Sunday, August 31, 2025

Numerical Duration

 Song 786: This week the playlist puts the spotlight on 20 to Life by Greg Cagno, who also wrote the song, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Seven weeks after my previous personal friend song post, this week's numerical excursion comes from another one of my Fast Folk colleagues. Back in the early 1990s, he and I would both regularly do solo sets at Spook Handy's weekly open mikes at the Corner Tavern in New Brunswick, and we often enjoyed each other's performances. When I recently saw and heard the YouTube video of this ramble that he performed back in July, I decided to feature it on my next songwriter friend post. Though I know sometimes we can't forget, there might be other times when we do forget, but anyway, just as GC mentions melodically that he's in for the long haul, personally, I'm in for the long haul too.

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Impressive Tabby

 Song 785: This week the playlist focuses on Cool Cat by Queen, written by Freddie Mercury and John Deacon, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Near the end of the summer of 1981, I found out that I'd have to get another place to reside because my room would soon become unavailable, and fortunately, someone moved out of the house in Berkeley where a bunch of my musical friends lived and I got that available space. While I mostly paid attention to the melodic rides coming from that Berkeley circle, I did still listen to the radio as well, and in the spring of 1982 a royal quartet began informing everyone about a groovy feline. For years, I had been wishing and hoping and waiting to really hit the big time, but did it happen? No, it didn't. However, the real reason for missing the big time had nothing to do with speeding too fast.

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Rural Pathway

 Song 784: This week the playlist comes around to Country Road by James Taylor, who also wrote the song, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. In my freshman year at Northwestern University, which started in the fall of 1969, I got a subscription to Rolling Stone magazine to keep myself informed about the music that interested me, and I soon found out about this JT fellow. Shortly before the summer arrived and I headed back to my parents' upstate NY home, I bought a few LPs that I thought I'd like, including the new album by Mr. Taylor. I spent much of that summer break working as a counselor for a music and arts camp near Camptown, PA, and during my free time there, I often played my 33s on the turntable in my cabin. I quickly got to know all of the new record's songs, and this particular one inspired me to write a tune that I called Country Highway and which you can see and hear a lyric video of by clicking on the title. Back then, I sometimes thought I could hear a heavenly band full of angels that were coming to set me free, and while they never actually arrived, it did give me a good reason to walk on down, walk on down, walk on down a country road. I had introduced my camp colleagues to sweet baby james and they all really liked his music. Then, about a month after the summer camp ended, the airwaves started letting everyone else know about the Fire And Rain (Song 263).

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Inaudible Cardiac Throb

 Song 783: This week the playlist recognizes Can't You Hear My Heartbeat by Herman’s Hermits, written by John Carter and Ken Lewis, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Not long after the Beatles rocked my world in February of 1964, their fellow British Invaders began catching my ears as well, and I soon started hearing from a reclusive quintet about someone's inability to pick up the nearby sound of someone else's pulsation. It didn't take long to learn the melody for the song title and the spots where it appeared, so I could then sing along with the Herman five whenever their question mark rose out of the transistor radio. At the time, I had an obsession with a young woman my age, but rarely did I see her lookin' my way. I don't think she ever did move up closer to me, so I would bet that she never did hear the pounding of my heartbeat.

Sunday, August 3, 2025

The Week’s Final Evening

 Song 782: This week the playlist puts the spotlight on Saturday Night by Bay City Rollers, written by Bill Martin and Phil Coulter, and you can find a YouTube video of it by clicking on the title. Near the end of the summer of 1975 I started hearing about how to enjoy the weekend darker hours, and while I personally had no problem spelling the final day of the week, I would bet this song did help some younger listeners get more adept at that. Unlike plenty of others I've known for most of my life, I rarely if ever cared about keeping cool in the summer, but living in the Windy City area at the time, I did not like dealing with the colder months in that region, and during the next winter season, I found out from a TV show about the moderate temperatures of the California Bay City area, which triggered me to start planning a move in that direction. At first I thought I'd head west in the summer of 1976, but then some dental complications made me decide I had to postpone the trip for two years, and I didn't stick my thumb out in the westward direction until July of 1978, when I finally did get to rock it up, roll it up, do it all and have a ball getting some free rides that took me to the Bay City.