Showing posts with label Chambers Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chambers Brothers. Show all posts

Saturday, February 15, 2025

10 SONGS: 2/15/2025

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 # 1272: THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO celebrates BLACK HISTORY MONTH.

ARTHUR CONLEY: Sweet Soul Music

As a confederacy of dunces seek to disavow the long-held tradition of recognizing February as Black History Month, I hereby declare this and every month from now on will be National Ridicule The Federal Confederacy Of Dunces Month. This will remain in effect until sanity returns and we consign the odious dunces to go bathing in the Gulf of Mexico.

Meanwhile, This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio celebrates Black History Month right here, and for our opening theme we call on the services of Arthur Conley. Do you like good music? You're in the right place.

BIG MAMA THORNTON: Hound Dog

We open the show proper with a long-distance dedication, going out to a not-so-special someone. No names are necessary. Big Mama Thornton knows who you are...and she knows what you are.

DERRICK ANDERSON: Send Me Down A Sign

I think Derrick Anderson is best known as bassist for the Bangles, but he first entered this little mutant radio show's airspace with TIRnRR Fave Raves the Andersons! Yeah, we were playing the Andersons! from the get-go, and that's an absolutely hilarious in-joke. Trust me! It is!

We've also been big fans of Derrick's 2017 solo album A World Of My Own, and its breakout track "When I Was Your Man" accrued significant Dana & Carl spinnage. This week, we figured we'd dig a little deeper into the album for "Send Me Down A Sign," a track I don't think we've ever played previously. I tell ya, this world of Derrick Anderson's own sounds like a mighty fine place to be.

JOAN ARMATRADING: Eating The Bear

From a previous post:

Some days the bear will eat you. Some days you eat the bear. All due respect to the incredible Ms. Joan Armatrading, but there are days when I believe this even-handed ratio to be overly optimistic regarding our collective and individual odds of surviving wholesale consumption by ravenous ursines. I don't think the Ranger's gonna like this, Yogi. 

"Eating The Bear" was (I think) the first Joan Armatrading track I knew, a cut from her 1981 album Walk Under Ladders. It's not the best-known track on that record; both "I'm Lucky" and "When I Get It Right" wound up on her Greatest Hits collection, while "Eating The Bear" remained native to the original album only. I was exposed to all three of those tracks in the same time frame, so I can't say for sure which one I heard first. But, whichever one was first to cross into my sovereign airspace, "Eating The Bear" was the one that had impact. Its impact came via the radio. Of course.

In 1981, I was a recent college graduate (State University College at Brockport Class of 1980), living in an apartment with my girlfriend (who was still completing her undergrad studies at Brockport), working at McDonald's, drinking beer, listening to my music. Brockport is a small village on the Erie Canal. It's located in Western New York, about 19 miles west of Rochester, and the city of Buffalo sprawls another 64 miles or so farther away. We could usually get radio stations from Buffalo and even from Toronto. Buffalo had a generic album-rock station called 97 Rock, a bland AOR outlet that usually wasn't of much interest to me. Sunday nights were the exception. That's when this cookie-cutter rock station transformed itself temporarily into something greater: A weekly showcase called 97 Power Rock.

97 Power Rock claimed a more adventurous format, programming new wave rock and other fare that was presumably edgier than the station's prerequisite diet of Loverboy and Journey. 97 Power Rock played the likes of The Teardrop Explodes, U2, Psychedelic Furs, Viva Beat, Joy Division, Spandau Ballet, the Vibrators, Mission of Burma, old school rock by Andy Fairweather Low, even reggae by Dillinger. It was sufficiently eclectic and vibrant to secure my loyalty.

