Showing posts with label Bo Diddley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bo Diddley. Show all posts

Friday, February 16, 2024

10 SONGS: 2/16/2024

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 # 1220. This show is available as a podcast.

WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

Back in the '90s, Wonderboy was a fantastic SoCal rockin' pop combo fronted by our old pal Robbie Rist. I've never even seen a copy of Wonderboy's eponymous 1992 debut album, but follow-ups Abbey Road To Ruin (1994) and Napoleon Blown Apart (1997) have been in my CD library since the proverbial ever. We've played Wonderboy on TIRnRR, we've played the esteemed Mr. Rist singin' with Popdudes, Quint, Ballzy Tomorrow, the Test Pressings, and solo, and we've played our Robbie working as an integral component of a number of other acts. The official record demonstrates that we, y'know, like Robbie Rist records.


But we did not know that Wonderboy recorded another album after Napoleon Blow Apart

The revelation came to us via The Spoon, the weekly podcast this Rist guy co-hosts with Chris Jackson and Thom Bowers. A recent Spooncast closed with a taste of "Girl Songs," a friggin' magnificent li'l gem from Wonderboy's originally unreleased album Hero Isle. Wonderboy recorded Hero Isle in (I think) the late '90s, working with studio magician Christian Nesmith; Christian and his wife Circe Link have also been fixtures on this little mutant radio show's playlists. Alas, Hero Isle was never released. Never released at all...

...wait.

What?

WHAT THE ACTUAL...?!!

Robbie did a digital self-release of Hero Isle. Well, that's good! Finally! Musta just been released, right? Right...?

It came out in 2018. 

We need better minions. Or, I guess, some minions. A minion. The buck stops somewhere over there. WAY over there.

Better late than...dammit, I wish we'd gotten to this sooner. But we're on it NOW! "Girl Songs" is a picture-perfect embrace of essential non-essentialness, eschewing weightier lyrical topics in favor of writin' catchy pop tunes about girls. 'Cause girls mean a lot to me!

We get the meaning, Robbie, and we agree. "Girl Songs" at long last makes its TIRnRR debut this week. We'll hear another Hero Isle track this Sunday night.

AND we'll hear "Girl Songs" again on Sunday, too. We have a big stack of time to overcompensate for. Girl songs? We're in.

[NOTE: Since this was posted, we have learned that Hero Isle was recorded before Napoleon Blown Apart, not after.]

BO DIDDLEY: Ooh Baby

It might not be strictly accurate to say I've been on a Bo Diddley kick, but it's true that a spin of the Diddley Daddy's incongruous (but swell!) bubblegum single "Bo Diddley 1969" on January 15th led to more Bo on each succeeding week. It's BO time!

Other than a spin of Diddley's "Background To A Music" (a song I learned from Cub Koda), all of the rest of my Bo picks in January and February have come from my 2-CD Bo Diddley compilation The Chess Box. From The Chess Box, we've heard "Bo Diddley 1969," "Pills," "Diddy Wah Diddy," and this week's bodacious Bo cut "Ooh Baby." We'll go back to The Chess Box for another relatively obscure Bo Diddley treat on our next show. 

And people say we don't know Diddley. Liars!

THE MC5: High School

In fact, I was a high school student when I first heard the MC5. The introduction occurred some time around my senior year, seven or eight years after the 1969 release of the group's incendiary classic "Kick Out The Jams." The track was included on a weird 2-LP various-artists set called Heavy Metal. I wrote about that album here. In that piece, I gave specific praise for the MC5:

"The album opens with 'Kick Out The Jams.' That was the revelation for me. I'd never heard the MC5 before, never heard of the MC5 before. This was the censored version, with brothers and sisters standing in for the unexpurgated original incitement to kick out the jams, muthafuckas. I knew nothing about any of that; I just knew this track rocked, and I discovered its raucous, ragged splendor just before I discovered the concept of punk rock. Within less than a year, I would be an enthusiastic punk fan."

"High School" was my second MC5 track, delivered to my eager ears on July 6, 1979, as I witnessed the Ramones' irresistible film Rock 'n' Roll High School. "High School" was on the movie's soundtrack, but not on the movie's soundtrack album. Within the next two or three years, I tracked down used copies of each of the MC5's three albums, Kick Out The Jams, Back In The USA, and High Time. The Back In The USA track "Shakin' Street" scored a lot--a lot--of turntable time in my apartment in the early '80s.

MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer left our mortal Shakin' Street behind at the beginning of this month. There was no doubt that we would close this week's show with "Kick Out The Jams," and I confess I was tempted to program the uncensored version for play during the safe harbor period, then sub in the cleaner-language edit for replay. But: Too much work. We kick out the jams in the fashion we choose.

And during our opening set, we chose the MC5's "High School" to salute the late, great Wayne Kramer. The kids want a little action. The kids want a little fun. The kids all have to get their kicks before the evening's done.

It's been a long, long time since high school. The lesson was learned, and it remains in place. Rah rah rah. Sis boom bah.

BLUE ÖYSTER CULT: Godzilla

I associate Blue Öyster Cult's song "Godzilla" with a specific memory of someone I knew decades ago. We were friends, but we did not part as friends. Our eventual estrangement had nothing whatsoever to do with either "Godzilla" or the band that performed it, but my mind tethers the track to a former friend, and my recollection of that friend playing the song and dedicating it to a former flame, someone I didn't really know. 

They also did not part as friends. 

Music is larger than its intrinsic details, and it can affect us in ways far beyond the artists' intentions. For all that, I don't hate the song at all. I do still dig it, and it makes a welcome addition to the TIRnRR playlist. I was amazed to look at our all-time stats and discover we'd never played the damned thing before. Well! There goes Tokyo! Go, go Godzilla!

MAD MONSTER PARTY: No Matter What I Do

When Dana programmed the Blue Öyster Cult song, I couldn't resist following that mad monster Godzilla with Mad Monster Party. Categorical imperative, people. Mad Monster Party included Gwynne Kahn and (at times) Bambi Conway, both of whom had been in the Pandoras, whose way fab 1984 track "It's About Time" merits a chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1)

Mad Monster Party released one single and recorded an album's worth of absolutely ace material in the '80s; if the album had come out, it would have been one of my tippy-top records of the decade, probably Top Three (challenging On Fyre by Lyres, falling just short of my # 1 pick Drop Out With The Barracudas). One of its tracks, "Can't Stop Loving You," appeared on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 3 in 2013, and the whole album (or at least an approximation of it) was briefly available as an authorized digital download. It is no longer available in any legit form.

And that's a shame. I have wav masters of the album, provided to me by the band when we were putting together the above-mentioned TIRnRR compilation. This stuff cries out for wider attention, wider release, and I hope some visionary record label will strike a deal to put Mad Monster Party on the shelves in physical form.

"No Matter What I Do" is from that album, and it rocks. Hey, Godzilla! Wanna party? Mad monsters gotta stick together.

SLADE: Do We Still Do It

Before radio playlists became so numbingly homogenized across the breadth of everywheresville, it was possible--common, even--for Top 40 stations in different parts of the USA to play records not being played in other markets. 

For example:

1970s stompmeisters Slade were huge in their native UK, largely unknown (or at least underappreciated) here in the colonies. But I knew 'em, because Syracuse's WOLF-AM decided Slade's "Gudbye T' Jane" was a goddamned hit, and played the track accordingly. Over time, I eventually snagged the Slade best-of LP Sladest, and sniffed imperiously at Johnnys-come-lately who discovered Slade material through Quiet Riot's meatball covers in the '80s. Poseurs.

For all that, I have to concede that it was an '80s cover version that hooked me on Slade's "Do We Still Do It." Slade's original version appeared on their 1974 album Old New Borrowed And Blue. In 1988, Flashcubes guitarist Paul Armstrong covered the song with his group 1.4.5. on their album Rhythm n' Booze. Thus indoctrinated, I kept ears open for Slade's OG rendition, and finally grabbed a copy of Old New Borrowed And Blue at a record show. We have played the Slade and the 1.4.5. records at various times on this show over the years.

And we still do it.

THE COCKTAIL SLIPPERS: St. Valentine's Day Massacre

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You


From power pop legend Paul Collins' new album Stand Back And Take A Good Look, "I'm The Only One For You" just might be my favorite new track of 2024 so far. We've now played it three weeks in a row. Spin # 4 will come this Sunday night. Stand back? NO! Dive in, man. Dive in.

THE BROTHERS STEVE: Songwriter


The mighty Brothers Steve released two albums with the good folks at Big Stir Records: # 1 (an independent release in 2019, reissued by Big Stir in 2020) and Dose (2021). If they do another album, I continue to insist it's gotta be called Dry.

I will not explain this joke to you.

