Showing posts with label Leather Catsuit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leather Catsuit. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2025

10 SONGS: 1/4/2025--THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO's Most-Played Tracks In 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.

Kidd Video did not make our countdown. But their bass player did.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1266: The Countdown Show. These are TIRnRR's ten most-played tracks in 2024, and the individual entries are reprised from previous 10 Songs features.

10. THE GRIP WEEDS: Lady Friend

The Grip Weeds' 2022 covers album DiG offers the enduring reward of New Jersey's Phenomenal Pop Combo taking on a splendid array of classics and obscurities alike. The standard single-disc version of DiG finds the Grip Weeds mining nuggets previously, um...dug by Paul Revere and the Raiders, the Zombies, the Velvet Underground, the Knickerbockers, the Rolling Stones, and more; the double-disc edition adds (among others) the Monkees, the Beatles, the Turtles, and Frosty's "Organ Grinder's Monkey." There's even a three-disc version, so, y'know, buy that. Whatever it takes: Get a GRIP!

TIRnRR's top DiG has been this sublime cover of the Byrds' "Lady Friend." It was # 6 on our 2022 Countdown, # 9 in 2023, and it hangs in at # 10 for 2024. Here it comes again. 

9. THE GRIP WEEDS: Strange Bird

Hey, a chance to hear a TIRnRR classic again for the first time! The Grip Weeds' original version of "Strange Bird" was the B-side of a single released in Germany, later re-recorded for the group's album The Sound Is In You. The Grip Weeds also gave us an exclusive remix/retweak of the original single for our 2017 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4 (a tale told here, and you can still get that CD here and its download edition here). 

And now, the Grip Weeds have recorded brand-new versions of both "Strange Bird" and its original A-side "She Brings The Rain," offered in a teaser EP in advance of their forthcoming album. We're told the tracks will not be on the album, so grab 'em now. Strange birds of the world, UNITE!

8. LEATHER CATSUIT: Can't Get You Off My Mind

Leather Catsuit's "Can't Get You Off My Mind" comes equipped with a title that mirrors my opinion of the track: I can't get it off my mind. I don't wanna get it off my mind. It's pop music! I wanna hear it again and again. 

7. SLYBOOTS: Blindsided

Ace NYC combo Slyboots made their TIRnRR debut in May, with a spin of their recent cover of Meat Puppets' "Oh, Me." All well 'n' groovy. Now, we dig a little bit deeper for a way swell Slyboots original called "Blindsided." "Blindsided" was released last summer, but you know the drill: 

Any record you ain't heard is a new record.

And, new or old, we're delighted to hear this record. We'll hear it again.

(Worth noting: Slyboots' subsequent single "If We Could Let Go" made it to # 15 on our countdown, and it is my favorite new track of 2024.)

6. JUNIPER: Baby Doll

Our worlds collide. In a good way! From her absolutely wonderful 2023 album She Steals Candy, teen sensation and TIRnRR Fave Rave Juniper covers another TIRnRR Fave Rave, Amy Rigby. And Juniper does a mighty fine job of it, too, fortifying the world-weary shrug of Amy's original with a post-adolescent patina of quiet, simmering pissed-offedness. Both versions are equally mature, and in either case the listener really, really wants to track down the clueless would-be Lothario and swat him with extreme prejudice.

Would serve him right. Bastard!

5. CARLA OLSON AND TALL POPPY SYNDROME: Is It True

As pop fans, when we listen to multiple versions of the same song, we often develop an allegiance to the version that hooked us first. So even the combined forces of Carla Olson and Tall Poppy Syndrome may face long odds in trying to pry my devotion away from Brenda Lee with their new cover of our Brenda's 1964 single "Is It True."

