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MAD - Artist - Round 4 - #1's have been posted (5 Viewers)

Yes #6 - Owner of a Lonely Heart
Album - 90125 (1983)


Time for the band’s biggest mainstream commercial hit.

To me, this is a quintessential early-80s rock hit. It’s got everything you want in a monster 80s hit - it’s got sound effects, it’s got a programmed drum machine, it’s got a catchy chorus, it’s got an awesome guitar solo, it’s got an impeccably produced music video that got tons of MTV play.

To this day, the intro still elicits a “F Yeah!” from me every time I hear it. Love this song.

♥️💔🥁🎸

can't help but insert "fart" during the refrain ..."shart" would be good too - don't judge me
 
Yes #6 - Owner of a Lonely Heart
Album - 90125 (1983)


Time for the band’s biggest mainstream commercial hit.

To me, this is a quintessential early-80s rock hit. It’s got everything you want in a monster 80s hit - it’s got sound effects, it’s got a programmed drum machine, it’s got a catchy chorus, it’s got an awesome guitar solo, it’s got an impeccably produced music video that got tons of MTV play.

To this day, the intro still elicits a “F Yeah!” from me every time I hear it. Love this song.

♥️💔🥁🎸

Pretty sure this one would be eligible for my theme list
 

#6 - With Every Heartbeat - Kleerup and Robyn​



Producer - Kleerup
Writer - Robyn and Andreas Kleerup
Chart Positions - UK #1, US Dance Club Songs #5, Europe #5
Album - Robyn (International Version)
Year - 2007
Collaborator History - We have already established that Robyn’s main collaborator, Klas Åhlund, plays for the Teddybears who we saw with Cardiac Arrest earlier. Andreas Kleerup plays drums for the Teddybears. Kleerup has worked with and remixed such iconic artists as Lady Gaga, Moby, The Cardigans, and Nonono. As well as Röyksopp muse Susanne Sundfør.

Key Lyric -
We could keep trying but things will never change
So I don't look back
Still I'm dying with every step I take
But I don't look back


Notes - Kleerup had a severe nosebleed when he met Robyn through Klas after a gig in Stockholm early one morning following a massive street brawl downtown between Kleerup, Klas and paparazzi that had insulted Robyn, landing Klas a stint in jail. With Every Heartbeat" was composed in Kleerup's living room, where Robyn came up with the song's melody, inspired by Giorgio Moroder, "but mostly by the ZZ Top song 'Legs'"

Steve Perkins of BBC Chart Blog praised the song for its lack of a chorus, writing "when you peel this song apart, it's actually very cyclical regardless: odd lines are repeated, but carefully chosen as if to reinforce the point that a new line just made. [...] There's a trembling quality to Robyn's voice in this song – as though she could fall apart at any moment but is keeping herself together by sheer force of will – which adds enormously to the fighting spirit of a song that is pessimistic without being bleak." Online music magazine Pitchfork placed the song at number 46 on their Top 500 Tracks of the Decade list. In October 2011, NME placed it at number 30 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years".

Next up - Another heartbreaker. This time from the Robyn LP
 
The Clashkupcho1The Magnificent Seven
The Magnificent Seven is the 6th (but not final :ninja: ) selection from Sandinista!

I've seen some crazy theories on what this song is about (my favorite is that the Magnificent Seven were the 7 public cemeteries built outside Victorian London because the city graveyards got too full). Personally, I believe it's simply about the average joe working his *** off all his life for nothing.

So get back to work an' sweat some more
The sun will sink an' we'll get out the door
It's no good for man to work in cages
Hits the town, he drinks his wages


Release in 1980, The Magnificent Seven obviously draws strongly from rap of that era. And Joe throws out some great lyrics. It wouldn't be a Clash song without a reference to police brutality.

