Showing posts with label Jesse Bryson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jesse Bryson. Show all posts

Thursday, July 7, 2022

10 SONGS: 7/7/2022

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 # 1136: COME ON LET'S GO! A Celebration Of Classic Power Pop, Pure Pop, And The Power Pop Periphery.

THE FLASHCUBES WITH THE SPONGETONES: Have You Ever Been Torn Apart?

POP WITH POWER! It seemed appropriate to kick off our power pop extravaganza with this rock 'n' roll summit meeting between two of its all-time greatest practitioners: Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse (and this week's Featured Performers) the Flashcubes and North Carolina's phenomenal pop combo the Spongetones. Their recent combined-force Big Stir Records single remake of the Spongetones' "Have You Ever Been Torn Apart?" has been a huge TIRnRR favorite this year, because we have simply impeccable rockin' pop taste.

THE BEATLES: Please Please Me

We are never going to collectively agree on a definition of power pop, and we're never going to agree on power pop's point of origin. Bomp! magazine's Greg Shaw and Gary Sperrazza! pinpointed the Who's pre-Tommy sides as power pop's Ground Zero, but many informed fans and pundits insist power pop can't start until the '70s. I strongly disagree with the latter view, and kinda think we can and should start power pop's stopwatch a little earlier than Bomp! decreed. We can make a case for power pop beginning with Eddie Cochran; I think power pop's introductory detonation came courtesy of the Beatles, specifically with "Please Please Me." Writer Gary Pig Gold and I debated the subject in this piece from 2007.

JESSE BRYSON: Come Back

When we decided to do this week's show as a celebration of classic power pop, pure pop, and the power pop periphery from the '60s, '70s, and '80s, I also wanted to bridge then and now by playing all of the Flashcubes' singles, 1978-2022. As a sidebar to that, we threw in Jesse Bryson's version of "Come Back," a song Jesse's dad Wally Bryson wrote and originally recorded with Fotomaker in the late '70s; Jesse's new version enlists Gary Frenay and Tommy Allen from the 'Cubes and Frankie Vinci and Lex Marchesi from Fotomaker, so its legacy aspect made it a natural addition to this week's retrovision. Jesse Bryson's "Come Back" joined the Flashcubes' 21st century singles as the only latter-day tracks on this week's show.

THE BANGLES: Tell Me

In the mid '90s, when I was freelancing for Goldmine magazine, I wrote a lengthy history of power pop. The piece was published in the January 5th, 1996 issue of GM, alongside separate best-of power pop annotations and recommendations from John M. Borack, a Bay City Rollers retrospective by Dave Thompson, my interview with Greg Kihn, and my liner notes to the Flashcubes' then-forthcoming anthology CD Bright Lights. It was an honor to be involved with creating the first-ever power pop issue of Goldmine, and editor Jeff Tamarkin told me the issue sold well and received a very positive reaction.

But...well, nobody's perfect. Gary Sperrazza! himself was miffed that I hadn't contacted him for his recollections of Bomp! and the power pop scene (an error I still and will always regret). And one reader wrote a letter complaining about the overwhelmingly male-dominated nature of my power pop history. Although I thought some of that reader's suggestions of female power pop artists bordered on the absurd (prompting my reply, "Toni Basil? Are you putting me on?"), I eventually found myself agreeing that he had a point.

So, when I eventually updated and revamped my power pop history into a new version for John Borack's 2005 book Shake Some Action, I acknowledged the oversight and tried to correct it a little bit. Looking back, I say it was still perfunctory--how did I fail to mention Holly and the Italians?--but I did at least expand my coverage a little bit. I hadn't yet heard the fabulous music of the Shivvers or the Expressos in 2005, but I included mention of the Pop Tarts, the Catholic Girls, Nikki and the Corvettes, the B-Girls, the Go-Go's, and the Bangles. I later dovetailed some of this (including the Shivvers) into a blog piece called "Power Pop 101."

