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Middle-aged Dummies are back and bursting at the "themes" to get going! Full theme ahead! (7 Viewers)

#, Please # 24
Song: 1999
Artist: Prince
Year: 1982

My roommate David had a theory about "1999" circa 1984 or 85. He posited that whenever the song came on at a party, it was time to leave and go somewhere else. This was back in the days when we had multiple options on a given night. It sort of worked because it was the period of Prince's peak popularity.

I got a text from him last week saying he's defending his doctoral dissertation at the end of this month. I don't think it's about his "1999" theory but it's still an incredible accomplishment for a guy who's been a heroin user for many of the 40 years we've known each other.
 
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I missed a MADs adjacent new release a couple of weeks ago and it came from one of my single named ladies.

Celeste is the featured vocalist on one of the tracks on the new Cymande album. It's a lovely ballad where she sounds more like Adele than she did on "Stop This Flame"


I was just getting through the 25s and Celeste's song stood out as a really fine one.

eta* It's got a "Blue Rondo a la Turk" vibe to it. Did they sample it, I wonder?
 
Really liked the 25s. "Leave The City" by the Magnolia Electric Co. was the new-to-me standout along with Celeste's "Stop This Flame." Songs that I am familiar with but loved hearing were "C'Mere" by Interpol, "Sir Duke" by Stevie Wonder, and "Goody Two Shoes" by Adam Ant, just to name a few.

I dug this playlist.
 
I missed a MADs adjacent new release a couple of weeks ago and it came from one of my single named ladies.

Celeste is the featured vocalist on one of the tracks on the new Cymande album. It's a lovely ballad where she sounds more like Adele than she did on "Stop This Flame"


I was just getting through the 25s and Celeste's song stood out as a really fine one.

eta* It's got a "Blue Rondo a la Turk" vibe to it. Did they sample it, I wonder?

The sample is from Nina Simone's "Sinnerman"
 
I missed a MADs adjacent new release a couple of weeks ago and it came from one of my single named ladies.

Celeste is the featured vocalist on one of the tracks on the new Cymande album. It's a lovely ballad where she sounds more like Adele than she did on "Stop This Flame"


I was just getting through the 25s and Celeste's song stood out as a really fine one.

eta* It's got a "Blue Rondo a la Turk" vibe to it. Did they sample it, I wonder?

The sample is from Nina Simone's "Sinnerman”

Oh wow. Sounded familiar. Guess I just couldn’t place it. “Get By” by Talib Kweli, one of my favorite hip hop songs ever, sampled “Sinnerman”
 
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24. All Right All Night
Artist: Tom Robinson Band
Album: TRB Two (1979)
Todd's role(s): producer
Writer(s): Tom Robinson, Danny Kustow, Dolphin Taylor and Ian Parker

The song: A rollicking tune that lies somewhere in the intersection of pub rock and punk rock, "All Right All Night" kicks off the second and final Tom Robinson band album, TRB Two. The song is deftly produced by Todd Rundgren with an ear toward both mainstream and alternative sounds, as he had done with New York Dolls' debut 6 years earlier. The organ is prominently featured, which means it could probably pass for a Stranglers song. The instrumental passage in the middle where the synth and the guitar trade brief solos is a thrill to hear, as is the memorable melody and chorus. On the coda, the synth goes off on a tanget reminiscent of those we hear on Utopia records from Roger Powell, but it is played by band member Ian Parker.

"All Right All Night" was the album's second single and did not chart.

The album: With their high-energy sound that appealed to punks and regular folks alike and a philosophy of wearing their politics (as leftist as they could be) on their sleeve, the Tom Robinson Band seized the spotlight in the U.K. in 1977 and 1978, with their debut single "2-4-6-8 Motorway" hitting #4 and their first album Power in the Darkness hitting #5. They also achieved notoriety because singer/bassist Robinson was one of the few openly gay rock musicians at the time and wrote a song about it ("(Sing if You're) Glad to Be Gay".) But things got pretty dysfunctional when they began to plan their second album. They intended to record it with Chris Thomas, who produced their first record, but a falling out occurred and the band brought in Rundgren at the suggestion of drummer Dolphin Taylor. Rundgren walked into a scenario where the band couldn't agree on which songs to record, so they let Rundgren pick them. When Taylor disagreed with some of the selections, finding them to be inferior to the band's previous material, he quit the band, then reconsidered, but Robinson refused to take him back and replaced him with Preston Heyman. The best tracks maintain the energy of the first album but feature more sophisticated playing.