Joan Armatrading's music was part of that. Walk Under Ladders had a little bit of a post-punk vibe, partially attributable to Steve Lillywhite's production plus Thomas Dolby's synthesizer work on the album. That perceived level of cool opened 97 Power Rock's playlist for entry, and Armatrading's own songs, singing, playing, and pure presence did the rest. Man, this sounded fantastic on the radio. It didn't quite move me to buy the album--I was still a few years away from grasping Armatrading's brilliance--but it got my attention. I heard the songs, and a radio ad for the album, all of which prompted me to scrawl Walk Under Ladders in my spiral notebook, on the long, long list of LPs I wanted to buy once I'd accumulated enough burger-flippin' cash to buy all of the albums I wanted.

"Eating The Bear" was the Armatrading track for me. In 1981, I'd never heard the phrase Some days you eat the bear, some days the bear eats you, so I had no idea whatsoever of the song's subject matter, no proper understanding of its stubborn fatalism, its determined swig from a half-empty glass that we'll refill if we survive, and smash in the face of any critter that says we won't. I just thought it sounded great, and it still sounds great. 

For years, Armatrading's Greatest Hits was her sole representation in my music collection, and "Me Myself I" is discussed in my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). "Eating The Bear" subsequently popped into my head again, and I snagged a CD of Walk Under Ladders, a wonderful album that I wish had made the transition from my notebook list to my record shelf forty-odd years ago. 

Better late than never. Sometimes it takes a while, but radio gets the job done eventually. Bear necessities. Mind your manners there, Yogi. I ain't a-gonna be in no pic-a-nic basket. I'll keep you off my menu if you keep me off yours.

THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS: Time Has Come Today

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

RIHANNA: Shut Up And Drive

I remember hearing Rihanna's hit "Umbrella" in 2007, and not being especially taken with it. In 2008, the updated version of her Good Girl Gone Bad (Good Girl Gone Bad: Reloaded) landed into my consciousness via my then-teen daughter, whose interest in "Take A Bow" and "Disturbia" brought those songs to my attention as well. I was a little surprised to discover I liked them (especially "Disturbia"), but I did indeed like them.

I missed out on the track "Shut Up And Drive." I've heard it, but I never noticed it until a random search for playlist ideas brought me to it earlier this month. It was like a brand new song to me, and I loved it.

(How did I know I loved it? The fact that I played it on obsessive repeat would be a pretty clear clue to that.)

Wikipedia describes "Shut Up And Drive" as a new wave song--no, really!--based on "Blue Monday" by New Order. No offense to the mopey British guys, but I prefer it the way Rihanna did it.

RAY CHARLES: Hit The Road Jack

Yep. I direct this sentiment at the precise dunces to whom you would think I'd direct it.

GRANDMASTER AND MELLE MEL: White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)

From my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1):

"...New Music Radio [WBNY-FM in Buffalo, a station to which I was religiously devoted in the '80s]  included hip hop. Like Herman's Hermits, rap was part of the atmosphere, part of the flavor of WBNY. WBNY was my introduction to Run DMC (with 'Rockbox'), and it was my introduction to Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. 'The Message.' Don't push me 'cause I'm close to the edge. Music journalists told us 'The Message' was the first big hip-hop track to ignore party-time bragging to focus instead on social commentary, to chronicle inner-city living in disadvantaged black neighborhoods. It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder how I keep from goin' under. We didn't need to be told how powerful it sounded on the radio.

"The importance and impact of 'The Message' notwithstanding, 'White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)' meant more to me, then and now. It's more pop than 'The Message,' with its seductive rang-dang-diggety-dang-de-dang melody, propulsive bass, and Melle Mel's cry of 'BASS!,' the latter sucker-punching you when you realize it's meant as a deceptive homophone for 'base,' as in freebase cocaine...

"...'White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)' is a Melle Mel record; former cohorts Grandmaster Flash and Melle Mel had parted company prior to 'White Lines,' but the record was credited to Grandmaster and Melle Mel in an attempt to capitalize on the familiar name and the previous success of 'The Message.' It is often referred to as a Grandmaster Flash record, and that's what I thought it was when I heard it on WBNY. Whatever and whomever, I couldn't hear it enough...."

