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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Mike takes the opportunity to jump on his soapbox about big business and Madison Avenue.
It seems like I haven't heard that expression in a while.

Mike gets into how Jesus being the son of God was a fairy tale.
We had many such discussions when I was a kid. :rommie:

Once she's alone with Archie, Edith expresses her understanding that he didn't get his bonus because of the London shipment mistake he made at the plant, having put together what happened.
Not so unconscious after all. :D

Betty Bowerchuck (Arlene Golonka)
Ubiquitous character actor.

she's been seeing Ted for two weeks--secretly, because of a company policy Ted told her about that Mary isn't aware of.
No dating clowns or offspring of clowns?

including Betty...whom we'll apparently never see again.
An early attempt at a Georgette? Too bad, Arlene Golonka is adorable.

A man named Dolan (Anthony Zerbe)
In his annual appearance. :rommie:

(IMFers doing bad accents again in this one, including Outrageously French Jim.)
That sounds like fun. :rommie:

(For an island, this place has a pretty big mountainside in the background.)
Did Ricardo Montalban appear in the portfolio scene?

Dolan makes a call to Istanbul
Not Constantinople?

they try to strongarm Monsieur Jim for his keys, but he knocks them both down a peg with fisticuffs.
"Zut alors!"

Finch wanders around the island and finds evidence that he's in Georgia.
"What th--?! Bright red clay!"

In case it shows, this was one in which I had trouble following the nooks and crannies of the scheme.
This is why conventional law enforcement is useless in situations like this.

Maybe Jim Phelps owed them a favor.
Another untold crossover.

A quick image search turned up this screencap.
That's my kinda dowdy. :rommie:

I can see that. It's a pity, because taken separately from its fans and its overexposure, it's a fine piece of music.
Yeah, I don't doubt it.
 
55 Years Ago This Holiday Season

"A Marshmallow World," Dean Martin
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"What Can I Give You This Christmas," The Lettermen
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"If Every Day Was Like Christmas," Elvis Presley
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"We Need a Little Christmas," Percy Faith
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"Someday at Christmas," Stevie Wonder
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_______

An early attempt at a Georgette?
Ah, maybe. I thought there was a similar Ted girlfriend in later seasons.

That sounds like fun. :rommie:
They had him in the beanie and kerchief and striped shirt and white pants...he looked like he stepped out of a cartoon. The only thing missing was a curly mustache.

Not Constantinople?
Not since 1930.

Another untold crossover.
Or maybe the IMF caused the bus breakdown in the first place. [Barney crawls out of a secret compartment in the Partridge Family bus.]
 
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TBDBD has John and Yoko participating in public events in London on July 19 and August 11. It tends to cover international trips, and there's no indication that they were ever in New York or on the continent between those dates. However, the Beatles Bible entry for the concert says that John had been in New York a couple days before the concert and quotes John saying that he and Yoko were staying in the Virgin Islands at the time of the concert.

ETA: Beatlesdaily.com indicates that John and Yoko were in the Virgin Islands on July 24 attempting to gain custody of Kyoko.

It appears you were right. I just checked the entries for June-August in the online book The Beatles Day By Day: After The Break-Up, and John gives an interview where he says the story about him and Yoko fighting and John running to Europe was a story concocted by Allen Klein as a PR stunt.

How three different Beatle books I have repeat the same story and get it wrong is something else.
 
It appears you were right. I just checked the entries for June-August in the online book The Beatles Day By Day: After The Break-Up, and John gives an interview where he says the story about him and Yoko fighting and John running to Europe was a story concocted by Allen Klein as a PR stunt.

How three different Beatle books I have repeat the same story and get it wrong is something else.
I'd be interested in seeing that page if you have a direct link to it. I think I found the blog in question, but I'm not sure how to navigate to the next set of chronological entries.
 
John's mocking songs during rehearsals left and right, including that take of Paul's "Teddy Boy," which is here, in which he breaks into square dance instructions.

They dance around to, and sing some of their best songs and classics by others, in funny voices, but at no point does John say out loud to Paul that one of his songs is not rock and roll and therefore not appropriate for the band.

The contrast is even more stark in light of the fact that song’s like Maxwell’s and even When I’m 64 are very clearly not “rock and roll.” But John wouldn’t publicly attack any of Paul’s songs (especially to his face) . Joking around about Teddy Boy is no diff from what they did with dozens of songs in the doc, but those weren’t “attacks.”