Getting back to the Bangles: their eponymous debut EP and their first full-length album All Over The Place remain stirring, sterling examples of transcendent pop-rock, earning them the "She-Beatles" sobriquet bestowed upon them by intrepid TIRnRR listener Elma Tiran, aka Sparky. Subsequent records were good too, though my heart belongs to the earlier efforts.

Especially to All Over The Place. To my ears, that record is one track shy of being a perfect album, only kept from a complete Love At First Spin by my disinterest in "More Than Meets The Eye." The rest is as good as rockin' pop music gets. Mr. Goldmine letter-writer, wherever you are: in the words of the Monkees, I'm a little bit wrong, you're a little bit right.

(Not about Toni Basil, mind you. Still think you were putting me on with that.)

THE ISLEY BROTHERS: Got To Have You Back

No one thinks of the Isley Brothers as a power pop band, and that's fair (the Isleys' enormous influence on the Beatles notwithstanding). But this song, 1966's "Got To Have You Back?" I tell ya, if the exact same recording had been credited to the Who on Brunswick instead of the Isley Brothers on Motown, it would garner wider recognition as an essential early power pop track. Whatever label you choose for it, it's an amazing track.

THE RAMONES: Sheena Is A Punk Rocker

Our above-mentioned Bomp! magazine visionaries Greg Shaw and Gary Sperrazza! recognized the power pop bona fides of the Ramones. I concur, and I made my case on their behalf when I wrote the Ramones' induction into The Power Pop Hall of Fame. "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker" is, without exaggeration, the record that changed my life, an epiphany on a direct par with seeing the Beatles in A Hard Day's Night and the first time I witnessed the Flashcubes play. Punk can be pop; it can be as pop as the giddiest and catchiest stuff out there. To me, that's as simple as 1-2-3-4!  

(And, um...I wrote a book about the Ramones. But it's a secret for now. Shhhhh. Don't tell anybody.)

STIV BATORS: It's Cold Outside

Just because punk can be pop doesn't mean all punk is pop. I love the Sex Pistols, and believe their intrinsic worth as an exciting rock 'n' roll band is undervalued because folks can't see past the anger and anarchy, but I can't plausibly consider the Pistols as power pop. Some punk and punk-adjacent bands--the Jam, the Buzzcocks, Generation X, Eddie and the Hot Rods, Rich Kids with ex-Pistol Glen Matlock--at least dabbled around the edge of power pop. The Sex Pistols and the Clash did not. 

Nor did the Dead Boys, really, though the group's guitarist Jimmy Zero claimed that the Raspberries' Side 3 was his favorite album. There's no discernible power pop influence in the grooves of the Dead Boys' first album Young, Loud & Snotty, and while you can maybe hear a little bit of closeted janglebuzz in their second album We Have Come For Your Children, it still ain't quite a record that demands to be filed under Teen Beat Vocal.

Which makes it all the more remarkable that former Dead Boys lead singer Stiv Bators briefly became a full-on power pop performer with the singles he did immediately after the Dead Boys' dissolution in 1979. "Sonic Reducer" isn't power pop. "It's Cold Outside"/"The Last Year" is. Unmistakably. Undeniably. Follow-up 45 "Not That Way Anymore"/"Circumstantial Evidence" is, at the very least, pretty damned close. And the singles were released by Bomp Records! Of course!

Bators knew who he needed to form his power pop band: guitarist Frank Secich had been in the shoulda-been-famous '70s rockin' pop combo Blue Ash, and his presence imbued Bators' immediate post-Dead Boys work with power pop gravitas; I really, really hope the Flashcubes do some work with Secich, too. 

"It's Cold Outside" was originally a 1966 regional hit by the Choir, a Cleveland group otherwise canonized in power pop history because it included three future members of the Raspberries, guitarist Wally Bryson, drummer Jim Bonfanti, and bassist Dave Smalley (though I don't think Smalley was on the Choir's recording of "It's Cold Outside"). 