"Is It True" is far and away my favorite Brenda Lee track. It wasn't a hit in America, and I didn't hear it until Rhino Records included "Is It True" in the fabulous 2005 various-artists boxed set One Kiss Can Lead To Another: Girl Group Sounds Lost And Found. This amazing 4-CD compilation is like the Nuggets of the '60s girl-group sound, and Brenda Lee's "Is It True" is one of its absolute highlights. I adored the song immediately, and have never stopped loving it.

So my gosh, Carla and her Tall Poppy comrades deserve mega accolades for holding their own here. It's not just that their "Is It True" is accomplished and well-performed--I would have expected nothing less from that level of talent--it's that the elusive mojo is there. You believe them. I believe them. I'm not prepared to relinquish my torch for Brenda Lee's original, but I'm very happy to say that I now have two go-to versions of "Is It True." Is it true? Yep. I'll testify to that under oath. 

4. ELENA ROGERS: I Feel Alive

This is so good. Elena Rogers first entered TIRnRR's sovereign air space on a recommendation from pop giant Jamie Hoover. Jamie's been working with the young singer for a few years, he's clearly (and understandably) knocked out by her talent and musical prowess, and he would kindly like the world at large to wake the hell up and get hip to Elena Rogers awready. 

Elena's 2024 single "I Feel Alive" is her best track yet, ambitious and audacious in its approach while remaining absolutely, unerringly pop. During Jamie's 2023 appearance on the way-swell Only Three Lads podcast, our esteemed Mr. Hoover promised a new Elena Rogers album in '24. That album was Prelude To Whatever, and its first advance single "I Feel Alive" ratcheted up the anticipation.

Can you feel it? 

In a recent email to some musicians, I made a passing reference to Elena Rogers as "insanely talented." That is, if anything, selling her short.

3. THE CYNZ: Woman Child

This little mutant radio show has demonstrated its pervasive and prevailing interest in the music of the Cynz. We love 'em. We play 'em. We're fans.

Given the above truths, I think it means even more when I say the current Cynz single "Woman Child" just might be the best thing they've done yet. "Woman Child" offers further empirical evidence of their essential asskickin' capability. Bless us, Lord. We have CYNZ!

2. PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You

One of the new albums I was most looking forward to hearing this year was Stand Back And Take A Good Look, courtesy of power pop king Paul Collins and the intrepid Jem Records label. I've been a Paul Collins fan since I was in college in the late '70s, listening to his work with the Nerves, the Breakaways, and his own subsequent combo the Beat, aka the Paul Collins Beat. The Beat's 1979 debut LP is an acknowledged classic of power pop, and Paul's "Walking Out On Love" was among the tracks celebrated in my 2024 book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Power pop fan? That's MY beat!

Based on a spin of the album's first single "I'm The Only One For You" (recorded alongside another power pop great, the late Dwight Twilley), it was immediately clear that this record was gonna kick what needed kickin'. Can't stop the beat, man. Can't stop the beat.

1. WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

I can't even tell you how much I love "Girl Songs" by Wonderboy. Recorded in the '90s, finally released just a few years back, this exuberant embrace of the transcendent act of swooning over chicks is like the TIRnRR mindset in microcosm. It was unchallenged as our # 1 most-played track in 2024. To paraphrase country singer BeyoncĂ©: Who run the world? GIRL SONGS!

BONUS TRACK!!
11. THE FLASHCUBES: Make Something Happen

Before we go, we wanna say a few words about our # 11 most-played track in 2024: "Make Something Happen" by Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes.  Let's start with these few words about an already-announced project, then circle back for a few more words about an as-yet-unannounced project

"Make something happen?" Okeydokey! I'm in the very early stages of writing a new book about Power Pop Hall of Famers the Flashcubes. The book's working (and probable official) title is Make Something Happen! The DIY Story Of A Power Pop Band Called THE FLASHCUBES, and the project was initiated by the Flashcubes themselves. Well, I'M in! 

