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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Mixer, have you ever featured a Jackie Wilson song in the thread?
He only had sporadic crossover single success at the Top 30 level in the period that I've been covering, but 1963's "Baby Workout" may have come up in 55th anniversary business--at that point I think I was only spot-featuring songs from that timeframe--and "Whispers (Gettin' Louder)" definitely came up in '66.

Ah, this is sad. She did some great stuff back in the early 70s. My friend who died a few months ago would have been heartbroken about this. She kept close tabs on Olivia while she was able.
This is one of those that hits a little harder and closer to home than the next inevitable celebrity death. :(

I see that Lamont Dozier has also passed, at 81. I don't know anything about him as an individual, but his name definitely comes up a lot as a songwriter of noteworthy hits. The list of songs with his co-writing credit that made the 2004 Rolling Stone list is substantial:

"Where Did Our Love Go" (The Supremes)
"Baby I Need Your Loving" (Four Tops)
"Baby Love" (The Supremes)
"Nowhere to Run" (Martha & The Vandellas)
"I Can't Help Myself" (Four Tops)
"Reach Out I'll Be There" (Four Tops)
"You Keep Me Hangin' On" (The Supremes)
"Standing in the Shadows of Love" (Four Tops)
"Band of Gold" (Freda Payne)​

They're always stringing that guy along.
[Insert "Sad Horns" clip]

I kind of remember that scene. :rommie:
It turned up quite a few hits in an image search, include pics of mannequins wearing it in some sort of exhibit.

So they captured the new Mister Big?
[Goes back and looks.] Yes.

That seems random. Is there some special connection with Beirut in the modeling industry?
They'd established that Beirut was one of the possible salon locations that KAOS was planning to smuggle the info to, which they were trying to deduce from learning the method of transport (which typically triggered the "what/where/how" gag).

Just my usual thing that James Brown just keeps on going and we just check in on him from time to time. :rommie:
Ah, got it.

Interesting. Of course, I had lots of exposure to Neil Diamond because of my Mother's crush.
Don't know if that's come up before.
 
This is one of those that hits a little harder and closer to home than the next inevitable celebrity death. :(
She had a long, hard road.

The list of songs with his co-writing credit that made the 2004 Rolling Stone list is substantial:
It sure is. Great stuff, and hopefully worth a lot of residuals.

[Insert "Sad Horns" clip]
I'm surprised my Anne Francis joke didn't get a reaction. :rommie:

It turned up quite a few hits in an image search, include pics of mannequins wearing it in some sort of exhibit.
A Get Smart exhibit? I'll have to look for that.

[Goes back and looks.] Yes.
Mister Bigs don't last very long. Good thing CONTROL doesn't have that problem with Chiefs. :rommie:

Don't know if that's come up before.
I thought I mentioned it, but maybe not. Yeah, those 8-Tracks got plenty of play. Not that I minded, because I liked his stuff, too. Just maybe for not entirely the same reasons. :rommie:
 
_______

Ah, the Old 55th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing Trick!

_______

Get Smart
"The Last One In Is a Rotten Spy"
Originally aired May 7, 1966
Season 1 finale
Wiki said:
Max is contacted by a member of the Russian swim team who has a list of KAOS agents and wants to use the list to defect. Unfortunately, Max can't remember her name, so he has to go undercover as a swimming trainer to discover the defector. 99 and the Chief join him as they attempt to ferret out the potential defector. Alice Ghostley guest stars as one of the members of the Russian contingent.

Agent 81 (Dave Cameron) is killed by an enemy agent (John Milford) in a phone booth. Max subsequently takes a call from 81's lover on the swim team via a miniature phone concealed in his full-size phone. Max fumbles his attempt to record the conversation, can't find anything to write on, and has trouble understanding the woman's Russian name. After she hangs up, he unthinkingly whips a notebook out of his robe to write down the location.

Going undercover with the Chief and 99 at the hotel where the swim teams are staying, Max finds that all of the girls on the swim team have similar-sounding names. A follow-up call from the source leads Max, pressed by the Chief, to dive into the pool fully clothed for a promised message. Max later finds the message in his sandwich instead, but only after he eats the half with the names of the enemy agents.

The contact makes another call to arrange a nighttime meeting, and Max eats the list again in a struggle with 81's killer, Greco, who's with the Russian contingent. After an attempt to sneak into the dormitory results in Max being escorted out, he finds the list in his pocket, but Max insists on going back to the dormitory the next morning to protect the source. There he learns that his source is Verna (Alice Ghostley), the girls' coach, whom Max has been attempting to evade. Greco confronts the two of them with a rifle, but Verna TV Fus him and they run to the pool area. Max and Greco end up in a struggle in the pool, which Max wins when he deploys a floatie with a gun concealed in it.

Contrary to the summary, I don't think KAOS was ever mentioned. Verna was just offering a list of enemy agents. For that matter, I don't think Verna's nationality was ever named, either, but that much was pretty obvious.

