references to previous encounters with the other version of Doctor Spectrum as if they were the same character.That's exactly what I was thinking of. When I think of Squadron Supreme, I think of the Serpent Crown Saga-- Englehart was one of my writing gods back in the 70s.
I'd considered spoofing on that!How do you feel about lime?
This was definitely too odd and quirky a song to make it as a single. The Jim parts sound good and prominently reference the passing of Otis Redding, but the countryish Robby vocals always sounded to me like he was spoofing on Dylan, and I have no idea what the connection would be between those two elements.Hee haw! Er... I mean, this is so freakin' good I could cry.
It's got a good enough sign-o-the-times vibe that I got it despite it being sub-Top 30 on this side of the pond.This is a nice one.
Here I thought I'd have to tell everybody that the singer was Tony Orlando...and now I have, for those who weren't in the know! Fun fact, this wasn't his first hit...he'd scored a solo-billed Top 20 single earlier in the decade:It's always darkest before the Dawn.
This one is the last we should be hearing from The Rascals as 50th anniversary business, as it proved to be their final Top 40 single.Should have carried this back for a refund.![]()
It really is, and that's from somebody whose primary exposure to the song was this version:Surprisingly good.
Yeah, the telethon was an institution for as long as I can remember...these days it feels like the holiday has lost what I always considered to be its main thing.For those of you old enough to remember when the stars came out on Labor Day for a good cause, this is for you:
View attachment 11054
If you weren’t there, I’m sorry for you. It was an indescribable mix of heart and schmaltz. And I mean that from the bottom of my heart.
Surprisingly good.
I had meant to comment on this one and forgot. Yeah, Smith's version of the song is pretty great. I didn't remember it until I clicked on the vid. The arrangement works and the lead vocalist can REALLY sing. The song loses none of it's passion."Baby It's You," Smith
When it came to soulful crooning, John Lennon left nothing on the table.It really is, and that's from somebody whose primary exposure to the song was this version:
I never missed it. Labor Day was always about the Jerry Lewis Telethon, the new TV schedule, and back to school.For those of you old enough to remember when the stars came out on Labor Day for a good cause, this is for you:
View attachment 11054
If you weren’t there, I’m sorry for you. It was an indescribable mix of heart and schmaltz. And I mean that from the bottom of my heart.
I guess so, but I never would have guessed that he was 50.How much it comes out seems to vary in an image search, but as I recall, he had some temple-graying going on as Tigh.
Ah, I see. I am apparently totally unfamiliar with this character.Any time Golden Age Johnny uttered the syllables that matched his magic word, "Cei-U"--which sounded like "say you"...it summoned his eager-to-please genie-like Thunderbolt, who proceeded to cause magical mischief at Johnny's every stray suggestion. Context or inflection didn't matter, just that he strung together those syllables...which of course happened a lot. So while I type it as "Oh, Donald," an "Oh! Donald..." would work just as well going by those rules.
We shall return!But at least we've put women in space...whether we'll ever go back to the Moon at all is questionable, and the only people who've been there so far were all men.
Well, that too. Cheerfully morbid. Or morbidly inspirational. Or something.Longing for the day that he can join his departed love I'd describe as morbid at best.
I never would have caught that.and the writing inside compounded the problem, with Iron Man making references to previous encounters with the other version of Doctor Spectrum as if they were the same character.
I'd considered spoofing on that!
I think I will get it myself. I like it.It's got a good enough sign-o-the-times vibe that I got it despite it being sub-Top 30 on this side of the pond.
It said so on the video, so I'm not sure if I would have recognized his voice on my own. The song itself sounds kind of Four Seasons-ish.Here I thought I'd have to tell everybody that the singer was Tony Orlando...
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"Newsview magazine is offering a $10,000 reward for any information leading to the capture of this mutt."