I think for several reasons, George being the youngest, cutting his songwriting teeth with the band, J and P always being the Beatles’ songwriting “heavy lifters,” etc, John just didn’t have the same respect for George’s songs. George appeared to take what John said seriously. And then shortly thereafter left the band and has to have meeting with the guys before he returns. This was no coincidence.

I’ll try to go through episode 2 and see if I can find a time sig for you.
 
I’ll try to go through episode 2 and see if I can find a time sig for you.
It would've been in episode 1 if it happened before the George walkout. "I Me Mine" came up at Twickenham. I'm not sure they ever revisited it at Apple Studios. Recording a usable version of the song for the album was the subject of the Beatles' last group recording session in early 1970...and John wasn't there.
 
"A Marshmallow World," Dean Martin
Sounds like one of those dreams where you're trying to run but you can't.

"What Can I Give You This Christmas," The Lettermen
Sounds like they didn't really want to do a Christmas song.

"If Every Day Was Like Christmas," Elvis Presley
Sounds like Elvis needs a comeback.

"We Need a Little Christmas," Percy Faith
Ah, now this sounds like a Christmas song.

"Someday at Christmas," Stevie Wonder
And this sounds like Stevie. Good one.

Not since 1930.
Uh oh. No Captain America for you this time. :D

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50 Years Ago This Holiday Season

I already spotlighted "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" in a news post. Also in 1971, the King releases his second holiday album, Elvis Sings The Wonderful World of Christmas. A selection of highlights:

"O Come, All Ye Faithful"
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"It Won't Seem Like Christmas (Without You)"
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"Winter Wonderland"
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"Merry Christmas Baby"
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"Silver Bells"
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_______

Sounds like one of those dreams where you're trying to run but you can't.
I like this one--Dino's good for Christmas.

Sounds like they didn't really want to do a Christmas song.
I'm no Lettermen fan, but this is on one of my compilations.

Sounds like Elvis needs a comeback.
This is a decent one. I associate it with the songs on the album spotlighted above, because I have a CD compilation of the contents of his two Christmas albums, which includes this.

Ah, now this sounds like a Christmas song.
This one can help get me in the spirit most years.

And this sounds like Stevie. Good one.
This one is really stand-out.

Uh oh. No Captain America for you this time. :D
Eh, I'm just being like Cap is the rest of the time.
 
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I'd be interested in seeing that page if you have a direct link to it. I think I found the blog in question, but I'm not sure how to navigate to the next set of chronological entries.

I tried posting a link, but the book/quote is part of the Scribd website and it won't let me. (Or I'm not doing it correctly.)
I'll try and copy the page and post the text later.
 
"O Come, All Ye Faithful"
Not one of my favorite Christmas songs.

"It Won't Seem Like Christmas (Without You)"
This definitely has that classic Elvis sound.

"Winter Wonderland"
This is a good song, and I get a kick out of that Kingly flourish at the end. :rommie:

"Merry Christmas Baby"
I said, I enjoyed this one a lot, yes, I did, I did, I did.

"Silver Bells"
This is a good one.

Eh, I'm just being like Cap is the rest of the time.
:rommie:
 
55 Years Ago This Week

December 25
  • Marionette sci-fi series Thunderbirds airs its final episode on ITV in the United Kingdom with a Christmas special.
  • All four Beatles spend Christmas at home in the south of England.

December 26 – The first Kwanzaa was celebrated by Dr. Maulana Karenga (formerly Ronald M. Everett) and other members of the black nationalist US (United Slaves) Organization. The Kwanzaa celebration is held during the seven days from December 26 to January 1, with each day celebrating a particular principle. Seven years later, a newspaper article from the Los Angeles Times Syndicate would provide the first national news about an alternative to Christmas and Hanukkah, and by the end of the century, Kwanzaa would be celebrated by over 13,000,000 worldwide.

December 28 – China conducted its fifth nuclear test, and a subsequent analysis of the radioactive fallout from the test indicated that China had developed a "triple stage bomb", considered the precursor to a hydrogen bomb because the second stage produced a fusion reaction necessary to trigger the thermonuclear explosion. The 300-kiloton bomb, the United States Atomic Energy Commission concluded, was also the "dirtiest" of the bombs, maximizing both radiation and fallout. The next test, on June 17, 1967, would be China's detonation of a hydrogen bomb.

December 29 – In New Orleans, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ordered three school systems in Alabama and four in Louisiana to desegregate their classrooms before the beginning of the next school year, and to immediately raise the quality level of all-black schools to that of all-white schools.