TRB Two was much more sonically diverse than the debut album, but also more inconsistent, and received mixed reviews and not much promotion from label EMI, and the band's continuing dysfunction did not help. The members' increasing animosity toward each other derailed their tour to support the album, and the band broke up a few months after the album's release after guitarist Danny Kustow quit. Robinson began a solo career, taking his music in a more pop direction.

You Might Also Like: The album's first single "Bully for You" is very British-sounding but has a chorus and chord changes that wouldn't sound out of place on a Rundgren or Utopia album (and another Powell-like synth solo). Tom Robinson believes it inspired "Another Brick in the Wall Part 2" by Pink Floyd, with whom the band shared a manager. "There's no question [the song's repeated] 'We don't need no aggravation' was in the air around Roger Waters", he told Classic Rock. "The truth of it is that I had a really good idea for a chorus and we didn't make the most of it. If 'Bully for You' had started with, 'We don't need no aggravation,' how much better would it have been? Roger's skills as a writer were far more developed than my own. He put a great idea to better use, so fair play to him." https://open.spotify.com/track/3kPx8FZ4O3XGYHTTT7Huyz?si=d21a0daa89d8469d

At #23, a song from some Canadian power poppers that is better than their one U.S. hit.
 
Random walk time (I'll be skipping any that I've already written about).

Eephus – Single (Named) Ladies

Let Me Blow Ya Mind - Eve feat. Gwen Stefani
Yes, please. Love this one, particularly how it opens, but the lyrics are also very good.

Love for my wordplay that's hard to find
Sophomore, I ain't scared, one of a kind
All I do is contemplate ways to make your fans mine
Eyes bloodshot, stressin', chills up your spine
Huh, sick to your stomach wishin' I wrote your rhymes


MAC_32 – Songs to play during (and after) a funeral

Whiskey Lullaby - Brad Paisley / Alison Kraus
I honestly wish this theme had come up during a different random walk, because country is not my cup of tea. That said, this is one of the most depressing songs I've ever heard, and certainly fits with the theme. Ain't gonna lie, I got chills when Alison's voice came in. :cry:

The rumors flew
But nobody knew how much she blamed herself
For years and years
She tried to hide the whiskey on her breathe

She finally drank her pain away little at a time
But she never could get drunk enough to get him of her mind
Until the night

She put that bottle to her head and pulled the trigger
And finally drank away his memory
Life is short but this time it was bigger
Than the strength she had to get up off her knees


Chaos34 - Post Surf Rock Surf Rockish (80s fwd)

Spy School Graduation Theme - Shadowy Men On A Shadowy Planet

Much like sorbet, this surf rock gem is a palate cleanser that gradually washes away the sadness from the previous song. I don't know why a spy school would have a graduation theme, but I'm glad they did.

krista4 – Chicagoland

Chicago Seemed Tired Last Night – The Hold Steady
:thumbup:

Can't go wrong with the Hold Steady. I think Craig mentions poets as much as he does as that's the way he sees himself. That's my message board sermon anyway.

We gather our gospels from gossip and bar talk then we declare them the truth
We salvage our sermons from message boards and scene reports
And we sic them on the youth


Tau837 – Hair metal

What Love Can Be - Kingdom Come
This is not what I think of when I hear "hair metal", but that's ok. This is a good song from an artist I'd never heard of and I'm glad you included at least one power ballad.

Random note: I think I had to skip around 4 or 5 I've already "reviewed", and I expect that will continue the closer I get to completion. For some reason, world's worst superhero has popped up in almost every one of these I've done.
 