What do we have for entertainment?
Cops kickin' Gypsies on the pavement


My favorite verse

Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels
Came to the checkout at the 7-11
Marx was skint - but he had sense
Engels lent him the necessary pence
 
The Clashkupcho1The Magnificent Seven
The Magnificent Seven is the 6th (but not final :ninja: ) selection from Sandinista!

I've seen some crazy theories on what this song is about (my favorite is that the Magnificent Seven were the 7 public cemeteries built outside Victorian London because the city graveyards got too full). Personally, I believe it's simply about the average joe working his *** off all his life for nothing.

So get back to work an' sweat some more
The sun will sink an' we'll get out the door
It's no good for man to work in cages
Hits the town, he drinks his wages


Release in 1980, The Magnificent Seven obviously draws strongly from rap of that era. And Joe throws out some great lyrics. It wouldn't be a Clash song without a reference to police brutality.

What do we have for entertainment?
Cops kickin' Gypsies on the pavement


My favorite verse

Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels
Came to the checkout at the 7-11
Marx was skint - but he had sense
Engels lent him the necessary pence
Nice - This is my favorite Clash song.
 
6's PLAYLIST

Ryan StarYambagSomebody's Son
Ryan: ''Somebody's Son was written as a punk rock song, but we recorded it as a piano, more of a ballad. And I really love it. People keep asking, 'Is it political?' because there's a line where I say, 'Hey, hey, head of state, send me home.' It's really more about a relationship separated by a war, but it's more about longing for that person, and missing them, and what that life is like missing someone so much. Which I know a lot about, being on the road constantly. But it sets up this beautiful scene of bombs dropping over this man, but he's holding a note that his lover left him so he could think of her and remember her and keep him strong when he's awake and with what he has to do."
 
#6: JOURNEY - FEELING THAT WAY


I hope you all liked the early Christmas present on the playlist... That video is yet another fantastic slice of 70s. My ignorant butt whiffed on the pairing of it with Anytime, but at least both playlist! :oldunsure: I honestly don't remember hearing this song at all, but weirdly Anytime had some familiarity. I liked the groove and solo on this one slightly more than the straight rocking follow up. The opening trio of Infinity is so damn good: Lights + Feeling that Way/Anytime. Hopefully I am doing this great band some justice for long time fans despite my blunder.

Top 5 preview: the other part to my favorite 1-2 punch, a song from the debut that has stayed a favorite since 1st listen, the song mostly responsible for this adventure (when Schon really stood out for the first time for me), another song from Evolution that could be my #1 most days, and holy **** - a cover??!! .
 
#6: LORD HURON - TIME TO RUN


Another fun, cinematic video from Ben and the gang here. Sorry for the confusion, but I waffled and switched the song on the playlist back to the album cut. It's about a minute and a half longer, and has a little more atmosphere. It also highlights the exact same I was talking about in my last post - a great opening trio of songs that flow together like on Strange Trails. Very similar in tone and structure to Until the Night Turns. Just like last time, song #2 is my favorite. We have heard all the songs that open the album as well: Ends of the Earth --> Time to Run ---> Lonesome Dreams. We still have one more from this album to go.

It's time to run, well I hope you understand what I've done
Run away for you, I'm gonna count the days 'til you make it through
I did it all for you, well I hope you live the life you want to
My time is spent, baby please don't tell 'em just where I went


I wanted everybody else in the world to know
(Ooh ooh ooh ooh)
I wanted everyone to know that you're the girl for me
(Ooh ooh ooh ooh)


Next: the song responsible for their insane # of listens on Spotify.
 
Okay, current plan. Tonight, finish the jam-packed #7s. Write-up for “We” tomorrow, and then hope to listen to the next batch after. Hopefully catch up by/over Christmas.

