I'm always cruising around the interweb, looking for interesting music. I'll see or hear something out there that sets me on a path.
This part of this series was actually prompted by two different blogs that combined to send me on this journey.
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Sal Nunziato runs Burning Wood blog. His life is music, so he knows it from the inside. He is most into 20th Century artists & their continuing output this centuty. Alway somehing there that we mere mortals probably missed.
Starting the week off with "Rolling Stone: Please Just Call it a Day".
About this, Sal sez:
"I should know better. But I guess that is why it's called click bait. Rolling Stone has released their list of '50 Greatest Concept Albums' and if you can get beyond 49 without reaching for a heavy object to throw at your computer screen or crush your phone to bits, more power to you."
I haven't read fucking RS for decades. Last place I'd want to find out what's really going on in music. They're kinda just a glorified advertisement. But I read the article & all the interesting reader comment. I even checked out their list. What a load of shite.
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A couple days later I was visiting A History of Dubious Taste blog to catch up on things I might have missed. I have to say I don't check in with AHoDT as often as I should, but I always check out whatever is there for some suprisingly great finds.
There was a posting from October 12 that caught my attention, "The 100 Greatest UK Number 1 Singles".
After having read the Rolling Stone shitlist, I decided I should check out The Guardian's list. I figured that they had nothing to particularly gain by hyping any acts, so at least I figured their criteria would be different. Jez had been doing a series featuring these #1 songs starting with Bill Haley & the Comets - "Rock Around the Clock", #100, November 18, 2020. The Ocober 12, 2022 post was #89. It was the Sugarbabes - "Freak Like Me".
I decided to peruse The Guardian list for myself just to see how bad it was. It was worse than I had imagined. Got to #78 before I found a song I'd ever listen to, so I decided to make a compilation of any of the songs I deemed listenable IMO. After compiling the set, I was incredulous to realize that only one song was from the 21st Century. I went back over the original Guardian list. Only twenty-five of the 100 songs were even from this century. Those were from the likes of Beyoncé, Kylie Minogue, Lil Nas X, Carly Rae Jepsen, & their ilk.
The set I compiled follows the Law of Fives & the Sacred 23, The KLF - "3am Eternal. Jimmy Cauty & Bill Drummond had already written a book on how to
have a No. 1 record, The Manual. Guess they took a page from their own
playbook. After that the list is in descending order from #78, a song I've posted here before. "Something in the Air" - Thunderclap Newman. Then the last track is one of my all time favorite songs from the first band I ever saw live, The Four Tops. Great place to end this crazy side-trip. Flash back much?
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3am Eternal - The KLF, 1991, #23
Something in the Air - Thunderclap Newman, 1969, #78
A Whiter Shade of Pale - Procol Harum, 1967, #75
Killing in the Name - Rage Against the Machine, 2009, #72
Come on Eileen - Dexys Midnight Runners, 1982, #68
Tainted Love - Soft Cell, 1981, #52
Can the Can - Suzi Quatro, 1973, #47
Going Underground - The Jam, 1980, #39
You Really Got Me - The Kinks, 1964, #28
Bang a Gong (Get it On) - T Rex, 1971, #21
Hit Me with Your Rhythm Stick - Ian Drury & the Blockheads, 1979, #18
Great Balls of Fire - Jerry Lee Lewis, 1957, #15
Billie Jean - Michael Jackson, 1983, #6
Ghost Town - The Specials, 1981, #2
Reach Out (I'll Be There) - The Four Tops, 1966, #40
Enjoy,
NØ