And when I say "early stages," I mean it, man. I've had a couple of planning meetings with members of the 'Cubes, and I've begun trying to find and learn appropriate tech to record and transcribe interviews. My next task is to write a one-sheet on the book's behalf, and then to start talking to the Flashcubes and their entourage. It's all very exciting, and we hope to bring the book to retail by the Summer of 2025. From the book's first public announcement:

"This will be an oral history of the band, with personal stories related by the 'Cubes themselves--Tommy Allen, Paul Armstrong, Gary Frenay, and Arty Lenin--discussing their roots as rockin' pop fans in the '60s and '70s, their formation in the punk rock crucible of 1977, their frenzied live shows with the Ramones, the Runaways, the Police, the Jam, David Johansen, Joe Jackson, the Scruffs, the Romantics, Artful Dodger, 999, and more, their irresistible original songs, their indie 45s, their demo tapes, their breakup at the end of the '70s, and the subsequent recognition that the Flashcubes were a legit power pop legend. This growing awareness and celebration reunited the Flashcubes in the '90s, culminating in their award-winning 2023 album Pop Masters.

"In Make Something Happen!, the Flashcubes story will also be told by eyewitnesses: Fans, fellow musicians, industry insiders, and maybe the occasional drunken pogo dancer yelling out GOT NO MIND!, or swooning to 'Christi Girl,' vowing to wait till next week, it'll be all right. This is the first-hand story of Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse, a band that thrived under bright lights of their own invention."

More details to come. Oh, rest assured there will be more details to come. As I've written elsewhere: I think everyone knows that I'm possibly the world's most insistent Flashcubes fan. The Flashcubes are my favorite power pop band, they rank with the Beatles and the Ramones in the troika of my top rock 'n' roll groups, and I've long wished they enjoyed the sort of mass notoriety and adulation I think they deserve. "Make Something Happen" was first recorded by Gary Frenay's post-Flashcubes band Screen Test in the '80s, then recorded again by the reunited 'Cubes for their 2003 album Brilliant. It's a hit record, no matter how few the number of people who've heard it.

And it makes a dandy title for a book about the Flashcubes. 

"Make something happen."

Good advice.

BUT WAIT...! There's more....

I'm targeting the book's tentative publication date for September of this year. It will be accompanied by a companion project, something we've hinted at but not yet acknowledged on record. That project remains [REDACTED], but it's coming in September from Big Stir Records. [REDACTED] just so happens to involve a number of acts who made this year's TIRnRR countdown, including Slyboots, Librarians With Hickeys, sparkle*jets u.k., Pop Co-Op, Wonderboy's Robbie Rist, the Flashcubes themselves, and (we're hoping) Carla Olson, plus more TIRnRR Fave Raves like the Kennedys, Sorrows, Chris von Sneidern, Jim Basnight and Beth Peabody, Tom Kenny, and others we can't name quite yet. 

But we will. Hell, let's name one more right now: The SpongeTones. We'll hear their [REDACTED] contribution on the radio in Syracuse this Sunday night. It's all part of this rewarding business of making something happen.

 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.

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, April 5, 2024

10 SONGS: 4/5/2024

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 # 1227. This show is available as a podcast.

POP CO-OP: Misfits

The last time the members of pop supergroup Pop Co-Op covered a song by This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio's House Band the Kinks, it was as part of TIR'n'RR Allstars, recording a sublime version of "Waterloo Sunset" on behalf of this little mutant radio show. We are still (very nearly) humbled by the kindness of everyone involved in that effort, and you can still grab the accompanying Waterloo Sunset benefit compilation on Kool Kat Musik CD or as a Futureman Records download. GO! BUY! These neck-snappin' segues don't pay for themselves.

Now, Pop Co-Op has a brand-new cover of the Kinks' "Misfits," recorded as part of another super-secret future project, but nonetheless available in today's all-day-and-all-of-the-night better days. For ALL of you fancy dedicated followers of fashion!  This is your chance, this is your time, and this is your download. See? You're fitting in already.