Selected (and Shuffled) Favorites
I Believe in You and Me - Whitney Houston
Rock ‘N’ Roll Machine - Triumph
Given To Fly - Pearl Jam (/Eddie Vedder)
Somewhere - Johnny Marr
Walking On Broken Glass - Annie Lennox
Act Naturally - Buck Owens & Ringo Starr
Radio Free Europe - REM
Until the Night Turns - Lord Huron
Trucker Speed - Fred Eaglesmith
Call Your Girlfriend - Robyn

Shuffle Adventures:

Have to go for a three-fer this time around. The triple combo of Motley Crue’s beautiful ballad “Home Sweet Home” followed by “Don’t Stop Believing” by Journey (good news: we found South Detroit. Bad news: it’s in South Dakota), and capped off by George’s Clinton catchy, groovy “Atomic Dog” was just too strong to ignore.
 
Finally listened to the #9 playlist. Other than my own song:
  • Favorites already known to me:
    • The Clash - Rock the Casbah
    • Motley Crue - Wild Side
    • Radiohead - Karma Police
  • Favorites new to me:
    • Walkmen - Juveniles
    • Lindsey Stirling - Carol of the Bells
    • Our Lady Peace - One Man Army
    • My Morning Jacket - Run Thru
    • Robyn - Indestructible -- this is the first Robyn song to make my list; EDIT: actually, this is the second Robyn song
    • Lord Huron - Wait by the River
    • Fred Eaglesmith - Some Roads
Another great playlist.
 
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6. A World of Fantasy
Album: Never Surrender (Canada 1982, US 1983)
Writers: Rik Emmett, Mike Levine, Gil Moore and Tammy Patrick
Lead vocals: Rik Emmett
Chart History: US Mainstream Rock #3
Video?: Yes
Lyrical category: Love/lust/breakup

Alert: This is Track 2 of Never Surrender.

"A World of Fantasy" may be the best example of how at the top of their game, Triumph was extremely melodic AND extremely powerful. The first single from Never Surrender, "A World of Fantasy" is an extremely dynamic track that combines the intricacies of prog with the pop sense of the best AOR tracks and the raw power of hard rock and metal.

The acoustic guitar-and-synth opening suggests we might be about to hear a prog tune, but as Rik Emmett begins to overlay the main melody on electric guitar, the vibe switches to "epic rock/metal." It's the kind of thing we might have heard from Queensryche a few years later. As Emmett begins to sing, Mike Levine comes in with some supportive bass lines, but the song is still pretty hushed by Triumph standards. Then, when Emmett hits a high note at the end of the verse, THWACK! We are off and running. Emmett repeats the main melody on guitar, but it's double-tracked for greater impact, and Levine and Gil Moore begin a pounding rhythm that is perfect for fist-pumping accompaniment at the arena. This passage is one of my favorites in the band's entire catalog.

The second verse has the same melody as the first, but as the band is swinging at full speed, Emmett's vocal is louder and more impassioned.

The chorus comes in two parts, the first of which features Emmett singing alone and hitting some of the highest notes he ever managed, and the second of which is a torrent of melody that produces one of the Biggest Choruses of the band's career. It was a sign of the times that the song's biggest hook didn't appear until more than 2 minutes into the song. Like many of the best bands of its day, Triumph rewarded the patience of its listeners.

The third verse adds some fills and keyboard lines that hadn't appeared earlier in the song. After another run through the first part of chorus, we get to Emmett's brief guitar solo, which matches the anguish of his vocal, which resumes as we begin a bridge featuring a dynamic buildup from Moore that leads us into the Big Chorus again. This time, Emmett wails on guitar and vocals in between the lines of the chorus and the song continues its momentum until it fades out.

Like "Spellbound" (#12 on my list), "A World of Fantasy" is about a man who is "hypnotized" by a lover who is wrong for him. The "evil woman"/"witchy woman" theme is one trope from the classic rock era that I don't miss, but this song deals with it better than most because the narrator takes some of the blame himself:

I was chasing a dream, I was fancy free
I was so naive
You were all wrapped up in a mystery
You looked good to me
And I needed love, I wanted it desperately
But oh, real love, you never came to me


The dated lyrics may be the reason that the Never Surrender tracks represented at their reunion shows and on their most popular compilation album (2010's Greatest Hits Remixed) are the title track (#15 on my list) and "When the Lights Go Down" (#23), but not "A World of Fantasy" despite it getting more play on MTV (with a video that combined footage from the studio, a soundstage and a live show) and (in the Philly market, at least) on the radio.

