Showing posts with label Nancy Sinatra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Sinatra. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2023

10 SONGS: 2/24/2023

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 Radio # 1169. This show is available as a podcast.

HERB ALPERT AND THE TIJUANA BRASS: Casino Royale


As the pop world mourns the passing of the legendary Burt Bacharach, we decided to thread a tribute to Bacharach and his frequent songwriting partner Hal David throughout this week's program. I think we managed a nice blend of recognized prerequisites from the Bacharach-David songbook with a few less-expected choices in song and/or performer.


Our first strand of that thread was Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass' title tune from the all-star 1967 James Bond comedy Casino Royale. It's an instrumental, so you don't hear lyricist David's work here, but we chose the track deliberately as our snarky response to pundits who greeted news of Bacharach's passing with quotes from what they mistakenly believed were Bacharach's lyrics. Bacharach was the melody guy; he collaborated with gifted lyricists like David, and it's a disservice to those lyricists to assign credit to Bacharach.

Although Hal David passed in 2012, we wanted to pay equal tribute to David in our salute to Burt Bacharach. And, since "Casino Royale" does have lyrics--they're just not used in this instrumental version--the song is credited to Bacharach and David. And our Bacharach-David tribute was under way. With guns. And knives. We're fighting for our lives...!

STEVE STOECKEL: Mod Girl


In our position as hosts of The Best Three Hours Of Radio On The Whole Friggin' Planet, Dana and I possess the good sense, good taste, and good, good, good, good vibrations to be big fans of the music of Steve Stoeckel. Steve Stoeckel in the Spongetones? Check! Steve Stoeckel in Jamie and Steve? ALSO check! Steve Stoeckel in Pop Co-Op? Checkity-check-checkaroonie! Steve Stoeckel and his THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL Allstars? Duh. All good!

So of course we're delighted to expand that ongoing circle o' good with Steve's first-ever solo album The Power Of And. We've been playing stellar tracks from The Power Of And the past few weeks, and this week we got around to "Mod Girl." There's a lot of good stuff on this record.

And we got around to "Mod Girl" twice this week. We played the album track, and in the following set we played an unreleased a cappella mix that shows off the amazing backing vocals by Jamie Hoover and Elena Rogers. Goosebump City! We sure hope the good folks at Big Stir Records release this mix as well. And we'll play it again next week.

IRENE PEÑA: In This Room


Yes, it's America's Sweetheart Irene Peña! "In This Room" is my favorite among a big stack of sublime Irene Peña numbers, and it's available on her digital album Nothing To Do With You, and on our 2022 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 5. This particular spin was in anticipation of Dana & Carl's guest appearance on Irene's Twitch TV channel Irene Peña Music this coming Sunday, February 26th, at 7 pm Eastern. SUNDAY! We'll chat! We'll laugh! She'll wonder why she's wasting her valuable time on the likes of Dana & Carl! But she'll manage it all with a smile (or at least a smirk), because she's AMERICA'S SWEETHEART! We hope you'll join us on Twitch this Sunday, and then come back for TIRnRR as we open our show with another example of Irene's musical magic. Sweet is its own reward.

MIKE BROWNING: Blood Of Oblivion


We have played Mike Browning's fabulous current cover of the Rainy Daze's 1967 obscurity "Blood Of Oblivion" each and every week since its release as a single earlier this year. It is guaranteed a berth on our 2023 year-end countdown show. An act of Congress couldn't keep it out. It's taking a break next week, but we absolutely love it, and it will be back very, very soon.

JOHNATHAN PUSHKAR: Let's Get Small


Fab musician Johnathan Pushkar is into the Marvel Comics movies, and I think he's also into the comic books that spawned that cinematic universe. Me, too! I identify as more of a DC Comics guy in general--I'm BATMAN!!--but I love DC and Marvel superheroes as much as I love my rockin' pop music. Johnathan's new single "Let's Get Small" provides an opportunity to combine those interests, with an engaging li'l radio-ready ditty in tribute to the latest Marvel cinematic outing, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. Pop guys ASSEMBLE!