Meanwhile, it was high time we played another Brothers Steve number (GET IT?) on the show, and we went back to # 1 for our choices. From that album, "We Got The Hits" has become something of a TIRnRR Fave Rave, so we figured we'd mix it up a bit, deciding between "Beat Generation Poet Turned Assassin" and "Songwriter." We went with the latter.

When it comes to programming the best stuff, you can always count on us.

THE MC5: Kick Out The Jams


Also The Greatest Record Ever Made. Godspeed, Wayne Kramer. Kick out the jams, brother. Kick out the jams.

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 new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now 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 will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). 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

Saturday, January 27, 2024

10 SONGS: 1/27/2024

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 # 1217. This show is available as a podcast.

VEGAS WITH RANDOLPH: What If?

Anyone who knows me is aware that my devotion to the big beat of the rock and the roll is matched, guitar to cape, by my pervasive and prevailing interest in superhero comic books. And while I have no idea whether or not the members of Vegas With Randolph have ever even read an issue of The Brave And The Bold or Tales To Astonish, I did use an  enthusiastic comics comparison when hyping their 2017 super team-up with Lannie Flowers for our compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4. That provides a coincidental bit of symmetry as we open this week's battle for truth, justice, and the Rickenbacker way with a new VWR track that shares its title with a Marvel Comics series:

What If?

That's the central question that sparks all fiction, the fantastic and the everyday alike. It's also the not-so-secret origin of many a relationship, and it serves as inspiration for many a fine pop song. Tell us about it, VWR:

What if, What if
I found you
and you wanted me
And I wanted you
And we were meant to be
What if I could lift the veil and see
Our destiny

Adventures await. It all starts with that question: What if?

"What If?" comes to us from Vegas With Randolph's forthcoming new album The Future Store. You should buy it. I did! And we will hear another of its tracks on our next show.

Will hear. There is no "if." There is just the amazing, the incredible, and the mighty. Excelsior!

THE JACK RUBIES: Heaven Shook Me
THE CYRKLE: Red Rubber Ball [21st century version]


This week's second set opens with two in a row from our friends at Big Stir Records. And while many think of Big Stir as a power pop (or at least power pop adjacent) label, this pairing illustrates that Big Stir is so much more than just one thing. 

The Jack Rubies are a British group that plied their surly craft in the '80s. Usually described as postpunk, the Jack Rubies are back with a new Big Stir album called Clocks Are Out Of Time, a brooding concoction that's as far removed from jangle as Mickey Spillane is from Mickey Mouse. Both great. Both great in different ways.

The Jack Rubies' "Heaven Shook Me" leads into the Cyrkle. Obviously. In the '60s, the Cyrkle annexed the charts with the sunshine pop of their big hits "Turn Down Day" and, of course, "Red Rubber Ball," the latter written by Paul Simon. The Cyrkle's present-day incarnation has signed with Big Stir, and in 2023 they released a single of the autobiographical "We Thought We Could Fly" coupled with a 21st-century remake of "Red Rubber Ball." We played "We Thought We Could Fly" upon its release, and the morning sun's "Red Rubber Ball [21st century version]" shines on this week's playlist. We hear the group is working on a new album for Big Stir. And we think's it's gonna be all right. Full Cyrkle.

BO DIDDLEY: Pills

It seems likely that a lot of folks in the TIRnRR demographic were introduced to Bo Diddley's classic 1961 song "Pills" via the cover version found on the New York Dolls' 1973 eponymous debut album.

Me? I never even knew the song existed before hearing former Dolls lead singer David Johansen warble it live at my first David Jo show in the summer of 1979. Even then, I thought the song was called "Rock 'n' Roll Nurse." I barely knew any Dolls or Johansen material before that show, just "Personality Crisis" and "Who Are The Mystery Girls," maybe "Babylon," and possibly David Jo's solo "Funky But Chic." After that night, I made a point of catching up as fast as I could.

I got to Bo Diddley's own "Pills" in 1990, with the acquisition of the two-CD Diddley compilation The Chess Box. A few years later, I got to see Diddley himself as part of an oldies package tour. I don't think he performed "Pills" in that live set at the New York State Fair, nor did Johansen sing it again in any of the shows of his I caught after my first one in '79. Guess he really didn't dig that jive the nurse was giving him.

We played Bo Diddley's "Pills" this week, and we played his late '60s bubblegum single "Bo Diddley 1969" last week. We'll serve up a third Bo Diddley classic on this coming Sunday night's program. Which one? Well, I tell ya: It ain't no town, and it ain't no city.