_______

Get Smart
"Anatomy of a Lover"
Originally aired September 17, 1966
Season 2 premiere
Wiki said:
KAOS reprograms Hymie to murder the Chief. After Max foils the attempt, and unable to go through with dismantling him, he hides Hymie in his apartment. Posing as Max's cousin, Hymie meets the Chief's niece who immediately becomes smitten with the robot. KAOS once again reprograms Hymie, and this time, he is out to kill Max!

A KAOS agent infiltrates CONTROL HQ and reprograms Hymie (Dick Gautier's second of six appearances in the role) to go after the Chief in his office, breaking through the door and smashing the desk. Max makes unusually quick and efficient work of stopping him by plugging his AC wire into a DC wall socket, and the Chief declares that Hymie has to be destroyed. Assigned to do the job, Max gently questions his friend and helps him escape to hide out in Max's apartment, where the robot gets to work trying to keep house. Getting some time off after handing over a bag supposedly containing the Hymie's parts, Max studies the manual to figure out how the robot was tampered with. Along the way, the odd couple start having domestic squabbles. Meanwhile, Max's temporary neighbor and the Chief's niece, Phoebe (Laurel Goodwin), borrows 10 pounds of sugar from Max's "cousin" and takes a liking to him.

Max is brought in to answer to the Chief over the disassembled washtub that he turned over, and the infiltrator strikes in Max's apartment, getting to Hymie again. Hymie promises to take Phoebe out, so Max and 99 accompany them on a double date. Getting Phoebe aside, Max tries to explain Hymie's true nature to Phoebe. When it's time to pay the check, Hymie literally grabs the waiter and ends up unsuccessfully shooting himself in the head. Back at Smart's apartment, CONTROL security man Kirsch (King Moody) reveals himself as the infiltrator, holding the agents and robot at gunpoint, but Hymie take out Kirsch, his reprogramming overcome when the double agent flicks cigar ashes on the floor. "Hymie's programming for neatness was stronger than his programming for evil." The Chief drops in and finds out about Hymie and his niece.

In the coda, having learned that Hymie is a robot, Phoebe transfers her affection to Max, and the Chief declares his preference for Hymie.

_______

I'm surprised my Anne Francis joke didn't get a reaction. :rommie:
I Capped it.

A Get Smart exhibit? I'll have to look for that.
Well, a display of some sort. I didn't go to the pages, so I'm not sure what the nature of it is.

ETA: Apparently dolls / action figures...shot very close, so at a glance I was assuming they were life-sized.
 
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Revisiting June 2, 1972...
  • Major Roger Locher, whose F-4D had been shot down on May 10, was finally rescued after 23 days behind enemy lines. He was 60 miles (97 km) northwest of Hanoi and within 5 miles (8.0 km) of the heavily defended Yên Bái Air Base. 7th Air Force General John Vogt canceled the entire strike mission set for Hanoi that day and dedicated all available resources to rescuing Lochar. The direct task force of 119 aircraft successfully pulled him out of the jungle without any losses. His time behind enemy lines and successful rescue was a record for the Vietnam War. It was the farthest penetration of an American search and rescue operation into North Vietnam.
I was just watching an episode of Dogfights on Military History with a segment concerning this operation. One of the F-4 pilots flying support scored the first and only known supersonic gun kill in history.
 
Max subsequently takes a call from 81's lover on the swim team via a miniature phone concealed in his full-size phone.
Gotta keep work and personal life separate.

A follow-up call from the source leads Max, pressed by the Chief, to dive into the pool fully clothed for a promised message.
"Undercover? I thought you said underwater."

After an attempt to sneak into the dormitory results in Max being escorted out
Where's 99? Isn't she undercover, too?

Verna (Alice Ghostley)
A Samantha Stevens relative. So she was 81's girlfriend?

but Verna TV Fus him
You go, Alice.

Contrary to the summary, I don't think KAOS was ever mentioned. Verna was just offering a list of enemy agents. For that matter, I don't think Verna's nationality was ever named, either, but that much was pretty obvious.
She's from an unidentified Eastern Bloc country. CONTROL was covering for the IMF that week.

Hymie (Dick Gautier's second of six appearances in the role)
Only six? I would have guessed more.

and the Chief declares that Hymie has to be destroyed.
I think that was a rash decision made in the heat of the moment of a near-death experience.

Max gently questions his friend and helps him escape to hide out in Max's apartment
Awww. Max is a big softie. :adore:

Max studies the manual to figure out how the robot was tampered with.
Reading the manual is always a last resort. :rommie:

the Chief's niece, Phoebe (Laurel Goodwin)
Yeoman Colt!

Max is brought in to answer to the Chief over the disassembled washtub that he turned over
"He's a Steampunk robot, Chief."

"Hymie's programming for neatness was stronger than his programming for evil."
He started out as a Roomba and worked his way up.

In the coda, having learned that Hymie is a robot, Phoebe transfers her affection to Max, and the Chief declares his preference for Hymie.
Was Phoebe in on the whole espionage thing?

I Capped it.
Good, I wasn't sure if you were that familiar with Twilight Zone. :rommie:

ETA: Apparently dolls / action figures...shot very close, so at a glance I was assuming they were life-sized.
Ah, okay.

