Showing posts with label Bloodstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bloodstone. Show all posts

Saturday, June 29, 2024

10 SONGS: 6/29/2024

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single. 

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1239.

ALICE COOPER: School's Out

Big ol' shout-out to educators everywhere, including TIRnRR's own intrepid Dana Bonn. Out for the summer, out 'til fall, they might not come back at all. 

And we have just the song for that occasion. From a previous post:

To an adolescent or young teen in the early to mid 1970s, nothing in the world was cooler than Alice Cooper. Before KISS, before punk, Alice Cooper was gaudy and dangerous, potentially the most scandalous, depraved character on AM radio. It didn't matter that it was all an act--show biz!--or that David Bowie was ultimately a far more potent threat to the straight-laced status quo; at the time, Alice Cooper seemed the most dangerous, and therefore the most alluring. Within this fist-pumpin' time frame, a kid that couldn't relate to "School's Out," or didn't want to turn the radio up louder than it could actually go whenever that song came on...well, that kid just would not have been me...

... As an annual clarion call for kids champin' at the frothy-mouthed bit to ditch pencils, books, and teacher's dirty looks for summertime action, "School's Out" delivers a snarky dismissal of rules, regulations, decorum, good manners, and probably decent posture and reasonable hygiene to boot. Because screw all of that--school's out for the summer! Sing it, Alice. School's out completely. The lesson's been learned.

sparkle*jets u.k.: I Can't Wait For Summer

By the power of all that's catchy 'n' engaging, the new sparkle*jets u.k. album Box Of Letters is flat-out sublime anna half. We've been playing its title track as an advance single, and it earned another spin in this week's first set. We open our second set with follow-up single "I Can't Wait For Summer," and we cranked it even though I detest hot weather. But the summer's here. The time is right! Open up that Box Of Letters.

MIKE BROWNING: Heartbreak Hotel

Hey, a TIRnRR exclusive! Our pal Mike Browning takes on King Elvis I, and while covering prime Elvis is a daunting task at best, our Mike rises to the, um...daunt. An exclusive track? We will gladly cede that right if Mike chooses to share the track elsewhere. 

As he should. Even Lonely Street could do with a little bit of company.

BLOODSTONE: Natural High

We played Bloodstone's "My Little Lady" on last week's show, and we intended to also play the group's biggest hit "Natural High." Time conspired against us--lousy, stinkin' time!--and we weren't able to carve out playlist space for "Natural High." We make up for it this week. Sweet soul on the radio. The resulting euphoria is only natural.

THE LONG RYDERS: Looking For Lewis And Clark

It blows my mind that we never played this great track in any of our previous 1238 shows. But, like Bloodstone's "Natural High," we just never got around to programming it. I first heard the Long Ryders' "Looking For Lewis And Clark" on Buffalo's WBNY-FM in the '80s, and the group's accompanying State Of Our Union album was an in-store play favorite when I worked in record retail. A few months later, when I was managing a record store, I created a Long Ryders wall display linked to the group's then-recent TV commercial for Miller. Made the American way!

Is "Looking For Lewis And Clark" the Long Ryders' best-known track? Possibly not, though its '80s airplay on BNY may have nudged me into believing it is. Still, it's surprising that it's never made its way to a past TIRnRR playlist. We've played the Long Ryders many times, most notably "10-5-60" (my favorite), and also "Lights Of Downtown," "Run Dusty Run," and others. "Looking For Lewis And Clark" finally joins that Whole Friggin' Planet honor roll this week.

CHERIE AND MARIE CURRIE: Since You've Been Gone

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE STALLIONS: Why

With Bloodstone's "Natural High" and the Long Ryders' "Looking For Lewis And Clark" both making their (way) belated TIRnRR debuts this week, we figured we maybe oughta balance the acclimation process with a spin of something we've played a time or two zillion before. The Stallions' '90s punk cover of the Dirty Wurds' '60s garage obscurity "Why" was our most-played track during each of this little mutant radio show's first two years, and it remained unchallenged as our all-time most-played track for years thereafter. Its reign at # 1 was eventually usurped by Big Star's "September Gurls," but I think "Why" may still be hangin' in there at # 2, even though we rarely play it nowadays. Whether we play it with bludgeoning frequency or save it as a rare burst of welcome, unexpected VOLUME, the Stallions' "Why" will always, always be an integral part of TIRnRR's DNA.

Why? 

Because. 

Just because.