MARYKATE O'NEIL: I'm Ready For My Luck To Turn Around


FAIRPORT CONVENTION: Time Will Show The Wiser

On our radio show, Dana's been the one playing Fairport Convention, and I'm the one cheering every time he does. But I first heard Fairport Convention's cover of the Merry-Go-Round's delicate pop treasure "Time Will Show The Wiser" when my boss Lewis mentioned it. Lew loves Fairport Convention, and he saw them in concert some time in the way back when. As much I love the original, I now regard the Fairport Convention cover as definitive. Thanks for the tip, Lew! And thanks to Dana for programming it. Wise move.

HEADGIRL: Please Don't Touch

Girls can rock. Girls and boys can even rock together.

In 1980, the members of British metal acts Motörhead and Girlschool merged briefly as Headgirl, with their respective frontpersons--bassist Lemmy Kilmister and guitarist Kelly Jackson--trading lead vocals on a single called "Please Don't Touch." At the time of its release,  I knew Motörhead a little bit, and I was peripherally aware of Girlschool, an all-female group that was part of the then-hyped British New Wave of Heavy Metal, or at least a tangent to it. I guess a tangent is more accurate; their gender prevented them from being considered fairly alongside the boys in Iron Maiden and Def Leppard.

I didn't hear Headgirl's fantastic bludgeoning of Johnny Kidd and the Pirates' "Please Don't Touch" until 2021, but it made up for lost time by immediately becoming a part of my permanent Hot 100. It has a chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), and it's always ready to pop into the TIRnRR playlist at any time.

(The playlist is the only instance where I'm only going to spin the song once, and move on. Otherwise? It is not uncommon for repeat plays of "Please Don't Touch" to occupy the entirety of the iPod soundtrack for my evening commute. Don'tcha touch me baby 'cuz I'm shakin' so much.) 

THE FLASHCUBES: Gudbuy T' Jane

A few paragraphs north of here, we talked about how Big Stir Records is so much more than just a power pop label. But now, let's speak of one of the label's power pop superstars, the Flashcubes. But first: These words about rock 'n' roll radio.

My love of rock 'n' roll radio was forged by my absolute fascination with AM Top 40, beginning when I was a kid in the '60s, manifesting in earnest when I was in middle school and high school in the '70s. My migration to FM by the time I graduated from high school in 1977 didn't change the fact of the matter: Radio was everything. 

In those days, Top 40 stations in one city weren't necessarily playing all of the same potential hit records as Top 40 stations in other cities. Regional hits. Years later, I was surprised to learn that, say, "Tonight" by the Raspberries and "Blockbuster" by Sweet weren't radio smashes all across the USA. But here in Syracuse, they were. And so was "Gudbuy T' Jane" by UK stompers Slade.

My God, I loved this record. Still do. Slade were huge in their native land, but the colonies didn't catch on until the '80s, first via the numbskull proxy of covers by Quiet Riot and then by the much-belated appearance of Slade themselves on the American pop radar (and on MTV) with "My Oh My" and "Run Runaway."

The members of Syracuse's own power pop powerhouses the Flashcubes knew (and know) better. I'm sure they heard "Gudbuy T'Jane" on Syracuse's WOLF-AM circa '72, and I know at the very least that 'Cubes guitarist Paul Armstrong is a Slade fan of long standing. So "Gudbuy T' Jane" was a natural choice for the Flashcubes to remake on their superlative 2023 all-covers album Pop Masters. Latter-day New York Dolls guitarist Steve Conte brings additional oomph here, and the Flashcubes provide plenty of oomph of their own. It's what they do!

"Gudbuy T' Jane." Made for the airwaves, then and now. Get with it, America. Jane is all right, all right, all right, all right.

THE WEEKLINGS: Falling Down A Flight Of Stairs

When the Weeklings release new music, This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio has a tendency to wanna play it. We have to fill three hours of radio each week, and we very much prefer to fill that spot with irresistible music. Hey! The Weeklings create irresistible music! Let's play THAT!

We debuted "None Of Your Business," an advance track from the Weeklings' new album Raspberry Park,  on last week's show. Dana's been champin' at the bit to play a different track from Raspberry Park, the beguiling "Falling Down A Flight Of Stairs," but we hadda wait until the album's actual release to follow through.

Now: The album's out! And "Falling Down The Stairs" is on the air in Syracuse. Fall in. It's the Weeklings! On the radio, where they belong.