CEELO GREEN: Forget You

Maybe not the first specific "F YOU!" that comes to mind in these troubling times. Though, come to think of it, it wasn't the first "F YOU!" that came to CeeLo Green's mind either. One of the marks of how great this is as a pure pop song is that the original "Fuck You" is incidental; it works just as well in FCC-friendly format. "Forget You" is perfectly radio-ready without the potty mouth, and perfectly pissed-off in any incarnation.

JAMES BROWN: Say It Loud--I'm Black And I'm Proud [Pt. 1]

There is much reason for pride. We celebrate it throughout the year. And we circle it on our calendar every February for Black History Month. Say it loud.

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, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

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.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! The Chambers Brothers, "Time Has Come Today"

February is BLACK HISTORY MONTH. You should not trust any traitorous grifter-in-chief who tries to suggest otherwise. This is a chapter from my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1).

An infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Today, this is THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE!


THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS: Time Has Come Today
Written by Willie Chambers and Joseph Chambers
Produced by David Rubinson
Single, Columbia Records, 1967

My soul has been psychedelicized.

Some records feels so massive, so friggin' huge, that we can't imagine how that sonic tsunami could be contained by any physical medium. The track's palpable mojo bursts free from its grooves, untethered, conjuring the equivalent of cinematic Sensurround within our eager heads. It's larger than life. That description applies to the dynamic acid soul of "Time Has Come Today" by the Chambers Brothers.

"Time Has Come Today" was released as a single the winter following the summer of love. It became a hit as 1967 became 1968, its epic lysergic a fiery prequel to the upheaval '68 would bring. The record is louder and heavier than the heavens, its clarion call of revelation and revolution only too fitting to hear from a group of four brothers (plus a non-brother drummer) raised on the Gospel. 

1968 offered the promise and the threat of a nation and a world ready to burn. But even as everything seemed poised to tumble into the Stygian depths, the Chambers Brothers do not preach of destruction, nor sing the praises of Hell. We already know that the devil has no music to call his own. Not even in 1968. Not even today.

The Chambers Brothers evoke the apocalyptic in service of greater good. "Time Has Come Today" isn't the defiant call to arms of the MC5's "Kick Out The Jams," nor is it a feel-good joining of hands like, say, the Youngbloods' "Get Together." "Time Has Come Today" stands alone, its determination delivered at a volume that can leave a scar, its strength realized in choosing compassion over hate. TIME! It's a rock record. It's a soul record. 100 % on both counts, and it does not care if the math is fuzzy. The Chambers Brothers don't have time for such petty limitations.

The group first attempted the song in 1966. They returned to it for their 1967 album The Time Has Come,  an eleven-minute rendition elasticized and psychedelicized by an extended musical freakgasm that quotes "The Little Drummer Boy," perhaps indicating that Christmastime has come today. An initial single edit sacrificed a little too much of the song's weight and presence. A subsequent single clocking in at a little under five minutes provides perfect balance. Perfect time. And a perfect time for love.

TIME!

You can argue that "Time Has Come Today" isn't specifically about love. At the rumbling dawn of 1968, "Time Has Come Today" could just as well be a ticking time bomb, or a countdown to civil rights, a looming deadline for resistance against the draft, a call to alter one's consciousness, or, I guess, just a freakout party tune. It's an insistent, even belligerent warning, an urgent command: Love. We'll fight for it if we have to. Young hearts can go their way. Can't put it off another day. The time has come. 

The rules have changed today. Regrets. We've had a few. Knowing we can be tough and strong doesn't mean we will be tough and strong. In A Farewell To Arms, Hemingway writes that "the world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places." It seems a nice, hopeful quote. But then he adds, "But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry."

Unsentimental bastard, that Hemingway.

I don't care what others say. They think we don't listen anyway. With souls psychedelicized (or otherwise), love's power can bring heartbreak, and it can bring you down. But it can save you if the stars align. It's a dangerous, frightening creature that is worth its risk. Its potential reward is the very reason we suffer its cruelty. 