December 31
  • East German Premier Walter Ulbricht discusses negotiations about German reunification.
  • Eight paintings worth millions of pounds are stolen from Dulwich Picture Gallery in London, but are recovered locally within a week.
  • The Congolese government takes over the Union Minière du Haut Katanga.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "I'm a Believer," The Monkees
2. "Snoopy vs. The Red Baron," The Royal Guardsmen
3. "Winchester Cathedral," The New Vaudeville Band
4. "That's Life," Frank Sinatra
5. "Sugar Town," Nancy Sinatra
6. "Mellow Yellow," Donovan
7. "Tell It Like It Is," Aaron Neville
8. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," The Temptations
9. "A Place in the Sun," Stevie Wonder
10. "Good Thing," Paul Revere & The Raiders
11. "Devil with the Blue Dress On / Good Golly Miss Molly," Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
12. "Single Girl," Sandy Posey
13. "Good Vibrations," The Beach Boys
14. "You Keep Me Hangin' On," The Supremes
15. "Standing in the Shadows of Love," Four Tops
16. "Talk Talk," The Music Machine

19. "Words of Love," The Mamas & The Papas

21. "Whispers (Getttin' Louder)," Jackie Wilson
22. "I Need Somebody," ? & The Mysterians
23. "Tell It to the Rain," The Four Seasons
24. "Mame," Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass
25. "Lady Godiva," Peter & Gordon
26. "Mustang Sally," Wilson Pickett
27. "East West," Herman's Hermits
28. "I've Passed This Way Before," Jimmy Ruffin
29. "Help Me Girl," Eric Burdon & The Animals
30. "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago," The Yardbirds
31. "I Got the Feelin' (Oh No No)," Neil Diamond
32. "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone," The Monkees
33. "Nashville Cats," The Lovin' Spoonful
34. "(Come 'Round Here) I'm the One You Need," The Miracles

36. "Try a Little Tenderness," Otis Redding
37. "Georgy Girl," The Seekers
38. "Colour My World," Petula Clark

40. "It Tears Me Up," Percy Sledge
41. "(We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet," The Blues Magoos

45. "I'm Ready for Love," Martha & The Vandellas
46. "A Hazy Shade of Winter," Simon & Garfunkel
47. "98.6," Keith

50. "Stop, Stop, Stop," The Hollies
51. "Where Will the Words Come From?," Gary Lewis & the Playboys

53. "Knock on Wood," Eddie Floyd
54. "I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)," The Electric Prunes

61. "How Do You Catch a Girl," Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs

71. "Knight in Rusty Armour," Peter & Gordon

74. "Green, Green Grass of Home," Tom Jones

84. "It's Now Winter's Day," Tommy Roe
85. "Pushin' Too Hard," The Seeds
86. "Music to Watch Girls By," The Bob Crewe Generation

90. "Kind of a Drag," The Buckinghams

92. "Let's Fall in Love," Peaches & Herb

100. "Gimme Some Lovin'," The Spencer Davis Group


Leaving the chart:
  • "But It's Alright," J. J. Jackson (13 weeks)
  • "Coming on Strong," Brenda Lee (13 weeks)
  • "I'm Your Puppet," James & Bobby Purify (14 weeks)
  • "Poor Side of Town," Johnny Rivers (15 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"Pushin' Too Hard," The Seeds
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(Dec. 24; #36 US)

"Let's Fall in Love," Peaches & Herb
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(#21 US; #11 R&B)

"Music to Watch Girls By," The Bob Crewe Generation
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(#15 US; #2 AC)

"Gimme Some Lovin'," The Spencer Davis Group
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(#7 US; #2 UK; #244 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

"Kind of a Drag," The Buckinghams
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(#1 US the weeks of Feb. 18 and 25, 1967)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 19, episode 16
  • Gilligan's Island, "Gilligan Goes Gung-Ho"
  • The Monkees, "Son of a Gypsy"
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Last Harbor Raid: Part 2"
  • Batman, "The Sandman Cometh"
  • Batman, "The Catwoman Goeth"
  • Star Trek, "Shore Leave"
  • The Green Hornet, "The Hornet and the Firefly"
  • The Wild Wild West, "The Night of the Lord of Limbo"
  • Tarzan, "The Fire People"
  • The Time Tunnel, "The Revenge of Robin Hood"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Art for Hogan's Sake"
  • The Man from U.N.C.L.E., "The Take Me to Your Leader Affair"
  • 12 O'Clock High, "Graveyard"
  • Get Smart, "Kiss of Death"

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki pages for the month or year and Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day, with minor editing as needed.