Our pal Rich Firestone debuted "Misfits" Sunday on the fourth-anniversary edition of his epic weekly essentialness Radio Deer Camp, and we followed the path of those same Kinky boots that evening. It all fit together as it oughta.

(Coincidentally, "Misfits" was the title tune from the then-new Kinks album hitting retail racks right around the time of my first Kinks concert in 1978. Serendipity! And we'll hear Pop Co-Op's "Misfits" on TIRnRR again this coming Sunday. Ya can't miss out on "Misfits."

TALL POPPY SYNDROME: This Time Tomorrow


Pop Co-Op's Kinks cover debuts this week, but Tall Poppy Syndrome's rendition of the Kinks' "This Time Tomorrow" now makes its second consecutive TIRnRR appearance. Since its initial spin here, Tall Poppy Syndrome's version of "This Time Tomorrow" has garnered specific thumbs-up validations from each of the surviving original Kinks, Ray Davies, Dave Davies, and Mick Avory.

I was a bit surprised to see Kinks-mandated validation for my endorsement of the track in last week's 10 Songs. From Dave Davies' X account:

I've been re-Tweeted by one of the Kinks. I love this gig. And Tall Poppy Syndrome's "This Time Tomorrow" returns for its third TIRnRR appearance this Sunday. We wouldn't wanna disappoint our friend Dave Davies. 

AM RADIO: Hush

With the exception of the annual Dana's Funky Soul Pit, just about every TIRnRR playlist is gonna serve up some rockin' pop delights from the Big Stir Records label. Like Kool Kat Musik, Jem Records, Rum Bar Records, Futureman, and a few other can't-friggin'-miss indie labels, Big Stir is one of our go-to resources for Fave Raves, both fresh and familiar. Go, Big Stir!

That is evident again this week, as the TIRnRR boppin' itinerary takes us to Big Stir releases by the Bablers, the Brothers Steve, Hungrytown, the Flashcubes, and the Electromagnates. This coming Sunday night's program will crank up Big Stir stars Dolph Chaneythe Speed of Sound, Librarians With Hickeys, and more from Syracuse's own power pop powerhouses the Flashcubes. Go, go, Big Stir, GO!!

Our ongoing Big Stir blitz also includes cool stuff from Generation Blue, the new book and compilation LP package raising its Weezer-like fist on behalf of '90s Hollywood Geek Rock. OooWEEEoooo! The past couple of weeks have seen TIRnRR airplay of "Where The Hell Is She," Shufflepuck's contribution to Generation Blue. This week, AM Radio's Generation Blue track "Hush" gets its turn. And this Sunday's show will program a fab Generation Blue tune from Ridel High.

Yep. It's the Blue Generation. And they've got something to say.  

PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You
ELENA ROGERS: I Feel Alive
LEATHER CATSUIT: Can't Get You Off My Mind

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio closes out every year with a countdown show, playin' back what we played a lot over the course of the preceding twelve months. It is, as Tevye told us, tradition. Our stats are compiled 'n' kept by the mighty Fritz Van Leaven, and we don't see any of his tabulatin' magic until it's time for us to prep the actual countdown.

But as we close out the first quarter of 2024, even a casual look at this year's playlists so far reveals that Paul Collins' "I'm The Only One For You," Elena Rogers' "I Feel Alive," and Leather Catsuit's "Can't Get You Off My Mind" have already locked up berths on the countdown when it happens. It would take an act of God to shut any of them out. And even if it were to turn out that they don't have God on their side, they do have something else:

The math. The math is on their side.

That doesn't mean all--or any--will make our Top Ten. There are a lot of playlists between now and countdown time. But they will all be on the countdown somewhere.

And each one of these fine gems will accrue another spin on our next show. We play the hits. 

Count on it.

THE KINKS: Who'll Be The Next In Line

With an opening set that includes two Kinks covers, it seemed imperative to play a li'l treat by the Kinks themselves. Yep, turns out the House Band was the next in line.