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Honky Tonk Women," The Rolling Stones
2. "A Boy Named Sue," Johnny Cash
3. "Sugar, Sugar," The Archies
4. "Green River," Creedence Clearwater Revival
Wiki said:Crosby, Stills & Nash is the first album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, released in 1969 on the Atlantic Records label. It spawned two Top 40 hit singles, "Marrakesh Express" and "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," which peaked respectively at #28 the week of August 23, 1969, and at #21 the week of December 6, 1969, on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The album itself peaked at #6 on the Billboard Top Pop Albums chart. It was certified four times platinum by the RIAA for sales of over 4,200,000.
I did not know that!Wiki said:The title "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" (a play on words for "Sweet Judy Blue Eyes") refers to Stephen Stills' former girlfriend, singer/songwriter Judy Collins, and the lyrics to most of the suite's sections consist of his thoughts about her and their imminent breakup.
Wiki said:Along with the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo and The Band's Music from Big Pink of the previous year, [Crosby, Stills & Nash] helped initiate a sea change in popular music away from the ruling late-1960s aesthetic of bands playing blues-based rock music on loud guitars.
Strong sales, combined with the group's emphasis on personal confession in its writing, paved the way for the success of the singer-songwriter movement of the early 1970s. Their utilization of personal events in their material without resorting to subterfuge, their talents in vocal harmony, their cultivation of painstaking studio craft, as well as the Laurel Canyon ethos that surrounded the group and their associates, established an aesthetic for a number of acts that came to define the "California sound" of the ensuing decade, including the Eagles, Jackson Browne, post-1974 Fleetwood Mac, and others.
Yeah, her vocal style reminds me of Dusty.The arrangement works and the lead vocalist can REALLY sing.
I believe that the expression for this sort of occasion is..."D'oh!"It said so on the video
An epic, unique classic.Their debut album starts powerfully with the masterful "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," which would have made a far stronger lead single than the one that they chose.
And it's actually something I did know.I did not know that!
But it's so purely CSN.I've always been underwhelmed by the actual lead single, "Marrakesh Express," a goofy little ditty which Graham Nash brought with him from The Hollies...but it proved to be quite popular in these parts, so what do Iggy and I know?
Such a weird, sad song.Side two opens with "Wooden Ships," a song written by Crosby, Stills, and Paul Kantner from Jefferson Airplane.
Both a sage and a muse.Reportedly this is another song that was written with Joni Mitchell in mind...she was pretty popular in the group.
I believe that the expression for this sort of occasion is..."D'oh!"
Part of my problem with it is that it doesn't sound like CSN to me, from the other songs that I know by them.But it's so purely CSN.![]()
That’s what I’m talking about! Hi yo!When retro-worlds collide...on Labor Day:
WARNING: Okoyay ingsay. (But stick around for the end anyway.)
A YouTube commenter said:She sang like a bird (being slowly crushed in a vise).
I'm going to somewhat disagree with this. First, I'd add Dylan, Donovan, and Simon and Garfield as artists who were also just as important as CSN and The Band, (more important in the case of Dylan). in the early development of the singer/songwriter genre.Along with the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo and The Band's Music from Big Pink of the previous year, [Crosby, Stills & Nash] helped initiate a sea change in popular music away from the ruling late-1960s aesthetic of bands playing blues-based rock music on loud guitars.
Strong sales, combined with the group's emphasis on personal confession in its writing, paved the way for the success of the singer-songwriter movement of the early 1970s.
I've always thought that the word "suite" was a reference to this song sounding like it is 3 different songs slapped together. Of course I could be wrong, but to me it sounds like song 1 ends at about 5:00, song 2 starts about 5:09, and song 3 starts at about 6:33.Their debut album starts powerfully with the masterful "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes,"
Wow, Jerry Lewis is like... the 5th Beatle or something.When retro-worlds collide...on Labor Day:
Interesting. Totally different perspective there.Part of my problem with it is that it doesn't sound like CSN to me, from the other songs that I know by them.
Wiki said:A lonely night at Ann's apartment is interrupted by a mouse, which somehow makes her father think she and Donald are fooling around.
