Author Topic: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979  (Read 11448 times)

Big Fingers McGee

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #30 on: March 29, 2013, 10:48:42 AM »
Not a bad set.

CapnJack

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #31 on: March 29, 2013, 10:58:02 AM »
Renee sez Pink Floyd gets BOS.
Tuned to a natural E

RGMike

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #32 on: March 29, 2013, 11:31:17 AM »
Renee sez Pink Floyd gets BOS.

figures -- the song most-frequently-(over-)played on K-Fox and The Bone.
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dischead

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #33 on: March 29, 2013, 11:02:45 PM »
For me 1979 is a shoulder year, as popular music climbs out of the pit that was the late '70s.
So I wasn't expecting much, and I wasn't disappointed.  It was very rock-centric, ignoring
then-current musical trends like punk, funk, and disco.  I'm not sure how to rate 10@10 sets
these days.  Should I grade on a curve, or stick to strict standards of excellence?
"Your favorite songs, played beautifully"

Lightnin' Rod

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #34 on: March 30, 2013, 03:59:46 PM »
For me 1979 is a shoulder year, as popular music climbs out of the pit that was the late '70s.
So I wasn't expecting much, and I wasn't disappointed.  It was very rock-centric, ignoring
then-current musical trends like punk, funk, and disco.  I'm not sure how to rate 10@10 sets
these days.  Should I grade on a curve, or stick to strict standards of excellence?

I am conflicted about late 70's sets, especially 77 and 78.  But I became a Joe Jackson fan almost immediately, which helped with the transition to "new wave".

I grade sets on a whim.  If I enoyed it, YAY.  But I'm not that much of a geek.  I am more of an enthusiast.
and any fool knows
a dog needs a home
a shelter
from pigs on the wing

dischead

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #35 on: March 30, 2013, 05:23:02 PM »
I am conflicted about late 70's sets, especially 77 and 78.  But I became a Joe Jackson fan almost immediately, which helped with the transition to "new wave".

I grade sets on a whim.  If I enoyed it, YAY.  But I'm not that much of a geek.  I am more of an enthusiast.

I am not conflicted at all.  1976, 1977, and 1978 were all poor years for
pop/rock, in my opinion.  Of course, one can always cherry-pick a set of
good tunes -- no year is completely void of worthwhile material -- but overall
it was a bad time for the mainstream.  The truly interesting stuff was happening
in other genres.  And in apparent contradiction to this, some of my all-time
favorite albums were released in those years.

If I grade RR sets to DM or even AL standards, then they almost always fail.  If
I grade them against themselves, some will be above average.  (I'm speaking
in general here; I don't have a formal grading system for 10@10 sets.)
"Your favorite songs, played beautifully"

ggould

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #36 on: March 31, 2013, 05:15:47 PM »
so, no list?
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RGMike

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #37 on: March 31, 2013, 07:35:30 PM »
so, no list?

Sorry, I'm avoiding FB during work hours.

1. Joe Jackson - Friday
2. ZZ Top - Cheap Sunglasses
3. The Clash - Lost In The Supermarket
(Movie: "10")
4. Atlanta Rhythm Section - Spooky
5. The Eagles - The Long Run
(News: Gays march for equality.)
6. Herb Alpert - Rise
7. Pink Floyd - Run Like Hell
(TV: The Love Boat)
8. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers - Here Comes My Girl
9. The Cars - It's All I Can Do
10. ELO - Don't Bring Me Down
You spin me right 'round, baby, right 'round

ggould

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #38 on: April 01, 2013, 10:21:14 AM »
thank you.
Don't stand in the way of LOVE!

CapnJack

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #39 on: April 02, 2013, 12:17:50 AM »
For me 1979 is a shoulder year, as popular music climbs out of the pit that was the late '70s.
So I wasn't expecting much, and I wasn't disappointed.  It was very rock-centric, ignoring
then-current musical trends like punk, funk, and disco.  I'm not sure how to rate 10@10 sets
these days.  Should I grade on a curve, or stick to strict standards of excellence?

Here is my pseudo 1979 10@10:

 1. Wings - Goodnight Tonight
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Mama Carlson asks about format change.)
 2. The Sports - Who Listens To The Radio?
 3. Daryl Hall & John Oates - Portable Radio
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Judge not the behavior of the employees but the profits.)
 4. The Nervebreakers - Hijack The Radio
 5. Joe Jackson - On Your Radio
(News: Disco Demolition Greg Gumbel news report)
 6. Chicago - Street Player
(News: Disco Demolition Steve Dahl interview)
 7. George Harrison - Not Guilty
(Movie: The Muppet Movie - Kermit and Fozzie meet The Electric Mayhem)
 8. Kermit (Jim Henson) - Rainbow Connection
 9. Olivia Newton-John - Deeper Than The Night
10. Marvin Gaye - A Funky Space Reincarnation

I attempted to cover as many different genres as possible for this one.  This one comes close to 1 hour in length!

https://soundcloud.com/capnjack-1/06-10-10-1979

Enjoy!  :D

ETA: Taking this file down to add another.  If you want to listen to it, let me know, and I will reupload it.
« Last Edit: April 06, 2013, 01:26:39 AM by CapnJack »
Tuned to a natural E

urth

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #40 on: April 04, 2013, 01:00:21 PM »
For me 1979 is a shoulder year, as popular music climbs out of the pit that was the late '70s.
So I wasn't expecting much, and I wasn't disappointed.  It was very rock-centric, ignoring
then-current musical trends like punk, funk, and disco.  I'm not sure how to rate 10@10 sets
these days.  Should I grade on a curve, or stick to strict standards of excellence?

