Music
In the news: Two recent obituaries in The NY Times are pretty telling for my generation: Augie Meyers and Chip Taylor. The former was the organist for the Sir Douglas Quintet, and may be most generally known for Sahm’s shoutout at the break in their hit “Mendocino”: “Aw, play it Augie!” This has a special resonance for me because recently my friend the Boomer Manqué recently asked me if I had ever heard of the Sir Douglas Quintet, as he had just apparently discovered them in his endless quest to be ten years older. Needless to say, my reply, which I can’t quite remember, was delivered in an icy tone. No one born in 1948 who owned a radio in the 60s should have to answer questions like this. Ask me about artists from about 1980 onward and I will turn from icy tone to glassy stare. We all have our generations. Anyhow, Meyers did more than just “Mendocino” and I’ve added the Texas Tornados to the queue for further exploration. As for Chip Taylor, the lead in his obit is that he wrote the song “Wild Thing.” When this song was released by the Troggs in 1966 it was widely received as one of the worst recorded songs ever. As it swiftly rose the singles charts, at least one deejay would begrudgingly play it for its fans and, when it was over, break the record on the air in the hopes that it would go away. I mean, let’s face it: at the time, even my grandmother could have played better guitar, and she was deaf, arthritic and slightly batty. Then again, my friend Tom AKA Whippy did a truly emotional “I think you move me” along with the record whenever it came on the radio. Sixty years later it’s still among the most elemental, and popular, rock songs ever—hell, Jimi Hendrix covered it practically out of the gate. And it had a composer, the late Chip Taylor, who, among other claims to fame, was Jon Voight’s younger brother. Sometimes, like this week, it seems that my entire youth is hitting the obits one player at a time.
Sigh…
Oldies: Which brings me to my Oldies playlist. I’m thinking it might be fun to look at these and see if there’s anything worth talking about. The nature of the playlist is simple enough: it’s primarily songs that were considered oldies already by 1966, and then songs from the AM radio from 1966 to about 1971 that were definitely more AM than FM, although a few AOR numbers are there because they were everywhere. There’s also later songs that are sort of fun to listen to on the imaginary radio of a Spotify playlist while driving to the grocery store, plus songs that weren’t hits at all but they sound like the times, usually R&B numbers. Not all the songs are rock, because I’m working towards nostalgia to a great degree, and, say, “A Summer Place” by the Percy Faith Orchestra makes the list because it brings one back, not because one spent a lot of hours doing the frug to it. This will also give me a chance to clean the list up a bit, as playlists do tend to wander if you don’t keep an eye on them.
So let’s look at the first 10.
- “1-2-3” is just a good popular hit. One would never flip this song off if it came on the car radio.
- “16 Candles” is a good example of a song that was never current but was, to the Boomer ear, an oldie from day one. I also managed to include it in my Donald Trump “Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Playlist” on my ConstToonies blog.
- “19th” was one of the songs one longed for to come on the AM radio, as probably the best thing in the top ten at the time. For that matter, the Stones were probably the best thing, period, on the AM radio starting with their first hit. Flipping them off on the car radio was inconceivable, except, of course, for “Satisfaction” at about the one hundred millionth iteration. Even perhaps the best rock song ever gets tired after 50 plays a day.
- “26 Miles” is definitely one of the songs on the list for nostalgic purposes only. Were the people who made this a hit the same ones who bought “19th Nervous Breakdown”? One wonders…
- The Beach Boys and Paul Simon need no explanation. But “59th,” despite being a Simon & Garfunkel song, was way more of a hit by Harpers Bizarre, hence the latter is here and not the former, but the former is in my general favorites playlist. By the way, it is probably the most famous use of the word “groovy” which, I assure you, was never ever ever a word used by self-respecting Boomers. Not ever, not nohow.
- I don’t think I ever heard of “The 81” before it came up on some random album I was auditing, and I thought it sounded perfect as an oldie, unheralded though it may have been at the time. Hence, our first non-hit.
- “96” and “98.6” were both hits, simple as that, although they couldn’t be less alike aside from being in the late 90s. ? and the Mysterians—it was not meant to be spelled out—echo our discussion above on the Troggs: garage band perfection. “98.6” is simply sweet and, let’s face it, catchy. It deserved to be a hit.
I don’t know if you find this interesting, but feel free to play along as we go through the scorecard in the future. If you’re of the Spotify persuasion yourself: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5ENNoOXIMMQRuoMzSsF2lj?si=c220993f30d845b8