"A World of Fantasy" appeared regularly on the Never Surrender and Thunder Seven tours, but not after that except for one of those special-setlist Toronto shows in 1988. It often served as the lead-in to Moore's drum solo. On the vinyl version of the Stages live album, the drum solo is listed as a separate track, "Druh Mer Selbo," but on the remastered CD version and the Spotify version, "A World of Fantasy" and the drum solo are combined into one track. (The original CD version cut the drum solo altogether.)

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1o3XYqBnyGQ
Live version from The US Festival in 1983: https://open.spotify.com/track/11zw2XgP8lbehy8S9DlMue?si=b9154cb0b0ef44b6
Live version from Dallas in 1983 or 1984: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNYJwSRfvDE
Live version from Stages (includes drum solo): https://open.spotify.com/track/1m4nWE0eK5JyYapsQoB6bx?si=ea3c768281024152

With the highest-ranked songs from Never Surrender, Rock & Roll Machine, Progressions of Power and Thunder Seven having appeared all in a row, all that is left are the best songs from Just a Game and Allied Forces. At #5, my highest-ranked song sung by Gil Moore, and the second song I ever heard by the band.
 
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There were several songs I liked, but Airborne Toxic Event won this round with "Hell and Back". I'm on my fourth time through.

Excellent.
I love this and love all those that are enjoying them. I now have like 10 songs of theirs's on my playlist. They just keep growing on me each time I hear them.

I love the last five songs....
 
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Eddie VedderTau837Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town

"Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town" is a beautifully introspective and acoustic-driven song by Pearl Jam, featured on their second studio album, "Vs." (1993). Despite the lack of a commercial single release, the song reached #17 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and #23 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.

Written primarily by Eddie, the song is one of the band's most beloved tracks for its simplicity, storytelling, and emotional depth. Unlike much of Pearl Jam's grunge-tinged work, this song stands out as a quiet and reflective piece. The length of the song's title was a reaction by the band to the fact that most of its songs featured one-word titles. The song is often referred to simply as "Elderly Woman" or "Small Town" by the band and its fans.

The song tells a poignant story of a woman reflecting on her life in a small town when she unexpectedly encounters someone from her past. It explores themes of nostalgia, regret, self-reflection, and the passage of time. The song captures the feeling of being stuck in a small town, where life can feel stagnant and limited. The narrator reflects on her choices and how they’ve shaped her life, suggesting a sense of longing for what could have been. The chance encounter with someone from the past highlights the importance of human connection and how it can stir long-buried emotions.

"Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town" is a departure from Pearl Jam's louder, more aggressive tracks. It is a gentle, acoustic-driven ballad that allows Eddie's voice and the story to take center stage. The song features a simple, repetitive strumming pattern that creates a warm, intimate atmosphere. The lack of heavy instrumentation allows the focus to remain on the lyrics and Eddie’s emotional delivery. Eddie’s voice is soft and heartfelt, perfectly conveying the melancholy and nostalgia of the story.

The song is a staple of Pearl Jam’s live shows, where it often serves as a moment of intimacy between the band and the audience. The crowd typically sings along, especially during the chorus, creating a shared, emotional experience. Pearl Jam has played the song 500 times in concert.

In summary, this song stands out for its simplicity and emotional depth. Its heartfelt lyrics and acoustic arrangement showcase a different side of Pearl Jam, making it a fan favorite and one of the band’s most iconic pieces.
 
Eddie VedderTau837Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town

"Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town" is a beautifully introspective and acoustic-driven song by Pearl Jam, featured on their second studio album, "Vs." (1993). Despite the lack of a commercial single release, the song reached #17 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and #23 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.

