(Above: Lesley Gore as Pussycat, 1967) I will freely go on record as saying I like Lesley Gore records. There. It's out there. Sure, the songs are sometimes over-simplistic. They're often dismissed as watered-down tales of high school romance that devolves into fights ("Judy's Turn to Cry") and frustration about the egghead not noticing her … Continue reading Guilty pleasures: Lesley Gore, “California Nights” (1967)
1960s
RIP Peter Sarstedt: “Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)” (1969)
(Above: How do you pass up a picture sleeve like this?) I didn't know who Peter Sarstedt was until two things happened several years ago: I picked up a book on British chart history for a project and saw that he had the Number One song in the UK the day I was born. I … Continue reading RIP Peter Sarstedt: “Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)” (1969)
12+ Blogs of Christmas: Just Like The Ones We Used To Know
(Above: The author, exactly 45 Christmases ago.) Nostalgia is Christmas, and vice-versa. What happens when the family gets together for the holidays? As Andy Williams put it, "the tales of the glories of Christmases long ago." So much of the Christmas celebration is tradition. Normally I am opposed to "we've always done it that way," … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: Just Like The Ones We Used To Know
12+ Blogs of Christmas, Airing of Grievances Edition: Bob Rivers, “The Twelve Pains of Christmas” (1988)
(Above: "I gotta lot of problems with you people..." Say the word "festivus," and most people with a handle on popular culture of the 1990s will know exactly what you mean. The holiday, first introduced to the lexicon by Seinfeld (a show that added such phrases as "double-dipping" and "not that there's anything wrong with … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas, Airing of Grievances Edition: Bob Rivers, “The Twelve Pains of Christmas” (1988)
12+ Blogs of Christmas: We Need a Little… Edge
(Above: The Edge of Christmas, Oglio Records. Another one from my collection.) I don't want to give the wrong impression: I don't dislike Christmas music. In the last piece I talked about how some of the music of the season isn't helping those who are having emotional issues. (Fun fact: in each of the last … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: We Need a Little… Edge
12+ Blogs of Christmas: We’ll Muddle Through Somehow
(Above: Bummed Out Christmas (Rhino), one of the pieces of my collection.) "What came first - the misery, or the music?" This question, asked by Rob Gordon in High Fidelity (one of my all-time favorite films), is appropriate today. The Christmas season is not all snowflakes and candy canes for everyone. Depression escalates for some, … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: We’ll Muddle Through Somehow
12+ Blogs of Christmas: Observe the snow.
(Above: Christmastime in Michigan.) If we really wanted to, we could break the songs heard on the radio at the holidays into themes. There are Christmas songs and there are winter songs. One could argue that the winter songs could stay in rotation well into February were it not for the fact that by the … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: Observe the snow.
12+ Blogs of Christmas: Mona Abboud, “The Pretty Little Dolly” (1966)
(Above: Johnny's not sure what he signed up for.) 50 years ago tonight - December 15, 1966 - a classic Christmas moment took place on The Tonight Show. Mona Abboud, an actress who performed children's voices in commercials, got her chance to sit on the panel with Johnny Carson. She performed a song about the … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: Mona Abboud, “The Pretty Little Dolly” (1966)
Stop the presses: The Lemon Pipers, “Rice is Nice” (1968)
(Above: The December 12, 1991 Southtown Economist, framed and in my office. Students sometimes ask about "all the 8-tracks.") 25 years ago today, my hometown newspaper did a feature on me. I had left 97X in Davenport, Iowa a few months earlier, and was toiling away doing mornings at WLLI in Joliet. In one move … Continue reading Stop the presses: The Lemon Pipers, “Rice is Nice” (1968)
12+ Blogs of Christmas: Andy Williams, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time Of the Year”(1963)
(Above: Claudine Longet and Andy Williams. Not pictured: firearms, Spider Sabich.) I got drawn into one of the new retro TV channels (Get TV) tonight. I am, admittedly, a sucker for old programming. (If they'd run the original ads and dispense with all of the new ones targeted at old people, like catheters, reverse mortgages, … Continue reading 12+ Blogs of Christmas: Andy Williams, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time Of the Year”(1963)