_______

Not one of my favorite Christmas songs.
I like the arrangement for this one, especially the way it kicks in at the "Sing, choirs of angels" line.

This definitely has that classic Elvis sound.
This is one of several original songs that distinguish this album's contents from his 1957 Christmas album.

This is a good song, and I get a kick out of that Kingly flourish at the end. :rommie:
And that's shades of his renditions of holiday standards on the 1957 album.

I said, I enjoyed this one a lot, yes, I did, I did, I did.
The King in good bluesy form. I read that this one was issued as a single with "O Come, All Ye Faithful" on the flip side.

This is a good one.
An enjoyable rendition of a holiday standard that isn't generally a favorite.

:beer: Garry Crimble, all! :beer:
 
Merry Saturnalia!
Wreath.gif


"Pushin' Too Hard," The Seeds
I never heard this before. It sounds like a neighborhood band who accidentally got on the radio. :rommie:

"Let's Fall in Love," Peaches & Herb
Peaches & Herb were around in 66. Wow. They're still boring, though.

"Music to Watch Girls By," The Bob Crewe Generation
I do kind of remember this.

"Gimme Some Lovin'," The Spencer Davis Group
Classic Rock.

"Kind of a Drag," The Buckinghams
Also an Oldies Radio Classic.
 
50 Years Ago This Week

December 26 – A former U.S. teacher, Patrick Critton, hijacked Air Canada Flight 932 after it took off from Thunder Bay, Ontario on a flight to Toronto, was flown to Cuba as he demanded, and released the crew at the airport in Havana. Police in Cuba arrested Critton and he would spend eight months in a Cuban prison, but Canada's extradition requests were denied. For the next 29 years, Critton lived and worked in Cuba, in the African nation of Tanzania, and, from 1994 to 2001, back in the United States, without assuming a new identity. On September 10, 2001, he was arrested after a Canadian detective Googled the name "Patrick Critton". He would serve almost two years of a five-year prison sentence and then be deported back to the U.S.

December 27 – The first of eight Soyuz-M rockets was launched by the Soviet Union, as part of the Kosmos 470 mission, with the specific payload of a Zenit 4 MT photoreconnaissance satellite. The rockets would continue to be used successfully until 1976.

December 28 – "The Dæmons" became the very first Doctor Who serial to be rebroadcast by the BBC complete, in omnibus form. The broadcast attracted 10.5 million viewers, giving the show its highest rating since 1965.

December 29
  • The United Kingdom gives up its military bases in Malta.
  • Boys in the Sand, the first gay porn film, made its theatrical debut, at the 55th Street Playhouse in New York City.

December 30 – The first McDonald's in Australia opens in Yagoona, Sydney.

January 1
  • Kurt Waldheim of Austria became the fourth Secretary General of the United Nations, succeeding U Thant. Waldheim served two five-year terms. It would only be after he became President of Austria in 1986 that the world would learn that Waldheim had been a Nazi officer being investigated by the UN War Crimes Commission.
  • In a match between the two highest ranked college football teams in the United States, the Number 1 Nebraska Cornhuskers beat the Number 2 Alabama Crimson Tide in the Orange Bowl, 38–6, to clinch the mythical national college football championship determined by polls taken by the Associated Press and by United Press International.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Brand New Key," Melanie
2. "American Pie," Don McLean
3. "Family Affair," Sly & The Family Stone
4. "An Old Fashioned Love Song," Three Dog Night
5. "Got to Be There," Michael Jackson
6. "Have You Seen Her," The Chi-Lites
7. "Scorpio," Dennis Coffey & The Detroit Guitar Band
8. "Sunshine," Jonathan Edwards
9. "Cherish," David Cassidy
10. "Hey Girl" / "I Knew You When", Donny Osmond
11. "All I Ever Need Is You," Sonny & Cher
12. "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)," The New Seekers
13. "You Are Everything," The Stylistics
14. "Let's Stay Together," Al Green
15. "Respect Yourself," The Staple Singers
16. "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (in Perfect Harmony)," The Hillside Singers
17. "Day After Day," Badfinger
18. "Drowning in the Sea of Love," Joe Simon
19. "Clean Up Woman," Betty Wright
20. "One Monkey Don't Stop No Show Part I," Honey Cone
21. "Sugar Daddy," Jackson 5
22. "Where Did Our Love Go," Donnie Elbert
23. "Theme from 'Shaft'," Isaac Hayes
24. "Baby I'm-a Want You," Bread
25. "Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves," Cher