I was just watching an episode of Dogfights on Military History with a segment concerning this operation. One of the F-4 pilots flying support scored the first and only known supersonic gun kill in history.
He shot down a supersonic jet?
 
Where's 99? Isn't she undercover, too?
I think she only wanted to talk to Max. Defector stuff.

So she was 81's girlfriend?
Apparently, though this was barely established in the first phone call.

Was Phoebe in on the whole espionage thing?
I'm not sure.

He shot down a supersonic jet?
Yes, a MiG-19; but the history-making part is that it was a gun kill made at supersonic speed.

It's particularly ironic that an F-4 Phantom made this historic kill. While Major Phil Handley was flying a later model that included an interior cannon, the F-4 was notorious for having been designed not to have a gun--somebody having prematurely decided that missiles had made dogfighting obsolete. The problem was that the missiles weren't that reliable yet. This meant that an F-4 pilot could shoot off his entire payload of radar-guided and heat-seeking missiles unsuccessfully (as happened with Handley here), and then had to disengage because he had nothing to fight with.
 
I think she only wanted to talk to Max. Defector stuff.
Makes sense.

Yes, a MiG-19; but the history-making part is that it was a gun kill made at supersonic speed.
Impressive, especially a half century ago.

It's particularly ironic that an F-4 Phantom made this historic kill. While Major Phil Handley was flying a later model that included an interior cannon, the F-4 was notorious for having been designed not to have a gun--somebody having prematurely decided that missiles had made dogfighting obsolete. The problem was that the missiles weren't that reliable yet. This meant that an F-4 pilot could shoot off his entire payload of radar-guided and heat-seeking missiles unsuccessfully (as happened with Handley here), and then had to disengage because he had nothing to fight with.
Never bring a missile to a gunfight. Or something.
 
Going through Beat Club's YouTube page, I've found a lot of performances from 1972. I'm going to post a few in the coming days, some from classic bands and some from obscure bands that should have been bigger.
 
I'd thought I would start first with a couple of bands that share a common ancestry, Poco and Manassas; both being formed after the demise of Buffalo Springfield.

After Stephen Stills and Neil Young left to form Crosby, Stlls & Nash and Young went to work with Crazy Horse, the remaining members of Buffalo Springfield formed Poco. Poco is one of the missing links in the country rock trains that leads from the latter-day Byrds to the Eagles, with stops including the Flying Burrito Brothers and Michael Nesmith and the First National Band.

Poco - C'mon (1972) - YouTube

Randy Meisner would go on to play with the Eagles and Timothy B. Schmit would replace him, while Richard Furay would go on to form the Souther Hillman Furay band with J.D. Souther and Chris Hillman

After Crosby, Stills, Nash (& Young) broke up, Stills launched a solo career and formed Manassas; and Manassas features Chris Hillman from The Byrds and Flying Burrito Brothers on guitar and vocals.

Manassas (feat. Stephen Stills) - 03 - Bound To Fall (1972) - YouTube
 
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_______

Don't Tell Me It's More 55th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing!

_______

Get Smart
"Strike While the Agent Is Hot"
Originally aired September 24, 1966
Wiki said:
A CONTROL agent contacting Max is shot on duty. Before he dies, he puts Max in charge of the "Spy's Guild" labor negotiations.

Max makes contact with Agent 47 (Pat McCaffrie) at an airport via adjacent phone booths, trying to glean intel about counterfeit money being smuggled into the country to fund KAOS. 47 is shot by two men using the old silenced revolver trick, and when Max goes into his booth, 47 is more interested in prepping Max to take over for him as head negotiator of the Guild for Surviving CONTROL Agents, making him take the oath and showing him the secret handshake. Finally, with his dying breath, 47 leaves a cryptic clue.

Max chairs a secret labor meeting of agents who are all hiding in pieces of furniture in a storage room. The Chief crashes the gathering with the help of Fang, and when dragged into discussing labor issues, ends up trying to reason with pieces of furniture that don't have agents in them. Later, with a potential strike impending, 47's clue leads to a children's book, causing Max to go to a bookstore manned by Madame Verna (Lisa Pera) and a fellow KAOS agent (Dino Natali), who think he's their contact and draw his attention to a specific page, but CONTROL can't make anything out of it. On a follow-up visit, Max is given another book and page number of interest before a third agent (Alan Dexter) identifies Smart while he's on his way out.

The third agent confronts Max at his apartment at gunpoint and explains how the page numbers were the clue, to a location in the store's bookshelves. Max's apartment gadgetry works for once and the agent ends up being shot in a struggle over his gun. The dying KAOS agent describes his organization's benefits for wounded and killed agents in great detail, which makes Max green with envy. Max and the Chief sneak into the bookstore at night and find a bus depot locker key at the indicated location, only to be confronted by the second agent and a fourth. The opposing agents engage in a gunfight around the shelves, and Max and the Chief are caught at gunpoint by the second agent when Max notes that it's almost midnight and insists that he'll be going on strike unless the Chief signs the new contract...which the KAOS agent contributes to, before the Chief relents. Then Max takes the agent's gun, thinking that it's out of bullets, only to find that there was one left.