Love. The time has come. You can feel it, in your soul. Its sound fills every pocket of the air around us. Its force lifts us, its rhythm moves us, its voice drives us. TIME! Love's power cannot be denied when its time has come.

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, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

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.

Saturday, August 31, 2024

10 SONGS: 8/31/2024

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 # 1248.

THE GREG KIHN BAND: Reunited

Our featured performer this week was, of course, the late, great Greg Kihn. I've often written about what I call my crucible year of 1977, a year of transition from high school into college, and a big year of transition in the music I loved. The transition really began in late '76, and bled well into '78, but you know how crucibles are; heat expands, and the heat of my crucible couldn't be contained within a single calendar year.

The acts, new and old, that I discovered and/or embraced in this short span of time redefined me. No, "redefined" ain't the right word. Refocused. Redirected? Renewed? Ah, got it: Refined. My preexisting love of '60s British Invasion and early '70s AM Top 40 radio didn't cede space for new arrivals; no, the floor plan for my passions just grew. I already loved the Beatles, the Monkees, Badfinger, the Raspberries, the Dave Clark Five, the Animals, Sweet, and more. My crucible forged fresh and ongoing awareness of the Kinks, the Ramones, the Flashcubes, Blondie, the Runaways, the Jam, the YardbirdsTelevision, Elvis Costello, et al.

And at the heart of all of that, WOUR-FM in Utica, NY introduced my ears to the sounds of the Rubinoos, Nick Lowe, Graham Parker, the Sex Pistols...and to Greg Kihn.

I don't mention Greg Kihn as often as I mention most of these others, but he was absolutely an important and still-cherished part of my crucible, part of how I thought pop music should sound in my world.

So yes, of course the news of Kihn's passing demanded tribute, and we played as many Greg Kihn and Greg Kihn Band performances as we could. The show and the tribute started with the Greg Kihn Band's 1984 gem "Reunited," as This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio remembers Greg Kihn.

LIBRARIANS WITH HICKEYS: Hello Operator

Any new music by Librarians With Hickeys is pret' much guaranteed a spin (or more!) on our little mutant radio show. Akron's Phenomenal Pop Combo is back with a fab new single, "Hello Operator," and yes, we will absolutely accept the charges. "Hello Operator" is a teaser for a new Librarians With Hickeys album due out before the end of the year. It's pret' much guaranteed we'll be playing that, too. The number you have reached IS in service!

THE ARMOIRES: Snake Island Thirteen

As the rockin' pop world waits with giddy anticipation for the imminent release of the Armoires' splendid new album Octoberland, we have one more advance single from that mighty, mighty record. The digital single was released on August 24--Ukrainian Independence Day--and it pairs the Octoberland track "Snake Island Thirteen" with "Don't Kill That World I'm Living In," the latter by Ukrainian performer Roy Crank. Sales of the split single Songs For Ukrainian Independence Day benefit humanitarian aid through United Help Ukraine. YOU should purchase it immediately, and you can do so right here. You can also donate directly to United Help Ukraine here.

(I have heard Octoberland, and it's one of the best albums of 2024. We'll be talking more about Octoberland very soon.)

GREG KIHN: Hurt So Bad
GREG KIHN: For You


The photo up at the tippy-top of today's post shows that I have a fair to decent collection of Greg Kihn's music. I have an obvious and very common pick for my # 1 favorite Greg Kihn track, and we'll get to that in a couple of entries south of here. My second-favorite among Kihn's catalog is "Hurt So Bad," a wonderful cut from his 1977 album Greg Kihn Again. Whatta record! I don't think I got around to hearing it until the '80s--and I can't believe we never played it on TIRnRR before this week's show--but "Hurts So Bad" has been one of my top Greg Kihn go-tos for decades. It would have required military action to keep "Hurt So Bad" out of the playlist this week.

The only Greg Kihn Again track I knew contemporary to its release in '77 was Kihn's cover of Bruce Springsteen's "For You," which scored significant airplay on WOUR and served as my introduction to Greg Kihn. As the Boss hisself wrote in a different song: From small things, Mama, big things one day come.