For the #24s, I’m going back to a single list. Mostly because their were more songs that were unknown to me that I liked (and in general). Here’s what I’ve got:

Selected Numbers:
Let Me Blow Your Mind - Eve & Gwen Stefani
Train Tracks - Jelly Roll (feat. Struggle)
The Thrill is Gone - B.B. King
Dreadlock Holiday - 10cc
Wet Blanket - Metric
He Loves U Not - Dream
Change (In the House of Flies) - Deftones
What Love Can Be - Kingdom Come
Steppin’ Out - Joe Jackson
Better Off Alone - Alice Deejay

Go Figure
Going back to back-to-back here, with two songs that meshed. First up the beautiful instrumental “Sleepless Nights” from Kozi, which flowed into Gentlemen’s Dub Club and “Eye of the Storm”
 
#24s:

I haven't been commenting enough on Eephus' playlist. I've dug them all, but Let Me Blow Your Mind was a stand out at the top of the 24s.
Train Tracks was another at the top that I really dug. Simey throwing me a curveball here. ;)
Forbidden was another band that was off my radar in the 80s but I listened to in the last decade as I got back into metal. Chalice of Blood was great.
I was laughing a lot when Mr. Moustache came up. I was thinking about different write ups for different types of moustaches. It also got me thinking about listening to albums like Bleach, Gish, and Louder than Love when those came out.
Forever is probably my favorite non-Every Open Eye track. Odd couple, but I think the loudest concerts I've been two have been Pantera and Chrvches.
All Right All Night was a kick *** track I hadn't heard before.
Dreadlock Holiday awesome and hit me right at the correct time. It was probably the track the grabbed my attention the most. I listened to more from this album and added them to the top of the listing queue.
Lazy Eye was one of my favorite 90s soundtrack songs. I like The Goo Goo Dolls way more that I seem to admit. I did hear a little bit of that St. Anger snare in there, but it was like Eephus went in the studio and turned the volume down on that mic. Not nearly as loud and with as much echo as Lars.
Metric is another I added and bumped up to the top of the queue. Every time I hear a song I like it, but they seem to slip my mind as a group to listen to. Wet Blanket was great.
St. Vincent was another hard cut from the list. I loved seeing New York pop up here.

Top to bottom it might be my favorite playlist so far. The above doesn't mention Prince, or Deftones, or BB King, or The Hold Steady, or....
 
No surprise I've been digging @Yambag's playlist and his experience with metal in the 80s/90s. I made and sent him my version of 31 songs/artists from that time frame (+ 1 year in my case :bag: ). I also badgered him with questions and guesses of what his playlist was. Not going to post anything that might come in the future, but I thought the comparison of the first 7 would be interesting to some others in here as well. I don't think he minds commenting on bands that won't come up because of the alphabetical flow of the playlist.

My first 7 songs:


I didn't get as much into the speed/death stuff back then. I did struggle a little bit with putting more grunge/alternative bands on there, but I only included something that I thought had a metal edge to it and went for a song that could be held up as a good example. If it showed up on a list as metal on wiki I at least considered it. I've been enjoying the trip down memory lane and the differences between two versions of the same theme.
 
24's

Known
Nivana: Mr. Moustache
Chvrches: Forever
Prince: 1999
Goo Goo Dolls: Lazy Eye
Joe Jackson: Steppin' Out
Alice Deejay: Better Off Alone

Caught My Attention
The Cult: Rain
Train Tracks: Jelly Roll (not a fan of his, but this was catchy)
B.B. King: The Thrill is Gone
Kozi: Sleepless Nights
Gentelman's Dub Club: Eye of the Storm
Tom Robinson Band: All Right All Night
The Cars: Stranger Eyes (seems like I have to back and revisit their catalog)
Metric: Wet Blanket
Deftones: Change
Kingdom Come: What Love Can Be
 
This 10cc song is way different than what I've heard by them before.
Their American hits were pretty mainstream-sounding for the time, but their overall body of work was quite diverse.
They essentially had multiple songwriting teams within the group.
Listening to best ofs or greatest hits is a wild ride indeed. Mainly Godley and Creme
 
The first time I heard that Gotye song was at my cousin's kids' birthday party and the DJ played it. I thought it was some old song that I just hadn't heard before.
 