Written primarily by Eddie, the song is one of the band's most beloved tracks for its simplicity, storytelling, and emotional depth. Unlike much of Pearl Jam's grunge-tinged work, this song stands out as a quiet and reflective piece. The length of the song's title was a reaction by the band to the fact that most of its songs featured one-word titles. The song is often referred to simply as "Elderly Woman" or "Small Town" by the band and its fans.

The song tells a poignant story of a woman reflecting on her life in a small town when she unexpectedly encounters someone from her past. It explores themes of nostalgia, regret, self-reflection, and the passage of time. The song captures the feeling of being stuck in a small town, where life can feel stagnant and limited. The narrator reflects on her choices and how they’ve shaped her life, suggesting a sense of longing for what could have been. The chance encounter with someone from the past highlights the importance of human connection and how it can stir long-buried emotions.

"Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town" is a departure from Pearl Jam's louder, more aggressive tracks. It is a gentle, acoustic-driven ballad that allows Eddie's voice and the story to take center stage. The song features a simple, repetitive strumming pattern that creates a warm, intimate atmosphere. The lack of heavy instrumentation allows the focus to remain on the lyrics and Eddie’s emotional delivery. Eddie’s voice is soft and heartfelt, perfectly conveying the melancholy and nostalgia of the story.

The song is a staple of Pearl Jam’s live shows, where it often serves as a moment of intimacy between the band and the audience. The crowd typically sings along, especially during the chorus, creating a shared, emotional experience. Pearl Jam has played the song 500 times in concert.

In summary, this song stands out for its simplicity and emotional depth. Its heartfelt lyrics and acoustic arrangement showcase a different side of Pearl Jam, making it a fan favorite and one of the band’s most iconic pieces.
This is my favorite Pearl Jam song - love it so much. I’ve always had bittersweet feelings when hearing this song - it was the first song I heard after running into my long-time girlfriend at a party about a year after she broke up with me (I still wasn’t over her). :cry:
 
Crap. I forgot to give the context for "Missionary Man", so here it is (from Wikipedia):

Upon the single's July 1986 US release, the song was described as being inspired in part by Lennox's 1984–1985 marriage to devout Hare Krishna Radha Raman. When discussing the song's inspiration and meaning, Lennox stated "Obviously, there is a personal meaning in [Missionary Man] for me, because of my past history. But I also think that there are a great deal of people in the media, in the form of politicians or religious speakers or philosophical people, people who are generally trying to have some power over other people, who I just don't trust."
 
Crap. I forgot to give the context for "Missionary Man", so here it is (from Wikipedia):

Upon the single's July 1986 US release, the song was described as being inspired in part by Lennox's 1984–1985 marriage to devout Hare Krishna Radha Raman. When discussing the song's inspiration and meaning, Lennox stated "Obviously, there is a personal meaning in [Missionary Man] for me, because of my past history. But I also think that there are a great deal of people in the media, in the form of politicians or religious speakers or philosophical people, people who are generally trying to have some power over other people, who I just don't trust."
I dont think this is the only song to reference him. One to come?
 
Crap. I forgot to give the context for "Missionary Man", so here it is (from Wikipedia):

Upon the single's July 1986 US release, the song was described as being inspired in part by Lennox's 1984–1985 marriage to devout Hare Krishna Radha Raman. When discussing the song's inspiration and meaning, Lennox stated "Obviously, there is a personal meaning in [Missionary Man] for me, because of my past history. But I also think that there are a great deal of people in the media, in the form of politicians or religious speakers or philosophical people, people who are generally trying to have some power over other people, who I just don't trust."
I dont think this is the only song to reference him. One to come?
Not that I'm aware of. It really was the Thunderdome of song selection. I tried for maximum variety.
 
6. You Light Up My Life (Just Whitney, 2002)

With a new, $100 million dollar contract with Arista, Whitney returned to the studio with her fifth studio album, Just Whitney, which debuted at #9 on the Billboard 200 chart and #3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, and reached Platinum status. In addition to Babyface, the production team for this album included Kevin "She'kspere" Briggs (who also worked with TLC and Destiny's Child), singer/rapper Missy Elliot and for one song (Whatchulookinat), Bobby Brown.