That's Ann collecting rain water in a pot for washing her hair.Wiki said:After inviting her parents over to a baseball game that gets rained out, Ann decides to let them and Donald stay at her place for a game of Monopoly, for which Lou gets much too competitive in.
Wiki said:Ann's father slips at Donald's magazine and hurts himself. Donald has to get him to sign an insurance waiver.
The even earlier development, perhaps. One can always go back a little further, but CSN and The Band would be more immediate influences on early '70s music.I'm going to somewhat disagree with this. First, I'd add Dylan, Donovan, and Simon and Garfield as artists who were also just as important as CSN and The Band, (more important in the case of Dylan). in the early development of the singer/songwriter genre.
I'll agree with that. The singer/songwriter thing was very prevalent in the early '70s, but it wasn't the only game in town.The way I remember it, the singer/songwriter genre created an alternative to blues based rock rather creating a "sea change" in popular music with both running along parallel lines.
Four segments, actually.I've always thought that the word "suite" was a reference to this song sounding like it is 3 different songs slapped together. Of course I could be wrong, but to me it sounds like song 1 ends at about 5:00, song 2 starts about 5:09, and song 3 starts at about 6:33.
Wiki said:"Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" has four distinct sections. The timings below are for the full album version. The shortened version released as a single cut the second and fourth verses from the first section, the third and fourth verses from the second section, and the final verse and preceding break from the third section, and shortened the guitar break between the second and the third sections. The final section is the only part that stayed fully intact on the single.
The first section is a traditional pop song with four verses, featuring a chorus of "I am yours, you are mine, you are what you are." Running at approximately 2:56, the lead vocal is performed by Stills, with Crosby and Nash providing harmonies.
The second section is performed in half time relative to the first section, and features four verses of three-part harmony from the band, with Stills performing a brief vocal solo between the second and third. This section runs from 2:56 to 4:43.
The third section is more upbeat and features poetic lyrics ("chestnut brown canary, ruby-throated sparrow"), lasting from 4:43 to 6:25. Each of the three phrases is initially sung by Stills, with Nash then joining, and finally Crosby rounding out the harmonies. Connecting the phrases are instrumental breaks performed by Stills on acoustic guitar.
The final section (the coda) is sung in Spanish, with "doo-doo-doo-da-doo" backing vocals, starting at 6:34 until the song concludes. Stills has said that he intentionally made the final stanzas unexpected and difficult, even using a foreign language for the lyrics, "just to make sure nobody would understand it" (not even Spanish speaking people).
My mileage varies...something like "Suite" has more of a classical vibe.gblews said:I like "Judy", but I've always had a little less respect for songs that are created from "spare parts" (or at least, when it sounds like it). It's the main reason I have never thought of "A Day In the Life" as the Beatles' greatest song.
1972's a bit late for that...he'll have to settle for being the Second Yoko.Wow, Jerry Lewis is like... the 5th Beatle or something.![]()
May Pang?1972's a bit late for that...he'll have to settle for being the Second Yoko.
Another opportunity for a genre version of That Girl. It would certainly be a lot better than everybody indulging Mr. Marie's painfully Victorian sexual mores.Ann actually doesn't recognize her visitor as a mouse...she exaggerates its size and appearance to Donald on the phone.
Or maybe they're just messing with him to see if he'll die of a heart attack or something.Of course, nobody gets around to explaining the situation before he starts going on about the need for a shotgun wedding in Baltimore.
"Exterminator" was a bad choice then . "Mouse Whisperer" would have been better.Feeling the need to prove the existence of the mouse to her father, Ann calls an exterminator (Bill Bramley), but he leaves when she explains that she just wants him to expose it and "shoo it away" without harming it.
No, "Oh, a mouse?""Oh, Donald" count: 7
"Oh, Daddy" count: 2
Does she have Mouse Trap?We get a good look at Ann's hall closet shelf, which is where she keeps her games for the purpose of this episode
Apparently, Ann wants a guy just like the guy that married dear old Mom....Donald stops her, expressing his understanding of Mr. Marie's pride and principles.