_______

Get Smart
"A Spy for a Spy"
Originally aired October 1, 1966
Wiki said:
The Chief is kidnapped by KAOS Vice President of Public Relations and Terror, Siegfried (Bernie Kopell, in his first appearance in this recurring role). Max retaliates by kidnapping KAOS's top assassin. After this, a war of kidnappings takes place, which culminates in Max and Siegfried being the only ones who haven't been kidnapped.

A magician is shot by Siegfried backstage, so that the KAOS agent can take his place entertaining at the restaurant where Max and 99 are throwing a birthday party for the Chief, which includes a cake with a message in invisible icing. Siegfried invites the Chief to participate in the vanishing booth trick and causes them both to disappear, leaving behind a note crediting KAOS. Max takes charge of CONTROL against the protests of lab head Carlson (Stacy Keach) and administrative head Standish (Pitt Herbert)...which involves an unsuccessful call to the man at the top, who's engaged in an emergency meeting at his ranch. Max then receives a call from Siegfried arranging for a nighttime meeting at a park. After concealed weapons start falling out of each of their trench coats, they take turns checking equivalent weapons...Max lending Siegfried a switchblade to toss in the pile when he doesn't have one. Siegfried wants the X-11--having to tell Max what it is, natch. When the exchange takes place, Max exchanges a dummy X-11 for a dummy Chief.

Max goes after top KAOS assassin Danker (James Lanphier), engaging in a running firefight against his briefcase gun, in which 86 eventually manages to gain the advantage. When Max calls Siegfried to arrange an exchange, the competitive kidnappings quickly ensue, with Max using a tally board to keep track of who's got which agents. Eventually he and Siegfried have to arrange a negotiation meeting because each has all of the other's operatives, and they discuss exchanging the agents a pair at a time, starting with Danker and the Chief. At the exchange, Siegfried and Max each attempt to gain an advantage on the other via ledgerdemain, but neither succeeds...

Max: The old lighter in the gun in the rabbit trick!​

And Max almost blows the negotiations by offering to re-exchange the Chief and Danker as hostages, but ends up leaving with the Chief anyway. The mass exchange takes place between two buses in a parking lot, with Siegfried covertly swiping CONTROL's bus driver.

There's a running gag in which Max repeatedly breaks his shoe phone when returning Siegfried's German-style heel click.

_______

I Asked You Not to Tell Me That!

_______

Never bring a missile to a gunfight. Or something.
At least not crappy missiles that don't work right.

After Stephen Stills and Neil Young left to form Crosby, Stlls & Nash and Young went to work with Crazy Horse, the remaining members of Buffalo Springfield formed Poco. Poco is one of the missing links in the country rock trains that leads from the latter-day Byrds to the Eagles, with stops including the Flying Burrito Brothers and Michael Nesmith and the First National Band.
I didn't realize there was a Buffalo Springfield / Poco connection.

Today I'd thought I'd do 'Pioneers Of Rock'
If all of this were on an American show, I'd say it was a sign of '50s retro coming in, but it's hard to say when it's coming from overseas.

_______

55 Years Ago This Week Overflow Special

Also recent and new on the chart the week of August 12, 1967:

"Glory of Love," Otis Redding
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(July 29; #60 US; #19 R&B)

"Run, Run, Run," The Third Rail
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(Aug. 5; #53 US)

"Groovin'," Booker T. & The M.G.'s
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(Aug. 5; #21 US; #10 R&B)

"You Know What I Mean," The Turtles
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(Aug. 5; #12 US)

"Things I Should Have Said," The Grass Roots
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(Aug. 12; #23 US)
 
If all of this were on an American show, I'd say it was a sign of '50s retro coming in, but it's hard to say when it's coming from overseas.

Funny you should mention that. In the summer of 1972, England and Europe experienced a '50s rock and roll revival, and a lot of the '50s pioneers from America saw their old singles chart again, culminating in 'The London Rock and Roll Show', held 2-August-1972 in Wembley Stadium.

The London Rock and Roll Show - Wikipedia
 
Today I'd thought I'd do 'Pioneers Of Rock'
That's great stuff. The Everly Brothers are looking very 70s there. It's funny how some of these clips have the visual effects in place, and others just have the blue screen.

intel about counterfeit money being smuggled into the country to fund KAOS.
That's what they get for outsourcing.

47 is more interested in prepping Max to take over for him as head negotiator of the Guild for Surviving CONTROL Agents, making him take the oath and showing him the secret handshake.
You'd think a spy union, of all things, would be more prepared for this eventuality.

The Chief crashes the gathering with the help of Fang
Fang!
Hello.gif


The dying KAOS agent describes his organization's benefits for wounded and killed agents in great detail, which makes Max green with envy.
This show cracks me up. :rommie:

Max and the Chief are caught at gunpoint by the second agent when Max notes that it's almost midnight and insists that he'll be going on strike unless the Chief signs the new contract...which the KAOS agent contributes to, before the Chief relents.
Max plays hardball. :rommie:

Then Max takes the agent's gun, thinking that it's out of bullets, only to find that there was one left.
In all the confusion, he kind of lost count.

which includes a cake with a message in invisible icing.
The old tell him it's got invisible icing when you really just bought a generic cake at the last minute trick.

