Song 600: This week the playlist puts the spotlight on Keep A-Knockin' by Little Richard, written by Richard Penniman, J. Mayo Williams and Bert Mays, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. This LR shaker gets credit for inspiring last week's Led Zeppelin jaunt, and hearing the two next to each other would make that connection quite obvious. During my HS stretch I mistakenly thought that the British Invaders had invented RnR, but as the 1970s arrived and I had the freedom to explore the real story of the music style I craved, I soon found out how folks like Mr. Penniman had laid the foundation for rock. Along that decade, the Chicago-area rock stations did a 1950s revival, and so sometimes I would get to hear compelling hits like this that hadn't previously crossed my ears, thereby increasing my respect for such moving pioneers. It makes sense that if you want to enter a particular building and you keep a-knockin’ but you can't come in, probably the best option would be to simply come back tomorrow night and try it again.
These posts relate to the songs that I add to my YouTube favorite songs playlist, which I started as a daily thing in June of 2013 but which I had to change to a weekly thing 6 months later due to the time involved. I started posting here with song 184, but you can find the older posts on my website if you're interested, plus links to YT videos of the songs.
Sunday, January 30, 2022
Sunday, January 23, 2022
Genre Personified
Song 599: This week the playlist applauds Rock and Roll by Led Zeppelin, written by John Bonham, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. As the 1970s unfolded and I began living a life independent from the fundamentalist household where I had grown up, I had the freedom to listen to the devil's music as much as I wanted, and some punchy rumblers came along that quickly grabbed my attention. I added the untitled 33 commonly known as Led Zeppelin IV to my LP collection not long after it showed up in late 1971, and it became a regular spinner on the turntable. This marks the second appearance of an LZ4 cut on this list, with Stairway to Heaven being Song 288. Around the time this mover shook the airwaves, it became the quartet's concert opener, and understandably played that role (and roll) for a while. Now, for way too many Americans, most of the last two years have been a long lonely, lonely, lonely, lonely, lonely time, and it sure seems so long since we walked in the moonlight, but my advice is to open your arms and let some love come running in.
Sunday, January 16, 2022
Colored Indigestion
Song 598: Seven weeks after my previous personal friend song post, this week's amusing jaunt Heartburn Blues comes from my colleague Rob Lytle, who also wrote the song, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. I hooked up with him back around 1989. He animated the New England folkie scene, while I hung out in the NYC singer/songwriter circle, and we would often bump into each other when I would head up to NE music events like the Sober in the Sun Festival. Recently finding his YT channel, I soon gave this gem a listen, and it quickly raised a grin on my end. When I first started my own YT channel (which resides at https://www.youtube.com/user/daveelderdotcom), I did a weekly segment performing a tune live (which I labeled a rough cut video), and I felt a bit disappointed that I came across very few similar efforts by comrades, so I savor discovering a buddy who does do that, as Rob does here, and on other videos from his channel. In addition, over the years I have found very few lyrical word games of the kind I relish that enliven compositions coming from my cronies, so when I do catch one of those, as in this clever sparkler, it tickles me all the more. Of course, there is a learnin' and a burnin' when someone's stomach gas is churnin', but is there some purple pill that person can take to free that stomach from all the trouble? Probably not.
Sunday, January 9, 2022
Monarch Snoozing This Evening
Song 597: This week on the playlist you can hear The Lion Sleeps Tonight by The Tokens, written by Solomon Linda, Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, George David Weiss and Albert Stanton, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Once again, just like 8 of my last 10 blogs here, tonight marks the premier of The Tokens in my favorite song bunch. I probably did not hear this ramble for the first decade after it appeared in 1961, because, growing up in a family that opposed the devil's music, I knew next to nothing about RnR until the Fab Four rocked my world in February of 1964. As an independent young adult in the early 1970s, though, a lot of the older gems that I had missed caught my ears, including this engaging sparkler, as the rock radio stations went through a pre-Beatle revival. While I generally leaned towards guitar-centered arrangements, whether electric or acoustic, a few jaunts like this one expanded my appreciation for multi-layered vocal-driven ventures. This being the part of the year with shorter days and longer nights, we can easily believe that The Lion Sleeps Tonight, even if the animal has approached the peaceful village, so don't fear my darling - there's no need for anyone to lose any sleep this evening.
Sunday, January 2, 2022
Country Music Center Felines
Song 596: This week the playlist recognizes Nashville Cats by The Lovin' Spoonful, written by John Sebastian, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Happy Meow Year! Just like 7 of my last 9 blogs here, tonight marks the first appearance of this particular group in my favorite song gathering. Soon after I finished and released Purrfection: The Cat Single last spring, I decided to put together a YouTube cat song playlist, and I did a Facebook post asking for suggestions that might fit the concept. Among the replies I got, someone mentioned this roller, and while it’s not really a cat tale and doesn't belong on the playlist of those (which is called CATegorically-Correct Songs and which you can find by clicking on the title), being reminded of the gem led to an intention to add it to this bunch. I don't remember exactly when these talented Tennessee musician types first crossed my radar, but by the early 1970s, as I accumulated a growing LP collection, I definitely had a 33 that featured the anthem, and it got plenty of spins on the turntable, expanding my appreciation for singer/songwriter Sebastian in the process. It felt inspiring to hear about mothers from somewhere who were not uptight about possibly having one of the kids (or more) wanting to play music, especially in light of my own parents' opposition back then to my interest in melodic rambling where I also intended to play clean as country water and wild as mountain dew.