THE FIRST CLASS: Beach Baby

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

WONDERBOY: Girl Songs

Like the Paul Collins, Elena Rogers, and Leather Catsuit TIRnRR Pick Hits cited above, Wonderboy's sublime "Girl Songs" will score a spot on our year-end countdown. We think. Pretty sure. It's not quite guaranteed yet...but it probably is. "Girls Songs" will take a break this Sunday night, ceding its space to another track from Wonderboy's Hero Isle album. 

It'll be back. Girls mean a lot to me. "Girl Songs" means a lot. too.

RASPBERRIES: Tonight

When we did our Eric Carmen tribute show a few weeks back, the rules severely limited the number of Raspberries tracks we could play. I wanted to spin the urgent power pop of "Go All The Way," "I Wanna Be With You," "Tonight," and "Ecstasy"--the horny singles--but I also wanted to play "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," "I'm A Rocker," and maybe "Let's Pretend." 

Well, that's a wee bit more than the mere four Raspberries tracks we can play in a three-hour slot.

So we settled on "Go All The Way" and "I Wanna Be With You" from the let's-get-it-on quartet, recalled the confident strut of my "I'm A Rocker" 45, and worshiped at the altar of "Overnight Sensation" 's Top 40 radio ambition and accomplishment. We also played Off Broadway's cover of "Tonight," deferred "Ecstasy" to last week's show, and placed "Let's Pretend" on the reserve list.

We got to the Raspberries' "Tonight" this week. I thought "Tonight" sounded like a hit when I first heard it on Syracuse's WOLF-AM in 1973. That opinion will not change. Not tonight, nor on any other night. 

(I have also decided to add my recent "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)" rant to my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). We just want a hit record, man. And we will play it on the radio.)

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, February 24, 2024

10 SONGS: 2/24/2024

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 # 1221. This show is available as a podcast.

RICH ARITHMETIC: When You Want Somebody (To Make Love To)

Rich Arithmetic is the nom de bop of Rich Horton, and somehow our stats indicate that this week's spin of "When You Want Somebody (To Make Love To)" is only the fifth time a Rich Arithmetic track has ever graced a TIRnRR playlist. Man, where the hell have we been? This fine tune comes to us from the brand-new Rich Arithmetic album Pushbutton Romance, it's flippin' fantastic, and it's back on the radio again in our next show. We may be slow. But we ain't stupid.

THE CYNZ: Little Miss Lost

Singles. Tribute album offerings. Since the Cynz aligned with the mighty Jem Records, we've been getting little teases of new Cynz recordings, whettin' the ol' appetite for more. Now, at long last, that promised MORE! is nearly at hand.

March 29th is the official street date for Little Miss Lost, the brand new album from the Cynz. We can't wait. Meanwhile, the album's title tune has been released as an advance single. We played it on the radio this week, and we're playin' it again this Sunday night. Tease leads to promise. Promise leads to reward. Don't let this be a lost opportunity: Get with the music of the Cynz.

ELENA ROGERS: I Feel Alive


This is so good. Elena Rogers first entered TIRnRR's sovereign air space on a recommendation from pop giant Jamie Hoover. Jamie's been working with the young singer for a few years, he's clearly (and understandably) knocked out by her talent and musical prowess, and he would kindly like the world at large to wake the hell up and get hip to Elena Rogers awready. 

Elena's new single "I Feel Alive" is her best track yet, ambitious and audacious in its approach while remaining absolutely, unerringly pop. During Jamie's 2023 appearance on the way-swell Only Three Lads podcast, our esteemed Mr. Hoover promised a new Elena Rogers album in '24. That album will be called Prelude To Whatever, and "I Feel Alive" ratchets up the anticipation.

Can you feel it? 

