10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => Capital Gold, other Internet Radio => Topic started by: urth on February 04, 2008, 11:42:17 AM
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I was really looking forward to hearing Marilynn and Judge on KPOO today, and wouldn't you know they're having buffering issues, big time. Might have to bail and try again later.
ETA: Had a meeting, came back, still buffering. Eff it, going to go elsewhere. Wish they'd get their streaming together.
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I was really looking forward to hearing Marilynn and Judge on KPOO today, and wouldn't you know they're having buffering issues, big time. Might have to bail and try again later.
ETA: Had a meeting, came back, still buffering. Eff it, going to go elsewhere. Wish they'd get their streaming together.
I just logged on and it sounds fine so far.
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"Dress the way you please
And put your mind at ease"
Judge does the gay disco thang with the Village People's "San Francisco", right after the loooooooooooooong version of Cerrone's "SuperNature".
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"Dress the way you please
And put your mind at ease"
Judge does the gay disco thang with the Village People's "San Francisco", right after the loooooooooooooong version of Cerrone's "SuperNature".
and from SF to Holly-Holly-wood, seems Judge is tracking a VP album side!
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the princess' favorite letch gets the "live vinyl album side" treatment from Judge -- the loooong version of "On Broadway", among others.
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the princess' favorite letch gets the "live vinyl album side" treatment from Judge -- the loooong version of "On Broadway", among others.
... and among those others is a cover of "Lady Blue" -- first time I've ever heard anyone other than Leon Russell sing this.
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New to me on CG: Godley & Creme's "Wedding Bells", which pre-dates "Cry" by 4 years and was a much bigger hit in the UK.
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Nice to have 'CDX back: Squeeze, "If I Didn't Love You". Cocoa mugs sit side-by-side. and one of the great sexual euphemisms: "the door to your love's off the latch". Followed by Mr Joel's live remake of "She's Got a Way", which I haven't heard in ages.
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Nuggets aplenty on WLNG: Soupy Sales' kitsch klassic , "Do The Mouse" and The Bros Gibb, "Love Be Tender With My Fanny".
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OMFG-of-the-Month: Cher, "You Better Sit Down, Kids". Love that intro. And the sax. And the lyric...
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Mr Diamond works on his Longfellow... Serenade. Ride, baby, ride!
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OMFG-of-the-Month: Cher, "You Better Sit Down, Kids". Love that intro. And the sax. And the lyric...
severl hours later: Cher again, "Just Like Jesse james".
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OMFG-of-the-Month: Cher, "You Better Sit Down, Kids". Love that intro. And the sax. And the lyric...
Love how she didn't bother fixing the gender and so assumed the man role for the duration of the song. As well as the ending that spirals off into some sort of senseless chaos.
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Once again, can't get the live stream from CG, so I'm checking out a few of their archived things (which play with no problems at all).
Thought I'd give ol' Dean a listen, and it seems just like the last show he had on the pre-merger CG, where he takes requests and dedications all night long, and bitches about football and the like. (Those UK jocks are a cranky lot, aren't they?) Wonder if he'd consider bringing back the One-minute miracle, or whatever that phone contest was called lo those several years ago.
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Once again, can't get the live stream from CG, so I'm checking out a few of their archived things (which play with no problems at all).
Thought I'd give ol' Dean a listen, and it seems just like the last show he had on the pre-merger CG, where he takes requests and dedications all night long, and bitches about football and the like. (Those UK jocks are a cranky lot, aren't they?) Wonder if he'd consider bringing back the One-minute miracle, or whatever that phone contest was called lo those several years ago.
Hrm, It took a couple trys but I did get CGSS live with no probs. Greg is s-s-s-smokin, as always.
But if you're stuck with archived stuff, there's always Greg's show from last Saturday, which i heard most of. And last week's retro-countdown show was from early '63, with Buddy Holly's widow, Maria Elena, as the in-studio guest.
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"This one's a mutha! Hit it!" CGSS plays the Pasadenas fabulous history-of-soul-music groove, "Tribute" -- how shameful that this was not a US hit.
"Payback
James Brown
How he slides
I don't know..."
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Hoo Lawd! Ms Millie jackson sez "mah man, he a SWEET man!"