27. "Stones" / "Crunchy Granola Suite", Neil Diamond
28. "Hey Big Brother," Rare Earth
29. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," Rod Stewart w/ Faces
30. "Superstar (Remember How You Got Where You Are)," The Temptations

36. "Anticipation," Carly Simon
37. "It's One of Those Nights (Yes Love)," The Partridge Family

39. "Behind Blue Eyes," The Who
40. "Levon," Elton John

43. "Never Been to Spain," Three Dog Night

46. "Make Me the Woman That You Go Home To," Gladys Knight & the Pips

55. "Black Dog," Led Zeppelin
56. "Stay with Me," Faces

58. "Those Were the Days," Carroll O'Connor & Jean Stapleton (as the Bunkers)

60. "Pretty as You Feel," Jefferson Airplane

66. "Fire and Water," Wilson Pickett
67. "Don't Say You Don't Remember," Beverly Bremers
68. "Without You," Nilsson
69. "Truckin'," The Grateful Dead

73. "Superstar" / "Bless the Beasts and Children", Carpenters

75. "Tightrope Ride," The Doors

81. "Precious and Few," Climax

87. "Bang a Gong (Get It On)," T. Rex

89. "The Lion Sleeps Tonight," Robert John


92. "Ain't Understanding Mellow," Jerry Butler & Brenda Lee Eager


Leaving the chart:
  • "Desiderata," Les Crane (12 weeks)
  • "A Natural Man," Lou Rawls (18 weeks)
  • "Rock Steady," Aretha Franklin (9 weeks)
  • "Your Move (I've Seen All Good People)," Yes (14 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"Make Me the Woman That You Go Home To," Gladys Knight & the Pips
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(Dec. 18; #27 US; #3 R&B)

"Stay with Me," Faces
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(#17 US; #6 UK)

"Bang a Gong (Get It On)," T. Rex
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(#10 US; #1 UK)

"The Lion Sleeps Tonight," Robert John
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(#3 US; #6 AC)

"Precious and Few," Climax
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(#3 US; #6 AC)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Odd Man In"
  • Adam-12, "Pick-Up"
  • The Brady Bunch, "The Teeter-Totter Caper"
  • The Partridge Family, "Where Do Mermaids Go?"
  • The Odd Couple, "And Leave the Greyhound to Us?"
  • Love, American Style, "Love and the Contact Lens / Love and the Doctor's Honeymoon / Love and the Motel Mixup"
  • All in the Family, "The Elevator Story"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "The Five-Minute Dress"
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Bride"

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki pages for the month or year.

_______

Merry Saturnalia!
Wreath.gif
It runs rings around other holidays.

I never heard this before. It sounds like a neighborhood band who accidentally got on the radio. :rommie:
That's why they call it garage rock. This one, I believe, got on the R&R Hall of Fame list, which was my reason for getting it.

Peaches & Herb were around in 66. Wow. They're still boring, though.
Okay, but no, not exciting.

I do kind of remember this.
Think it came up in another context...Crewe did the soundtrack of a movie I reviewed or something.

Classic Rock.
Yep.

Also an Oldies Radio Classic.
Now I thought it came up before that you'd never heard of these guys...

George appeared to take what John said seriously. And then shortly thereafter left the band and has to have meeting with the guys before he returns. This was no coincidence.
Okay, I found it. It was hard to even tell what was going on without subtitles on. What John did there may have gotten under George's skin, though George tried to take it with dry humor at the time. But the walk-out occurred two days later, and more immediately after Paul had been criticizing him for "vamping" over John's part just prior to the performance after which he walked out. And this was not the first incident of George chaffing at Paul's instructions...the famous scene that was in the Let It Be film of George snapping back to Paul that he'd play however Paul wanted him to play had occurred on an earlier day.

Still need to finish Part III...maybe later today. The ex has been raving about the rooftop performance.

ETA: Ex's landlord update--He's back home now, with 24-hour live-in care, but still doing stuff like salting the driveway.
 
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"Pushin' Too Hard," The Seeds
I never heard this before. It sounds like a neighborhood band who accidentally got on the radio.

My local classic rock station plays this almost every Saturday as part of their 'Psychedelic Sixties' program.

"Gimme Some Lovin'," The Spencer Davis Group

Something not mentioned in the Wikipedia entry but can be found in the liner notes of the Steve Winwood box set is that Dave Mason and Jim Capaldi are playing on this as well as the next Spencer Davis single 'I'm A Man'; which lead to the formation of 'Traffic'.