LEATHER CATSUIT: Can't Get You Off My Mind


A couple of week's back, in the exciting 2/9/2024 edition of 10 Songs, I referred to both Paul Collins' "I'm The Only One For You" and Leather Catsuit's "Can't Get You Off My Mind" as welcome earworms. Well, the fact that we're still delighting in that act of programming 'em indicates their Welcome, Earworm! status remains unchallenged. Hell, the Leather Catsuit track is in my head pretty much all day, every day. Yep: I can't get it off my mind.

Don't wanna get it off my mind. And I am perfectly fine with that.

THE CYRKLE: We Can Find It


We've been playing most of the advance single sides from '60s sunshine pop combo the Cyrkle's new album Revival, and the arrival of the entire album gives us a chance to air what seems to be its best track. "We Can Find It" is less overtly nostalgic than the album's (still pretty nifty) first single "We Thought We Could Fly" and the attendant (solid) remakes of the Cyrkle's hits "Red Rubber Ball" and "Turn Down Day," but equally a product of the group's legacy. Endearing in its own right. 

THE RAMONES: Swallow My Pride


"Swallow My Pride" is one of my favorite tracks by one of my all-time favorite groups, the Ramones. The American Beatles! The greatest American rock 'n' roll group of all time! I like 'em so much I wrote a book about them. And I also wrote an appreciation of my 25 favorite Ramones tracks, which included this celebration of "Swallow My Pride:"

We should have seen this as a sign: If "Swallow My Pride" couldn't become a smash hit single, any top-of-the-pops aspirations the Ramones harbored were doomed from the start. Looking just at the Ramones' American singles, we can say maybe U.S. radio wasn't quite ready for "Blitzkrieg Bop" in '76, that "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" was pretty but not smooth enough for American airwaves, and maybe "I Remember You" didn't have the prerequisite oomph to be radio-ready.

But "Swallow My Pride" was perfect. Perfect. It's pure pop, drawing inspiration from the best '60s influences, and it doesn't even have any specific punk or glue-sniffing aspect to put an asterisk on its commercial sheen. It's a revved-up counterpart to the Bay City Rollers' "Rock And Roll Love Letter" or KISS' "Shout It Out Loud."

Perhaps "Swallow My Pride" was too good for Top 40 in 1977, and I guess progressive FM might have thought it too pop (or whatever other excuse they could concoct to dismiss something so obviously beneath their smug carcasses). The Ramones' next three singles--"Sheena Is A Punk Rocker," "Rockaway Beach," and "Do You Wanna Dance"--maintained a similarly irresistible spark, and even managed to breach the Billboard Hot 100. No subsequent Ramones single even came close.

The Ramones deserved a string of hit records. "Swallow My Pride" should have been one of 'em.

THE MONKEES: For Pete's Sake


When we programmed this spin of the Monkees' shoulda-been-a-single track "For Pete's Sake," we weren't thinking about the fact that this week also marked five years since the world lost Peter Tork. We played it simply because we wanted to play it. In this generation, in this lovin' time. 

THE SPINNERS: I'll Be Around


In the perhaps unlikely event my long-threatened (and long-ago-completed) book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) ever finds its path to publication, it will include a chapter about the Spinners' 1972 soul classic "I'll Be Around."

"I'll Be Around" was one of the many integral components of my own golden age of AM Top 40, the days and nights when my adolescent and teen ears were surgically tethered to Syracuse's WOLF-AM and WNDR-AM. My experience of just being in utter thrall to pop radio in the early '70s is the biggest reason why I grew up [sic] wanting to participate in the process. Make no mistake: My part of making TIRnRR is a direct result of my prevailing wish to be able to create something that can match and expand upon the sound and sense AM radio sparked within my hook-starved noggin.