By the end, we find Lew and Donald bonding over their mutual competition in the game.
Pay up, Newsview.Lew slips in the hall because of a puddle left by a leaky water cooler.
Still kind of a step up.1972's a bit late for that...he'll have to settle for being the Second Yoko.
Wiki said:Alice's Restaurant is a 1969 American comedy film directed by Arthur Penn. It is an adaptation of the 1967 folk song "Alice's Restaurant Massacree", originally written and sung by Arlo Guthrie. The film stars Guthrie as himself, with Pat Quinn as Alice Brock and James Broderick as Ray Brock. Penn, who resided in the story's setting of Stockbridge, Massachusetts, co-wrote the story with Venable Herndon in 1967 after hearing the song, shortly after directing Bonnie & Clyde.
Arlo said:Obie, do you think we're gonna hang ourselves for litterin'?
Arlo said:I mean I'm sittin' here on the Group W bench 'cause you wanna know if I'm moral enough to join the Army and burn women, kids, houses, children, and villages after bein' a litterbug!
I meant band-wise, not, y'know...May Pang?
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It would certainly be a lot better than everybody indulging Mr. Marie's painfully Victorian sexual mores.
The exterminator did make a crack about Ann needing a guy with a flute and a funny hat."Exterminator" was a bad choice then . "Mouse Whisperer" would have been better.
Nope, a couple of presumably made up games and Monopoly.Does she have Mouse Trap?![]()
Quite likely, now that you mention it.Apparently, Ann wants a guy just like the guy that married dear old Mom.
Harsh.Still kind of a step up.
I wouldn't call it a Thanksgiving tradition for me, although I do like the song.I was not overly familiar with the 18-1/2-minute song upon which the film is based, though I was generally aware of its status as a Thanksgiving tradition for some
It would probably be obvious if I saw it, but right now I have no idea what that's supposed to be.Note that I'd be inclined to post the song here for reference, but it includes an account of somebody using the f****t slur
When I write my autobiography, it's going to be legendary.It's not like Arlo's actual life, however, as the incidents depicted in the film causing Arlo to leave Montana didn't happen.
It's the drugs, man.(Unfortunately, that video has that annoying effect going on that makes it look like the background is moving behind the characters.)
Now that's cool.Of note, Officer Obie is played by William Obanhein, the actual police chief who arrested Arlo and a friend for the dumping incident.
I'm not familiar with that one.One item that really stood out for me...at Shelly's funeral, Tigger Outlaw (apparently known mainly for appearing in this film; perhaps related to Geoff Outlaw, who played Roger Crowther) performs a Joni Mitchell song called "Songs to Aging Children Come," which I found hauntingly familiar, causing me to wonder when I might have heard it before. Possibly going way back to early childhood?
Sounds like fun, although I am very opposed to littering.Overall, I found this film to be a decent contributor to the immersive sign-o-the-timesiness, though it isn't playing on the same field as the likes of Easy Rider and Midnight Cowboy. And the song's story did grow on me via its retelling in the film.
The exterminator did make a crack about Ann needing a guy with a flute and a funny hat.
Well, I'm not French.Harsh.
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:September 6 – Olympia Stadium, Detroit.
September 7 – Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto.
September 8 – Forum, Montreal. The Beatles' flight to Jacksonville, Florida after the Montreal gig is directed instead to Key West, Florida after warnings of a hurricane heading for Jacksonville. It does arrive there, so the Beatles stay at a hotel in Key West until the morning of 11 September.
Wiki said:September 10 – The African Development Bank (AfDB) is founded.
September 11 – In Jacksonville, Florida, John Lennon announces that the Beatles will not play to a segregated audience.
The Beatles Day by Day said:September 11 – Gator Bowl, Jacksonville.
September 12 – Boston Garden, Boston.
