10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => KFOG's 10@10 => Topic started by: RGMike on May 31, 2013, 09:55:08 AM
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Renee in Yosemite again.
and it's a nice surprise: '65 begins with the fantabulous Beau Brummels. instant BOS1
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1965! From December 7th...
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(http://images.45cat.com/the-beau-brummels-laugh-laugh-autumn.jpg)
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1965! From December 7th...
**SPOILER ALERT **
1. The Beau Brummels - Laugh, Laugh
2. The Zombies - She's Not There
(News: Malcolm X)
3. The Impressions - People Get Ready.
(News: Will the Beatles go out of style? How long will they last?)
4. The Beatles - Ticket To Ride
5. Bob Dylan - Maggie's Farm
6. The Byrds - I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better
(TV: Get Smart)
7. Sam The Sham and the Pharaohs - Woolly Bully
8. Otis Redding - I've Been Loving You Too Long
(Commercial montage: Mars presents Tom Sweet and his Milky Way machine [Stan Freberg]/7Up/V8 [Jonathan Winters]/Pepsi/Buick/Ford/Winston)
9. The Loving' Spoonful - Do You Believe in Magic?
10. The Who - My Generation
a "classic" worthy of the appellation. One of the better sets of the RR era, I daresay.
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(http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/4186RZK8HEL.jpg)
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(http://userserve-ak.last.fm/serve/_/34779413/People+Get+Ready+51QirO7QaWL_SS500_.jpg)
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train segue:
(http://userserve-ak.last.fm/serve/_/29212057/Ticket+To+Ride+Ticket_to_Ride.jpg)
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(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/b1/Maggie's_Farm_single_cover.jpg/220px-Maggie's_Farm_single_cover.jpg)
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Maggie's farm and Junior's kinda border on each other, I think
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/b1/Maggie's_Farm_single_cover.jpg/220px-Maggie's_Farm_single_cover.jpg)(http://thumbs4.ebaystatic.com/d/l225/m/mad_JwaEmdpHgZKG6eqys5A.jpg)
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(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/5/54/The_Byrds_-_All_I_Really_Feel_A_Whole_Lot.jpg/220px-The_Byrds_-_All_I_Really_Feel_A_Whole_Lot.jpg)
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BOS for the Byrdies.
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let's not be L-7!
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Bigger BOS for Get Smart! Such a great show.
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(http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-ImkJGRO2qMU/USu5cag_LlI/AAAAAAAAFVM/kyGYBhvJ7WA/s1600/album_Sam-the-Sham--the-Pharaohs-Wooly-Bully.jpg)
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
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(http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/418RP035JTL.jpg)
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uber-BOS: Stan Freberg and
June Foray Walter Tetley for Milky Way and Jonathan Winters for V-8.
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(http://images.uulyrics.com/cover/l/lovin-spoonful/album-do-you-believe-in-magic.jpg)
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(http://www.positive-feedback.com/Issue23/images/Who_My-Gen_Brunswick.jpg)
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
Everybody in my circle of 10-years-olds knew that "L-7" was slang for "square".
(http://s3.amazonaws.com/rapgenius/1323788453_xv.jpg)
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all together now: "the songs are too short!!"
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Bigger BOS for Get Smart! Such a great show.
Absolutely and Positively !!!!
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
Everybody in my circle of 10-years-olds knew that "L-7" was slang for "square".
(http://s3.amazonaws.com/rapgenius/1323788453_xv.jpg)
Guess I'm a little too young to have used it that way.
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While "My Generation" makes me think of those PBS pledge drive specials, this is enjoyable, if not surprising. There was not really any FM radio playing deeper cuts back then. I'd probably BOS the Byrds or the Beatles, but many deserving cuts.
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
never heard that Mondegreen before!
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Rick James revived the expression some years later.
(http://www.thecriticscorner.com/JustTheFacts/RickJamesBustingL7DgCover.jpg)
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Being the clueless one around here, I'll bite: Are people serious that the lyric actually is 'L7?' I always heard 'sermon.'
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Being the clueless one around here, I'll bite: Are people serious that the lyric actually is 'L7?' I always heard 'sermon.'
Completely serious:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wooly_Bully#Title_and_lyrics
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Being the clueless one around here, I'll bite: Are people serious that the lyric actually is 'L7?' I always heard 'sermon.'
Completely serious:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wooly_Bully#Title_and_lyrics
Thanks, urth -- I can't believe it's even in dispute. "L-7" was a very common slang expression then.
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Being the clueless one around here, I'll bite: Are people serious that the lyric actually is 'L7?' I always heard 'sermon.'
Completely serious:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wooly_Bully#Title_and_lyrics
Thanks, urth -- I can't believe it's even in dispute. "L-7" was a very common slang expression then.
I think I heard it first from Maynard G. Krebs. (by the way, according to wiki, Maynard's middle name was Walter (the G was silent, he would explain)). I always thought it was Gilligan. And it turns out that Gilligan is Gilligan's last name -- his first name was Willy. Who knew?
Ah.... the things you will interweb late on a Friday afternoon.... is it time to go home yet?
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let's not be L-7!
I always heard that as "Let this be a sermon". Who knew what L-7 meant? Not me, dat's fo sho.
I always heard it as L-7, but never had a clue what it meant (back then anyway).
Being the clueless one around here, I'll bite: Are people serious that the lyric actually is 'L7?' I always heard 'sermon.'
Completely serious:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wooly_Bully#Title_and_lyrics
Thanks, urth -- I can't believe it's even in dispute. "L-7" was a very common slang expression then.
I think I heard it first from Maynard G. Krebs. (by the way, according to wiki, Maynard's middle name was Walter (the G was silent, he would explain)). I always thought it was Gilligan. And it turns out that Gilligan is Gilligan's last name -- his first name was Willy. Who knew?
Ah.... the things you will interweb late on a Friday afternoon.... is it time to go home yet?
Just shows (again) how clueless I am. I guess this is kind of a reverse Mondegreen? So, next thing you'll be telling me the lyrics to "Louie Louie" are obscene!