From an early draft of the long-threatened thing:

The Spinners' string of Atlantic hits commenced in 1972, with the # 3 smash "I'll Be Around." Its resigned sigh offers little clue to the exuberance yet to come; thematically, its tale of love lost has more in common with "It's A Shame" and "My Whole World Ended (The Moment You Left Me)" than it shares with the presumed happiness within the love stories sung in "Could It Be I'm Falling In Love," "One Of A Kind Love Affair," and "Then Came You." You've made a choice, and now it's up to me to bow out gracefully. It's pop music performed with a lump in the throat, yet it eschews melodrama with...well, not quite a shrug, but with the wisdom to realize causing a scene won't do any damned bit of good. I'm sorry, my friend; this affair is over, man.

But whenever you call me
I'll be there

That devotion won't change, even as the singer bids farewell to a house he'd prefer to still call his home, to a heart he aches with a desire to still call his, to a present and a future he's desperate to believe could still be, though he knows with dull certainty that it can't. His love is too strong to allow him to wish his lover anything but the best, even though he's shattered by the fact that "the best" emphatically does not include him. She's made a choice. As he leaves, she's going to close the door behind him. 

He doesn't give up hope. Whenever she calls him....

HOLLY GOLIGHTLY: Time Will Tell



WONDERBOY: Girl Songs


It's an important subject, and we thank our friends Wonderboy for starting the conversation. We introduced TIRnRR to the concept last week. We re-visited it this week. We'll return to it yet again on our next show. Let's hear it for the girls.

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

Friday, February 9, 2024

10 SONGS: 2/9/2024

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 # 1219. This show is available as a podcast.

THE WEEKLINGS: All The Cash In The World

I'm prone to hyperbole anyway, so maybe you should ingest a li'l bit o' sodium when you hear me wonder out loud if the Weeklings' new album Raspberry Park just might be the group's best effort yet. But I tell ya: I'm starting to believe it is.

Exhibit A in that case is the Raspberry Park track "All The Cash In The World." As much as I've loved (and programmed!) the Weeklings' previous Pick Hits, "All The Cash In The World" carries some super-special intangible that elevates its pure sensory delight. "In The Moment,' from the Weeklings' 2020 album 3, has long been my go-to moment of Weeklingness. 

That moment now belongs to "All The Cash In The World."

MELANIE: Peace Will Come (According To Plan)

Our pal and colleague (and Radio Deer Camp host) Rich Firestone recently bemoaned the fact that we're forced to bid farewell to so many of our rockin' pop idols with such numbing, non-stop frequency. On this week's show, we say goodbye to Melanie Safka.

I wrote at length about my introduction to Melanie's music in a Greatest Record Ever Made! piece spotlighting "Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)," Melanie's magnificent collaboration with the Edwin Hawkins Singers. As we remember Melanie, it was tempting to play that song yet again this week. But it felt more appropriate to play a Melanie song that we'd never played before.

"Peace Will Come (According To Plan)" opens with a quiet dignity that blossoms into full-body exuberance, an embrace of peace that will accept no substitute. It is the delicate grace and willful power of Melanie in microcosm. Peace will come. 

Melanie said so. 

Godspeed, Ms. Safka.

HUNGRYTOWN: Another Year

Have we ever played Hungrytown before? A check of the ol' stats says...nope, this was the first time. Man, it's a lucky thing for us that we have tenure. Now that Hungrytown's Rebecca Hall and Ken Anderson have brought their unique folk vision to the ever-intrepid Big Stir Records label, maybe Dana and Carl can do a better job of getting Hungrytown into The Best Three Hours Of Radio On The Whole Friggin' Planet. It starts with "Another Year," Hungrytown's new single and Big Stir debut. Another year? We say it's another chance. We'll get it right this time.

THE SATISFACTORS: Arrested

Serendipity! When I fell in deep thrall to this track by the Satisfactors, I had no idea the ace lead vocals were supplied by none other than Kurt Reil of TIRnRR Fave Raves the Grip Weeds. HuzZAH!! Kurt was also the studio wizzard (spelling intentional, as it Wood be) who made our own 2022 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 5 sound so flippin' fantastic.

"Arrested" is also flippin' fantastic. The album is Dramatis Personae. This arrest merits further investigation. Just the facts: I'm on the case.