1. "The House of the Rising Sun," The Animals
2. "Where Did Our Love Go," The Supremes
3. "Because," The Dave Clark Five
4. "Everybody Loves Somebody," Dean Martin
5. "Bread and Butter," The Newbeats
6. "C'mon and Swim," Bobby Freeman
7. "G.T.O.," Ronny & The Daytonas
8. "A Hard Day's Night," The Beatles
9. "Remember (Walkin' in the Sand)," The Shangri-Las
10. "Oh, Pretty Woman," Roy Orbison
11. "Selfish One," Jackie Ross
12. "And I Love Her," The Beatles
13. "Under the Boardwalk," The Drifters
14. "Maybe I Know," Lesley Gore
15. "Maybelline," Johnny Rivers
16. "Haunted House," Jumpin' Gene Simmons
18. "How Do You Do It," Gerry & The Pacemakers
20. "You Never Can Tell," Chuck Berry
21. "It Hurts to Be in Love," Gene Pitney
22. "Save It for Me," The Four Seasons
23. "We'll Sing in the Sunshine," Gale Garnett
24. "Baby I Need Your Loving," Four Tops
25. "Dancing in the Street," Martha & The Vandellas
26. "Walk, Don't Run '64," The Ventures
27. "It's All Over Now," The Rolling Stones
28. "Funny (How Time Slips Away)," Joe Hinton
29. "I'm on the Outside (Looking In)," Little Anthony & The Imperials
30. "Wishin' and Hopin'," Dusty Springfield
31. "Do Wah Diddy Diddy," Manfred Mann
32. "People Say," The Dixie Cups
33. "Such a Night," Elvis Presley
34. "Just Be True," Gene Chandler
35. "Out of Sight," James Brown & His Orchestra
36. "I'll Cry Instead," The Beatles
37. "Ain't She Sweet," The Beatles
42. "Matchbox," The Beatles
44. "A Summer Song," Chad & Jeremy
48. "You Must Believe Me," The Impressions
51. "From a Window," Billy J. Kramer w/ The Dakotas
53. "Ringo's Theme (This Boy)," George Martin & His Orchestra
54. "Let It Be Me," Betty Everett & Jerry Butler
56. "Rhythm," Major Lance
58. "When I Grow Up (to Be a Man)," The Beach Boys
59. "If I Fell," The Beatles
60. "Last Kiss," J. Frank Wilson & The Cavaliers
65. "Girl (Why You Wanna Make Me Blue)," The Temptations
67. "Slow Down," The Beatles
77. "Mercy, Mercy," Don Covay & The Goodtimers
84. "Little Honda," The Hondells
86. "Come a Little Bit Closer," Jay & The Americans
90. "Tobacco Road," The Nashville Teens
It's a tradition for some radio stations to play it on the holiday, which is how I heard part of the song once. This likely goes back to closer to its original release, when it's said to have been big on freeform radio.I wouldn't call it a Thanksgiving tradition for me, although I do like the song.
The word's more benign definition is "a bundle of sticks or twigs bound together as fuel."It would probably be obvious if I saw it, but right now I have no idea what that's supposed to be.![]()
He said something to the effect that he'd rather make a fool of himself than have somebody else make a fool of him.Now that's cool.
Now I did have the film on in the background on Decades years back, so the song may have caught my attention then...but this felt different. It was like a fairly intense deja vu moment.I'm not familiar with that one.
One of my favorite of Chuck's classics.20. "You Never Can Tell," Chuck Berry
"From a Window," Billy J. Kramer w/ The Dakotas
I mean REALLY Paul. The song sounds SO Paul and I just love it. I had completely forgotten "From a Window" and how much I used to love it, until I clicked on the vid. Perfectly crafted little pop song.(Aug. 22; #23 US; #10 UK; written by John Lennon & Paul McCartney--really Paul)
One of those corny little pop tunes that I liked back in the day, but would have been loathe to admit I liked back in the day."Come a Little Bit Closer," Jay & The Americans
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