JONATHAN RICHMAN: Roadrunner

Within the alt-pop realm where Dana & Carl often dwell, Jonathan Richman's "Roadrunner" has become an acknowledged classic. Usually, that means a spin of the Modern Lovers' John Cale-produced version from 1972, but my first exposure to the song was ex-Modern Lover Richman's solo version, first released as a single in '74 and a UK hit when reissued in '77. 

On this version (now usually referred to as "Roadrunner [Once]"), our Jonathan is backed by the Greg Kihn Band, and Kihn sings back-up. And I heard it via its inclusion on a friggin' fantastic various-artists compilation called Geef Voor New Wave, a battered but bountiful cornucopia that slotted its "Roadrunner" alongside essentials by the Rubinoos, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Generation X, Motörhead, the Adverts, the Motors, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, X-Ray SpexEarth Quake, Radio Stars, the Radiators From Space, Johnny Moped, and the Sex Pistols. Lemme tell ya: This was awesome

The Greg Kihn Band later recorded their own version of "Roadrunner," a live-in-the-studio rave-up on their 1979 album With The Naked Eye. Post-crucible, yes, but this particular "Roadrunner" enjoyed a lot of airplay on Syracuse's 95X, and it was an integral part of my soundtrack that summer. I had the radio ON...!

THE GREG KIHN BAND: The Breakup Song (They Don't Write 'Em)

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS: Time Has Come Today

In the midst of our Irish wake for Greg Kihn, it seemed imperative to also pay tribute to the late Joe Chambers of psychedelic soul juggernaut the Chambers Brothers. The obvious song to play for that tribute is also the right song to play for that tribute: "Time Has Come Today," co-written by Joe and his brother Willie Chambers, is a stone masterpiece, and I was tempted to program its eleven-minute+ LP version instead of the five-minute single. The track rules at either length.

Here's a bit from the "Time Has Come Today" chapter in my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1):

"My soul has been psychedelicized.

"Some records feels so massive, so friggin' huge, that we can't imagine how that sonic tsunami could be contained by any physical medium. The track's palpable mojo bursts free from its grooves, untethered, conjuring the equivalent of cinematic Sensurround within our eager heads. The record is larger than life. That description applies to the dynamic acid soul of 'Time Has Come Today' by the Chambers Brothers.

" 'Time Has Come Today' was released as a single the winter following the summer of love. It became a hit as 1967 became 1968, the track's epic lysergic earthquake serving as fiery prequel to the upheaval '68 would bring. The record is louder and heavier than the heavens, its clarion call of revelation and revolution only too fitting to hear from a group of four brothers (plus a non-brother drummer) raised on the Gospel.  

"For even as the world seemed poised to tumble into the Stygian depths, the Chambers Brothers do not preach of destruction, nor sing the praises of Hell. We already know that the devil has no music to call his own. Not even in 1968. Not even today.

"So the Chambers Brothers evoke the apocalyptic in service of greater good...."

JOAN JETT AND THE BLACKHEARTS: Be Straight

Our tribute to Greg Kihn included tracks credited to the Greg Kihn Band and to Kihn as a solo artist, a sample of Kihn's work with future guitar hero Joe Satriani, and the Jonathan Richman track. As a bonus, we also threw in "Be Straight" by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, a track from the group's 1981 album I Love Rock 'n Roll. Jett co-wrote the song with Kihn and Kenny Laguna, Jett's manager. "Be Straight" is one of four tracks on I Love Rock 'n Roll that I like even more than I like the album's title track, and one of five such tracks if we also consider the originally non-LP "Oh Woe Is Me." And I do love the title track, too. I'm a fan.