PAUL COLLINS: I'm The Only One For You

THE welcome earworm of 2024 so far. From power pop icon Paul Collins' forthcoming new album Stand Back And Take A Good Look, "I'm The Only One For You" finds Collins boppin' with righteous aplomb alongside the late Dwight Twilley, and the irresistible result fits right in among the best stuff Collins has ever done, including the Nerves, the Breakaways, and Paul Collins' Beat. I mean, the Beat's eponymous 1979 debut LP is one of the classics of power pop; "I'm The Only One For You" would have felt right at home on the record, mingling as a peer with your "Rock And Roll Girl" and your "Don't Wait Up For Me"" and your "Walking Out On Love." 

We debuted "I'm The Only One For You" on last week's TIRnRR. We played it again this week. And it returns to the air in Syracuse this coming Sunday night. DO wait up for this. And I can't wait to hear the album.

LEATHER CATSUIT: Can't Get You Off My Mind

Speaking of welcome earworms! Leather Catsuit's "Can Get You Off My Mind" comes equipped with a title that mirrors my opinion of the track: I can't get it off my mind. I don't wanna get it off my mind. It's pop music! I wanna hear it again and again. 

SUZI QUATRO: Paralysed

During back-announcements on this week's show, I joked that the set that opened with Leather Catsuit kicked off instead with Leather Tuscadero, mock-corrected myself, and then noted a couple of tracks later that we played Ms. Tuscadero herself, Suzi Quatro. And folks think we never plan stuff out in advance!

(They're usually right about that. But I digress.)

My original intent was to play Suzi Q's "I May Be Too Young," the first Suzi Quatro track I ever heard, and the subject of a chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). But, as often happens when we're trying to shoehorn the show into its three-hour slot, we had to look at where we could sub in shorter selections. In that process, I switched my Quatro choice to "Paralysed," from her album Your Mama Won't Like Me.

Although I bought Your Mama Won't Like Me (at Record Revolution in Cleveland Heights, Ohio) when I was still a 1970s rock 'n' roll teen with a crush on Suzi Quatro, it's been established that I didn't really like this album all that much. The above-mentioned Rich Firestone has suggested Suzi should have called it Carl Won't Like This. I need to give it a fresh listen one of these days, just to see if I like it better now.

Even back then, though, "Paralysed" was the one track I did like. Still do. The stories you've heard are gonna be confirmed. Sing it, Suzi.

ROB MOSS AND SKIN-TIGHT SKIN: Hey You (We're Sick Of You)

"Hey You (We're Sick Of You)," the latest single from Rob Moss and Skin-Tight Skin, has the good sense, good taste, good breeding, and good rockin' tonight to enlist the aid of the Flashcubes' irresistible force of nature Paul Armstrong on Special Guest Bat-Villain guitar. Holy Search and Destroy! It's a match made in Boston. Probably at The Rat. It's loud. It's proud. It's skin-tight. And it's on the radio in Syracuse.

TEGAN AND SARA: Walking With A Ghost

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

TAYLOR SWIFT: The Last Great American Dynasty

I'm told our next show has some heavy duty competition from a big football game on TV this Sunday. If the Buffalo Bills were playing, I'd even watch the game. But I would watch with the radio on.

But anyway, our congratulations to Taylor Swift. I've forgiven her boyfriend's team for ending the Bills' postseason this year--we'll get 'em next year!--and she is most definitely THE pop person of the moment. I don't listen to all of her work, but I admire her talent and her character. Plus she pisses off many of the same people who piss ME off. "The Last Great American Dynasty" (from her 2020 album folklore) is a truly wonderful track, and I think its Rumours-era Fleetwood Mac vibe is of a piece with whatever the hell it is we do here on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio.

And regardless of whether or not the team Taylor's rooting for at the Super Bowl prevails or comes up short, one thing's for sure: She's still gonna be Taylor Swift.

Winner!

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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