The Choir's "It's Cold Outside" is a fabulous record. Stiv Bators' remake slays the original, and it's not even close. Credit one more notch to the punk and power pop alliance.

THE FLASHCUBES FEATURING RANDY KLAWON: Get The Message

To date, the Flashcubes have released a total of eight singles. The first two were 45s issued during the group's original run, "Christi Girl" in 1978 and "Wait Till Next Week" in '79. Since regrouping in the early '90s, the 'Cubes did one two-song CD single of Chris Spedding covers (later reissued as a 45 for Record Store Day in 2017), and commenced their current series of Big Stir digital singles in 2021.

The Big Stir singles have all been covers, with our 'Cubes usually aided and abetted by other stars of the glittering power pop sky. The first was their take on Pezband's "Baby It's Cold Outside" (with the song's author Mimi Betinis pitching in), followed by renditions of the Dwight Twilley Band's "Alone In My Room," a collaboration with Shoes on the latter's magnificent "Tomorrow Night," the above-mentioned Spongecubes mash-up, and Slade's "Gudbuy T' Jane," performed with Ed Conte. On this week's show, we played 'em all.

And we wanted more.

So the group allowed us an exclusive premiere of "Get The Message," a way-fab cover of a song originally written and recorded by Eric Carmen in 1969, with his pre-Raspberries combo Cyrus Erie. For this new version, the Flashcubes drafted Randy Klawon, who had been in Cyrus Erie (albeit after they recorded "Get The Message"), and he'd been in the Choir. Randy's brother Danny Klawon wrote "It's Cold Outside."  SCORE!! I now regard this new version as definitive, and we thank the Flashcubes for letting us share it.

There's still a lot more to come in the Flashcubes-Big Stir LLC. I know a couple of specifics, and I know there's more that I don't really know about yet. I look forward to all of it. And I look forward to playing it all on the radio, where it belongs.

THE SMITHEREENS: Behind The Wall Of Sleep

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE FLASHCUBES: No Promise

Hey, speaking (yet again) of my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1): From 1979, this is the Flashcubes' single that should have been. I've written about it here, and again here. Love this record. Love this band. This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl would not exist if not for the Beatles, the Ramones, and the Flashcubes. Pop with power. It inspires us every day, and it fuels a fresh radio show every week. There is a promise after all.

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.

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

Thursday, June 30, 2022

10 SONGS: 6/30/2022

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.

Sydney Chandler as Chrissie Hynde in the mini-series Pistol

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1135.

THE FLASHCUBES FEATURING STEVE CONTE: Gudbuy T' Jane

Man, I am really, really enjoying these continued opportunities to speak the phrase "new music from the Flashcubes." Here, my all-time favorite power pop combo enlists the aid of guitarist Steve Conte, a latter-day member of the New York Dolls, to cover one of my top-of-the-pops AM radio hits from the '70s.

Slade was, commercially, a much bigger deal in their native England than they were here in the Colonies. Nonetheless, although Slade's 1973 single "Gudbuy T' Jane" peaked at # 68 on Billboard's Hot 100, it was a legit smash on Syracuse's WOLF-AM when I was in eighth grade, proving once again that Syracuse is just cooler than the rest the country. I'm sure the young Flashcubes heard it, and it impacted them like it impacted me. What a great record! What a great, great record.

The 'Cubes and Conte do it justice, retaining Slade stompin' swagger and enhancing it with the pure pop panache we expect from Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse. We'll be playing this new "Gudbuy T' Jane" single again on next week's show.

