Thursday, July 10, 2014

A Mike Doughty curiosity

For the past year or so, I've been playing what apparently is a Mike Doughty "greatest hits" collection that is available only outside the a United States and Canada: "Introduction," on the label Nois-O-Lution, catalog number B001LPDJMY. You can find this disc on various international Amazon.coms, but no other info except maybe a track listing--no reviews, no notes. I wasn't even sure that it was a legitimate release (you can get bootlegs and probably counterfeits on Amazon.com; I keep looking for in vain "David Hasselhoff, Live In Germany").  So here's the cover:




I've been listening to the mp3s that I "found" somewhere but I decided to spring for the CD because is functions as a really good "greatest hits" of Mike Doughty's early period.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

American Top 40, June 26, 1976

As I've mentioned before, I remember the music of 1976 as being better than it actually was. Still, the now-late Casey Kasem was a staple of my teen years and I certainly won't complain that his classic shows are being re-run. (I'm downloading them from 94.5 KOOL FM via dar.fm.)  While I credit myself as having a near-pornographic memory of that time, there were a few surprises from that show, to wit:

*If I ever knew this, I'd forgotten it: Todd Rundgren did a perfect note-for-note cover of the Beach Boys "Good Vibrations" that got into the Top 40 that summer. Funny that I've never read about this in any of the adulatory (and probably deserved) Rundgren reportage that came later.

*One of my fave tunes from that year, "More More More," was introduced by Casey as being by Andrea True "from Nashville."  I'd forgotten that Andrea True, like Bettie Page, was from Nashville.

*A song that I did know, but had completely forgotten about, was America's "Today's The Day" (from their "Hideaway" album).  To my 2014 ears, though, it's an incredibly good song, well-crafted and well-produced, and it holds up very well. There's a hint of Beach Boys in the production.

*Speaking of which, it's only because the Beach Boys are so great that I forgive them for their '76 version of "Rock and Roll Music."  (The album that it came from, however--"15 Big Ones"--is a memorable one for me and impossible for me to dislike.)

*The standout tune from that show was Marvin Gaye's "I Want You."