I go back a long, long way with Ant-Man. The current character (on film and on the comics page) is Scott Lang, but my Ant-Man in the '60s and '70s was Dr. Hank Pym. By the time I first saw the character in 1966, he'd already grown into being Giant-Man, a member of the Mighty Avengers. After my earlier introduction to Marvel with Sub-Mariner and the Incredible Hulk in Tales To Astonish, Giant-Man and his fellow Avengers the Wasp, the Mighty Thor, the Invincible Iron Man, and Captain America represented my second exposure to the Marvel Age of Comics.

This comic book was published in 1965. but I saw it in '66
I'm proud of my passions. At the still-(willfully) immature age of 63, I keep on blasting my music, reading my comic books, and seeing most of the new superhero flicks as they're released. Dig what you dig. 

A few recent purchases at Comix Zone in North Syracuse
Johnathan Pushkar gets it. Those who don't get it are just thinking too small.

GENE PITNEY: Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa



COLIN HAY: I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself
NANCY SINATRA: Wishin' And Hopin'


The results of playlist construction can surprise even the ones who construct 'em. It was a given that a Dusty Springfield track would be part of our Bacharach-David thread. I figured it would be Dusty's version of "I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself"...until I decided some intangible oomphability in ex-Men At Work frontman Colin Hay's rendition suited our needs better.

Right. So! Dusty's "Wishin' And Hopin'," a record I fondly remember from my childhood. Slam dunk choice. Then I heard Nancy Sinatra's version, and really wanted to include that. I wasn't gonna give up on Dusty--no way, no how--so her shimmering performance of "The Look Of Love" became our designated Dusty Bacharach-David.


During the show, we heard from listeners who regard "The Look Of Love" as Dusty's best record, and their favorite rendition of any Bacharach-David gem ever recorded by anyone. See, the playlist takes care of itself. Even when it surprises us.

THE RAMONES: She's The One


The American Beatles. The greatest American rock 'n' roll band of all time. For me, 2023 is the year of the Ramones. Sure, every year is another 1-2-3-4! Ramones year in these quarters, but especially so this year because of my Ramones book. As someone who's spent the last five decades wanting to write books, finally getting my first book published is a pretty big deal. I'm going to try not to be a boor about it, try to rein in my enthusiasm as much as I can, but...yeah, this is a pretty big freakin' deal.

But it was Dana who played the Ramones on this week's show. From the group's fantastic 1978 album Road To Ruin, "She's The One" was described in Bomp! magazine as the Ramones' best-ever fast song. Since the lads weren't especially known for their ballads, that's high praise. And it's another high-octane part of my year of the Ramones.

DIONNE WARWICK: Do You Know The Way To San Jose


We end almost all of our shows with at least one after-the-tag bonus track--WAITWAITWAITWAITWAITWAIT! We got a little more This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio!--to spin immediately after Dana and I have signed off for the week. Given our Bacharach-David tribute thread, this week's bonus also needed to be something from that songbook.

My original intent was to use the 5th Dimension's "One Less Bell To Answer" in this spot. As I thought more about it, and knowing that Dionne Warwick was often said to be Bacharach's favorite interpreter of his work, and even though we'd already played her superb rendition of "Walk On By," it felt imperative to end with a Warwick track. 

And it had to be "Do You Know The Way To San Jose." I remember the song from its hit heyday in 1968, which just happened to be the summer I made my first trip to California (a tale told as part of this long narrative of my life in the '60s). The track's sprightly, winning ambiance belies the capitulation expressed in its lyrics. 

Or is it capitulation? Granted, the singer in this story is ditching dreams of stardom in L.A. for a reset in San Jose, presenting a spiritual predecessor to the luckless would-be superstar catching a midnight train to Georgia in the classic '70s hit by Gladys Knight and the Pips. But both Dionne and Gladys see a path to a potential happy ending. There are many ways to succeed. Some of those ways include success on one's own terms.