For this album, Whitney strove to connect more with her fans with songs that were more 'revealing' about her, as well as songs she felt they could sing along to and enjoy the melody of:

"[t]his album for me is about surviving, raising a family, being a wife or girlfriend and all the challenges that go along with those things. These songs are more about creating a mood than about anything in particular."

You Light Up My Life was not released as a single.

Fun fact for you: the song's composer, Joseph Brooks, briefly dated Laverne and Shirley's Cindy Williams and wanted her to star in the movie based on the song, but they were having issues between them by the time things started ramping up.
 
Thoughts on the #6s of artists I know well:

Yes -- I co-sign everything Yo Mama said about "Owner of a Lonely Heart". In 7th grade I had a classmate who would freak out and start air guitaring every time this song came on.

Tweedy/Wilco -- "Monday" is one of the heavy hitters from Being There and may be my favorite song on that record. It is soulful, rocking and swinging, none of which was expected from what I thought was an "alt-country" band in 1996. I have seen this performed at a few of their shows I have been to, the most memorable of which featured a horn section. But not just any horn section. The night before, the band had played Providence, RI. After the show, they were approached by three Brown University students who played various horn instruments, who told them that they had learned "Monday" and another Wilco song with horns (that we haven't seen yet but might). The band invited them onto their bus and to travel with them to perform the next night in Sayreville, NJ, where I was in the audience.

My Morning Jacket -- "Lay Low" is the second of two epics from Z (after "Dondante"), which has a tense, grinding first half and lets loose in the second half with some thrilling dual-guitar work from Jim James and Carl Broemel. Onstage, James would sing the first half hidden by a cloak, then remove it and be handed his guitar for the second half.

P-Funk -- "Up for the Down Stroke" is basically the template for the Parliament sound that ripped up the R&B charts in the mid- and late-70s.

Bee Gees -- "Night Fever" is one of the songs that defines the band's disco era and was the biggest of their Saturday Night Fever hits, staying at #1 on the Hot 100 for 8 weeks.
 
6.

Song: Monday
Artist: Wilco
Album: Being There
Year: 1996

Charlie had a plenty good band but he couldn't understand why no
One would go
A world record players on a tour of Japan, Charlie fixing his van with the
Left arm tan
He said
Monday, I'm all high, get me out of FLA
In school, yeah, I fooled ya, now I know I made a mistake



Back on song #29 (Casino Queen) I had this to say “This song rocks and is reminiscent of Exile era Rolling Stones. So why is it so low in the rankings in that case? Well, it’s because the band pulled off this sound much better on their next album release. That song will be appearing much later in the countdown.”

This is the song.
 
The Bee GeeszamboniNight Fever
Their biggest hit - as Pip mentioned, a disco staple that stayed at #1 for 8 weeks in 1978. Per wiki. for the first five weeks that "Night Fever" was at #1, the previously ranked "Stayin' Alive" was at #2, and for one week in March 1978, the Bee Gees pulled a page from their Beatles buddies by managing to have four of their related songs (performed or written by them) in the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. I particularly like the transition around the 0:30 mark from the falsetto.

Also didn't know upon doing some research that the opening string/keyboard sound was patterned after Percy Faith's "Theme From A Summer Place", a popular 1959 instrumental. If that tune sounds familiar, it should: the scene in Animal House where Pinto is first getting busy with the mayor's daughter.
 
Tim MaiaDon QuixoteBrother, Sister, Father, and Mother
This one is from Tim Maia’s first album after he left the Rational Culture cult. It includes some lyrics to try to convince listeners that he was free of the cult and its religious teachings:

'Cause there's no heaven
There's no God
'Cause there's no Devil
There's no Hell


But I just enjoy the orchestral/disco/R&B sound to it and some of the other songs on this album. You can probably see the connection from someone like my last MAD artist pick of Curtis Mayfield to Tim Maia with the mix of the orchestra and funky guitar.
 