Max takes charge of CONTROL against the protests of lab head Carlson (Stacy Keach) and administrative head Standish (Pitt Herbert)...
Again, you'd think that CONTROL would have a line of succession in place for this sort of thing.

an unsuccessful call to the man at the top, who's engaged in an emergency meeting at his ranch.
Cute. :rommie:

the competitive kidnappings quickly ensue, with Max using a tally board to keep track of who's got which agents.
Was 99 captured? Is she even on the show anymore? :rommie:

I Asked You Not to Tell Me That!
:rommie:

"Glory of Love," Otis Redding
Not his best.

"Run, Run, Run," The Third Rail
That's kinda cute.

"Groovin'," Booker T. & The M.G.'s
What just happened? I feel unfulfilled.

"You Know What I Mean," The Turtles
Also not their best.

"Things I Should Have Said," The Grass Roots
Ditto.
 
We're jumping back to 1967 for Jimi Hendrix's second appearance on Beat Club. I chose the second appearance over the first because he was more restrained in his first appearance. With this one, the Experience is in full bloom.

The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Stone Free | Audio glitches (1967) - YouTube

The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Purple Haze (1967) - YouTube (Listen as Jimi sings "'Scuse me while I kiss this guy', while he looks at Noel Redding. Could it be that Jimi himself is the originator of the misunderstood lyric.)

The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Hey Joe (1967) - YouTube
 
55 Years Ago This Week

August 13
  • The rock band Fleetwood Mac made its debut, appearing at the National Jazz and Blues Festival in Windsor, Berkshire, with Peter Green, Mick Fleetwood, Jeremy Spencer and (instead of John McVie), bassist Bob Brunning.
  • Two women were killed by bears, in separate attacks on the same night, while camping at the Glacier National Park in Montana. The unusual incidents, the first bear attacks in the history of the park, would call national attention to both the dangers of leaving garbage out in the open and the problems associated with the decreasing size of wild habitats and the increasing number of people encroaching upon them. At 12:45, summertime park employees Julie Helgesen and Roy Ducat were in sleeping bags when they were mauled by a bear that had apparently been attracted by leftover sandwiches; Hegelsen was dragged away and died hours later. Twenty miles away, Michele Koons, a 19-year-old camper from San Diego, was camping with four fellow employees at the park and was unable to get out of her sleeping bag before a different bear dragged her away and killed her. The tragedy would later become the basis for a bestselling book, Night of the Grizzlies by Jack Olsen.

August 14 – All but one of the United Kingdom's pirate radio stations played music for their final day, then signed off before the new Marine Broadcasting Offences Act went into effect at midnight. The new law was an extension of the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949 and although it could not prohibit boats from broadcasting from outside Britain's territorial waters, it did prohibit those stations from selling advertising within the British Isles. Only one station, Radio Caroline, would continue to broadcast the next day. With the shutdown of the pirate stations, BBC Radio 1 would go on the air on September 30 with a popular music format.

August 15 – The Chicago Picasso, a 50-foot-high metal Cubist sculpture created by Pablo Picasso, was unveiled in front of the Chicago Civic Center (now the Richard J. Daley Center).

August 16 – Access to the Temple Mount, venerated as a holy site in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, was placed fully under the control of the Jerusalem Islamic Waqf by Israel's Ministry of Religion. The action came the day after the Israeli Defense Forces' Chief Rabbi, Major General Shlomo Goren had led a group of soldiers in prayer at the site and declared his intention to build a synagogue on the mount, overlooking Old Jerusalem and recently captured from Jordan during the Six-Day War. The civilian Israel Police would continue to guard the site, and to ban prayer there by non-Muslims, half a century later.

August 18
  • Pope Paul VI announced a drastic reform of the governance of the Roman Catholic Church and of Vatican City. The Roman Curia was reorganized "into something similar to a modern government cabinet". The Pope's Secretary of State, Cardinal Amleto Cicognani, was given expanded powers and the title of "papal secretary", with expanded powers analogous to those of a Prime Minister. For the first time, an annual budget was to be drawn up, under a new office to be known as the "Prefecture of Economic Affairs of the Holy See".
  • Israel opened its border crossing at the Allenby Bridge of the Jordan River and began the first of 14 days during which repatriation would be allowed for the 167,500 Palestinian refugees who had applied to return to their homes in the West Bank. On the first day, only 355 displaced people, most of them women and children, or elderly residents, came across the border. Both Israel and Jordan blamed each other for the small number of crossings.
  • Boston Red Sox outfielder Tony Conigliaro suffered a severe head injury after being struck in the left temple by a baseball thrown by pitcher Jack Hamilton of the visiting California Angels. "Tony C.", who had led the American League in home runs in 1965, sustained a damage to his left eye and would miss the rest of 1967 and all of the 1968 season, before making a comeback in 1969 and hitting 20 home runs. Conigliaro's injury "encouraged the use of the batting helmet with the addition of the earflap", which would become mandatory in Major League Baseball by 1983.