Do you know the way? It seems that Dionne Warwick did know. Bacharach and David definitely knew. Whether a great big freeway like L.A. or a chance to really breathe in San Jose, Hal David's words teamed with Burt Bacharach's melodies to craft the sound of the American...no, the International Dream.

(I almost included a little snippet of me trying to sing the first verse of "Do You Know The Way To San Jose" before introducing Dionne's record as the way the song is supposed to sound. I thought better of it. I'm certain Dionne would have remained Bacharach's favorite. And rightly so.)

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Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available for preorder, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!!

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.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

10 SONGS: 6/15/2021

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. Given my intention to usually write these on Mondays, the lists are often dominated by songs played on the previous 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 # 1081.

STOECKEL & PEÑA: Why

This new record has been our little secret for quite some time, and we're delighted to now be able to share it with the world. "Why" is the first release by Stoeckel & Peña, as in Steve Stoeckel (of The Spongetones, Pop Co-Op, and Jamie & Steve) and America's Sweetheart Irene Peña. Both were previously among the many fine folks responsible for "Waterloo Sunset," a benefit project credited to TIRnRR Allstars, covering The Kinks to raise money for whatever the hell it is Dana and I do here. 

So yeah, we're BIG fans of Stoeckel & Peña. We've been chompin' at the bit for this chance to spin their wonderful debut single, and its minty-fresh release on the mighty Big Stir Records label brings that glorious chance firmly into the now. Why? Because we like it. We like them. Much more to come from Stoeckel & Peña (in all their diverse pop incarnations) as TIRnRR rolls on. 

The secret's out. 

Spread the word.

And if you don't know "Why," well, you should.

JIM BASNIGHT: Middle Of The Night

This little mutant radio show has a long and proud history of playing Jim Basnight's music. Solo, with The Moberlys, with The Rockinghams...hell, if Jim ever joins forces with the chick who sang "Rescue Me," we'll start playing Fontella Basnight, too. "Middle Of The Night" is Jim's latest, a new single from the above-mentioned Big Stir Records. Of course we played it. It's Jim Basnight. Playing Jim Basnight is what we do.

ARETHA FRANKLIN: Save Me

Why does this lesser-known Aretha Franklin LP track from 1967 appear to be set on a collision course with our year-end countdown? Playlists are built on whatever groove we hear in our heads, regardless of whether or not anyone else can hear it as easily. "Save Me"'s mix of a "Gloria" riff with a casual lyrical reference to "the Caped Crusader, Green Hornet and Kato, too" establishes a groove that compels me to play it. Aretha's will. I am as Aretha made me. 

JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS: You've Come A Long Way Baby

Dana and I have established a willingness--an eagerness!--to play records by Josie and the Pussycats. The early '70s cartoon group? The 2001 film version? BOTH! We love both. We have no need for Riverdale or any of that angsty nonsense, but we're good with hearing either of those earlier Josies and their long-tailed (with ears for hats) cohorts.

This week's show included "You've Come A Long Way Baby," a 1970 shoulda-been-smash single by Josie and company. Here's an excerpt from my history of bubblegum music, talking a little bit about that incarnation of Josie, Melody, and Valerie:

"One Saturday morning act that may have deserved a better fate was Josie and the Pussycats. The group is something of a pop culture footnote for introducing the world to one Cherie Moor, later to find fame as actress/singer Cheryl Ladd. Though based on an Archie Comics title, the music for Josie And The Pussycats was produced, not by Don Kirshner, but under the direction of songwriter Danny Janssen, best known for co-writing "Little Woman" for Bobby Sherman. And the sound Janssen chose for Josie and the Pussycats was cast, not in the image of The Archies, but in the soulful pop style of The Jackson Five.

