Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Songs I Didn't Skip (Part 13)

 How long am I going to continue doing this? Perhaps when I get a repeat which could be a very long time or not, knowing how the Apple Music app works.


"Shadow Dancing" by Andy Gibb (1978) 

The first stop by a Gibb/Bee Gees track. Another well-crafted disco hit.

"Hit The Road Jack" by Ray Charles (1961)

Did you know there's a follow up song called, "Well, I Told You"?

"Love In Song" by Wings (1975)

Growing up, this was the first LP from Wings I had a copy of so I listened to it a lot. It's not one of the best of their albums but it has a few good tracks. This is one of the better ones, though it sounds at times like Paul is trying a little too hard for an "exotic" sound with his chords. Never mind, it's miles better than the album's hit single, "Listen to What the Man Said" which I can't stand, even with Tom Scott playing on it.

"Hold On, I'm Comin'" by Sam & Dave (1966)

I love this song but I can't help but picture a beat-to-shit police car driving around suburban Chicago when I hear it.

"Whistlin' Past The Graveyard" by Tom Waits (1978)

Another Tom, though different. Love the lyrics on this one.

"Wheel in the Sky" by Journey

1978 is a big year in my music library it seems.

"Broken Arrow" by Robbie Robertson (1987)

This is positively drenched in Daniel Lanois production murk.

"Too Much Information" by The Police (1981)

Truly lesser-level Police but holds up today just for its theme.

"Peter Gunn" by Art of Noise (1986)

It's hard to screw up a song like "Gunn" but this one wears out its welcome after a while.

"Overkill" by Men at Work" (1983)

Not bad, but I prefer "It's a Mistake" from this album.


Thursday, March 24, 2022

Songs I Didn't Skip (Part 12)

 I'm starting to wonder if I should be a bit more picky.


"Breakdown Dead Ahead" by Boz Skaggs (1980)

Second-string Boz with his backup band at their usual Yacht Rock best.

"Girl, You Have No Faith in Medicine" by The White Stripes (2003)

Truly a song for our times.

"Gethsemane (I Only Want to Say)" by Ian Gillan (Jesus Christ Superstar, 1970 version)

The only thing keeping this track from being, "Deep Purple....WITH STRINGS" is the lack of an organ solo.

"Hold Your Head Up" by Argent (1972)

Wait, there's the missing organ solo!

"Morning Has Broken" by Cat Stevens (1971)

I've often thought that Cat Stevens wrote a perfect church song. Well, it turns out that this IS a church song, that he covered from 1931. Also, I swear Rick Wakeman is channeling Floyd Cramer on the piano track.

"Ministry of Love" by Eurythmics (1984)

I haven't seen the movie that this track came from but there's a good dark 80s groove in this bundle of synths and vocals.

"Ran Tan Waltz" by Kate Bush (1980)

This is a weirdo B side that sounds like it has a fuzzy fake tuba synth. All too appropriate for a song that Kate herself apparently called, "good, naughty fun".

"This Time" by INXS (1985)

A just-OK INXS track but still decent. I have this in rotation because it was on LP called "Greenpeace Breakthrough" which was a compilation of 80s hits, distributed by the state-owned record label Melodiya. I picked this vinyl up on a band trip to the Soviet Union in 1988. People were selling this and other things to tourists in the streets of Moscow at the time. If you hit the wikipedia page with translation, you'll see that it is a very solid playlist of 80s alt pop hits. The double LP also came with a large booklet I could never read. Cool.

"Light My Fire" by Helmut Zacharias (1969)

I like to imagine that this was done by a middle-aged Esquivel who had gone soft and wanted something to listen to while playing golf with Gerald Ford.

"Moon Rocks" by Talking Heads (1982)

Another great dog exercising/poop patrol tune.

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Songs I Didn't Skip (Part 11)

 Yes, this blog goes to 11.

"Army Dreamers" by Kate Bush (1980)

Yeah, it's pretty on-the-nose but still a catchy/odd little anti-war tune.

"You Don't Mess Around With Jim" by Jim Croce 1972)

This might be my favorite of Croce's songs. Tight. 

"Tumbling Tumbleweeds" by The Sons of the Pioneers (1946)

The Dude abides. I don't think I ever noticed that this song has bass clarinet in it. I seriously doubt the old time cowboys played themselves a lot of bass clarinet. Come to think of it, the arrangement of this song sounds kind of faux exotic, like old songs about tropical islands. Sons of the hula dancers.

"Mongoloid" by DEVO (1977)

"He wore a hat and he had a job". 

"Bem, Bem, Maria" by Gipsy Kings (1987)

Great stuff, even if I have no idea what they are talking about.

"The Bug" by Dire Straits (1991)

Knopfler does straight (heh) ahead Country, works in the word, "Groovy"  and it sounds great. 

"Enough To Be On Your Way" by James Taylor (1997)

Another super-clean, polished cut from James T and on this one, he drops an F bomb.

"What Is This Thing Called Love?" by Keely Smith

Okay, a jazz-like tune slipped through. Great arrangement here by Nelson Riddle of this classic tune sung Smith who was married to Louis Prima for a while.

"Romeo And Juliet" by Dire Straits (1980)

Another Dire Straits tune in quick succession. This has to be one of their best songs that hasn't aged at all. Prove me wrong. 


Saturday, March 5, 2022

Songs I Didn't Skip (Part 10)

 Part 10? Are you kidding me?!


"D.I.Y." by Peter Gabriel (1978)

A classic PG track. The piano sounds like it came out of a saloon and it's perhaps one of the earliest uses of the Chapman Stick on a pop recording though it usually sounds indistinguishable from a conventional fretless electric bass here. 

"I Want Your Love" by Chic (1978)

On a lot of these old disco hits, I often think of all the string players who had steady work playing on these tracks.

"Romeo Had Juliet" by Lou Reed (1989)

I'm pretty sure this was one of the first Lou Reed albums I'd heard when it came out. It took me a while to warm up to it but this one is so lyrically dense that it rewards close examination. 

"Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps" by CAKE (1996)

An interesting take on the old Doris Day song.

"Nothing's Changed" by Chris Isaak (1989)

Isaak does one thing and he does it well. This was from his most popular and probably best album of reverb-soaked retro crooning. 

"Party People" by Parliament (1979)

"Funky" doesn't even begin to describe this and other Parliament songs. This one grooves along until it adds this extra sax solo and a vocal that sounds like the guy from "You're A Mean One, Mister Grinch". 

"Mystified" by Fleetwood Mac (1987)

This was the first FM album I got familiar with as it came out at a time when I was buying CDs and the choices were more slim...maybe it was a "free" selection from BMG or Columbia House?

"Floater" by Bob Dylan (2001)

It sure sounds like Bob just came up with a tune and just wrote random goofy lyrics while he was having a smoke. Nonetheless, I like it.

"Tin Man" by America (1974)

Smoooooooooth. 

"Domino" by Van Morrison (1970)

Wow, he really nailed the American 60s R&B sound...or stole it but who's counting?

"ZZ Top Goes to Egypt" (1986)

Another song by a "Van". This one always cracks me up with the meandering slightly out-of-tune violin.