CHUBBY CHECKER: Slow Twistin'

The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame is a nice place to visit. But in terms of its relevance to the story (and history) of rock 'n' roll, people keep telling me it's unmimportant, that I should ignore it, that its continuous chuckleheaded snubs of worthy acts are best shrugged off with extreme disdain. These folks are right.

And they're also wrong.

Yes, the Hall is irrelevant, bloated, a joke, a blight, and it probably has bad breath. None of that contradicts my conviction that, in all caps and in bold, ROCK 'N' ROLL SHOULD HONOR ITS OWN. That glorified Hard Rock Cafe on the banks of Lake Erie, flawed though it is, remains the best, highest-profile means to do that. They keep messing it up. I'm gonna keep on calling for them to get it right.

Induct the Monkees. Induct Paul Revere and the Raiders. Induct the New York Dolls, Harry Nilsson, and Warren Zevon, each of whom has at least been nominated. And, for God's sake, induct Chubby Checker.

Come on, baby. Let's do this.

Speaking of acts looooong overdue for induction into The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame, our next edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio will program a few tracks by the Shangri-Las, in memory of the late, great Mary Weiss

REMEMBER!

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 new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now 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 will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). 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

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

10 SONGS: 1/17/2024

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 # 1216. This show is available as a podcast.

EMPEROR PENGUIN: What's The Worst That Could Happen

There are people--informed people, musician and music fan alike--who believe record labels don't matter. 

We disagree. 

Oh, it's true that a big-box corporate label is useless (or worse) to artists not pullin' in the mega-numbers, and it's also true that independent artists in the 21st century have tools to market themselves directly, tools that did not exist in previous eras. In those contexts, yeah, eff The Man. The artist is better off in those examples without the label.

But a good indie label can provide an invaluable means to getting new music to the right sets of ears. A great indie label can be a true partner to the artist, especially when physical releases are involved. That does matter. It can matter a lot.

One great indie label near 'n' dear to This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio's heart is Kool Kat Musik, led by the vision of Ray Gianchetti. We're proud to be biased here; Kool Kat released the last three TIRnRR compilations, and our Mr. Ray also did the CD version of fellow great indie label Futureman Records' digital set Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio. But both Dana and I were Kool Kat fans long before we were Kool Kat...whatever we are that's more accurate than "artists." We play Kool Kat releases, new and old, nearly every week. Much of that is compelling stuff that might not have gotten to us if it hadn't been pushed our way by this great indie label called Kool Kat. Thanks, Ray!

This week's show includes spins of Kool Kat releases by the Mosquitos and Armchair Oracles, a sneak peek at a near-future Kool Kat release from On The Runway, and it opens with an irresistible track from Emperor Penguin, asking that musical question, "What's The Worst That Could Happen?" That comes to us courtesy of the latest Emperor Penguin album Gentlemen Thieves, and we're delighted to add yet another Kool Kat treat to our own humble Play-Tone Galaxy. Kool Kat's cool by us.

THE WEEKLINGS: None Of Your Business

Speaking of great indie labels, Marty Scott's storied Jem Records imprint was one of my big go-to resources for the grooviest imports and indie releases in the '70s and '80s, when I was a somewhat younger rockin' pop fanatic. Marty's considerable (and HOW!!) experience in the music biz lends an undeniable oomph to his current efforts with Jem's modern incarnation. 

That prerequisite oomph has landed lotsa Jem releases by lotsa Jem stars on lotsa TIRnRR playlists. From the Grip Weeds and the Cynz to the Midnight Callers and the Gold Needles, and certainly including  the superfine tribute compilations in the Jem Records Celebrates series, Jem has been amply represented from week to week on this little mutant radio show. We're very much looking forward to a near-future Jem release from Paul Collins, and to the forthcoming Jem Records Celebrates [redacted]. Thanks, Marty!

Right now, we're commencing airplay of Raspberry Park, the latest from the force of nature that is the Weeklings. ALL HAIL THE WEEKLINGS! We start with this week's spin of the album's first single "None Of Your Business." Marty and his PR Empress Maureen Daye Pietoso have now said GO! to airplay of the rest of the record, and that starts on our next show. 

Jem of the airwaves. It's EVERYbody's business.

BO DIDDLEY: Bo Diddley 1969

BUBBLEGUM BO DIDDLEY! I dig this beyond any rational expectation. For some reason, ol' Bo did not perform this when I saw him on an oldies package tour many years ago. 

Go figure.

