Yesterday I presented a Chuck Berry remake as my forgotten oldie. It seemed like a good idea for today as well, but today I chose a Buddy Holly song, re-recorded by Peter & Gordon, and a hit for the British Duo in 1965. The song was a million seller, reaching #14 on the hot 100. It's also been covered by many, many artists from Joan Jett to Jackson Browne. The song is also a favorite first song at weddings... perhaps the only venue where it's not a forgotten oldie.
listen here
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
Maybellene
With the death of Chuck Berry last week, a lot of the songs he wrote have been getting airplay. But one song seems to be ignored, or forgotten. "Maybellene" was Berry's first hit record in 1955 reaching #5 on the hot 100. The song has been covered by several artists even on the country charts. My favorite version was a hit in 1964 for Johnny Rivers. The Johnny Rivers version climbed to #12 on the charts and would have been bigger except for the British Invasion. Today, it's another forgotten oldie.
watch Johnny do the song on American Bandstand here.
watch Johnny do the song on American Bandstand here.
Thursday, March 23, 2017
Bee Gees
In 1967 the Bee Gees broke onto the American scene with two top twenty hits in a row, a month apart. The first song was "the New York Mining Disaster", the second was "To Love Somebody". I remember when I first heard To Love Somebody, and what a great song it was. I thought another British act had arrived, but of course they're Australian. I also thought it was their first USA hit, because I totally missed the first song. Anyway, to me it's what started them rolling, but today just another forgotten oldie.
watch here
watch here
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
Keith Relf and the Yardbirds
Today is Keith Relf's birthday. The talented member of the British band The Yardbirds was lead singer on all the great Yardbirds' hits and contributed in many other ways. Born 3/22/43, Relf added a number of tasty licks on harmonica to many Yardbirds' songs. The 1965 song "I'm A Man", a 1965 remake of a Bo Diddley hit, reached the top 20 and features Keith Relf harmonica work throughout the song. Relf died in an accident at home in 1976, but in tribute today's forgotten oldie is I'm A Man... by Keith and the Yardbirds.
Watch the song performed here
Watch the song performed here
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Gene Pitney
A huge star in the USA, Gene Pitney was an even bigger star in the UK. He scored 16 top 40 hits in America, but had 22 in Britain. He was huge before the British Invasion, and was able to continue making hits during and after the Beatles. An interesting guy, Pitney played piano on several Rolling Stones records and never accepted credit or made a penny for it, he just liked hanging with the Stones. In 1962, Pitney went to #4 on the hot 100 with "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" a song about a John Wayne/Jimmy Stewart movie. And amazingly, the song never appeared in the movie. Anyway, it's a great song... forgotten today.
Listen Here
Listen Here
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Sky Pilot
In 1968, Eric Burdon and the New Animals scored their last top twenty hit with the song Sky Pilot. Because the song was nearly eight minutes long, side A was Part One, side B was Part Two. The song climbed to #14 on the hot 100 and is a classic... and extremely unusual, a great example of psychedelic rock. Today the song is a forgotten oldie.
watch the whole song here
watch the whole song here
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Something In The Air
Thunderclap Newman was a one hit wonder from England, formed by Pete Townsend of The Who. Even though their great song "Something In The Air" only peaked at #37 in the USA in 1969, it was a #1 hit in England, a top 20 cover hit for Tom Petty, and has been on dozens of TV shows and commercials, as well as movies. But the song is forgotten as a record... so we only hear it when it comes out on another commercial and we all say "Oh Yeah, I love this song!"
Listen Here
Listen Here
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Kinky... kinda.
Today's forgotten oldie deserves far more than it received. The Kinks "Who'll Be The Next In Line" climbed to #34 on the Hot 100 in 1965 but at the time the Kinks were on tour in the USA and receiving very bad press. All of the bad events from that tour began when the band skipped a union fee payment for an appearance on Dick Clark's Bandstand, and led to a four year ban from performing in the USA. Bummer. Regardless, to me this is one of the Kinks best songs, today a forgotten oldie.
watch it here
watch it here
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Rhinestone Cowboy
Sometimes it doesn't matter much what style a song is, When one of these songs hits it big, they call it a crossover. This was the case in 1975 when Glen Campbell released "Rhinestone Cowboy". The song went to #1 on both the Hot 100 and the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and made Glen Campbell a superstar. Amazingly in 1975 six other songs went to #1 on both the country and rock charts. But Rhinestone Cowboy was the biggest, and today mostly forgotten.
watch here
watch here
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