"Bang a Gong (Get It On)," T. Rex

The background vocals on this are provided by Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan of the folk-rock band 'The Turtles'. They were in a legal dispute with their label 'White Whale' over the name 'The Turtles', so they were performing as 'Flo And Eddie'.
 
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I won't bore you all with my Christmas present list, but I did get the Paul McCartney lyric omnibus thing. :D

"Make Me the Woman That You Go Home To," Gladys Knight & the Pips
"Make you the--? That I--? Wait, what? Say that again?"

"Stay with Me," Faces
Sweet-talkin' Rod Stewart. :rommie: Not his best, but he really had a small window of good stuff.

"Bang a Gong (Get It On)," T. Rex
Ah, I love this. Uber Classic.

"The Lion Sleeps Tonight," Robert John
Weirdly appealing.

Precious and Few," Climax
Nice one. Oldies Radio Classic, and one of the few songs about toucan romance.

It runs rings around other holidays.
And then falls on its face to sleep it off. :rommie:

That's why they call it garage rock.
True. :rommie:

This one, I believe, got on the R&R Hall of Fame list, which was my reason for getting it.
Interesting. I didn't think it was that good.

Think it came up in another context...Crewe did the soundtrack of a movie I reviewed or something.
That would explain it.

Now I thought it came up before that you'd never heard of these guys...
The band, probably, but I definitely know that song. It got a lot of airplay.

ETA: Ex's landlord update--He's back home now, with 24-hour live-in care, but still doing stuff like salting the driveway.
Good for him, I think, unless he's doing it against medical advice. Is the live-in care permanent?

My local classic rock station plays this almost every Saturday as part of their 'Psychedelic Sixties' program.
Interesting. Must be one of those regional things, because I'm sure I've never heard it before.
 
Something not mentioned in the Wikipedia entry but can be found in the liner notes of the Steve Winwood box set is that Dave Mason and Jim Capaldi are playing on this as well as the next Spencer Davis single 'I'm A Man'; which lead to the formation of 'Traffic'.
One of those well-known acts with at least one well-known song that didn't have much of a chance to come up in immersive retro context for lack of a major US single or an entry on either Rolling Stone list.

I won't bore you all with my Christmas present list, but I did get the Paul McCartney lyric omnibus thing. :D
That looks interesting...didn't know it existed.

"Make you the--? That I--? Wait, what? Say that again?"
Notable for being by Gladys Knight & the Pips.

Sweet-talkin' Rod Stewart. :rommie: Not his best, but he really had a small window of good stuff.
I find it kind of funny that Rod and Ron Wood were together in a band called Faces, considering they look so much alike.

Ah, I love this. Uber Classic.
In this case, the album made that RS list, but the single didn't make the other one. My original exposure was the Power Station cover in the '80s.

Weirdly appealing.
Is it? This version? This was the surprise entry for me this week, and while part of me wants to get it for completeness, having Robert John's other major single, it seems like a completely unnecessary cover that's only virtue would have been exposing the song to a new generation at the time.

Nice one. Oldies Radio Classic, and one of the few songs about toucan romance.
It's "Beg pardon?" time again.

Interesting. I didn't think it was that good.
The one notable bit for me is that the organ part reminds me of the Doors, whose first album release is coming up next week in the 55th anniversary timeline--Jim's comin' around again!

That would explain it.
And looking it up, the movie in question was Barbarella.

Good for him, I think, unless he's doing it against medical advice. Is the live-in care permanent?
I'm not sure offhand, but probably indefinite.
 
That looks interesting...didn't know it existed.
I could have sworn it came up in this thread before. I would have supplied a link.

Notable for being by Gladys Knight & the Pips.
It did sound nice.

I find it kind of funny that Rod and Ron Wood were together in a band called Faces, considering they look so much alike.
I wonder if that was their thought. :rommie:

In this case, the album made that RS list, but the single didn't make the other one. My original exposure was the Power Station cover in the '80s.
A decent cover. But I'm amazed that the original didn't make the list.

Is it? This version? This was the surprise entry for me this week, and while part of me wants to get it for completeness, having Robert John's other major single, it seems like a completely unnecessary cover that's only virtue would have been exposing the song to a new generation at the time.
I actually didn't realize it was a cover, but, yeah, still weirdly appealing. :rommie:

It's "Beg pardon?" time again.
"Precious and few are the moments we toucans share." :rommie:

And looking it up, the movie in question was Barbarella.
Which I have on DVD, so there you go.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing

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Hawaii Five-O
"Is This Any Way to Run a Paradise?"
Originally aired December 21, 1971
Wiki said:
McGarrett searches for an ecology fanatic whose pranks are harmless until he threatens the lives of those he feels are the cause of the islands' pollution.