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Today's Kasem goes back to Feb. 11, 1978, and we've already heard two tracks that deserved much better: War's "Galaxy" (debut at 40, to peak next week at 39) and Donna Summer's "I Love You" (at its peak of 37). Casey teases that someone's got three records on the chart - I'm guessing Bee Gees.
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Loved hearing the former No. 1 "Baby Come Back." Not so much Dan Hill, choking on his reply (as are we).
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At No. 5, Billy Joel don't want clever conversation. Maybe he should talk to Dan Hill.
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I'm wincing at the memory of my 5-year-old self having a novelty T-shirt that said "Up With Short People."
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Casey teases that someone's got three records on the chart - I'm guessing Bee Gees.
Ding Ding Ding!
I caught up on some needed sleep and woke up in time for "Peg" at #15. I'll catch up with the other hours tonite and tomorrow, but it was a delight to hear Shaun Cassidy's "Hey Deanie", his 2nd Eric Carmen cover in a row at that point (Carmen would do his own version a year or 2 later). The Dan Hill is one of those rare ballads that was actually improved by a dance remake (by I-forget-who) in the late '90s. Can't wait to hear BOTH versions of the Close Encounters theme.
My fave chart trivia of the week: LeBlanc & Carr's "Falling" and Paul Davis' "I Go Crazy" would both spend many weeks on the Hot 100 that year. "Falling" debuted in the 40 in what was already its 18th week on the chart; "I Go Crazy" was in its 25th week (!) as it moved up to #14. "Falling" would peak at 13, spending a total of 28 weeks on the chart; "Crazy" peaked at 7, racking up a total of 40 weeks, which was a record at the time iirc.
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Casey teases that someone's got three records on the chart - I'm guessing Bee Gees.
Ding Ding Ding!
I caught up on some needed sleep and woke up in time for "Peg" at #15. I'll catch up with the other hours tonite and tomorrow, but it was a delight to hear Shaun Cassidy's "Hey Deanie", his 2nd Eric Carmen cover in a row at that point (Carmen would do his own version a year or 2 later). The Dan Hill is one of those rare ballads that was actually improved by a dance remake (by I-forget-who) in the late '90s. Can't wait to hear BOTH versions of the Close Encounters theme.
My fave chart trivia of the week: LeBlanc & Carr's "Falling" and Paul Davis' "I Go Crazy" would both spend many weeks on the Hot 100 that year. "Falling" debuted in the 40 in what was already its 18th week on the chart; "I Go Crazy" was in its 25th week (!) as it moved up to #14. "Falling" would peak at 13, spending a total of 28 weeks on the chart; "Crazy" peaked at 7, racking up a total of 40 weeks, which was a record at the time iirc.
I had no idea about LeBlanc & Carr's chart run (I'm always impressed by those slow burns; they're such a rarity now), but I did know about Davis's, and you are correct; that record would be broken by "Tainted Love." (Whose run was then broken by Synch's "Where Are You Now," which shouldn't count b/c it was two separate chart runs; and then topped in the late '90s many times over.)
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Casey teases that someone's got three records on the chart - I'm guessing Bee Gees.
Ding Ding Ding!
I caught up on some needed sleep and woke up in time for "Peg" at #15. I'll catch up with the other hours tonite and tomorrow, but it was a delight to hear Shaun Cassidy's "Hey Deanie", his 2nd Eric Carmen cover in a row at that point (Carmen would do his own version a year or 2 later). The Dan Hill is one of those rare ballads that was actually improved by a dance remake (by I-forget-who) in the late '90s. Can't wait to hear BOTH versions of the Close Encounters theme.
My fave chart trivia of the week: LeBlanc & Carr's "Falling" and Paul Davis' "I Go Crazy" would both spend many weeks on the Hot 100 that year. "Falling" debuted in the 40 in what was already its 18th week on the chart; "I Go Crazy" was in its 25th week (!) as it moved up to #14. "Falling" would peak at 13, spending a total of 28 weeks on the chart; "Crazy" peaked at 7, racking up a total of 40 weeks, which was a record at the time iirc.
I had no idea about LeBlanc & Carr's chart run (I'm always impressed by those slow burns; they're such a rarity now), but I did know about Davis's, and you are correct; that record would be broken by "Tainted Love." (Whose run was then broken by Synch's "Where Are You Now," which shouldn't count b/c it was two separate chart runs; and then topped in the late '90s many times over.)