6's

Known
: Yes, Smiths, Crue (top 3 for me), Whitney, REM, Radiohead (also top 3 for me), Pearl Jam, Bee Gees

Caught My Attention
Walkmen: Victory
Pretty Reckless: Zombie
Wilco: Monday
Lindsey Sterling: Ice Storm
Airborne Toxic Event: Hell and Back
Candlebox: We
 
Bee Gees -- "Night Fever" is one of the songs that defines the band's disco era and was the biggest of their Saturday Night Fever hits, staying at #1 on the Hot 100 for 8 weeks.
There are many "perfect" records. This is one of them. Everything works.
It's indeed great, but there may be a few ahead by them that are arguably even better. At least to me.
 
Finally listened to the #8 playlist. Other than my own song:
  • Favorites already known to me:
    • Our Lady Peace - Clumsy
    • Motley Crue - Too Young to Fall in Love
  • Favorites new to me:
    • Wilco - Either Way
    • Lindsey Stirling - Sleigh Ride
    • The Airborne Toxic Event - Faithless
    • My Morning Jacket - Steam Engine
    • Candelbox - You
Another great playlist.
 

The title track of the Dr. Feelgood album (which many critics feel is their best.) This was one of their biggest songs, and for good reason - it's excellent. Good heavy opening, good riff, good hooks, etc. They had done the rehab thing by this point, and this was their first album while clean. It's also their last 80's album, and the last one with Vince for a decade. For me, it's also the last really good album, but caps off an incredible 80's run.

Of my top six, we get two from this album, and two each from the first two. All good stuff.
 
Candlebox #6
Song: We
Album: Wolves (2021)


(Youtube Version) Candlebox- We

All alone are we?
Bending never made us weak
Burning like a line of trees
Breaking for the enemy
Lying till we just can't see


Admittedly, the chorus (posted just above) is probably my favorite part of this song, with its increased intensity and emotion. Obviously though, considering this is #6, this is one I heavily enjoy throughout. There’s simply a consistent groove that’s infectious to me, Dave Krusen’s steady drum beats, the guitarwork of Island Styles, Brian Quinn, and Adam Kury, and of course Kevin Martin being heard above all that. I’m struggling to describe more better (>.>) the things I enjoy here, so I’m going to stop here and listen to music. Especially while I’m trying to catch up and deal with holidays and such.

Next on the countdown, a warning to shufflers that my next selection is technically two tracks, though one’s an intro. I don’t know how to clue the title other than to say it would require you to be very, very close.
 
When should we post our Christmas playlists? I have six tunes just for a MAD's holiday.
Xmas eve... I'll start a fire to listen by.
I assume we will have a pause in lists for Christmas. And it's now the 24th where I am, so Thunderbirds are go!

My list is in pairs.

The Rockers:

Slade - Merry Christmas Everybody

Queensrÿche - White Christmas

The Groovy:

The Pointer Sisters - Christmas in New York

Brian Setzer Orchestra - Gettin' in the Mood (For Christmas)

The Traditional:

Neil Diamond - O Holy Night

Annie Lennox - See Amid the Winter's Snow

Merry Christmas!
 
Fred Eaglesmith and his wife, Tif Ginn, released A Christmas Card last year. It's a short 27 minutes of 11 original songs, and it's excellent. The youtube link has an hour long sound effects injected in the middle, so highly recommend seeking out on your <premium music subscription app> instead

You can safely insert this album into the rotation at a gathering and it will blend right in, only it's way better than the songs surrounding it. The closing tune, Good Winter Time, is a keeper, and would have made my top 31 easily had i been paying attention.


It's mostly Tif on vocals, and she's really good. I mention this because often her backing vocals clash harshly with Fred's on many live tune. None of that here, it's all shine and polish.

 

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