#24s:

Train Tracks
was another at the top that I really dug. Simey throwing me a curveball here. ;)
I don't dabble in hip-hop/rap often. That's fo sho. :gang2:

living low class
we're just white trash
we got broke glass
and they got green grass
across them train tracks
across them train tracks

we try so hard
and we do so bad
we could go so far
but we can't look past
the ******** train tracks
I hate those train tracks
 
The 24's
known and liked songs

Rain
The Thrill Is Gone
Trouble Man
1999
Cortez the Killer
Somebody That I used to Know
Wet Blanket- Metric is a potential future MAD candidate for me
Change(In the House of Flies)
What Love Can Be
Cathedral
Steppin' Out

New to me likes
Let Me Blow Ya Mind
Train Tracks
Chalice of Blood
Sleepless Nights
Eye of the Storm
Dancing Time
All Right All Night
Dreadlock Holiday
Stranger Eyes-have probably heard but long since forgotten
Spy School Graduation Theme
 
This 10cc song is way different than what I've heard by them before.
I liked several of their songs in the 70s (including Dreadlock Holiday), but whenever I hear their song "I'm Not in Love," I think about that song "Mr. Jaws," and the 10cc snippet in it saying, "big boys don't cry, big boys don't cry."
I still have that 45 single as well.
Mr. Jaws was played a lot in '75. I think it was a hit. My favorite 10cc song is "The Things We Do for Love." I'm gonna have to listen to it at some point today to verify my love for it still exist. I'm pretty sure it does.
 
I missed a MADs adjacent new release a couple of weeks ago and it came from one of my single named ladies.

Celeste is the featured vocalist on one of the tracks on the new Cymande album. It's a lovely ballad where she sounds more like Adele than she did on "Stop This Flame"


I was just getting through the 25s and Celeste's song stood out as a really fine one.

eta* It's got a "Blue Rondo a la Turk" vibe to it. Did they sample it, I wonder?

The sample is from Nina Simone's "Sinnerman”

Oh wow. Sounded familiar. Guess I just couldn’t place it. “Get By” by Talib Kweli, one of my favorite hip hop songs ever, sampled “Sinnerman”

If I was forced into a Desert Island Discs of hip-hop, Get By would be on there, phenomenal track
 
When you think of rock and sax, you have to think of Morphine. I actually thought this would get more love from this crowd than my other picks, but maybe you guys really don't like the sound. It's understandable, it's unique.

As for me, I'm way behind with listening, and I always feel guilty handing out likes. I pretty much like everything and if I don't like something, I still like that whoever liked it liked it. I'm old and it takes more effort to dislike something than to like something. Music has been subjective since Grok and Grol argued about the tree trunk or the boulder being better for percussions. I love me some sax, hold out hope you chose something I have in mind, and think Morphine is derned good stuff though I haven't given this one a listen yet.

I'm beat up. My knee hurts. My thighs are malfunctioning. Two days of intermediate slopes and I'm questioning if my skiing days are done. I'm also questioning if I should get out of Dodge now or get snowed in for a couple days. Ooph. I hate getting old. Pretty sure I'm gonna pack up and hit the road. That should give me several hours to catch up with the playlists.
 
When you think of rock and sax, you have to think of Morphine. I actually thought this would get more love from this crowd than my other picks, but maybe you guys really don't like the sound. It's understandable, it's unique.

Haven't gotten to the24s, but your squeaky wheel got the grease. This is an excellent track. Now if you can get me out of agreeing with Krista about sax in rock n' roll we'll be jamming! It's ironic because Michael Monroe, my favorite front man growing up in high school (talk about role models), played sax for Hanoi Rocks and I always was like "No! Mike! Not the sax!" whenever he pulled it out to play it.

I think the Stones's "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" and Bobby Keys changed my absolutism about the instrument within rock n' roll, as have other songs, but it's not a go-to. (Watch—I'll love the rest of your songs now that I've said this.)
 
So many epic sax moments in rock n' roll. I don't get you two, but my college roommate for a couple years was a world class saxophonist that I'd known since kindergarten. To this day he likes to quip that he never had to work for living. He got to play.