The suspect first strikes by causing a fire at an incinerator plant that involves having plugged the top of the stack with a custom-fitted metal plate. Kono's actually pleased at the choice of target. Up top, Danno finds a figurine of Kaili, the Hawaiian god of battle, containing a typewritten message attributed to the deity. McGarrett goes to the museum to consult Curator Sumi (Edward Fernandez). A witness describes how one man climbed up the stack bearing the large circular metal plate, indicating a perp of considerable strength. In the next incident, a garbage truck dumps its load on the steps of the capital. McGarrett talks to Environmental Defense League official Clyde Finley (Fred Ball), who indicates that a lot of his membership support this Kaili and delivers the titular question.

Kaili's next target is a crop-dusting plane, which he shoots down with a shotgun, pulling the badly injured pilot out afterward and leaving his calling card. Steve considers this attempted murder and takes the investigation that much more seriously. Finley now volunteers his cooperation, so Five-O knocks on the doors of a list of EDL members, eliminating physically unlikely suspects. Five-O HQ gets an older hippie visitor (Don Lev) who confesses to being Kaili, but Steve considers him to be an unlikely suspect. The team narrows things down to a construction man; an athletic high school shop teacher; a gas station owner who openly owns a shotgun; and a man who's been threatening to demolish an apartment building that blocks his view of Diamond Head.

During a talk show broadcast concerning industrial pollution, we see Kaili type a death list that includes the panelists: Senator Bob Patterson (Fred Titcomb) and industrialists Edgar Hackbart (Mitch Mitchell), T. Emory Grace (Ted Scott), and Lai Han (Richard Morrison). The list is distributed and McGarrett gathers the potential targets to warn them and assign protection. Based on Kono's insight of Kaili's nature, Steve picks Lai Han--the strongest man--as the most likely target. At night, a man swims against a strong current up to Han's shoreline estate, sneaks up to the owner's bedroom clad only in trunks, and snaps his neck. Based on this additional feat of strength, Steve and Kono agree that it has to be the shop teacher whom the latter spoke to, Aku (Nephi Hanneman), who slips away during a search of the school after knocking out a posted police officer. In the school's basement, Danno finds a typewriter that matches the one used to write the notes.

Steve goes to the next likely target, Grace, wanting to use him as bait, but he won't cooperate. Senator Patterson proves more willing, so he goes on TV to address Kaili in a critical manner. The senator proceeds to attend a luncheon with Five-O among the crowd. The team then leads and tails him as he proceeds to the dedication of a sugar plant...outside of which Aku waits in the cane fields. Aku cuts off the senator's car with a dump truck and, when fired on by McGarrett, returns fire while fleeing into the fields. Squad car units are called in and surround the field. McGarrett calls for Aku's surrender via bullhorn, then has Kono address him in Hawaiian. Aku sets the field on fire, which Kono intuits is his way of committing suicide, shedding a tear and tossing a Kaili figurine found in the truck into the blaze.

_______

The Brady Bunch
"The Not-So-Rose-Colored Glasses"
Originally aired December 24, 1971
Wiki said:
Jan accidentally takes someone else's bicycle and her grades are falling. It is learned her eyesight is failing and she needs glasses – which she refuses to wear. She bicycles without her glasses, but crashes her bike destroying the portrait of the kids Mike intended as an anniversary present for Carol. Jan tells the kids the photographer lost the negative and they have to be photographed again for the replacement portrait. Mike realizes it is a new photograph – Jan wears her glasses in the new portrait. Jan says she was not wearing her glasses at the time of her accident and that she sold her bicycle to pay for the replacement portrait. In the subplot, Carol and Mike are trying to hide anniversary presents from each other.

The episode opens with the times-signy sight of Jan riding home on a banana seat bike, and sets up the anniversary present business as Alice feigns a toothache to keep Carol occupied while Mike takes the kids to the photographer. Mike gets a call from a playground that Jan stole another girl's bike. Jan is oblivious that the similar-looking bike isn't hers until the parents point out minor differences. (It seems like she could have made this mistake without needing glasses.) Mike proceeds to smuggle the kids, dressed up for the occasion, to the studio of comically disorganized photographer Gregory Gaylord (Robert Nadder). The parents later get a letter from one of Jan's teachers about her having difficulty and her grades slipping, and when talking to her about it notice that Jan can't read the letter. Learning that Jan sits in the back of the class further indicates an eyesight issue. Jan's brought home in her new specs and the younger kids have to be coached not to make fun, but they slip and make her feel worse. Marcia catches Jan taking her glasses off before going out to meet a boy at the library. On her way back, without the glasses, Jan rides right into the portrait, which is wrapped in paper in the garage, being hidden from Carol.