'That was fully the intention of Danny Janssen,' [bubblegum aficionado] Bill Pitzonka says. 'They held auditions for the girls for Josie and the Pussycats and he had selected the three girls. Cheryl Ladd—who wasn't Cheryl Ladd then—Cathy Dougher, and Patrice Holloway. And when he presented them to Hanna-Barbera they said, "Well, we really like Patrice Holloway, but we've never had a black cartoon character before." And he said, "Well, tough," Pitzonka notes with a laugh. "'I won't do the project unless she does it, because she's got the greatest voice for it."

"'So they sat on it for a while and he didn't hear back, and then they said, "Come down to the studio, we're doing Josie and the Pussycats." And (Janssen said), "You didn't fire her, did you? Because I wasn't gonna do it." And they said "No, just come down to the studio." They hired every major soul musician in L.A. to work on those sessions. Because they said, "We're gonna do this right, we are gonna do this right." And that's why there is a black character in Josie and the Pussycats, and why the music has such a soul slant.'"

THE LINDA LINDAS: Never Say Never

No, it's not a cover of Romeo Void's early '80s new wave touchstone of the same title. It's arguably better than that. The Linda Lindas have become the buzz band of 2021, deservedly so, and we're happy to do our little part to participate. "Claudia Kishi" has been our Linda Lindas Pick T' Click so far, but "Never Say Never" is my favorite. For now.

JOHNATHAN PUSHKAR: Junior's Farm

Like Red Bull, Johnathan Pushkar gives you Wings. I never get tired of that line. Everyone else is waaaaay past tired of it, but I never get tired of it. Never mind me; just listen to Johnathan's take on "Junior's Farm," from his brand-new album Compositions. C'mon, it's worth putting up with me if it means you get to hear that.

AMY RIGBY: I Don't Want To Talk About Love No More

Amy Rigby's gotten a lot of TIRnRR airplay over the years, both as a solo act and as a duo with her husband Wreckless Eric. I jumped on her track "Dancing With Joey Ramone" as soon as I heard it--it was one of my first iTunes purchases, and it's flat-out amazing--but the bulk of Amy's spins here have been as Dana's choice. I'm also a fan, mind you, but Dana's usually the one getting Amy Rigby into our playlists.

And lately, Dana's been playing a few tracks from Little Fugitive, the 2005 Amy Rigby album that gave the world "Dancing With Joey Ramone." "Like Rasputin" and "The Trouble With Jeanie" demonstrated that Little Fugitive held more delight beyond the great track I already knew, and this week's spin of the wonderful "I Don't Want To Talk About Love No More" made it obvious that I needed to own my own copy of Little Fugitive.

And now I do. Thank you, Discogs! I betcha I'll be adding more Amy Rigby to my collection soon. Radio's job is to sell records. Even if it's selling records to other DJs.

NANCY SINATRA AND DEAN MARTIN: Things

No, I didn't see it coming either. I'll take SONGS I DIDN"T EXPECT TO HEAR ON TIRnRR THIS WEEK for $1000, Alex.

IRENE PEÑA: Must Have Been Good

The release of Stoeckel & Peña's "Why" prompted us to celebrate Steve 'n' Irene as our Featured Performers this week, threading examples of their fine work throughout the playlist. With that plan in place, we wanted to close with a 1-2 punch of their greatest individual hits. "Must Have Been Good" was our introduction to Irene, a track from her 2017 album Trying Not To Smile. I think we first heard it as a single in 2016, courtesy of my former Goldmine colleague John M. Borack (who plays drums on the track). "Must Have Been Good" also found its way on to our own 2017 compilation This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4; its inclusion on TIRnRR # 4 helped to shape the overall feel of that set (a tale told here). Our Irene Peña feature absolutely had to culminate in a spin of "Must Have Been Good."

THE SPONGETONES: (My Girl) Maryanne

There was never any doubt about what song would close out our Steve Stoeckel spotlight. In a decades-long career loaded with oodles and oodles of great moments, The Spongetones' performance of his song "(My Girl) Maryanne" is the single greatest moment.

It is also The Greatest Record Ever Made!

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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.

The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:

Volume 1: download

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Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
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