(We will, in fact, be playing ALL of the Flashcubes' singles next week, from the '70s through today, from the old Northside Records days into their current series of classic power pop covers for the good folks at Big Stir Records. It's all part of a July 3rd TIRnRR extravaganza called COME ON LET'S GO!, which combines the Flashcubes' singles discography with a celebration of power pop's past, serving up classic '60s, '70s, and '80s power pop, pure pop, and the power pop periphery. We will even throw in another new, as-yet-unreleased Flashcubes single. We humbly recommend you ditch any other commitments and join us for COME ON LET'S GO!, TIRnRR's classic power pop celebration on July 3rd.)

THE BEACH BOYS: God Only Knows

When we were programming this week's show, Dana asked me if I'd yet seen the 2021 documentary Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road, which recently aired on PBS. Dana tsk tsked my reply that I had not, and then waxed rhapsodic about a scene therein where Don Was isolates the vocals on the Beach Boys' recording of "God Only Knows." That vocals-only snippet mesmerized Dana, prompting the inclusion of the familiar, timeless Pet Sounds track on the ol' playlist.

I have a complicated history with the Beach Boys, a group I once spurned in ignorance but later embraced as wisdom and heart prevailed. Seeing Carl Wilson sing "God Only Knows" at a Beach Boys concert in the late '80s remains one of the all-time most magical moments in my live music memories. Years later, a 2016 experience witnessing Brian Wilson and his band perform Pet Sounds live compelled me to write an emotional piece that is one of my favorites among the many things I've written for this blog.

Tsk tsks have their value. On Saturday, my wife Brenda and I watched Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road. Mesmerizing. Just like Dana said it was.

PERILOUS: Rock & Roll Kiss

We've been (rightly) making a big deal that we're fortunate enough to include this boppin' track "Rock & Roll Kiss" by Perilous on our forthcoming compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 5. But the track is also a part of the group's freshly-released three-song set Perilous, and that merits a little bit of attendant hoopla, too.  And it goes like THIS...!

ARTHUR ALEXANDER: Shot Of R & B

There is ample evidence that the Beatles adored Arthur Alexander's records. Paul McCartney himself said something to the effect that the Fab lads set out to be a soul group, wanting to sound like Arthur Alexander. Yes, much as the American Beatles, the Ramones, tried to be a bubblegum pop group like the Bay City Rollers. While the Ramones never actually covered the Rollers, the Beatles covered Alexander's "Anna" on Please Please Me, and they did his "Soldier Of Love" and "A Shot Of Rhythm And Blues" in early live shows and BBC sessions.

My first exposure to "A Shot Of Rhythm And Blues" came via the Beatles on The Deccagone Sessions, my first bootleg album. The Flamin' Groovies covered it, too--I'm sure they also learned the song from a Beatles bootleg rather than from Arthur Alexander. No matter. We come to great songs by whatever paths brings us. Get a shot of rhythm and blues, with a little rock 'n' roll on the side. Just for good measure.

(My Razor & Tie Arthur Alexander best-of CD lists this track as "Shot Of R & B," so I've continued that listing when we play it on TIRnRR.)

R.E.M.: Superman

Unlisted bonus tracks were an occasionally-common thing on CDs--the precursor of mid-credits scenes in Marvel movies, the successor of the post-credits scene in Ferris Bueller's Day Off--but I don't recall many occurrences of unlisted bonus tracks on LPs. The only example that comes to mind is "Train In Vain" on the Clash's London Calling

R.E.M.'s cover of the Clique's "Superman" half qualifies. The track isn't listed among its LP brethren on the back cover of R.E.M.'s 1986 Lifes Rich Pageant album, but it is on Side Two's label:

The fact that the label lumps "Superman"'s songwriting credit in with the songs written by R.E.M. (rather than actual "Superman" tunesmiths Gary Zekley and Mitchell Bottler) is evidence that the track may have been an afterthought. Great song, though, and ultimately a better-known version than the Clique's fine original.