Oh yeah, before guitar-driven rock n' roll and Chuck Berry, piano and sax ruled the day for rock n' roll. One listen to something like "Rocket 88" and you're aware of how much the sax and piano dominate. And it's glorious. I'm aware of the history to a degree, I'm just saying in the forms of music that I gravitated to, sax usually doesn't work incredibly well. As I get older, those things change. But sax in punk or indie or (especially) heavy metal doesn't necessarily go so great when the music is very guitar-driven.

eta* The New York Dolls used the sax to great effect in spots. A few bands I love have used it in a way that is very cool. It's also part of growing up in the eighties with that production and that saxophones sound different and synthesized at times. It's just . . . it needs to be slightly analog and fit the music. I can't think of any thrash metal sax players, for instance. It's just not peanut butter and chocolate.
 
So many epic sax moments in rock n' roll. I don't get you two, but my college roommate for a couple years was a world class saxophonist that I'd known since kindergarten. To this day he likes to quip that he never had to work for living. He got to play.

Oh yeah, before guitar-driven rock n' roll and Chuck Berry, piano and sax ruled the day for rock n' roll. One listen to something like "Rocket 88" and you're aware of how much the sax and piano dominate. And it's glorious. I'm aware of the history to a degree, I'm just saying in the forms of music that I gravitated to, sax usually doesn't work incredibly well. As I get older, those things change. But sax in punk or indie or (especially) heavy metal doesn't necessarily go so great when the music is very guitar-driven.

eta* The New York Dolls used the sax to great effect in spots. A few bands I love have used it in a way that is very cool. It's also part of growing up in the eighties with that production and that saxophones sound different and synthesized at times. It's just . . . it needs to be slightly analog and fit the music. I can't think of any thrash metal sax players, for instance. It's just not peanut butter and chocolate.
Pretty sure this is a sax solo at the end.
Room a Thousand Years Wide
 
So many epic sax moments in rock n' roll. I don't get you two, but my college roommate for a couple years was a world class saxophonist that I'd known since kindergarten. To this day he likes to quip that he never had to work for living. He got to play.

Oh yeah, before guitar-driven rock n' roll and Chuck Berry, piano and sax ruled the day for rock n' roll. One listen to something like "Rocket 88" and you're aware of how much the sax and piano dominate. And it's glorious. I'm aware of the history to a degree, I'm just saying in the forms of music that I gravitated to, sax usually doesn't work incredibly well. As I get older, those things change. But sax in punk or indie or (especially) heavy metal doesn't necessarily go so great when the music is very guitar-driven.

eta* The New York Dolls used the sax to great effect in spots. A few bands I love have used it in a way that is very cool. It's also part of growing up in the eighties with that production and that saxophones sound different and synthesized at times. It's just . . . it needs to be slightly analog and fit the music. I can't think of any thrash metal sax players, for instance. It's just not peanut butter and chocolate.
Pretty sure this is a sax solo at the end.
Room a Thousand Years Wide
It is. "Drawing Flies" from the same album also has one. Played by someone named Scott Granlund.
 
The New York Dolls used the sax to great effect in spots.
Because, you know, New York's all right if you like saxophones.
On another New York Dolls note, was sad to read this about David Johansen today.

 
The New York Dolls used the sax to great effect in spots.
Because, you know, New York's all right if you like saxophones.
On another New York Dolls note, was sad to read this about David Johansen today.


Hopefully he will get the donations he needs. I was thinking about ordering an L-U-V shirt where all proceeds go to his expenses.
 
The first time I heard that Gotye song was at my cousin's kids' birthday party and the DJ played it. I thought it was some old song that I just hadn't heard before.
had the same reaction first time I heard it... felt like something out of the 80s. IIRC, the video has a kind of Visage 'fade to grey' visual to it too.
 
The first time I heard that Gotye song was at my cousin's kids' birthday party and the DJ played it. I thought it was some old song that I just hadn't heard before.
had the same reaction first time I heard it... felt like something out of the 80s. IIRC, the video has a kind of Visage 'fade to grey' visual to it too.
It always reminds me of another "he said she said song", Don't You Want Me by the Human League.
 
The first time I heard that Gotye song was at my cousin's kids' birthday party and the DJ played it. I thought it was some old song that I just hadn't heard before.
had the same reaction first time I heard it... felt like something out of the 80s. IIRC, the video has a kind of Visage 'fade to grey' visual to it too.

 

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