Here is my pseudo 1979 10@10:

 1. Wings - Goodnight Tonight
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Mama Carlson asks about format change.)
 2. The Sports - Who Listens To The Radio?
 3. Daryl Hall & John Oates - Portable Radio
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Judge not the behavior of the employees but the profits.)
 4. The Nervebreakers - Hijack The Radio
 5. Joe Jackson - On Your Radio
(News: Disco Demolition Greg Gumbel news report)
 6. Chicago - Street Player
(News: Disco Demolition Steve Dahl interview)
 7. George Harrison - Not Guilty
(Movie: The Muppet Movie - Kermit and Fozzie meet The Electric Mayhem)
 8. Kermit (Jim Henson) - Rainbow Connection
 9. Olivia Newton-John - Deeper Than The Night
10. Marvin Gaye - A Funky Space Reincarnation

I attempted to cover as many different genres as possible for this one.  This one comes close to 1 hour in length!

https://soundcloud.com/capnjack-1/06-10-10-1979

Enjoy!  :D

Slow-ish day at work, so I listened again and did a stream-of consciousness commentary as it played.

1. This song illustrates what I was talking about in the other thread--a song I remember but haven't heard in ages. Not something I'd put on myself, and Wings had definitely gone downhill by this time (London Town, anyone?) but definitely a song of its time.

2. Again, a song I haven't heard in a long while, and illustrative of the new wavish singles that were one of the best things about '79, imo. (I thought this was Joe Jackson on first listen--very derivative of his sound/vocal inflection). Nice segue from the WKRP bit, too.

3. Can't say I remember this one at all, but it works with the "radio" theme of this sequence of songs. Not one of H&O's best, imo.

Love the second WKRP clip. The Red Wigglers jingle kills me.

4. Another song I have minimal memory of, but boy does it work in the context of this set. Also, a nice not-so-subtle dig at DC/RR.

5. The *real* JJ. My earlier comment about song #2 applies to 3, 4, and 5, too. 

Disco demolition clip #1: Great segue, and a great moment in 79 music history. I seem to remember that the charge they used to blow up the disco records also took a big chunk out of the turf in center field.

6. If you wanted to pick an appropriate song to show how bad disco could be, you did a fine job.  Slick, cheezy, and far longer than it needed to be.

Disco demolition clip #2: Boy, was Steve Dahl a jerk.

7. The segues just keep on coming--it really works out of that last clip. Wish George had done a better job with this song however. Not much beat, not much melody; I give it a 65, Dick.

8. Rainbow Connection is a nice flashback for anyone who was a kid in the late 70s or has a fondness for the Muppet Movie, but otherwise kind of sappy.

9. ONJ isn't doing it for me with this one.  No recollection of it at all, but looking at the tracklisting for this album I don't recognize anything else either.  Not sure what I would have substituted here--maybe a post SNF BeeGees tune?

10. Still another song I have no memory of, but I kinda like it. Midtempo, but funky.

None of the last four songs were very upbeat. Another dip in the new wave pop genre would have been great--perhaps the Fabulous Poodles or something else of that ilk?

Four of the 10 songs did not ring any bells in my memory. Good that you're digging deep for these, but almost too much so. A big part of 10@10's appeal is to trigger a bit of nostalgia. I could have used just a little bit less obscurity.

Production values again were stellar. Very nicely put together. Are you using ProTools or some other audio editing software to assemble these, or doing it old-school, with a turntable and a cassette recorder? :)

No wonder this set ran so long. Between the Wings and Chicago tunes, that's about 17 minutes right there, and if you add the Marvin Gaye, we're up around 26 minutes. And this was before CDs, when 22 minutes or so was about the most you could cram onto one side of an album.

All in all, some nice work. My hat is off to you for the effort you're obviously putting into this, digging up songs and finding appropriate clips to go with them, or vice versa. How much time does it take to pull everything together?
« Last Edit: April 04, 2013, 01:02:05 PM by urth »
Let's get right to it.

CapnJack

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #41 on: April 04, 2013, 04:08:10 PM »
Slow-ish day at work, so I listened again and did a stream-of consciousness commentary as it played.

1. This song illustrates what I was talking about in the other thread--a song I remember but haven't heard in ages. Not something I'd put on myself, and Wings had definitely gone downhill by this time (London Town, anyone?) but definitely a song of its time.

This set was originally inspired by Annalisa's final 10@10 set (Radio Songs):
http://10at10club.com/forum/index.php?topic=9057.msg157301#msg157301
I initially had a pair of tracks from Wings' Back To The Egg to open the set ("Reception"/"Getting Closer"), continuing the radio theme, but I went with the seldomly heard (these days) hit (disco) single instead.