August 19
  • NASA published "the first extensive chart of the hidden side of the Moon ever to be compiled", in advance of the August 22 meeting of the International Astronomical Union in Prague. Most of the features were unlabeled, but the map did use two names that had been proposed by the Soviet Union for features identified when the USSR took the far side's first pictures in 1959, Mare Moscoviense and the crater Tsiolkovsky. Two other features had been named by astronomers who had seen portions of the fringe of the far side through telescopes, the Mare Orientale (described by German astronomer Julius Franz in 1906) and the Jules Verne crater.
  • Another son, Jason, is born to Ringo Starr and his wife, Maureen, at Queen Charlotte's Hospital, London.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "All You Need Is Love," The Beatles
2. "Light My Fire," The Doors
3. "Pleasant Valley Sunday," The Monkees
4. "I Was Made to Love Her," Stevie Wonder
5. "Baby, I Love You," Aretha Franklin
6. "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," The Buckinghams
7. "Ode to Billie Joe," Bobbie Gentry
8. "Cold Sweat, Part 1," James Brown
9. "A Whiter Shade of Pale," Procol Harum
10. "A Girl Like You," The Young Rascals
11. "Silence Is Golden," The Tremeloes
12. "Carrie-Anne," The Hollies
13. "My Mammy," The Happenings
14. "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," Frankie Valli
15. "Words," The Monkees
16. "Windy," The Association
17. "Heroes and Villains," The Beach Boys
18. "To Love Somebody," Bee Gees
19. "Thank the Lord for the Night Time," Neil Diamond
20. "Reflections," Diana Ross & The Supremes
21. "You're My Everything," The Temptations
22. "Let the Good Times Roll & Feel So Good," Bunny Sigler
23. "Hypnotized," Linda Jones
24. "Apples, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie," Jay & The Techniques
25. "White Rabbit," Jefferson Airplane
26. "Little Bit o' Soul," The Music Explosion
27. "Come Back When You Grow Up," Bobby Vee & The Strangers
28. "Fakin' It," Simon & Garfunkel
29. "More Love," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
30. "(I Wanna) Testify," The Parliaments
31. "San Franciscan Nights," Eric Burdon & The Animals

33. "Soul Finger," The Bar-Kays
34. "Brown Eyed Girl," Van Morrison
35. "Up, Up and Away," The 5th Dimension

37. "I Take It Back," Sandy Posey
38. "Baby You're a Rich Man," The Beatles

46. "Funky Broadway," Wilson Pickett
47. "Make Me Yours," Bettye Swann
48. "You Know What I Mean," The Turtles

53. "You Only Live Twice," Nancy Sinatra
54. "There Is a Mountain," Donovan
55. "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," Jackie Wilson
56. "Groovin'," Booker T. & The M.G.'s

58. "The Letter," The Box Tops
59. "Things I Should Have Said," The Grass Roots

62. "Bluebird," Buffalo Springfield

66. "Gimme Little Sign," Brenton Wood

70. "Glory of Love," Otis Redding

72. "Run, Run, Run," The Third Rail

76. "I Dig Rock and Roll Music," Peter, Paul & Mary

80. "I Had a Dream," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay

82. "Lady Friend," The Byrds


88. "Knock on Wood," Otis & Carla

92. "Get on Up," The Esquires

94. "Love Bug Leave My Heart Alone," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas


Leaving the chart:
  • "C'mon Marianne," The Four Seasons (10 weeks)
  • "Come on Down to My Boat," Every Mother's Son (15 weeks)
  • "For Your Love," Peaches & Herb (8 weeks)
  • "I Like the Way," Tommy James & The Shondells (7 weeks)
  • "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," Scott McKenzie (12 weeks)
  • "Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)," Janis Ian (12 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"Knock on Wood," Otis & Carla
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(Aug. 12; #30 US; #8 R&B; #35 UK)

"Love Bug Leave My Heart Alone," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas
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(#25 US; #14 R&B; #56 UK)

"I Had a Dream," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay
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(#17 US)

"Get on Up," The Esquires
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(#11 US; #3 R&B)

"I Dig Rock and Roll Music," Peter, Paul & Mary
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(#9 US)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Saint, "The Russian Prisoner" (US season finale)

_______

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.

_______

culminating in 'The London Rock and Roll Show', held 2-August-1972 in Wembley Stadium.

The London Rock and Roll Show - Wikipedia
Very timely.

The Everly Brothers are looking very 70s there.
I recall them looking very similar in an early '70s Sullivan appearance.

This show cracks me up. :rommie:
That was a particularly funny bit of absurdity.

In all the confusion, he kind of lost count.
Pretty much...except in this case, his mistake was aided by the gun having actually misfired, making it seem empty.