THE SEX PISTOLS: Pretty Vacant

I don't know what I think of Pistol, the six-part Sex Pistols biopic based on Pistols guitarist Steve Jones' autobiography Lonely Boy. I haven't read Lonely Boy, but I have seen Pistol in its entirety. I found the first few episodes compelling, and actress Sydney Chandler is riveting as Chrissie Hynde, but I felt an increasing sense of disconnect as the series went forward. Does it present an accurate account of the Sex Pistols' short and explosive lifespan? I'm not sure. 

But probably not.

Listen: I expect some fudging of facts when translating real life into entertainment, into a pop presentation. There were a few moments in Pistol where the narrative strays from the facts as I think I know them (though perhaps not as far astray as the jumbled timeline of the Freddie Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody, nor as horrifyingly off-model as the film CBGB's), but I accept that. What's more jarring is a perhaps-unavoidable end result that reduces the seismic transcendence of the Sex Pistols--the filth and the fury--to something...lesser. Shallower. I'm glad I watched it. I'm not sure if I liked it.

I loved the Sex Pistols; I told that story here. Elsewhere, I wrote, "As a band, they are criminally underrated, as so many have focused on the clatter and the noise of punk while ignoring the solid rock 'n' roll combo--guitarist Steve Jones, drummer Paul Cook, and original bassist Glen Matlock--chuggin' away beneath Johnny Rotten's (effective) wailing. Sid Vicious could neither sing nor play, and replacing Glen with Sid threw the group's musical aspect out the broken window."

"God Save The Queen" is my favorite among the Sex Pistols canon, with "Pretty Vacant" a very close second, and much else similarly worthy of saturation airplay (though we will never in a million years be able to play "Bodies"). Never mind the bollocks. And never mind the biopics. Here's the Sex Pistols. And we do care.

MATERIAL ISSUE: Kim The Waitress

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

(For absent friends, 43 years on.)

JESSIE BRYSON: Come Back

Next week's COME ON LET'S GO! classic power pop TIRnRR shindig is about legacy, honoring and playing a bunch of great tunes from the past. I guess that approach (for one week only) contradicts our oft-stated commitment to mixing new stuff with old stuff, the way all rockin' pop radio shows should (and which all of the best ones do). 

Still, there's something to be said for pausing every once in a while and exulting in the sounds that made us. So: a legacy show, comprised almost entirely of tracks from the 1960s through the '80s. BUT...still including the Flashcubes' recent singles, bridging the time between. And also including Jesse Bryson's current Big Stir single cover of Fotomaker's "Come Back." I mean, Jesse's "Come Back" features members of the 'Cubes and Fotomaker, it was written by Jesse's Dad Wally Bryson (of the Raspberries and Fotomaker), and it's almost a tangent to what the Flashcubes are doing in their Big Stir singles. So yeah. while next week's show is mostly about yesteryear, mixing in a little bit of NOW! never hurt anyone. 

GLADHANDS: Forget All About It


I reviewed Gladhands' 1997 album La Di Da for Goldmine. I don't remember much of what I said about the album at the time, but I'm sure I liked it. I was particularly taken with "Forget All About It," an irresistible number that I think I called "Rundgrenesque." Which is fair, since Todd Rundgren did write the damned thing, and had originally recorded it with his old group the Nazz in 1969. I hadn't noticed the songwriting credits. 

Oops?


I think I realized my oversight well before I eventually heard the Nazz's original version of "Forget All About It." I'm not sure which version is my favorite, though we should offer an honorable mention of Game Theory's sturdy and appealing home recording of the tune (contained on the collection Across The Barrier Of Sound, and also a part of this week's radio party). But Gladhands introduced me to the song, and they did an absolutely ace rendition. We'll hear from the Nazz on next week's show.

THE FLASHCUBES WITH THE SPONGETONES: Have You Ever Been Torn Apart?

Ready for next week's show? Awright! Come on, 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.

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

Thursday, June 16, 2022

10 SONGS: 6/16/2022

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.

Please don't bother trying to find this song; it's not here

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1133.