Quote
2. Again, a song I haven't heard in a long while, and illustrative of the new wavish singles that were one of the best things about '79, imo. (I thought this was Joe Jackson on first listen--very derivative of his sound/vocal inflection). Nice segue from the WKRP bit, too.

3. Can't say I remember this one at all, but it works with the "radio" theme of this sequence of songs. Not one of H&O's best, imo.

Love the second WKRP clip. The Red Wigglers jingle kills me.

4. Another song I have minimal memory of, but boy does it work in the context of this set. Also, a nice not-so-subtle dig at DC/RR.

Somebody noticed! ;)

Quote
5. The *real* JJ. My earlier comment about song #2 applies to 3, 4, and 5, too. 

Disco demolition clip #1: Great segue, and a great moment in 79 music history. I seem to remember that the charge they used to blow up the disco records also took a big chunk out of the turf in center field.

6. If you wanted to pick an appropriate song to show how bad disco could be, you did a fine job.  Slick, cheezy, and far longer than it needed to be.

Disco demolition clip #2: Boy, was Steve Dahl a jerk.

7. The segues just keep on coming--it really works out of that last clip. Wish George had done a better job with this song however. Not much beat, not much melody; I give it a 65, Dick.

The Beatles' version of the song (from '68) is heavier.  George's '79 output was very mellow.

Quote
8. Rainbow Connection is a nice flashback for anyone who was a kid in the late 70s or has a fondness for the Muppet Movie, but otherwise kind of sappy.

This was a very last minute addition, as I originally had Raydio's "You Can't Change That" here.  Filled a request of RGMike's, I believe,
http://10at10club.com/forum/index.php?topic=9397.msg162609#msg162609
although I think I should haven chosen his other request, Shoes "Too Late", as it would have been more uptempo.

Quote
9. ONJ isn't doing it for me with this one.  No recollection of it at all, but looking at the tracklisting for this album I don't recognize anything else either.  Not sure what I would have substituted here--maybe a post SNF BeeGees tune?

"Love You Inside Out" or a deeper cut from Spirits Have Flown, perhaps?

Quote
10. Still another song I have no memory of, but I kinda like it. Midtempo, but funky.

None of the last four songs were very upbeat. Another dip in the new wave pop genre would have been great--perhaps the Fabulous Poodles or something else of that ilk?

How about the Fabulous Poodles' cover of the Everly Brothers "Man With Money"?

Quote
Four of the 10 songs did not ring any bells in my memory. Good that you're digging deep for these, but almost too much so. A big part of 10@10's appeal is to trigger a bit of nostalgia. I could have used just a little bit less obscurity.

If I were actually doing this for real, I would have probably posted something on Facebook asking for requests.  Wonder if I'd get requests for "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?", "My Sharona", and "Heartache Tonight"?  :)

Quote
Production values again were stellar. Very nicely put together. Are you using ProTools or some other audio editing software to assemble these, or doing it old-school, with a turntable and a cassette recorder? :)

Currently I'm only using CDs, youtube (for some clips), and Audacity to create what you hear.

Quote
No wonder this set ran so long. Between the Wings and Chicago tunes, that's about 17 minutes right there, and if you add the Marvin Gaye, we're up around 26 minutes. And this was before CDs, when 22 minutes or so was about the most you could cram onto one side of an album.

I probably went a bit overboard with the long songs.  I could have used the single edits of the Wings and Chicago tunes, but I think the Chicago one needed to be at full length for the point to get across.

Quote
All in all, some nice work. My hat is off to you for the effort you're obviously putting into this, digging up songs and finding appropriate clips to go with them, or vice versa. How much time does it take to pull everything together?

Thanks for your commentary!  It takes between 90 minutes to 2 hours to put a set together, as long as I'm inspired.
Tuned to a natural E

Tinka Cat

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Re: 29 March 2013: it's... 1979
« Reply #42 on: April 04, 2013, 05:49:21 PM »


Here is my pseudo 1979 10@10:

 1. Wings - Goodnight Tonight
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Mama Carlson asks about format change.)
 2. The Sports - Who Listens To The Radio?
 3. Daryl Hall & John Oates - Portable Radio
(TV: WKRP In Cincinnati - Judge not the behavior of the employees but the profits.)
 4. The Nervebreakers - Hijack The Radio
 5. Joe Jackson - On Your Radio
(News: Disco Demolition Greg Gumbel news report)
 6. Chicago - Street Player
(News: Disco Demolition Steve Dahl interview)
 7. George Harrison - Not Guilty
(Movie: The Muppet Movie - Kermit and Fozzie meet The Electric Mayhem)
 8. Kermit (Jim Henson) - Rainbow Connection
 9. Olivia Newton-John - Deeper Than The Night
10. Marvin Gaye - A Funky Space Reincarnation

I attempted to cover as many different genres as possible for this one.  This one comes close to 1 hour in length!

https://soundcloud.com/capnjack-1/06-10-10-1979

Enjoy!  :D

thanks!   I did enjoy this...!~
~CPL593H~