CHERRY VANILLA: No More Canaries

I first heard of singer Cherry Vanilla when I was a teen in the '70s. My underage status at the time did not prevent me from purchasing Penthouse from indifferent convenience store clerks, and Ms. Vanilla wrote at least one article (if not more) that appeared in between whatever else it was that also appeared in Penthouse. You can snicker at the notion of reading Penthouse, but those pages were also where I first heard of Patti Smith, who was an interview subject in one issue.

I don't recall whether or not the Penthouse material made note that Cherry had been a publicist for David Bowie, and I don't remember if she was mentioned in the issues of Phonograph Record Magazine that hooked me on the idea of punk in 1977, or in any other rock rags of the day. But I do know that at some subsequent point I saw her 1978 debut album Bad Girl on the shelves at Gerber Music and/or Brockport's Record Grove, nestled amidst the tattered contemporaneous bounty of then-recent releases by Radio Birdman, the Dead Boys, the Jam, and the Ramones.

It wasn't an immediate purchase; the album may have been too pricey for me at the time, or at least too pricey for a mere suggestion of punk periphery and post-Penthouse pheromones to overcome. I picked it up a few years later, and I was floored by its fantastic track "The Punk." 

We've played "The Punk" a few times on the show, but it seemed high time for a deeper track from the Cherry Vanilla collection. "No More Caries" is another selection from Bad Girl, and it serves as a reminder that I need to go back and give her records a fresh listen. 

I presume that I still won't need to show ID. 

THE ANDERSON COUNCIL: Citadel

I purchased my used copy of the Rolling Stones' 1967 album Their Satanic Majesties Request more than a decade after its release. It was a reissue, so it didn't have the original's 3-D cover graphic. I was in college, a power-poppin' punk rocker, and I was immediately drawn to the guitar riff of the album's second track "Citadel." I played the LP more than a few times in my dorm room, but "Citadel" was definitely my go-to. I played that one a lot.

Now, the ace Stones tribute album Jem Records Celebrates Jagger & Richards grants us another opportunity to pound the air on behalf of that riff. The mighty forces of the Anderson Council ably provide the prerequisite riffage, and all is as heavenly Satanic as it wants to be. The citadel stands. 

CHUCK BERRY: Promised Land

This coming Sunday night's show is devoted entirely to tracks celebrated in my new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). That's ferdamnedsure gonna include Chuck Berry's "Promised Land."

That's a promise.

Book it.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available for order; you can see details here. My 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is also still available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Friday, June 21, 2024

10 SONGS: 6/21/2024

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single. 

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1238.

THE FLASHCUBES: Do Anything You Wanna Do

This week's extravaganza opens with the Flashcubes' ace annexation of Eddie and the Hot Rods' power pop classic "Do Anything You Wanna Do." I didn't mention this on-air, but I knew when we programmed the show that I would be recording my parts for this episode on my daughter's 29th birthday. 

Given that, of course we open with "Do Anything You Wanna Do." 

Do anything you wanna do. It's the ambition I've always wished for her, the advice I've always offered her, and the words-to-live-by I've always hoped could guide her through a world of fulfillment and delight. I'm a proud father every second of every day.

BLOODSTONE: My Little Lady

Among the advantages of free-form playlist-building is that inspiration can come from anywhere, and neither a programming director nor (even worse) a programming consultant can block the mission-from-God implementation of your divine revelation.

Bloodstone is a soul group best-known for their sublime 1973 hit "Natural High." Last week, everybody's pal Robbie Rist (no doubt himself inspired by immersion in recent viewings of The Midnight Special on YouTube) posted:

"Bloodstone was a BAND! Not four guys in pastel suits with a backing band. And the high voiced dude played BASS! Dang. Skills."

Fair enough. And both a gent named Mark Fletcher and I immediately asked Robbie if he had ever seen Bloodstone's movie. One can imagine the pricking of his thumbs as Robbie replied:

"THEY DID A MOVIE???????"

Yep! I recall seeing Bloodstone's 1975 flick Train Ride To Hollywood on HBO when I was still a '70s teen. It's goofy and very much of its time, steeped in '70s nostalgia for Hollywood's golden age, featuring the Bloodstone gang cavorting alongside actors playing Humphrey Bogart, Bela Lugosi, W. C. Fields, Clark Gable, et al. (Typical scene? The Hollywood crew getting stoned, and Dracula telling Sam Spade, Don't Bogart that joint!) The entire movie is up on YouTube, and I should maybe oughta give it another view one of these days.