ROBIN LANE: All I'll Ever Need

A new single from Robin Lane? Yes, please. My first awareness of Lane's work came in 1980, with the release of the eponymous debut album by her band Robin Lane and the Chartbusters.  The memory's imprecise, but I likely came to the Chartbusters via mentions in Trouser Press or maybe CREEM magazine, my interest heightened by the fact that two of the Chartbusters--Asa Brebner and Leroy Radcliffe--had previously been in Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers. But if the erstwhile Modern Lovers hooked me initially on the Chartbusters, Robin Lane was undeniably Chartbuster # 1 (Number ONE!ONE!ONE...!)

I played Robin Lane and the Chartbusters frequently, particularly its tracks "Don't Cry," "When Things Go Wrong," and "Many Years Ago." That first album was part of my soundtrack in the early '80s, when I was a recent college grad, a professional burger-flipper, and sharing an apartment with my girlfriend. Our little Sony stereo actually belonged to Brenda, but she usually let me use it (at least when she wasn't playing her Soft Cell "Tainted Love" 45 over and over). When things go wrong, don't walk away/That will only make it harder. A Robin Lane and the Chartbusters lyric provided a working model for the art of living together. Something musta stuck. Decades later, Brenda and I are still together.

And, decades later, Robin Lane is still crafting irresistible rockin' pop music. "All I'll Ever Need" is Lane's first single for the mighty Red On Red Records label, and we eagerly await further fresh Robin Lane releases in the imminent realm of right-NOW-dammit! More new music from Robin Lane? Yes, yes, yes. Please. It's all we'll ever need. Meanwhile, we'll hear "All I'll Ever Need" again on next week's show.

ROSE ROYCE: Wishing On A Star

Well before discovering Soft Cell, Brenda's own pop obsessions included the sweet and soulful sound of Rose Royce. When Brenda and I met in 1978, I don't think I really knew any of Rose Royce's music beyond "Car Wash," the hit disco tune from the 1976 film of the same name. Well, that's not 100 % accurate; I had seen the movie, so I'd heard Rose Royce's soundtrack contributions (including the fabulous "I Wanna Get Next To You," which was a hit in its own right). Nonetheless, the songs didn't register in my teenaged mind at the time.

Brenda owned the Car Wash soundtrack on cassette, but her primary Rose Royce allegiance wasn't to that album. Her fave rave "Wishing On A Star" was the lead-off track from the group's 1977 album In Full Bloom, and it was (along with "September" by Earth, Wind & Fire) Brenda's toppermost of the poppermost. Somewhere in my vast accumulation of stuff, I have a cartoon portrait of Brenda, rendered by one of her college suitemates the year Brenda and I met. The drawing spotlights the dichotomy of R & B-lovin' Brenda falling for the likes of little punk rocker me, depicting Brenda in a Flashcubes t-shirt, wondering aloud, "Who could like a band called the Sex Pistols?" and singing lines from CC-approved numbers by the Ramones and the Rolling Stones. In the midst of this overabundance of attention to the strange stuff I liked, Brenda's suitemate allowed one word balloon expressing Brenda's own musical taste:

I'm wishing on a staaaaaaaaaaar....

Oooo, what a lovely pop record. Although I only knew the song through Brenda, we were both recently amazed to discover that it had never been a pop hit. It bubbled under Billboard's Hot 100; even on the R & B chart, it only managed a peak position of # 52. It fared better in Europe. In America, it was still always a hit in Brenda's ears, its lack of chart success notwithstanding.

We play the hits. TIRnRR's concept of what is and what is not a hit is aware of real-world considerations that define the term in the popular sense...but we don't care about that. We say a hit record is anything that sounds like it oughtta be a hit. When we played "Wishing On A Star" this week, intrepid TIRnRR listener (and Radio Deer Camp host) Rich Firestone remarked that the song was new to him, but he liked it. Brenda was surprised but pleased that she knew the song before Rich did. 

