10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => KFOG's 10@10 => Topic started by: Big Fingers McGee on August 29, 2012, 10:00:07 AM
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I'll guess 1991.... and I'm off by 20.
Love it, but an LN: 3 Dog Night
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I'll guess 1991.
hope yer wrong. And we're on time today -- guess those complaints worked.
ooo! 1971!!
Booo! uber-LN 3DN.
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BOS1 Nilsson, "Gotta Get Up".
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HM Nilsson. Talented, but comparing him to the Beatles was a bit of a stretch.
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BOS2 Mother Nature
(http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-6WMXHPk15ZE/Tkiml87-epI/AAAAAAAACNQ/f3fJTG4B3Z4/s1600/mnature.jpg)
VHM the Stamp Eaters. -- those stamps could use some Chiffon margarine.
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HM Nilsson. Talented, but comparing him to the Beatles was a bit of a stretch.
Have you seen the docu about him? Highly recommended.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0756727/
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BOS3 Jonathan Edwards, layin' 'round the shanty, mama.
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BOS4 the 'oo, in tune.
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borderline LN: Yes. it's MY move, and I move to take a bathroom break.
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HM Nilsson. Talented, but comparing him to the Beatles was a bit of a stretch.
Have you seen the docu about him? Highly recommended.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0756727/
Per CC's reco earlier this year, I did. I remain of the opinion that comparing him to the Beatles was a bit of a stretch.
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borderline LN: Yes. it's MY move, and I move to take a bathroom break.
The polite term is "epic".
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
I'm guessing DC didn't sign off on that one. Definite BOS.
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08/29/12 - Wednesday! 1971!
(Commercial: Coca-Cola teaching the world to sing in perfect harmony)
1. Three Dog Night - Joy To The World
2. Harry Nilsson - Gotta Get Up
(Commerical: Chiffon Margarine "It's not nice to fool Mother Nature.")
3. Stampeders - Sweet City Woman
4. Jonathan Edwards - Shanty
(TV: All In the Family - "Those Were The Days")
5. The Who - Getting In Tune
6. Yes - I've Seen All Good People
(News: Busing)
7. Gil Scott-Heron - The Revoution Will Not Be Televised
(Commercial: RCA makes watching TV a whole new ballgame)
8. Led Zeppelin - Rock and Roll
9. Aretha Franklin - Rock Steady
(Sports: Willie Mays hits No. 629; Marichal leads the Giants to victory
10. Rod Stewart - (I Know) I'm Losing You
(TV: Electric Company - "Glad-Ly Gladly")
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
Senility: I thought this was on The Last Poets album, but I guess I was wrong.
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
Senility: I thought this was on The Last Poets album, but I guess I was wrong.
I think he did more than one version -- maybe that's what you were thinking of.
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
Senility: I thought this was on The Last Poets album, but I guess I was wrong.
I think he did more than one version -- maybe that's what you were thinking of.
Gil Scott-Heron did release "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" on both of his first two albums, 1970's "Small Talk at 125th and Lenox" and "Pieces of a Man" from 1971. He doesn't have an album called "The Last Poets" as far as I can tell, but there was another group by that name in 1970 that did an eponymous album and is considered to be a precursor to rap and hip hop much in the way that Gil Scott-Heron is. Their album does have a track called "When the Revolution Comes"--could that be what you're thinking of, Geoff?
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Segue of the day: Edith Bunker screeching her way through her duet on "Those Were The Days" (aka the theme from All In The Family) with Archie, followed by "Getting In Tune." Heh heh heh.
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OMGWTFLOL: uber-uber BOS5 Gil Scott Heron, "The Revolution will NOT be Televised, Bitches!"
Senility: I thought this was on The Last Poets album, but I guess I was wrong.
I think he did more than one version -- maybe that's what you were thinking of.
Gil Scott-Heron did release "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" on both of his first two albums, 1970's "Small Talk at 125th and Lenox" and "Pieces of a Man" from 1971. He doesn't have an album called "The Last Poets" as far as I can tell, but there was another group by that name in 1970 that did an eponymous album and is considered to be a precursor to rap and hip hop much in the way that Gil Scott-Heron is. Their album does have a track called "When the Revolution Comes"--could that be what you're thinking of, Geoff?
No, I'm just wrong. I also thought Gil Scott-Heron was in the Last Poets. My failure is complete! Maybe I'm just used to a different version.