The old tell him it's got invisible icing when you really just bought a generic cake at the last minute trick.
:D

Again, you'd think that CONTROL would have a line of succession in place for this sort of thing.
One of the gags was that nobody knew who the Chief's immediate superior was, because it was top secret.

Was 99 captured?
Yes, she was the last agent captured, while Max was manning the tally board and on the phone with her...upon which he pulled out a handcuffed female KAOS agent who flirted with him (Barbro Hedstrom).

Not his best.
It's got that distinctly Otis sound, but is otherwise undistignuished.

That's kinda cute.
Another odd bit of business that was on Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968.

What just happened? I feel unfulfilled.
Booker T. don't need no stinkin' lyrics!

Also not their best.
Both decent inclusions, but yeah, relative filler among their hits.

We're jumping back to 1967 for Jimi Hendrix's second appearance on Beat Club.
:mallory:

One does not simply audio glitch Jimi Hendrix...

Loved this bit of YT commentary...
anthony janes said:
Jimi didn’t die! He just finished touring earth
 
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The rock band Fleetwood Mac made its debut, appearing at the National Jazz and Blues Festival in Windsor, Berkshire, with Peter Green, Mick Fleetwood, Jeremy Spencer and (instead of John McVie), bassist Bob Brunning.

Their rather unwieldy title at the time was 'Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac featuring Jeremy Spencer'. The reason John McVie didn't play with Fleetwood Mac for the first month or so, was that he had a rather lucrative gig as the bass player for John Mayall's Bluebreakers and he didn't want to give it up for an unknown commodity, seeing as he was engaged to Christine Perfect (McVie) of Chicken Shack. It was all rendered moot when Mayall fired his current lineup in order to take the Bluebreakers in a different direction featuring a horn section and a young Mick Taylor on lead guitar.
 
One does not simply audio glitch Jimi Hendrix...

I don't think I've mentioned this but, seeing as I live in the greater Seattle area, I went to the Museum of Pop Culture (formerly the Experience Music Project) for my 49th birthday, and located inside, as one of the centerpiece attractions, is a replica of Jimi's Electric Ladyland Studio, complete with the original mixing desk/console.
 
(Listen as Jimi sings "'Scuse me while I kiss this guy', while he looks at Noel Redding. Could it be that Jimi himself is the originator of the misunderstood lyric.)
Maybe it's not as misunderstood as we thought. :rommie:

The audience in these videos kind of reminds me of Night of the Living Dead. :rommie:

The civilian Israel Police would continue to guard the site, and to ban prayer there by non-Muslims [error?], half a century later.
Yeah, that's weird. There was also that bit about the "Jerusalem Islamic Waqf," which I don't understand.

Boston Red Sox outfielder Tony Conigliaro suffered a severe head injury after being struck in the left temple by a baseball thrown by pitcher Jack Hamilton of the visiting California Angels.
I kind of remember this. I certainly remember his name. He was quite a local hero back in the day.

"Knock on Wood," Otis & Carla
Good song.

"Love Bug Leave My Heart Alone," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas
That was weird, but pretty good.

"I Had a Dream," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay
This was pretty good, too.

"Get on Up," The Esquires
Not great.

"I Dig Rock and Roll Music," Peter, Paul & Mary
I always loved this one. It was on the PP&M 8-Track that we had. I love how they do little imitations of other artists. :rommie:

I recall them looking very similar in an early '70s Sullivan appearance.
I always picture them in their nice suits. :rommie:

One of the gags was that nobody knew who the Chief's immediate superior was, because it was top secret.
Some guy with orange hair had wandered off with the organizational chart.

Yes, she was the last agent captured, while Max was manning the tally board and on the phone with her...upon which he pulled out a handcuffed female KAOS agent who flirted with him (Barbro Hedstrom).
It's a trick, Max!

Booker T. don't need no stinkin' lyrics!
:rommie:

Loved this bit of YT commentary...
If there's a Rock'n'Roll Heaven, you know they've got a hell of a band.
 
50 Years Ago This Week

August 13 – Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark returned from North Vietnam, where he had traveled as a private individual as part of a factfinding group. Clark said that he had confirmed that the United States was bombing hospitals and dikes, and that he had been told that American prisoners "will be released immediately when we stop this senseless, murderous bombing and end the war and get out, get home, and get to the business of building the peace and giving happiness to little children around the world".

August 14 – In the worst aviation accident in Germany to date, all 156 people on board an Ilyushin Il-62 of East German Interflug were killed when the aircraft crashed near Königs Wusterhausen.

August 15 – Deep Purple, British Rock Band, played live first night in Japan, in Osaka.

August 16 – King Hassan II of Morocco was returning home from a meeting with President Pompidou of France, when his Boeing 727 was fired upon by the rebels within the Moroccan Air Force. Although several people were wounded, the King escaped injury, and the pilot was able to land after falsely stating that Hassan had been killed. While the attempted assassination was taking place, the royal palace was being bombed by others in the plot. As it turned out, Defense Minister Mohammed Oufkir had conspired, with others in the Moroccan armed forces, to stage a coup d'état and to set up a republic. Oufkir died the next day. Officially, it was a suicide, but there were rumors that Hassan himself had executed his former right-hand man. As punishment, Oufkir's family was imprisoned for nearly 20 years.