As a member of the Runaways, Jett was also a big part of my crucible. This week, I saw Joan Jett and the Blackhearts for my fourth time overall (and Jett herself for my fifth time, counting the time I saw the Runaways with the Ramones and the Flashcubes). Her set this week didn't include "Be Straight," but it did offer all of her prerequisite Joan Jett favorites, some superb-soundin' new numbers, my top three tracks from the expanded I Love Rock 'n Roll album ("Victim Of Circumstance," "Oh Woe Is Me," and especially "Love Is Pain"), and the show concluded with her signature tune, "Bad Reputation," a song that means a great deal to me.

(PLUS! Joan wore a KAMALA HARRIS FOR PRESIDENT button throughout the show. Rock AND roll! I love it.)

THE GREG KIHN BAND: Testify

And we do indeed testify. Every day. The crucible will accept nothing less.

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; 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.

Friday, September 8, 2023

10 SONGS: 9/8/2023

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 High School # 1197: The 12th Annual DANA'S FUNKY SOUL PIT. This show is available as a podcast.

ERMA FRANKLIN: It's Over

"Over...?!" WE JUST STARTED!!

Erma Franklin is no stranger to the Soul Pit, nor a stranger to non-Soul Pit TIRnRR playlists, with her song "I Don't Want No Mama's Boy" and her Forgotten Original of "Piece Of My Heart" scoring the most attention. "It's Over" is my new favorite Erma Franklin work.

Yes, we know about Erma Franklin's little sister Carolyn Franklin; she's also scored some TIRnRR airplay. And everyone knows about their middle sister. But today: a little respect for Big Sister Erma. Respect is never over.

THE SUPREMES: Love, I Never Knew You Could Feel So Good

We've been playing the Supremes a lot this year, specifically music the Supremes did in the '70s after former lead singer whatsername moved on to her solo career. It's an amazing and largely unrecognized body of work, well worthy of obsession and repeat play. A love Supreme. I never knew it could feel so good.

MEL AND TIM: Backfield In Motion

I don't recall Mel and Tim's hit "Backfield In Motion" from its radio heyday in 1969, though I probably heard it. The song entered my collection in 1977 via a used record purchase at Mike's Sound Center in North Syracuse. 

The used record in question was Do It Now: 20 Giant Hits, a various-artists collection issued by cheap-o label Ronco Records in 1970. I had read about the album in one of Harlan Ellison's books of TV criticism, The Glass Teat or The Other Glass Teat. "Backfield In Motion" did not make any immediate impression on me; it was one of the tracks I often skipped en route to the Association and Jefferson Airplane. I like it a lot more now.

Nor was I much of (or any of) a football fan in '77--I like that a lot more now, too--but I did recognize "backfield in motion" as a gridiron term. I even knew gridiron. I tell ya, I was a Renaissance punk. But my primary image for the phrase in the '70s was from an otherwise-forgotten TV comedy sketch about football, with Bob Hope or Dean Martin or whomever referring to some shapely 'n' sporty starlets' curvy backfields being in motion.

Penalty declined.

DONNA SUMMER: I Feel Love

Donna Summers' first hit "Love To Love You Bab," was basically an extended orgasm set to a disco beat (which is not necessarily a bad thing). But "I Feel Love" is more interesting; still shimmering and sexy--Donna Summer at that time could have covered the Singing Nun, and still been shimmering and sexy--but its European syncopation makes it even sexier, if not quite as sweaty. Or perhaps not as obviously sweaty.

In 1977, Brian Eno told Bowie that Donna Summer's "I Feel Love" was the sound of the future. In that year of potential musical revolution, a year of important and transcendent releases by the Ramones, the Sex Pistols, the ClashTalking HeadsElvis Costello, and Television, Eno was still probably right. An amazing single.

RICK JAMES: Super Freak

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE AD LIBS: The Boy From New York City

Various-artists compilations have played an enormous role in introducing me to a wider range of rockin' pop music. We mentioned Ronco's Do It Now a few metric parsecs north of here; from Heavy Metal and History Of British Rock through Nuggets and Yellow Pills, compilations have opened my ears to an endless array of singers, songs, and sounds. Variety. Context. Any record you ain't heard is a new record.