The boys are unsuccessful at attempting to repair the picture and frame, so the kids try to put together enough money to have another picture taken without letting any of the adults in on it. When they're unsuccessful, Jan offers to come up with the bread. The kids sneak out in groups and rendezvous at the studio wearing the same good clothes...which Alice and Carol notice, though the kids offer them impromptu excuses. They go out of their way to recreate the original picture, but nobody notices that Jan's now wearing her glasses. The anniversary arrives and the folks are surprised with gifts. The portrait is the first opened, and Carol notes that Jan wore her glasses. Mike takes Jan aside and she confesses. Mike, expressing concern that she could have hurt herself in a worse accident, grounds Jan from riding her bike, and she explains that she sold it to pay for the new portrait. Carol hangs the portrait in the parents' bedroom, and Alice reveals that during her diversion of Carol, the dentist found three cavities.

_______

The Odd Couple
"Felix the Calypso Singer"
Originally aired December 24, 1971
Wiki said:
When Nancy can't make it, Oscar takes Felix on a Caribbean vacation.

Felix is giving Oscar and Nancy a little bon voyage party at the apartment when Nancy gets called in for an emergency. Oscar is upset and feels like he has to take the vacation, so he gets the idea to ask Felix to come. In luggage still packed from a previous trip, Oscar finds a wrapped Christmas present that he forgot to give Felix the previous year: a box of assorted cheeses.

Felix has difficulty on the small plane ride that's their last leg of the trip to the island of Jacaloma. The pilot, Pepe (Vito Scotti), is also their cabbie, hotel bellhop, and hotel musician. As the guys are settling in, Oscar gets a call from Nancy that she found somebody to take her place. Felix is reluctantly willing to return to the States, but the flight off the island is delayed by Pepe getting stinking drunk, so Felix spends the night in the lobby.

Oscar offers to spend the next day with Felix seeing the local sights, but Felix confronts him with what he's learned of what a pathetic backwater Oscar managed to find--which includes the island's "museum" being a shelf with a few local artifacts displayed right there in the hotel bar. Nancy arrives and Felix hangs around to guilt Oscar about having to explore what little the island has to offer alone. Nancy takes pity on Felix and tries to get him involved in what she and Oscar are doing, but Oscar arranges for Felix to sing in Pepe's calypso band. While Felix hastily prepares for his performance...

Drunk patron (Jack Perkins): I'm Jesse Skolnik, who are you?
Oscar: Ringo Starr.​

Felix ends up singing a song that ribs Oscar by name. When he brings Jesse into the song, Oscar ends up having to deck Jesse to stop him from going after Felix. Before leaving, Felix admits that if their roles had been reversed and Gloria had been in Nancy's place, he would've dumped Oscar in a minute; and Pepe invites Felix to join the band for an encore performance.

As I recall, MeTV was using Felix's song in one of its spots for the show years back.

_______

I could have sworn it came up in this thread before. I would have supplied a link.
A search for "omnibus" only turns up a mention of a series of those for Kirby's Fourth World.

BTW, you're missing half the fun if you go reprint. The Fourth World titles largely ran through the phase in which DC was embracing a 52-page format to deal with the need to increase prices, so each issue of the titles includes a Golden Age Simon/Kirby reprint...the Newsboy Legion in Jimmy Olsen, Sandman in Forever People, Manhunter in New Gods, and the Boy Commandos in Mister Miracle.

A decent cover. But I'm amazed that the original didn't make the list.
I also meant to mention that while this was T. Rex's only big hit in the States, they were already into a decent run of big hits in the UK at this point. They often come up in Beatles lore as a band that was being seen as the next big thing after the Fabs on that side of the pond.

I actually didn't realize it was a cover, but, yeah, still weirdly appealing. :rommie:
Apparently it has a long list of recorded versions going back to 1939 under different titles, "Mbube" and "Wimoweh". The definitive r&r-era version, and apparently the first to use the title "The Lion Sleeps Tonight," was the chart-topper by the Tokens in 1961.

"Precious and few are the moments we toucans share." :rommie:
Knowing who I was dealing with, I should have caught that...
 
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