August 18 – A "hotline" between South Korea and North Korea was established, as telephone links between Seoul and Pyongyang were reopened for the first time since the 1950 outbreak of the Korean War.

August 19
  • The Midnight Special was shown for the first time on television, beginning at 1:00 in the morning on most NBC stations. NBC's experiment, aiming an early morning program at the 18- to 35-year-old audience that might stay up late on Friday nights, proved a success, and the rock concert series ran until 1981.
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  • Bennet Hanna of Peach Springs, Arizona, was killed when he backed up his car too far on Hualapai Hilltop after dropping friends off at the Havasupai trailhead. The car fell 500 feet (150 m) off the edge of the Grand Canyon.
  • The first daytime episode of the second incarnation of American game show The Price Is Right was taped at CBS Television City, to be aired on September 4, 1972.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Alone Again (Naturally)," Gilbert O'Sullivan
2. "Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)," Looking Glass
3. "Long Cool Woman (in a Black Dress)," The Hollies
4. "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right," Luther Ingram
5. "I'm Still in Love with You," Al Green
6."Where Is the Love," Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway
7. "Daddy, Don't You Walk So Fast," Wayne Newton
8. "Hold Your Head Up," Argent
9. "Coconut," Harry Nilsson
10. "Goodbye to Love," Carpenters
11. "The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A.," Donna Fargo
12. "You Don't Mess Around with Jim," Jim Croce
13. "Too Late to Turn Back Now," Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose
14. "School's Out," Alice Cooper
15. "How Do You Do?," Mouth & MacNeal
16. "Motorcycle Mama," Sailcat
17. "The Guitar Man," Bread
18. "Baby Don't Get Hooked on Me," Mac Davis
19. "Sealed with a Kiss," Bobby Vinton
20. "Lookin' Through the Windows," Jackson 5
21. "Rock and Roll, Part 2," Gary Glitter
22. "Happy," The Rolling Stones
23. "Join Together," The Who

25. "Lean on Me," Bill Withers
26. "Back Stabbers," The O'Jays

29. "Beautiful Sunday," Daniel Boone
30. "Hold Her Tight," The Osmonds

33. "Saturday in the Park," Chicago
34. "Layla," Derek & The Dominos
35. "Day by Day," Godspell
36. "Pop That Thang," The Isley Brothers
37. "Power of Love," Joe Simon

39. "Popcorn," Hot Butter
40. "Go All the Way," Raspberries

43. "Run to Me," Bee Gees
44. "Honky Cat," Elton John

46. "Conquistador," Procol Harum
47. "Black & White," Three Dog Night

49. "The City of New Orleans," Arlo Guthrie

51. "Everybody Plays the Fool," The Main Ingredient
52. "Starting All Over Again," Mel & Tim

55. "Play Me," Neil Diamond

57. "Speak to the Sky," Rick Springfield

61. "Ben," Michael Jackson

65. "Starman," David Bowie

67. "Get on the Good Foot, Pt. 1," James Brown

69. "Nights in White Satin," The Moody Blues

71. "My Ding-a-Ling," Chuck Berry

72. "Garden Party," Rick Nelson & The Stone Canyon Band

90. "Burning Love," Elvis Presley

95. "Freddie's Dead (Theme from 'Superfly')," Curtis Mayfield


Leaving the chart:
  • "Outa-Space," Billy Preston (17 weeks)
  • "Rocket Man," Elton John (15 weeks)
  • "Take It Easy," Eagles (11 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Freddie's Dead (Theme from 'Superfly')," Curtis Mayfield
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(#4 US; #2 R&B)

"Burning Love," Elvis Presley
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(#2 US; #7 UK)

_______

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

_______

I don't think I've mentioned this but, seeing as I live in the greater Seattle area, I went to the Museum of Pop Culture (formerly the Experience Music Project) for my 49th birthday, and located inside, as one of the centerpiece attractions, is a replica of Jimi's Electric Ladyland Studio, complete with the original mixing desk/console.
Ah, to be in a replica of Abbey Road when the Beatles worked there...

Yeah, that's weird. There was also that bit about the "Jerusalem Islamic Waqf," which I don't understand.
That's a thing. Looking closer, it seems that the timeline entry wasn't in error, as the location in question is a mosque, though the way it's written makes it sound like it is.

Good song.
An enjoyable rendition in its own right, but I don't think it improves upon the Eddie Floyd original.

That was weird, but pretty good.
Sounds like they're trying to sound like the Supremes again.

This was pretty good, too.
This is where their string of hits starts getting obscure and relatively forgettable.

Not great.
This is pretty enjoyable. It's interesting how the one horn flourish sounds a lot like "Knock on Wood".

I always loved this one. It was on the PP&M 8-Track that we had. I love how they do little imitations of other artists. :rommie:
Generally enjoyable for that, but their compliments are pretty backhanded.

Some guy with orange hair had wandered off with the organizational chart.
Eh?
 
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