163 1963

As we have discovered in the past there are interesting musical things to be found in most years. This time we are going all the way back to the wonders of nineteen hundred and sixty three. Oh joy!

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Playlist:

(00:00) Sam Cooke - Twistin’ the night away (live)

Tim from The face of today

(04:55) Morrissey - At last I am born

JC aka The Vinyl Villian

(08:46) The Skatalites - Addis Ababa

FiL from Pogoagogo

(12:18) Joe Henderson - Homestretch

Ross from Hummin’ Cummins

(16:44) New Order - 1963

John Q.

(22:37) The Kingsman - Louie Louie

The In Crowd from I’m learning to share!

(27:04) The Beatles - Not a second time

Linda from Speed of Dark

(29:34) The Monty Norman Orchestra - James Bond theme (Dr No)

Tricia

(31:47) Grant-Lee Phillips - Nothin’ is for sure

Greer from A Sweet Unrest

(36:34) The Beach Boys - Surfer girl

James from Appetite For Distraction

(39:35) Dead Kennedys - Kill the poor (live)

Dirk from Sexy Loser

(44:13) Beatallica - I want to choke your band

Eiron from The S+7 Method

(47:18) The Drifters - Up on the roof

Natalie from Mini-Obs

(50:49) Bob Dylan - A hard rain’s gonna fall

Adam from Pretending life is like a song

Thanks to all of you for you indulgence and efforts. Next time we will be exploring another bit of the body in the form of The skin. You can find the instructions on how to take part hiding here.

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9 Comments so far
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There is a quite glaring mistake in my introduction, caused by the expectation that there would be no other Beatles tracks this ‘cast. I would like to say that this is Tim’s fault, but that wouldn’t be very gracious of me. Beatallica is punishment enough, I think.

I liked this episode a lot!

Quite a lot of non-from-1963-tracks which always mixes it up! I have GOT to listen to more Dead Kennedys.

:-)

Linda, I was 6 when those lads hit it big in the USA, and I didn’t quite understand the hoopla. If you even said “Beatles” in the presence of my teenaged babysitters, they wailed and melted into a puddle of goo! It didn’t take long to sink in, though.
I’m envious of your Beatles concert. Just plain green.

Nat, that’s exactly how I felt about Elvis when I was a pre-teen! I just could not see the attraction–and never did.

I loved this episode! Great picks everyone, some not so obvious either :-)

Cheers!

What i love about CP is the people never seem to pick obvious choices, so it was good to see dead kens, Morrissey and new order etc….

Peace
rx

I liked this one a lot too, lots of variety and very upbeat for the most part. I enjoyed every single song. Great fun to listen to.

FiL- I always laugh out loud at your intros but this one was especially hilarious.

An excellently contrasty episode. Loved the Sam Cooke, Joe Henderson and Skatelites particularly (and FiL, LOL as always.)

You might think that Louie Louie is a a straightforward early 60s pop record, but part of the reason it’s so well known is the controversy it caused at the time. The story goes that the Kingsmen rehearsed the song all night before the recording session (guess they finally got the hang of those three chords, huh?) so by the time they got to the studio the singer was so far gone he could barely pronounce the words. Since the words were unclear on the recording, some right-wing paranoiacs imagined they heard various words and concepts which they considered beyond the pale, and some plausibly crude approximations purporting to be “the real lyrics” were circulated, resulting in a fruitless 31-month FBI investigation for obscenity. You couldn’t ask for better publicity, of course, which is why The Kingsmen are still apparently making a career out of this song - not bad considering they didn’t even write it. Frank Zappa and the Mothers Of Invention were particularly taken with this amazing ability of people to transfer their own sordid imaginings onto anything the slightest bit ambiguous: the MOI song Plastic People is a sort of deconstruction of Louie Louie, and the opening riff became Zappa’s shorthand motif for general dumbness and stupidity.

Once again I failed to contribute due to indecision - it was either the Stones doing Lennon/McCartney’s I Wanna Be Your Man or the Dylan’s live version of Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues, complete with his comment “There ain’t nothing wrong with this song” referring to him being dropped from a TV show when he was about to perform it.

Very fun episode. John, is that true the story behind 1963? I hadn’t heard that song in ages. LOL to James…The Karate Kid. Loved hearing Morrissey in there and I also really liked your pick, Greer.



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