Any record you ain't heard is a new record. And a hit's a hit. Wishing on a star? Thanks to Brenda for knowing a hit when she heard it.

IN DEED: Peace & Quiet
IN DEED: Don't Kill The Babe


We were pleased 'n' pumped to play the Swedish group In Deed's new Big Stir Records single "Don't Kill The Babe" on last week's show, and we were guaranteed to play it again this week (and--SPOILER ALERT!--next week, too). This week, though, we wanted to pair the latest from In Deed with a track from the group's fabulous debut album, 2001's At 4000 Meters. That CD's been out of print for an approximate forever, and has never been issued in physical form here in the States. 


Everything old is new again. The At 4000 Meters track "Peace & Quiet" will be on a readily-available domestic CD in the very near future, when it appears on our own forthcoming Kool Kat Musik compilation album This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 5. You've got your new In Deed from Big Stir. You've got your old In Deed made new from Kool Kat and TIRnRR. And we hear tell that Big Stir's got even more In Deed in store. 

We're in.

TIGER BOMB: Rave On Again


Yeah, this is good. A HIT! Portland, Maine's phenomenal pop combo
Tiger Bomb have flown under my myopic radar for far too long, but Lynda Mandolin herself alerted me to the group's new single on the Dionysus label, and sudden, blissful awareness dawned immediately. And it will rave on again next week. Obviously. My radar's got some myopia to correct.

POP CO-OP: I Just Love To Watch Her Dance


Once again: Your Favorite Album Of 2022. If memory serves--and there's a first time for everything--we've played five different tracks so far from Pop Co-Op's new album Suspension. We've played "I Just Love To Watch Her Dance" several times, making it our pick hit. We'll add a sixth Suspension track to our log with next week's playlist.

JESSE BRYSON: Abilene
JESSE BRYSON: Come Back

Hey, rockin' pop with a pedigree! Jesse Bryson is no stranger to the TIRnRR playlist--his track "Abilene" is considered an all-time classic in this particular playground, and we gave that one another spin this week--and his Dad Wally Bryson is power pop legend for his own iconic guitar work with the Raspberries and Fotomaker. Yes, pundits overuse the word "iconic." Fine. If you fancy yourself a power pop fan, just think of those opening guitar bits to the Raspberries hits "Go All The Way" and "I Wanna Be With You." If you don't agree those are iconic, I don't agree that you're a power pop fan.

My favorite Fotomaker track is 1978's "Come Back," which the elder Bryson wrote and recorded for the group's second album, Vis á Vis. Now, Jesse has recorded his own new version of "Come Back" as a Big Stir single, performed with panache alongside the Flashcubes' Gary Frenay and Tommy Allen and Fotomaker's Frankie Vinci and Lex Marchesi. As good as its pedigree? And then some. I'll see your icon, and raise ya one.

EYTAN MIRSKY: This Year's Gonna Be Our Year

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE ZOMBIES: What More Can I Do

Sometimes the specific time constraints of a three-hour slot prevent us from playing a record we wanted to play. We end most shows with a post-tag track, something short, that plays after we've said goodbye for the week. WAIT!WAIT!WAIT!WAIT!WAIT!WAIT! We got a little more This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio. The little post-tag track usually brings the show up to its three-hour mark.

This week, I wanted the post-tag track to be "She's Not There" by the Zombies. Alas, there was not sufficient space left for "She's Not There," forcing us to sub the Zombies' "What More Can I Do" in its place. 

Now, ya can't complain about any opportunity to play the Zombies, whatever track you wind up with. But "She's Not There" had a specific li'l spot in pop culture last week, when it was referenced (and not named) on the June 8th episode of Jeopardy!

The category: Put It On What? The clue: Decca F.11940, released 1963 The correct response (which no contestant offered): What is a turntable?

The record cited is the original British 45 of "She's Not There." While we wish we could have played that, "What More Can I Do" is at least a fine stand-in. What more can we do?

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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.

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