In the summer of '78, I snagged a copy of a 1976 oldies collection called 15 Original Rock N' Roll Biggies Vol. 2, a cheap set I acquired for the specific purpose of replacing my crappy-sounding 45 of the Bobby Fuller Four's "I Fought The Law." For bonus value, this album introduced me to a couple of great Standells cuts ("Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White" and "Why Pick On Me") I didn't know--any record you ain't heard, yadda yadda--and it introduced me to "The Boy From New York City" by the Ad Libs.

Unlike my previous experience of ignoring Mel and Tim on Do It Now, I did take a shine to "The Boy From New York City" and I played it nearly as often as I played its LP brethren Bobby Fuller and the Standells. Come ON, Kitty!

LARRY WILLIAMS: Slow Down

Last year's edition of Dana's Funky Soul Pit was a soul tribute to the Beatles, a fab 'n' funky soulabration of all things Fab. Most of that show consisted of soul and R & B covers of Beatles songs, but with a closing set of some of the classic soul originals--Arthur Alexander's "A Shot Of Rhythm And Blues," Chuck Berry's "Rock And Roll Music," the Cookies' "Chains," Richie Barrett's "Some Other Guy," et al.--that the savage young moptops themselves adored. The Beatles wanted to be a soul group. Lemme hear you say YEAH. THREE times!

The Beatles certainly adored Larry Williams, and most of us know Williams more from the Beatles' covers of "Slow Down," "Bad Boy," and "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" than we know Williams' versions. These songs became well-known classics because the Beatles did them.

But, even before Liverpool's Finest grabbed these songs and took 'em along on that left turn at Greenland, they were already GREAT songs. The Beatles had impeccable taste. 

Among all songs covered by the Beatles, their take on "Slow Down" edges out their well-known workout of the Isley Brothers' "Twist And Shout" as my favorite. The original's cool, too. The original's fantastic. I want that love to last.

MAJOR LANCE: It's The Beat

It's the BEAT, man, the BEAT! Like '70s Supremes, the mighty Major Lance has also established a presence on TIRnRR playlists. One of my older siblings had the 45 of Lance's 1963 smash "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um," and I'm delighted to say I typed the correct number of titular Ums without checking first. I'm a SUCCESS! 

I liked that record when I was a kid, and i still do. But man, it is so cool to hear deeper tracks from the Major Lance catalogue o' wonder; whenever Dana programs a Major Lance song I don't know, my inner self executes an enthusiastic li'l fist bump. Can't beat that. Keep 'em comin', Dana!

THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS: All Strung Out Over You

From a previous edition of 10 Songs:

"The Chambers Brothers are one-hit wonders, but man, what a hit that was. Their 1968 smash 'Time Has Come Today' is a freakin' wall of rock and soul, and I'm probably going to add it to my ever-forthcoming book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). I haven't listened to the full eleven-minute version in far too long, but I owe myself that pleasure in the near future. Even the single version is a bit lengthy at nearly five minutes, but it's five minutes well spent. TIME!! The Ramones did an incredible cover of the song in the early '80s; even they couldn't improve on the original.

"As is often the case with one-hit wonders, the Chambers Brothers cut more good stuff beyond the solitary Chosen One everyone knows. I've begun a casual dive into some of that recently, picking up both a CD best-of set and an expanded CD reissue of the group's The Time Has Come album. "All Strung Out Over You" was on that LP, a great track that only charted regionally. It deserved better."

To the above, I will add a supplemental Oh YEAH! on behalf of "All Strung Out Over You," and assure all 'n' sundry that, since writing that entry in 2021, I am now fully in the thrall of the longer cut of "Time Has Come Today." My soul has been psychedelicized.

RAY CHARLES: Let's Go Get Stoned

As always, it's important to have goals. Our goal is to hang tight, hang tough, and meet you back here next year for The 13th Annual Dana's Funky Soul Pit. Let's GO!

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

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, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl