10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => Capital Gold, other Internet Radio => Topic started by: RGMike on June 27, 2011, 10:40:13 AM
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TANC and OMGWTF: Listening to the Boardwalk and they're playing a Michael Bolton cover of TTD's "Sign Your Name" -- aaaack!! Sundaygal complained about the original being snoozy but this is beyond the pale.
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So I'm listening to Marshall Crenshaw's WFUV show -- his first one, from 6/18/11, which was just archived and made available, download-wise. And it some wild-ass stuff. Like Little Steven's show on acid, or something. It's an hour each week.
http://wfuv.streamguys.us/cgi-bin/colinker.cgi?colink=130825094932285
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JJ gives Foster Sylvers a ticket for illegal parking. But it's just a MISS-de-mee-nurr. Meanwhile JB's across da tracks, wit da long-haired hippies and da afro-blacks.
And James returns in the '60s hour to "Think". But oh, Etta James! "Fool That I Am" -- *swoon*.
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Atlantic2NG's UK retro-chart is from June 25th 1974!
#40: wacky Sedaky in the rain -- 6 months before it hit in the US. And Karen & Richard won't last a day without Paul Williams.
NTM: "Central Park Arrest" by Thunderthighs, a First Choice-sounding group, who it turns out were the female backing vocalists on Mott the Hoople's "Roll Away the Stone" (!)
Wow: Ronnie Lane, "The Poacher", also NTM. Tons of tunes on this chart I've never heard; I may have to stick with it, esp given that AL's a rerun today.
Another Mott connection: Lynsey dePaul with one of those retro-Spector-sounding things that the Brits were swooning over in the early '70s: "Ooh I Do".
one of my all-time 10cc faves: "Wall St Shuffle"
No more Auggie Dogness! EJ's son goes down.
wow, Cockney Rebel's "Judy Teen" and Alan Price's brilliant "Jarrow Song".
I never knew the Drifters' mid-'70s UK comeback hits (like "Back Row of the Movies") were on Bell records -- their homage-to-the-Brill Building sound is very much like the early Dawn hits, also on Bell. Gotta be the same writers/producers, no? (ETA: no -- written by Roger Greenaway!)
Haven't heard Leo Sayer's "One Man Band" in ages. And R Dean Taylor's "Ghost in My House" will always be the "why didn't the 4 Tops record this one?" song.
boogity-boogity! "the Streak" was a UK hit too. Don't look, Lord & Lady Ethel!
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Listening to to Dan Ingram airchecks on Rewound Radio -- amazing stuff. They're running one from late '72 or thereabouts: "I Am Woman" is the #1 record, and these are uncut recordings -- commericals included -- so we just got a Stiller & Meara spot for Blue Nun wine. Awesome.
ETA: classic Ingram, as he intros Billy Joel's first hit: "they called him 'piano man'... he was grossly obese... but he had a dazzling smile"
more great stuff: a summer-of-'72 aircheck. Gaz would've appreciated hearing Ingram make fun of Ray Sawyer singing "Sylvia's Mother" -- "stop sniveling, you wimp!"
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Listening to to Dan Ingram airchecks on Rewound Radio -- amazing stuff. They're running one from late '72 or thereabouts: "I Am Woman" is the #1 record, and these are uncut recordings -- commericals included -- so we just got a Stiller & Meara spot for Blue Nun wine. Awesome.
ETA: classic Ingram, as he intros Billy Joel's first hit: "they called him 'piano man'... he was grossly obese... but he had a dazzling smile"
more great stuff: a summer-of-'72 aircheck. Gaz would've appreciated hearing Ingram make fun of Ray Sawyer singing "Sylvia's Mother" -- "stop sniveling, you wimp!"
Worth noting in response to Gaz's FB question, that I didn't hear the Firefall "You are the Woman" line. Nor the "Carole King sings to her bra" either.
But here's one I didn't remember that was posted on the NYRMB... Dan played a commercial back in the day for Wetson's Hamburgers (a chain that was a main rival of McDonald's in the early '60s).
"The spot was all about how a young mother could save money by eating at Wetson's. How thrifty it was. At the end of the spot, the woman comes on and says, 'my husband hands me a dollar and says blow it.' Ingram comes on and says, 'here's another dollar, honey, blow it again.' " :o :o :o
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Atlantic 2NG's retro-chart today is from July 1983 -- around the time of my first visit to London, so there should be many a flashback in this first hour.
Roman Holliday's "Don't Try to Stop It" is NTM and a catchy little ditty. Toto's "I Won't Hold You back" is a dreadful ballad.
The MaryJane Girls got a surprise on da roof! Lawd! "hurry up and come" indeed.
Highest debut of the week: Iron f--in' Maiden! DUUUUDE!
OMFG: Tom Robinson's extraordinary "War Baby" -- I bought this 45 in London that summer, it was all over the radio over there. Didn't do a damn thing over here but wow, what a great song.
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TANC: 10 minutes after seeing Steve Zahn do a HIGH-larious white-boy version of "Sex Machine" on the season finale of Treme, I turn on KPOO and JJ's playing the JB orig.