3 posts tagged “pop”
Of course I remembered even more Moldy 70s songs immediately after I posted my Moldy 70s video collection, but one of them led to an unanticipated discovery. Looking for Starbuck's "Moonlight Feels Right" on YouTube, I found instead a live performance from 1986 of the same song by Yukihiro Takahashi, the former drummer of the Yellow Magic Orchestra, whose members (Takahashi, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Haruomi Hosono) have a hand in just about every piece of music from Japan that I hear. It's an impressive arrangement with the synth riffs played by a horn section, and the keyboardist even replicates the what is undoubtedly the best marimba solo ever in a pop song:
And for comparison purposes, here's the original:
Being first is everything. Bolus gets linked to from everywhere for posting videos of cheesy 70s songs as "Hell's iPod." I've been enjoying this crap for years, unironically, having made two "Moldy 70s" CDs during the Napster years. Here is a video sampler of those fine collections of shamefully seductive pop songs. Let's start out watching some chicks beat the shit out of a cowbell and a tambourine while Gary Wright and crew show you how phallic a keyboard can be:
"Geek the light fantastic!", says Mrs. V.
1964? Well, I heard it in the 70s.
"She's gonna get you from behind!" Ow!
You can't beat "Convoy" for the cheeze factor!
"Sweet City Woman" has one of my favorite gag-inducing lines ever: "And she feeds me love and tenderness and macaroons." Gahhhhhhh!
And now for some runners-up:
Duncan Sheik is in the air: I heard "She Runs Away" at Rite Aid on Monday, then again at Citgo on Tuesday. Now that I think about it, I hear him in the grocery store a lot. He must be making a tidy sum on royalties, and he certainly doesn't need more exposure from a no-name blogger, but I like him so much I'm going to present the video for "She Runs Away" anyway:
I discovered Duncan Sheik back when his first album came out. I heard "Barely Breathing" on the radio (who didn't?) and liked it, and when the CD showed up on the BMG website for five or six dollars I went ahead and ordered it. From the very first track ("She Runs Away"!) I was hooked, because it was apparent that Sheik was a David Sylvian fan and was carrying on the song-oriented work that Sylvian had abandoned (at the time) in favor of ambient music (yawn). The snare drum sound on "She Runs Away"--that's straight out of Secrets of the Beehive! The chord changes in the bridge of "Barely Breathing"--pure Sylvian! So I became a fan (because I was a Sylvian fan; there's another post to write), and I roped Mrs. Veneer into my fandom, and we had the pleasure of seeing him from a front table at the Birchmere in August 2005. It was a wonderful show, we got to meet him afterwards, he was incredibly warm; the whole thing was such a great experience that when he played the Birchmere again in February 2006, we took the kids to see him, he played their favorite song of his ("Serena"), and my favorite ("Such Reveries") in the encore, and he did another meet-and-greet afterwards so the kids got to meet him too, and it was a fabulous and memorable night all around. Not only that, his lead guitarist of choice, Gerry "Spooky Ghost" Leonard (in the video above) is a treasure in his own right, and I'll expand on that proclamation at some point.
Duncan doesn't play "Serena" very often, so how was it that we were treated to it? It was all the work of a group of drunk girls at the next table, who between songs kept shouting "Play Serena!" Then at one point a waitress, in her passage along the front of the stage, passed Duncan a note, which he read aloud to us: "It's our friend's birthday, and her name is Serena, so could you please sing Serena?" At which point another audience member piped up, "I have a sister named Half-Life!" (another of his songs) to the general amusement of everyone. No one in the room believed the Serena birthday story, but the band played Serena anyway, and really rocked out on it. Doug Yowell even broke a drumstick (not a regular drumstick, but one that looks like something you use to clean a wok)! They didn't play "Half-Life," though, and Duncan merely wagged a finger at a request for "Barely Breathing." Oh, well. I'll close with a "video" for "Serena"--