And I forgot "How Deep is Your Love" which spent 33 weeks on the Hot 100 -- it's last week on the chart was in MAY!
I must say I barely remembered either of the "Close Encounters" versions; neither got much NYC airplay. But OTOH, "Native New Yorker" was *huge* in the city; guess the rest of the country was less than enthused, since it peaked at 21.
BTW, my copy of Whitburn (which stops at 1993) says Synch's combined chart runs add up to 36 weeks -- did it chart a 3rd time in the 90s? Chubby Checkers' 2 runs with "The Twist" add up to 39 weeks; Soft Cell were on for 43.
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JJ has been slammin' tonite -- Willie Hutch, "Brotha's Gonna Work It Out", South Shore Commission, "Free Man", Ashford & Simpson's "Send It" and (OMG!) Billy Paul's "Let's Make a Baby".
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Casey teases that someone's got three records on the chart - I'm guessing Bee Gees.
Ding Ding Ding!
I caught up on some needed sleep and woke up in time for "Peg" at #15. I'll catch up with the other hours tonite and tomorrow, but it was a delight to hear Shaun Cassidy's "Hey Deanie", his 2nd Eric Carmen cover in a row at that point (Carmen would do his own version a year or 2 later). The Dan Hill is one of those rare ballads that was actually improved by a dance remake (by I-forget-who) in the late '90s. Can't wait to hear BOTH versions of the Close Encounters theme.
My fave chart trivia of the week: LeBlanc & Carr's "Falling" and Paul Davis' "I Go Crazy" would both spend many weeks on the Hot 100 that year. "Falling" debuted in the 40 in what was already its 18th week on the chart; "I Go Crazy" was in its 25th week (!) as it moved up to #14. "Falling" would peak at 13, spending a total of 28 weeks on the chart; "Crazy" peaked at 7, racking up a total of 40 weeks, which was a record at the time iirc.
I had no idea about LeBlanc & Carr's chart run (I'm always impressed by those slow burns; they're such a rarity now), but I did know about Davis's, and you are correct; that record would be broken by "Tainted Love." (Whose run was then broken by Synch's "Where Are You Now," which shouldn't count b/c it was two separate chart runs; and then topped in the late '90s many times over.)
And I forgot "How Deep is Your Love" which spent 33 weeks on the Hot 100 -- it's last week on the chart was in MAY!
I must say I barely remembered either of the "Close Encounters" versions; neither got much NYC airplay. But OTOH, "Native New Yorker" was *huge* in the city; guess the rest of the country was less than enthused, since it peaked at 21.
BTW, my copy of Whitburn (which stops at 1993) says Synch's combined chart runs add up to 36 weeks -- did it chart a 3rd time in the 90s? Chubby Checkers' 2 runs with "The Twist" add up to 39 weeks; Soft Cell were on for 43.
Hmm. Perhaps I've misremembered on the Synch record. Wish I could remember where I'd heard that from. I don't think it had a third charting.
For frame of reference: There are 7 songs on the current Hot 100 with chart runs of 30+ weeks:
http://acharts.us/billboard_hot_100
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For frame of reference: There are 7 songs on the current Hot 100 with chart runs of 30+ weeks:
http://acharts.us/billboard_hot_100
Wow that's scary -- I was sick of Colbie Caillet after *two* weeks ;) Or as I collectively refer to that gaggle of soundalike women: Corrinne Colbie Feist.
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For frame of reference: There are 7 songs on the current Hot 100 with chart runs of 30+ weeks:
http://acharts.us/billboard_hot_100
Wow that's scary -- I was sick of Colbie Caillet after *two* weeks ;) Or as I collectively refer to that gaggle of soundalike women: Corrinne Colbie Feist.
But you have to admit: "Will you count me in?" was damn cute.
Grammys for a different thread, natch.
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For frame of reference: There are 7 songs on the current Hot 100 with chart runs of 30+ weeks:
http://acharts.us/billboard_hot_100
Wow that's scary -- I was sick of Colbie Caillet after *two* weeks ;) Or as I collectively refer to that gaggle of soundalike women: Corrinne Colbie Feist.
But you have to admit: "Will you count me in?" was damn cute.
And which one was that?
"cute" multiplied by 5 (the number of these women that KFOG was playing, at last count) is sugar-shock-inducing.