And yeah, "Bo Diddley 1969" is barely (if even) a footnote to the mighty Diddley's rockin' c.v. It ain't exactly "Who Do You Love" or "Say Man;" it's not even "Background To A Music." But I like it. Bo Diddley, Bo-Bo-Bo Diddley! 

THE HALF CUBES: Tell Someone You Love Them

When we discuss the great indie labels of today, we have to give much respect to Big Stir Records. Big Stir's Rex Broome and Christina Bulbenko are musicians themselves, transmogrifying dead air into beautiful sounds as the Armoires, and their passion for what they do drives the ongoing success of their label. We play Big Stir on the radio almost every week, with a spin of the latest from the Incurables this week and a new one from the Jack Rubies next time out. Thanks, Rex and Christina!

This week's extravaganza also serves up an as-yet-unreleased treat from Big Stir recording artists the Half Cubes. The Half Cubes include Gary Frenay and Tommy Allen (two of the founding members of Big Stir recording artists the Flashcubes), working with talents like Fernando Perdomo and Randy Klawon on a mind-blowing array of accomplished covers. One hopes there'll be an album someday.

Meanwhile, this Half Cubes cover of "Tell Someone You Love Them" (previously done by none other than Dino, Desi and Billy) is just stellar. Lead vocal duties here fall to Rob Bonfiglio, who is married to Carnie Wilson and plays in his father-in-law Brian Wilson's band. Good vibrations! And another fantastic track from the Half Cubes.

ROCKY BURNETTE: Tired Of Toein' The Line

I made a mistake on the radio this week. Yes, the AGAIN!! is a given. Dana played Rocky Burnette's "Tired Of Toein' The Line," one-third of an in-set series of Dana's picks by Rocky's brother Billy Burnette ("Oh, Susan") and their daddy Johnny Burnette with his Rock 'n' Roll Trio ("Train Kept A-Rollin'). I mentioned how I disliked Rocky's "Tired Of Toein' The Line" at the time of its hit reign when I was in high school, but that I'm more'n okay with it now.

WRONG!

Not the part about dislike evolving to like; that's accurate. But I graduated from high school in 1977; "Tired Of Toein' The Line" was a hit in 1980, the year I graduated from college. See, I messed up my own timeline. I can't even toe that line, man. I blame my advanced age.

DAVID BOWIE: Life On Mars?

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

ARMCHAIR ORACLES: Nilsson Wilson

A song that references Harry Nilsson and the Beach Boys? Jeez, talk about pandering to the TIRnRR demo. We approve! From Armchair Oracles' new Kool Kat Musik album Nothingeveris. Thanks AGAIN, Ray!

MILLIE SMALL: Killer Joe

As much as I love Millie Small's lone American hit "My Boy Lollipop," I sometimes wonder if little Miss Bluebeat's greatest track might actually be her vibrant cover of the Rocky Fellers' "Killer Joe." Millie flips the POV of the original, changing the narrative voice of a boy fuming helplessly as his crush Marie dances with the fierce and fearsome Killer Joe to that of a chick fretting as her guy Killer Joe frugs and frolics with that obviously hinge-heeled hussy Marie. As I've said before: It's Rashomon with a beat!

THE FLASHCUBES: You For Me

Little-known fact: The Flashcubes' collaboration with Big Stir grew from seeds planted when the 'Cubes were promoting their self-released live-in-1979 album Flashcubes On Fire. That album came out in 2022, and during the run-up to its release we thought maybe one of its incendiary cuts could be a good candidate for Big Stir's digital single series. Little did we know where that would lead! The road to 2023's magnificent Pop Masters album mixed its paving material and paid off its state inspectors right here.

The Flashcubes On Fire track "You For Me" was written by guitarist Paul Armstrong, and this live version is its only released incarnation. A demo exists, but it can't compare to the fire heard here, with the Flashcubes' other guitarist Arty Lenin playin' his twelve-string just like ringin' a bell, Arty and bassist Gary boppin' in together for a combined vocal hook that conveys a bended knee and a fist in the air, drummer Tommy channeling Keith Moon and every mooned-over face that ever graced a Tiger Beat magazine lead feature, and Paul himself testifying with as flat-out, full-on, unabashed POP a thing as he's ever done. Underrated tune, even among 'Cubes fans.

THE RAMONES: I Don't Want To Grow Up

Also The Greatest Record Ever Made! It isn't in that book, but it is in this book.

And as I say every year on this date: Don't want to. Won't need to. Ain't gonna.

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 new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now 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 will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). 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