Anyway, Robbie's mention of Bloodstone was sufficient to determine that it was high [HAR!] time this little mutant radio shindig played Bloodstone again. We have played them before--we played "Rock 'n' Roll Choo Choo" from, you guessed it, Train Ride To Hollywood--but that was years ago. I didn't want to play the obvious choice of "Natural High," at least not this early in the show, so we opted for the lesser-known "My Little Lady."

(I wanted to circle back and play "Natural High" at the show's end, but we ran out of time. So "Natural High" will finally make its long-overdue TIRnRR debut this coming Sunday night. Two weeks in a row with a band called Bloodstone! Thanks for the inspiration, Robbie.)

WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

For dramatic purposes, the part of Robbie Rist will be played by DC Comics character Sunny Sparkle

Form follows function. Or function follows form--I forget which. Either way: Bloodstone singin' about a little lady in one set, then Robbie Rist with Wonderboy extolling the merit of girl songs in the next. That's how you build a better playlist, people.

THE GRIP WEEDS: Dandelion
THE ROLLING STONES: Get Off Of My Cloud

The recent tribute album Jem Records Celebrates Jagger & Richards has been feeding our playlists with satisfaction-level frequency. We played one of the Grip Weeds' contributions to that tribute (the great "We Love You") a couple of weeks back, and this week it seemed time to turn our attention to their cover of "Dandelion." We'll hear two more Jem Records Celebrates Jagger & Richards tracks on our next show, one of which we've played before, and one we, y'know, ain't played yet. But. We. WILL!

"Get Off Of My Cloud" was the first Rolling Stones song I knew, a well-remembered AM radio smash in 1965. I was but five years old, but even then I noticed how the Stones tweaked the familiar phrase Two's company, three's a crowd into their own uniquely cantankerous One is company, two's a crowd. On my cloud, baby.

BILLY JOEL: You May Be Right

The form function form thing again. Dana played Los Straitjackets performing Nick Lowe's "I Love The Sound Of Breaking Glass." Billy Joel's "You May Be Right" literally opens with the sound of breaking glass. 

You gotta love that.

NICK LOWE: So It Goes

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

sparkle*jets u.k.: Box Of Letters

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio has been all-in for sparkle*jets u.k. since the dawn of ever, or at least since the dawn of TIRnRR. We signed on the air in December of 1998, and it wasn't long before "10 Inches" (from the group's 1998 album In, Through, And Beyond) secured a playlist berth or two on the big show. We're fans!

And this fan is really taken with the new sparkle*jets u.k. album Box Of Letters. We've been playing the album's title tune as an advance single for a few weeks already, and we'll be playing it again Sunday night. We'll also be playing another Box Of Letters track, too.

Because that's what "all in" means. 

THE TEARJERKERS: Syracuse Summer

I hate hot weather. I hate cold weather, too; it's not an either/or situation, and it certainly makes sense to me to despise both extremes anyway. But when it's chilly, I can add extra layers of clothing. I can't peel off my skin when the temps pop to some unholy number that starts with a friggin' 9.

Hey, you remember Robbie Rist, star of stage, screen, and some 10 Songs mentions a few paragraphs north of here? When he was visiting Syracuse earlier this year, we got together for a lovely evening of banter and dining. As we were leaving the restaurant, Robbie saw me donning my old-man toque, and exclaimed with great dismay:

LOOK! LOOK! Carl's wearing a HAT! It's COLD!!!! How do you people live here...?!

I'd mock him, but I'm too busy sweating now.

Even so, the residual little kid lurking within me retains an affection for summer. There's a sense of greater possibilities, a broader array of things to do, the elusive allure of vacation and fun. 

It doesn't last as long so it means a little bit more.

Flashcubes bassist Gary Frenay wrote "Syracuse Summer," the ultimate tribute to Central New York's mercurial climate. It was first recorded by the Tearjerkers in 1980, with Gary singing the bridge. I find I can hate hot weather and still absolutely, unequivocally adore this song. I am large. I contain multitudes.

THE RAMONES: Rockaway Beach

The summer's here. The time is right. And it's not hard, not far to reach. Surf's up, brudders and sisters. Surf's up.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar

Carl's book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!! https://rarebirdlit.com/gabba-gabba-hey-a-conversation-with-the-ramones-by-carl-cafarelli/

If it's true that one book leads to another, my next book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) will be published in July. Stay tuned. Your turn is coming.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. Recent shows are archived at Westcott Radio. You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl