Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
Milk Crates and Turntables is a Music Discussion Podcast. Each week Scott chooses a different music topic and discuss and debate the good, the bad and the ugly side of that particular topic. Maybe you'll agree or maybe you'll disagree. Listen in and find out.
Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
Ep. 154 - 1976: In Albums And Movies.
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Ever played a game of "45 Poker" with vintage records? You'll love our nostalgic and playful competition where we each evaluate the hit potential of randomly selected 45 RPM records, featuring artists like the Bee Gees and Leo Sayer. Alongside this, I recount a side-splitting story about an encounter with an Asian stripper, and the lengths I went to hide "stripper dust" from my wife using KFC biscuits. This chapter is brimming with laughter, lighthearted banter, and friendly rivalry that's sure to make you smile.
We wrap things up with a deep dive into iconic music and movies from 1976, including Steely Dan's "The Royal Scam" and Genesis' evolution with Phil Collins. Our discussions range from the brilliance of Aerosmith's "Rocks" to the cinematic gems like "Carrie" and "Logan's Run." As we share personal stories of strange car purchases and tense moments in shady neighborhoods, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat, laughing at our unpredictable adventures. Don’t miss this episode packed with music history, lively debates, and unforgettable anecdotes that will keep you hooked from start to finish.
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Well, here we are, episode 154. 154. And on this episode we're going to pick up where we left off last week Me and the wrecking two, mark Smith and Luke Colicchio from the Music Relish Show. Find them on YouTube. It's a dynamic show, but we're going to pick up where we left off last week. We're going to be talking about albums, more albums from 1976 than movies from 1976. I have you Make the Call. We got 45 Polka. We got this Day in Music. I actually have a new segment. I have a new segment, but I'm not gonna tell you about it. You're gonna have to wait for it. So sit back, relax and wait and keep waiting, but it's pretty cool, so maybe you'll like it. Enjoy the show.
Speaker 3The KOFB Studio presents Milk Crates and Turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McClain.
Speaker 2Now let's talk music. Enjoy the show.
Speaker 1Thank you, amanda, for that wonderful introduction. Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends. I'm so glad you could attend. Come inside, come inside. Welcome to the podcast. We're streaming live right now over YouTube Switch. You know all its channels. I do it every week. If you've been watching for at least 153 episodes, you know where I'm streaming. You know what's live. You know what we're doing. I'm wound up tonight. I'm ready to go. It's going to be a good show. Well, it's because I drank a lot of fucking coffee before the show. A little jittery right now. One of my fucking TVs, one of my TVs isn't working in the background. I don't like this. That's not a good omen. It's not a good omen, yeah, but well, let's get this party started. Let's bring on the one, the only, the impeccable. Look at you, huh what?
Speaker 1hey hey, you're back in. You're back in your hostel yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, I got laundry going in the other part there.
Speaker 1It's gonna be noisy with the mic we're picking up laundry going in my other part of the studio. Uh For the listeners. Lou is in a jacket and a shirt and a tie and he made an announcement before the show. I didn't know, I didn't. You're looking good, buddy, looking good, thank you, buddy, thank you, shop-dressed man, you wear it. Well, I was listening to some Robert palmer, so that's funny. You should talk about him, you should mention him. I'm gonna bring him up as soon as we get done bringing on uh little markie smith, is this Milk Duds and Cumquats Little?
Speaker 3Marky Smith hey how you doing Little Marky Smith.
Speaker 4Lou.
Speaker 2Shut up.
Speaker 3No, you shut up, I'm getting the last word.
Speaker 2Mom, mom, mom. Little Marky Smith, I'm getting the last word. I feel like deliver. Mom, mom, mom.
Speaker 3Little Marky Smith. No Big, too heavy. Marky Smith, come on.
Speaker 1Good evening Patty Yossi. Good evening Allison Lundy.
Speaker 3I gotta say something. The suit on Luke kind of makes me a little more ose, because I'm thinking that's what Neil Peart would have looked like if they had inducted Russian to the rock and roll hall of fame sooner, did you say verbose? I don't know.
Speaker 1I'm trying to be Hermosa Mimosa. I'm from Jersey.
Speaker 3We try long words in New Jersey. It doesn't always work, for us.
Speaker 2I'm not like.
Speaker 4Mad Dog Russo he's morose, right, yeah, morose.
Speaker 1Sanguine. So Robert Palmer, it's funny you mention him, lou. Why is that? I was listening to a song from on the radio and if you really look at it, he did what very few there's very few in rock that do what he did and that is come in as a single. Just a singer, Just a singer, yeah, right, and he wasn't a pop singer, right.
Speaker 4Not in the sense most people would think I don't think no, no, he sang't know.
Speaker 1no, he's saying uh, you know, he had his own groove, he had his own style, there's like rm being kind of a soul thing. Yeah, yeah and he's a white guy, right, yep, but I just look at his career and I'm like you know what good for him. Like the dude that's, that's got to be one of the hottest things to do is just be a singer, yeah.
Speaker 4Oh yeah.
Speaker 1And come into the music industry and be successful. Because if you look at it, what do you think? The percentile is Mark of singles, just lone singers that make it.
Speaker 4Very few. A lot of times it's pretty schlucky material too, yeah, you know, and they don't last long right right, yeah boz skaggs had a career as just a singer? Yeah, but yeah. But at the same time, you know he's all, he plays guitar.
Speaker 3Yeah, sure, I think the best example of that, the one that luck that really did, was rod stewart.
Speaker 1He always covered material he came in with a band. He came in with a band yeah, that's true.
Speaker 3Joe cocker is another one joe cocker.
Speaker 4He might be more of an exception, you know whatever he, but he was known as joe cocker first.
Speaker 1Yeah, to us anyone van morrison came in with the band them, you know, it's just robert palma came in by himself and kind of created his own niche, you know, in in music and it was good yeah you know, he, he was, he wasn't the greatest by any means no as far as a technical singer.
Speaker 1Now, right, but he just was smooth and he always kept that. You know he always dressed impeccable, kind of like Brian Ferry or me, Like. So if Lou was the singer tonight, he's dressed like Robert Palmer. If that's there you go. That's how I can give the listeners a good perspective.
Speaker 2Feel the heat.
Speaker 4You know, when he was in Power Station it was pretty cool because he never considered that a thing. That was going to go on and on. I think the the duran duran guys expected more and uh, it was funny because I think he I read an interview he said he goes, I'm not going to have these kids tell me what to do, like you know, maybe being almost a generation older, yeah and and that and that's like the confidence that you have.
Speaker 1Right, you, but he had his little stay in the 80s too. You know he wasn't like an old guy that came in and like a Roy Orbison joining the. You know the Wilburys like the oldest one there and he's. You know Robert Palmer had been around but he was still around in the 80s.
Speaker 4I think he was considered a sex symbol during that part too. You think, oh those videos. I think he was considered a sex symbol during that part too. You think, oh those videos? I think so. A guy I worked with, he goes. I thought he was the coolest dude when I was like 12. He goes, I want to look like that there you go then yeah, yep, whoever produced those videos?
Speaker 1brilliant.
Speaker 4Some of the best marketing.
Speaker 1They figured out the whole ZZ Top, zz Top, yeah, type thing. Have an the whole zz top, zz top, yeah, yeah. Uh. Type thing. Have an ongoing theme and uh, but that you know, addicted to love that everybody was like what you know it's just a great uh uh concept yeah, and that drum sound had a lot to do.
Speaker 4I think that was that. You know, it sounded big. It was big and fat and huge on the radio, or however you heard it. Yeah, that was the 80s. You know, 80s brought in the big drum sound too absolutely yes, yes and I liked power station's version of bang a gong.
Speaker 1By the way, I did too me too, I think they did a respectable job. They didn't try to. Uh, you know, they put their little twist on it, a more modern, hotter edge to it. Of course no one can, no one can beat there. That's one of those songs where the original is just always going to be the best version. Yeah, yeah, because it was stripped down right. So power station went the total opposite direction and gave it a big 80s sound modern, booming sound, gated drums and everything yeah in the original, though.
Speaker 4It's kind of cool those breaks and it goes when the drums come in.
Speaker 1It's just so simple, but yep it's stripped down, it's just sleek, you know it's, it's smooth uh it's one of those songs that's what keeps it as, that's what makes it an epic song really I was like, I was like catchy too, yeah, yeah, the groove that that, that, that, that, like it's just a groove that everybody can listen to. So what's been going on, gentlemen?
Speaker 4a lot. I need to try. I need a recharge.
Speaker 1It's time, for I'm gonna get a recharge soon, soon, okay, take some time off and now I have to ask you you didn't get, you didn't get all dressed up just for the podcast, because you know it, you know I know it's a live stream, but I told you live stream is just a means to an end it's confidential.
Speaker 4I was offered a slot on a ticket.
Speaker 1That's all I'm saying are you going to chicago in a week?
Speaker 4my ticket.
Speaker 1I've got my ticket oh, look at mark gets dressed up with his kfc nice try mark no that, look at it's a kfc.
Speaker 3Uh, uh scoff yeah, yeah, it's liverpool fc. You mother fuck, you fuck. All right, the listeners again go watch this on YouTube.
Speaker 1The first thing you're going to see when you look at Mark and he has this fucking scarf on it's, red with white letters, and all you see is FC. Pretty much, yeah, so it's pretty much KFC. Oh, now it looks like a Christmas scarf. That's even worse, dude.
Speaker 3Obviously you don't know footie culture.
Speaker 1No, it doesn't matter by the way, 42 more wednesdays to christmas, so nice, nice, we're right there, or 32 I don't feel like that.
Speaker 4I like christmas. I like christmas. Yeah, I always ask on quizzes what's your favorite halloween?
Speaker 1call me a traditional christmas yeah, I, I love, I love christmas I really do, but thanksgiving just seems to be my favorite, because that's when my house is full and that's my daughter's favorite.
Speaker 3She will not work on thanksgiving.
Speaker 1She'll volunteer to take christmas yeah she doesn't want to work on thanksgiving right yeah, I just have all you know it's have friends and their families over, and. But the bad part of that is eventually that's going to kind of start to succeed. It's just natural Right. Oh yeah, yeah, um cause kids grow up, their kids grow up, and then there's splitting time and it's kind of like, uh, that it just kind of hurts just that much more. You know what I mean? Yeah, but Christmas is really stripped down to just the family.
Speaker 1You know, this will be the first thanksgiving without my daughter, oh wow oh, boy, wow, ah, look at mark for the listeners. Mark just wiped his eyes and he did a little sniffle and yeah, he's a, he's a, he's a daddy daughter and now he's locked himself up.
Speaker 4Now his eyes smell like fried chicken.
Speaker 3Respect the club hey, they're owned by Fenway Sports Group, so for better or for worse, did I ever tell you the KFC strip club story?
Speaker 1it involves grease, I guess. Okay, so when I was in customs, going back to probably I don't know the the 2000, we'll just say like 2007, 2000, 2008 right, one of my buddies is retiring and they have a retirement party at a strip club in hollywood, flor. So, all right, I'll go, and I hadn't been to one of those in a long time and my wife's cool, she's just like you know, just don't bring it home type thing, right. So I attend and there's a bunch of us there, all these customs guys, and the dude that's retiring knows that I kind of like asian girls, right?
Speaker 3I don't know. It's just a thing. The secret's out every I g big secret never guess that one?
Speaker 1um, and there's this gorgeous asian stripper in there, gorgeous, right and out of nowhere. She just comes up and grabs my, grabs my hand and says come on, and I'm like I, I didn't, I'm not paying for this. And she points at my buddy she goes, he paid for it right so I'm gonna get the lap dance right now. Nothing seedy happened. I didn't kind of. You know there was no, I'm, it's not that guy, especially in those rooms.
Speaker 1I know this camera's in those rooms, so you know you get the lap dance and and uh, she's, you know, like a snake. You know what I mean. Like writhing around and trying to get that extra tip. You know what I mean. Acting like you know oh, I really like you. And blah, blah, blah. So when she's done, we walk back over and I sit down and she walks away and I'm like, oh fuck, she got me. She got me with the stripper dust.
Speaker 3You couldn't go home, the stripper dust I'm like I smell like stripper dust, oh god.
Speaker 1I'm like, oh fuck, this isn't good right but. I I, so I kind of okay, I get napkins and I'm trying to wipe. No, no, no. So, all right, it's time for me to go, like I check out and I get in my car and it even smells more like stripper dust now and your car is going to smell like and your car is going to smell like Now, yeah.
Speaker 1But I'm driving home and I say, oh, I see it, I see a KFC, I have an idea. So I call my wife and I said, hey, baby, I'm on my way home, do you want some KFC? And she's like sure, yeah, okay, okay, perfect. So I go through the drive-thru and I order, you know like an eight-piece bucket or whatever it is right, and it comes with four biscuits and I'm like can I get an extra, you know extra biscuit for whatever 40 cents? And they're like sure. So I pay for my order. I drive out of the drive-thru and I pull into the first spot that I see and I reach in that box. I reach in the box and I pull out a biscuit and I smell it and I proceed to rub that fucking biscuit all over my neck, my arms I'm fucking rubbing the biscuits all over me right.
Speaker 1This crumbs literally everywhere you fall apart I fucking rub that biscuit all over me and I just I get out of the car and I get all the fucking crumbs out and I get and my wife says you smell like a biscuit.
Speaker 4It worked, it worked.
Speaker 1The only way to fight strip of dust is a KFC biscuit.
Speaker 4It fucking worked, because that's all you can smell with a biscuit, I go, I don't know.
Speaker 1I was sitting next to it in the car and I don't know. You know how the smell gets stuck on you.
Speaker 3Let me ask you, with your taste of food, did the biscuit turn you on rubbing against you more?
Speaker 1well, oh, I had other things in mind, like not making my wife fucking lose her mind, so my priority was just smell like a biscuit. Yeah right. So for all you listeners out, there are you men. If you ever go to strip club and you get doused with stripper dust, find a fucking kfc, buy a box of biscuits, eat two of them and rub the third one all over you and you will smell like a biscuit and you can explain that away easily yeah, yeah, I'm just getting a rash.
Speaker 1Yeah, the fucking KFC biscuit, because I'm like I don't know what made me think of that. Why would I think of biscuit? But it fucking worked. It worked Because they're moist, right, so they still got that oil on them. I can just biscuit.
Speaker 3They're good, they're good.
Speaker 4And then I eat one. The chicken alone can seep in your clothing. Exactly, right home exactly.
Speaker 1So then I ate one on the way home. So then when she said, why do you smell like a biscuit? I say, well, I, there was four, now there's three in there because I ate one on the way home, the conspiracy thickens. See, see, I can always thinking buddy wheels always turning in this house buddy, gotta, gotta avoid the wrath of con true yeah my wife was a
Speaker 1woman. God rest her soul. She was a wonderful, wonderful woman and uh, but she did not like that when she said don't bring it home. Uh, we went to hooters one time when I had my friends come down and she didn't know any. We'd never gone to Hooters. One time when I had my friends come down and she didn't know any, we'd never gone to Hooters. But all she heard was the stories about Hooters, right, and the girls. And so my buddies wanted to get pictures with these Hooters girls right, they're Florida girls and they're all pretty.
Speaker 1So we get pictures and then my buddy gets them developed and before he leaves, he hands me the pictures and I look at them, I. And before he leaves, he hands me the pictures and I look at him, okay, and I put them on the counter and I like I come home later on that day and she is furious. I told you don't bring this into the house. I go, baby. It was just no, you brought don't ever bring this into the house, all right, all right. I'm like, okay, I apologize. He gave me the pictures and she just like we never fought, we never argued, we just don't talk, which was always the best way to do things because you're gonna. You don't say something that you're gonna regret, right you know? Because in those moments you say something, they lock that shit in oh yeah, and it will come back on you two years later.
Speaker 3I'm 55 and I still stuff when I was 28 comes up and comes Nope, this is how you like it, so that's how you get.
Speaker 1But that was two years ago, baby. Nope, nope, this is how you like it, that's how you're going to get it. How do you remember that baby? How do you remember?
Speaker 4that baby. How do you? Oh, I don't. Oh, it's not hard, it's in, it's in the wiring all right time for 45 poker.
Speaker 1We're gonna play with patty this week too. Patty's in on the game. Lou, we decided uh, when you was it, who was it? Was it?
Speaker 2lou wasn't here, mark um oh yeah, lou wasn't here, you weren't here, lou wasn't here, no you weren't here, mark, and you see, allison sat in for you.
Speaker 1Oh, okay, it was when you chose your friend's emergency health situation over the podcast which Lou and I won't forget. This will come up two years from now, don't?
Speaker 3worry, walter, if you're listening to this, what Scott thinks of you.
Speaker 1Well, listen, listen. 154 episodes, right? What's gotten? In my way, nothing. That's true, that's right okay, we're starting over.
Speaker 3You mark all the snow storms in boca.
45 Record Poker Game
Speaker 1They never stopped the show that's right, okay, so this is. This is a unique thing. I have. There's two 45s in this package. Right, there's two 45s. They're both from private stock records, so the one here on top is is disc one and the one on the two is disc two. Mark, which disc? Which 45? Do you want One or two?
Speaker 3I'm not looking at them. Uh, I have an affinity for number two, so pick number two.
Speaker 1Something right Just doesn't sound All right, so it's from Private Stock Records. Oh boy, you got Rocky by Austin Roberts. Oh, and then you got the Power by Austin Roberts. Austin Power, yeah, you'd probably be better off with Austin Power.
Speaker 3Okay, I'm losing so far.
Speaker 1Oh yeah, that's. You're already in a big deficit. Here you go, lou. This is it, lou, it's. Lou is on the board. Chelsea Records, lou, chelsea Records. Nah, do you know anything about them?
Speaker 4Absolutely nothing. All right, I only acted like I sounded like I did.
Speaker 1Okay, well, here we go, you got. I Want to Dance With you. Do that Dance by Disco Tex and the Sexolettes. Ouch, it's better than Austin Roberts. Yeah, not much, but better. All right, now we're going to do me, and then Patty will be the fourth pick. Patty says what does stripper dust smell like? It's a combination of glitter and heavy perfume, very sweet smelling perfume. They put it on purposefully because they know that the guys that they don't usually like the people, that the guys that go there, they're in it for the money.
Speaker 1So they have these little ways of uh, I'm not going to say I dated the strip when she told me this stuff, but they have these little ways of getting like you know, I'll fucking with the customers. Yeah, yeah, and that's one of them.
Speaker 3That's why they they writhe on you like a snake and they rub all that shit all, and if they get divorced they'll be back more.
Speaker 1Well, there you go, there you go. Okay, here we go. This is mine right here. It's from columbia records. Columbia records, oh, rso records in a col package. Fame, irene, cara, I'm in the lead. All right, patty, there you go Playing from home. Patty's playing from home. Let's see what do we got for Patty. These are her 45s, like I always say, by the way, but I did incorporate some of mine in them with them. Here we go. Mam Records, m-a-m Records. Ooh, gilbert O'Sullivan Alone Again, naturally. Oh, was that a bigger hit than fame, though?
Speaker 1We'll figure that out, chart position probably not Right.
Speaker 4We'll figure that out as chart position.
Speaker 1chart position probably not right, we'll. We'll figure that out as as the the rounds continue. All right, back to you, mark yep, 45 poker.
Speaker 4It's the best oh no, mark's first, that's right oh, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1Did you want? Did you want to run this segment? Lou is this I'm good is this music relish where you can just take a segment. Is that what this is? Are you confused? Lou is the suit giving you can just take a segment. Is that what this is? Are you confused? Lou Is the suit giving you a little power surge because you know I need you on this podcast.
Speaker 2Are you playing that game?
Speaker 4You two are the buddies. I don't play those kind of games. I'm doing this to feel good about myself, scott.
Speaker 1Don't make me go all Perry on your ass boy.
Speaker 2Ooh, it's getting hot in here. It's getting hot in here alright here we go, mark.
Speaker 4Mark can go now milk, duds and kumquats oh okay, rso records.
Speaker 1This is a real RSO records. Oh, please, let BBG's RSO Records.
Speaker 3This is a real RSO, records, please let it be Bee Gees.
Speaker 1Yeah, bee Gees, bee Gees, but it's Love so Right, or? You Stepped Into my Life, love.
Speaker 3So Right, I think that's the A side.
Speaker 1You Stepped Into my Life. No Love.
Speaker 3So Right, I'm one's the A side you stepped into my life no Love.
Speaker 1So Right, I'm one of the biggest?
Speaker 3No, I'm not one of the biggest.
Speaker 4That's a bigger hit than you think.
Speaker 1Okay, the professor says All right, here we go.
Speaker 3Now it's Lou.
Speaker 1Lou is from Warner Reprise Records.
Speaker 4Warner, reprise Frank.
Speaker 1Frank, we got. Who is this?
Speaker 2oh, leo Serre, leo Serre, that is last week you got me in the morning right, you make me feel like dancing you make me feel like dancing gonna dance the night away. You make me feel like dancing gonna dance the night away. You make me feel like dancing Gonna dance the night away. You make me Okay, that's enough of that.
Speaker 4That was a hit though that was a pretty big hit. Yeah, that might have been a bigger hit than fame.
Speaker 1So you got disco text, though that's your hurt, that's your hurt.
Speaker 2That's what we need. All right, here we go.
Speaker 1This could jump me into a good spot right here. Come on, come on From Columbia Records. Columbia Records, there it is.
Speaker 2Billy.
Speaker 1Joel. Okay, the Manhattans, let's just kiss and say goodbye. Right, so I got two solid it's a solid hand right, it's a solid hand. You guys got a couple of hurts in there. Lou lou, that disco text might be a downfall.
Speaker 5Lou all right, here you go for patty patty can tie it up with you patty in the lead right, yeah, yeah yeah, atco records atco.
Speaker 1And let me see patty wrote something on this. Uh, don't read her diary. It says patty.
Speaker 3See she wrote patty, that's when you lent them out to each other. You went to parties yeah, that's patty.
Speaker 1And then there's something y-o-u. She wrote like y-o-u on that, interesting right that's okay atgo records. No, this is actually united artist records. Okay, in an atco packaging, it's a theme song oh, what is it? It's a theme from a movie oh, she got two good, solid hits right here. Nice, nice, cornelius brothers and sister rose, it's too late to turn back now. I believe, I believe, I believe Now was that a bigger hit than the Manhattan's Kiss and Say Goodbye.
Speaker 4Good question. Good question, you know.
Speaker 1All right, this is going to come down marked.
Speaker 4I'm going to go with the Cornelius Brothers on that. I don't know. I'm leaning toward that. I think that might be yeah.
Speaker 3Might have been a big hit. All right, all right, getting my big box of wax out here, let's go. So I'm picking for me first. Yep, oh, I don't even need to open it up. The sleeve says it. All the monkeys. I'm a believer or I'm not.
Speaker 1Your stepping stone you're still not going to win this one you're right, wait, let me make sure that's what's in it. Hold on, hold on yeah, oh, look stairway to heaven.
Speaker 3No, colgham's record. Colgham's records I.
Speaker 4I think when Mark has rivals equals Patty's. I mean, Loves the Right was a bigger hit than you might think. I think I'm hopeless at this point.
Speaker 1I'm pretty much done, but he still has that. Austin Roberts, you got the power.
Speaker 4That was a big hit Austin Roberts. Get the fuck out of here.
Speaker 2I got the power. That was a big hit. Austin roberts, get the fuck.
Speaker 4I got the power, all right is it possible that that austin power song if we all heard it we'd be like, oh, yeah, yeah, all right mark had the money, but it's no help.
Speaker 1Now this, this is Lou.
Speaker 4This could put Lou losing a way to head into a different spot right here Motown Records, motown, diana Ross and the Supremes.
Speaker 3It's either I'm living in shame or I'm so glad I got somebody like you around. Why don't you guys pick?
Speaker 4I don't know either one of those songs pick. I don't know either one of those songs. I don't know either one of them. I don't either one yeah, dead it's a dead.
Speaker 3It's a dead card dead card yeah, it's no good.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's between me and patty, now between me and patty scott, come on, don't screw me.
Speaker 3I even put the one I picked first back and picked out a second one.
Speaker 2I don't Planet.
Speaker 4Records. Mark has a stronger hand.
Speaker 3Planet Records Pointer Sisters. Jump for my love, jump. That was a big hit.
Speaker 2Yeah, jump yeah and.
Speaker 3I actually I got some consistency there yeah. Yeah, and I actually I got some consistency there. Yeah, yeah, okay, the most important pick Patty. Here we go, patty's pick.
Speaker 1All right, good Patty, have beginners luck and win this one.
Speaker 3Ooh, let me make sure it's the same thing in there. Okay, rod Stewart. Oh, let me make sure it's the same thing in there.
Speaker 2Okay, rod stewart, some guys have all the luck.
Speaker 3Yeah, I think that's a big hit. Well, it was backed by uh, I was only joking, that wasn't a big hit so what was the bigger hit for that?
Speaker 1the point assist is jump or rod stewart's I'm more familiar with rod stewart, some guys.
Speaker 3That was a big hit. Some guys have all the luck, by the way, robert it was I think.
Speaker 4I think jumps lasted longer I think.
Speaker 1I think the point assist is probably. Yeah, I'm just saying I'm not Because it's mine. Patty wants to win, she's like Rod, yeah Rod.
Speaker 3I agree with Patty Rod.
Speaker 1All right. So let's go with the three. Let's go with the three. I have a solid fame Big hit. Right Then I got the Manhattans Kiss and say goodbye Big hit. And then the third one was what? Jump Pointer Sisters, the Pointer Sisters, jump Patty has Gilbert O'Sullivan Alone Again. Naturally Too Late to Turn Back Now. Right, and Rod Stewart, some guys have all the luck.
Speaker 3I think Manhattan's is. I know it was a hit, but Patty seems to have three stronger hits. Your weakest is kiss and say goodbye definitely.
Speaker 4But it comes down to that Alone again. I mean I think that was a top 10. This is close. It's close. Let the American people decide.
Speaker 1I don't know who's out there. We're not exactly. There's Patty.
Speaker 4Patty and Allison. Allison bailed yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, oh Patty says me there's a delay on this. Now I do think I have a better. Oh, Patty says B. There's a delay on this. Now I think I get. I do think I have a better.
Speaker 3What does the professor say? To me it's almost a draw.
Speaker 4To me it's almost a draw.
Speaker 3What does Michael Stipe say?
Speaker 4What's the frequency, fucker?
Speaker 2What does Michael Slade say?
Speaker 1I just saw that. When you said that, I was like oh, shit.
Speaker 3There's pictures of him in a suit. It's Patty.
Speaker 1It's her 45s. I'm going to give her the win Her 45s. She had a good, solid hand. There's no such thing as a tie in this game, so I'll give.
Speaker 2Patty the win.
Speaker 1I'll give Patty the win.
Speaker 3Did Allison win last week? Did my sister win?
Speaker 1I think she had a better hand than you had for the previous three weeks.
Speaker 3Well, she is my older sister so she can kick my ass anytime. Patty is the winner.
Speaker 1Uh-oh, uh-oh, everybody's a wiener, here we go. All right, fucking rabble rouses in the house.
Speaker 4He's got an acronym with him. Yeah, he's carrying an acronym.
Speaker 1He came in strong with an acronym. We can see what kind of mood he's in tonight.
Speaker 4What does it mean? Yeah, d-e it mean yeah.
Speaker 2Colin, your brother accused me of wearing a.
Speaker 1KFC scarf See, see, lou Allison, I didn't bail. She said oh you're in trouble. I'm sorry. How dare you, lou, she's a big fan. Sorry.
Speaker 4And you go and insult the fandom.
Speaker 1What do you work for, Disney?
Speaker 3Allie, he's only a Park Ridge guy.
Speaker 4I would just like to say I misspoke. I happened to misspeak.
Speaker 3We're from Hillsdale, we know what we're doing.
Speaker 1Here we go, new Jersey talk.
Speaker 4I'm not from Hillsdale, mister, I'm from South Jersey.
Speaker 1Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, you northern boys are yeah, I moved up there, I moved uptown. Uptown, Hot water scarf, that's where I want to be. That's a good song by Prince Uptown, yeah, uptown.
Speaker 1Off the Dirty Mind album, actually, yep All right, I'm going to pick an album from 76 that we didn't get to last week and it's well. It's the Royal Scam Steely Dan, my favorite Steely Dan song, great album, very underrated, I think, in the catalog. It's always overlooked by Pretzel, logic and Asia, but I think it holds its own against them. You know what do you think. I its own against them. You know what do you think.
Speaker 4I do, I do. Yeah, it's a great album.
Steely Dan, Bob Seger, and More
Speaker 1Track listing on it is Kid Charlemagne Starts off with Kid Charlemagne the Caves of Altamira Don't Take Me Alive, signed in Stranger the Fez, haitian Divorce. Everything you Did the Royal Skin. Altamira don't take me alive, signing stranger the fez, haitian divorce, everything you did the royal skin. How is that not one of their fucking best albums? That's great, you know what I mean, but nobody ever talks about it well, what was there wasn't a hit, was there?
Speaker 4there wasn't a big charter control, I mean?
Speaker 1I mean they got radio play, well, maybe not I don't know, but any record, any Steely Dan fan. I think could look at that and say, yeah, it doesn't really get the respect it deserves. I think, as we talk about Steely Dan albums, solid songs, all of those songs, by the way, are on their greatest hits as we talk about Steely Dan albums, solid songs. All of those songs, by the way, are on their greatest hits.
Speaker 2Okay cool, Greatest hits Interesting Don't Take Me Alive the Fez.
Speaker 1Haitian Divorce Right.
Speaker 4Mm-hmm, yeah, the album that followed was full of hits.
Speaker 1And that was. Asia so that's one of those. They just were on a fucking killer writing streak, you know they were in the zone.
Speaker 4What was the album before that?
Speaker 1in 75, no Press of Logic was 74 let's see, I don't think I have that in front of me.
Speaker 4I can tell you in a second let's see did they do an album in 75?
Speaker 1I think they did the live album what band in the 70s didn't do one every?
Speaker 4year and if you're credence.
Speaker 3He did two a year.
Speaker 1Unless you're Bruce Springsteen. Let's see Discography.
Speaker 3Oh, katie Lyde was 75.
Speaker 1Yeah, katie Lyde so yeah, can't Buy a Thrill Countdown to Ecstasy. Pretzel Logic 74, katie Lyde 75, real Scam 76, asia 77, gaucho 80. Right, and then they didn't do another album for 20 years. Yeah, but what I mean?
Speaker 2that's fucking from pretzel logic to gaucho is like wow, yeah, yeah, you know in six years.
Speaker 4Maybe one day I'll listen to gaucho and like the album better. That's what I know you don't like the kick drum. It's not just that, it's just the mature, it's just. I don't like the sound of it 80s were they trying to it. To me they seem to go a little too in this heavily processed direction. Like I said, slick is still stilly then kind of were, kind of getting smooth.
Speaker 4They were still a rock band, but it became a little too. I mean, I felt the same way about the doobie brothers, but minute by minute and that's the same time frame I just thought it was just a little too slick like slick that I didn't really care for yeah, all right, mark, give us an album from 76 I'm trying to remember what I said last week uh, we'll correct, you don't worry okay, uh, hold on a second.
Speaker 3hold on on Wire. Jeff Beck. That was the second album of Fusion. He went from hard blues rock to Fusion and no singles on there that you would know, but he was definitely in the really tight sound.
Speaker 1I don't know if you're listening to that. I don't know much about Jeff Beck. I've never bought an album.
Speaker 3All the cool kids in high school. When I was going to high school in the 80s, they had either that album or the one before it painted on their denim jackets because that's a guitar player. He was the guy, he was the friend. He was part of the Holy Trinity Jeff Beck, eric Clapton, jimmy Page but Beck always did his own thing. He went off and did whatever the hell he wanted.
Speaker 1That's what I loved about him. Right, All right Lou.
Speaker 4Gordon Lightfoot Summertime Dream yeah.
Speaker 1That had a record of the Edmund.
Speaker 4Fitzgerald on it Greatest story ever told on vinyl. That's a lot of words in that song.
Speaker 1Like I said, I've said it once, I've said it a hundred times Anytime you get the fucking word Gitche Gumee in a song, that's a winner. Fucking right, that's fucking masterful, yeah.
Speaker 4That's masterful the way he sings it. The words have bird in there.
Speaker 1It's Gitche Gumee yeah From the big lake they call Gitche Goomey. Yeah, come on, man. He did his homework, he did his geography.
Speaker 4That's right, you got the story right. Yeah, he got it right. The drummer in that's the legendary Jim Gordon. Mark does a really good Jim Gordon impersonation he did on Music Relish the other night. Oh really, let's hear it. Yeah, yeah, jim Gordon, legendary drummer.
Speaker 3Mom, mom.
Speaker 1Oh, is he the one that did he kill his mother? Yes, he did. Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 3Oh, I knocked on my desk. You're terrible, mark, you're terrible. So when I did it last week, I knocked on my desk and my wife and my son went downstairs. It did so loud that somebody was banging on the door, Not doing that anymore.
Speaker 4Needless to say, I was appalled. Yes, you were Just like with wristly grips and all that.
Speaker 1Absolutely appalled.
Speaker 4Oh, my God.
Speaker 1Alright, Lou I just did mine didn't I? Oh, you did yours. Yeah, yeah, I'm going with my real this was my real introduction to Bob Seger. Is the Night Moves Out Good album? That was my big introduction to Bob Seger. And there was like I fucking sat in the beanbag chair. I had my Harman Kardon headphones on that. I didn't know what I had at the time. I don't think me and my brothers knew that my father was giving us some quality fucking equipment and uh, cause he was an audiophile, my father loved him.
Speaker 1His friends loved like they knew good stereo stuff and they knew good stolen stereo stuff too. I'm just going to leave it at that.
Speaker 1Um yeah, new, good stolen stereo stuff too. I'm just gonna leave it at that. Um yeah, and I sat in that orange beanbag chair in what we called the middle room because we only a very small apartment and I had those and I listened to this album front to back numerous times over, like in one sitting. You know, rock and roll never forgets Night moves. Fire down below Sun, burst baby Right Sun burst. Sunspot baby. Main Street, come to Papa. Ship of Fools and Mary Lou, I mean Solid record Solid Good probably.
Speaker 1I think it's his best I would say it's his best, yeah, good balance of hard rockers and some of his most heartfelt ballads, I mean and some great musicians.
Speaker 4Yeah, I think he's the memphis boys, the memphis gang, whatever we're calling that oh yeah oh yeah, they were the wrecking crew of of muscle Shoals.
Speaker 1Main Street is one of those songs that I'll always listen to. Yeah, and Night Moves too, hey, you know what Do you have? Siriusxm, I do All. Right. Now let me ask you this Do you have a feature in yours Maybe it's, I don't know each car, whatever package comes with, but I've noticed this over the last two or three months that every time I turn to a channel, I don't catch the middle of songs anymore. It backs up to the beginning, yeah, of a song.
Speaker 1so every channel and then it has a setting where you can rewind it. Now they used to have that in the old original series, like the kit that you would put in your car and you would run the fucking cord up to your roof and had a little magnet that was your antenna, right yeah, and they had it where you could stop. It had a little remote and you could rewind it, or it would hold for 45 minutes and then it would kick on to live music. But uh, I just know that it didn't dawn on me until I'm like why do I keep hearing the beat? Am I that lucky? Like driving up to saint augustine? I'm like you know, hour half into it. I'm like how?
Speaker 4do I get in the beginning of songs like wow, I'm fucking.
Speaker 1I just play the lottery wrong it's a new feature yeah well, I got.
Speaker 3Just if anyone's looking to save money, I elected the streaming-only plan, which is the cheapest. So I got it on my phone, because everyone's got Bluetooth in their car, and with the phone I can go back and forth between live yeah, I can hit live and it'll go into whatever they're playing. But I like that feature because you see a song you like.
Genesis and Steve Miller Band Discussed
Speaker 3You're not going to go in the middle, you know right, yeah all right give us an album mark um, I'm going to go with wind and weathering. The second album in 1976 from genesis.
Speaker 4All right, two records yep, and it was the last album of steve hackett. They did two records that year, yeah, yeah, and probably a tour also and I'm putting scott to sleep with that one no, no, no, uh.
Speaker 1Does genesis have the fleetwood max syndrome? What do you mean after peter gabriel? A transition no, they went from popular when phil collins took over.
Speaker 4It was a pretty seamless transition. I feel like it was a little different.
Speaker 1What were the hits with peter gabriel?
Speaker 4they didn't really have many hits, so that's what I'm talking about. Yeah, I mean, the landlines got embroidered. So when Phil Collins took over, right, it's like nobody knows.
Speaker 1There's a generation that doesn't really they know.
Speaker 2Peter.
Speaker 1Gabriel as a solo artist, but nobody listens that. I knew we weren't listening to Genesis pre-Phil.
Speaker 4Collins, no, no, if you did, you went back to it. I think for the most part I agree. I mean the first time I heard them was Follow you, follow Me, yeah, and so that wasn't the first album with Phil Collins as a singer. No, that was the first album after Steve Hackett. The guitar player, left, yeah. So, they had some album and then when steve hackett left.
Speaker 3They did it, and then there were three which had no hits until the very last song is follow you, follow me. So it was like at the very end they're saying okay, this is what we're going to start doing, and it's a great song it's a great song and they exploded, yeah I love everything from genesis. I I'm from that point on. They were just they were.
Speaker 1They were, uh, they were one of the powerhouse bands of the 80s I still listen to abacad I still listen to.
Speaker 4Invisible touch are good albums and yeah, duke is a good, duke is a good record excellent album that. That was. You know. That was the first. After follow you, follow me. That was the breakthrough record commercially for them what's your favorite genesis song?
Speaker 4oh god um, it's a hard to. I mean, it depends I. I'm in the mood lately. It's been uh, things from uh trick of the tail dance and volcano squonk. Um, I think of their big period. I do like abacab is a great song, it's also. It's also a jam, it's. It's a jam. That was a hit. Yeah, oh my.
Speaker 3God.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah oh. You know, in the modern period it's a sick fucking song with Mama from the Genesis record.
Speaker 3Yeah. Turn around turn around yeah, that song, why does it?
Speaker 1sound so lame Because I don't have it hooked up to my. I mean it sounds slow.
Speaker 4In my opinion. I don't think Duke is kind of a muddy sounding record to me.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Let's see, there we go. Don't get us kicked off youtube that in a radio that sounds just like him, yep yep, I love my favorite genesis song I love abacab too, by the way, I do love that song and in the 80s he had an edge to his voice.
Speaker 3He was almost screaming at times it was like hard pop, some of those songs he was just great to blast. Remember Three Sides Live. That was a really intense album.
Speaker 1What about you, Mark? What's your favorite Genesis song?
Speaker 3It's impossible for me to pick out.
Speaker 1What's the first song that popped into your head?
Speaker 3Firth of Fifth, ah yes, which has the most haunting guitar solo and flute solo. I think, evan, that was with Peter Gabriel.
Speaker 1That was the problem with Genesis and Peter Gabriel. They used fucking flutes.
Speaker 2Shut up. I'm a tall man. End of story. End of story, I think case closed.
Speaker 1Subject dropped.
Speaker 4You know, I agree, I think you know if they had not had Lamb Lies Down and Broadway with Peter Gabriel, you know, if they had not had Lamb Lies Down and Broadway with Peter Gabriel, that was something that did get them some attention. Before that they were probably kind of floundering, at least in the States. But at the same time I think Phil Collins is a better singer. I like Peter Gabriel's so much better solo Me too. You know what's a great song too Home by the Sea. Oh yeah, from the Genesis record. Every time I deliver to a nursing home that song is in my head. It's about ghosts, it's about old people. It's pretty freaking funny.
Speaker 1It's about delivering wine to the old people, oh God.
Speaker 4And then you're walking down the aisle and they're just farting in front of you freely.
Speaker 3That's what I do. That's the wind.
Speaker 4You're like oh.
Speaker 3All right, genesis put out an album after Phil. Collins left with Steve Wilson and that's got one of my favorite Genesis songs called Shipwreck. It's a great ballad.
Speaker 4What's the guy's name? Tony, something? Steve Wilson.
Speaker 3Ray Wilson. Ray Wilson, Poor guy Wait.
Speaker 4Ray Walston from my Favorite Martian there you go, mr Hahn.
Speaker 1Hold it down for a second. It's all yours, guys. Hold on.
Speaker 4He was also. He played in the Stand, the first movie. He was Bateman the professor.
Speaker 3I can't remember the first one, when it came out.
Speaker 4I loved it.
Speaker 3I love that they used Don't Fear the Reaper. And. I remember watching it, but I think it was too like I didn't have time to watch all the parts. I think it was like three parts, right, it was really long.
Speaker 4It was like 10 hours or something.
Speaker 3Yeah, I gotta track that down on DVD.
Speaker 4It's better than the remake.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's what.
Speaker 4I've heard Although it's kind of disappointing. In some ways it's much better than the remake. Remakes suck yeah.
Speaker 3I'm not even gonna watch it then all right, who's up screw it uh, lou, I think, well, I just did it um al stewart, you're the cat the year of the cat.
Speaker 1I love the whole story behind that. I've told that a couple times with that.
Speaker 4There's some stories on that. He did a lot of storytelling.
Speaker 1A lot of his song writing is storytelling oh, by the way, my non-profit one man, one mic, healing through storytelling. I'm one step away from being a 501c3 nonprofit.
Speaker 5Nice One step away.
Speaker 1I got approved by the state Small hurdle Awesome, the state of Florida. So now it's just the IRS giving me the designation and I'll be asking you guys for money. But anyway.
Speaker 3So you're going to pay us Every week.
Speaker 1Yeah, you know there's 80 episodes. You guys have been on that. Uh, you haven't. It's time to fucking pay up.
Speaker 2I'm only kidding, I'm only kidding you will speak to my agent.
Speaker 4Yeah, it carries more weight than me.
Speaker 3I have representation everybody hurts frequency.
Speaker 4Everybody's loose what's the frequency?
Speaker 1schmitty, uh, patty says well, thank you, congrats, scott. Thank you very much. Yes, it's quite an undertaking, but I'm doing it. The undertaker, uh, that's what you dress like. Really, I guess it's me. Let's see, let's see, let's see. So this album, it's a good album. It's a good album, not a great album, but it's a classic 70s album. Steve Miller Fly Like an Eagle yeah, yeah Right, big radio song. A lot of them, yeah, big radio song. Fly Like them. Yeah, big radio song. Fly like an eagle. That nice opening riff, it's one of those. Oh, you know, you know it as soon as you hear it then, ah, you got, uh, the space, and it's an instrumental leaning up to it, right, like that space yes, right, electro luxemburglio.
Speaker 4No, no, that's on the second record.
Speaker 1He's got. Take the Money and Run is on that album. Rockin' Me, you Send Me. These are the ones that I highlighted. I listened to the whole albums but those are the songs that stick out, you know. But yeah, it was a good album for the 70s.
Speaker 4It's a true 70s album his intention was to do something really simple. Um, it's, you know, it's pretty much a three-piece band guitar, bass, drums, and that's pretty much it yeah but I saw him back up journey.
Speaker 1Yeah, and he was good, he was good he had uh, he has. You know, he has more hits than people think. He played abracadabra.
Speaker 3He's one of those guys that if you see him live he didn't write that though. He did.
Speaker 4Gary Malibur, the drummer, wrote it. Oh.
Speaker 1He didn't put a lot of fucking thought into it. I can tell you that.
Speaker 4That's the beauty of the stupid hit. That song's almost novelty in a way.
Speaker 2With those stupid sound effects.
Speaker 4I mean, that's the guitar. Yeah, you know it's funny. When steve miller did um, fly like an eagle, he said pretty much anything you could say with rock and roll. As far as guitar has has been said already, he made that statement. Then he started doing, he did that record, but then and even hailing came along, yeah, yeah, we got, we got vinyl scratching. We got needle scratch going on in the music. I thought there was rain coming in my room what's going?
Speaker 4on it sounds like it sounds you're playing it's a zombie on to music. It's got I got needle scratch going to do jobs yeah is that supposed to have?
Speaker 1let me see something. Uh, there we got something like that right try this over here. No, not that one. Uh, here we go. Oh, let me try this over here. No, not that one. Here we go.
Speaker 2Oh.
Speaker 3Ouch, oh, that hurts. Don't do that.
Speaker 2That's a record being ruined. Well, that's sad.
Speaker 1Aw Having fun. Thank you very much.
Speaker 3Thank you. Thank you. I just had just a little break in the action. All right back to the show having fun, because there's a tv out behind you?
Speaker 1oh fuck, that shit drives me crazy it's driving me crazy yeah, and before I I came in like I waited to the last minute. That you guys know it.
Speaker 3I was like fuck, it's doing it again. I thought you had no power or something you know.
Speaker 1Nah, it's a roku thing it's an, except spider-man's head, so whatever and yours I do this, all right. Uh, who's up me?
Rock Legends and Guitar Greatness
Speaker 3um it. I you're gonna, you're gonna crucify me for saying this. It never was a big album to me, but Rocks from Aerosmith I got to listen to it again.
Speaker 4It's always a big album where I'm from.
Speaker 3It never hit me as big as the one before it or other albums. Last Child is a big fucking.
Speaker 1That was the jam of that album, but if you listen to it it's a fucking hard-hitting album. It it's a fucking hard hitting. I'm gonna list album it's very, and it's consistent, just like their first out, three albums before that or two albums before that, three, right, yeah, so you had dream on, then you had uh, get your wings.
Speaker 3Then you had toys in the attic, then you had rocks right yeah, as consistent as you can get, like before your wings might be my favorite of their seven. I love get your wings. It's dirty.
Speaker 1I just love the whole feel of that that whole and train kept. The rolling was and I wore the grooves out of featuring dream on. But yeah, um, they just matured. It was a more mature album and then toys in the attic was more much like. They just kept growing and getting songwriting. Yeah, yeah yeah and uh yeah, but rocks is, and that's why I said why is joe perry never considered in the greatest guitarist conversation?
Speaker 3I agree. I think some of his plans listen to those songs.
Speaker 1I mean, he's a hard-hitting consistent. Yeah, I hear that fucking scratch do you think that kind of?
Speaker 4he went away as a notable guitar player when they went to the modern age no, I think he still went through.
Speaker 3His guitar playing still came through. That's the one saving grace.
Speaker 1When they did all the commercial stuff, he was still out there playing the good riffs, yeah yeah, I just think he just, he's just one of those guys they think he's, he's gets that middle of the road treat, middle of the road great guitarist. You know rock in the rock world, um, just doesn't get any recognition. Yeah you never hear him talked about, but aril smith is one of the biggest bands in history right.
Speaker 4How was he considered back in their heyday?
Speaker 1I mean he was considered a, he was a.
Speaker 4I mean everyone knew who he was when I he considered an original, or was he like? I was hearing stonky comparisons to him.
Speaker 3I heard that too, that they were compared. There's no comparison. It's only because you have a singer and a recognizable guitar player that fought and they wrote songs together, just like Jagger and Richards.
Speaker 4And they did a lot of drugs, didn't they have a twin's name, the Toxic Twins? The Toxic Twins.
Speaker 3Did they coin that, or was that some?
Speaker 5writer. They did, oh, they did.
Speaker 1Okay so.
Speaker 3Glimmer Twins, toxic Twins, yeah Right, but it doesn't take away. They're nothing like the Stones, nothing at all.
Speaker 1He had a front man that was dynamic and could jump around the stage and you know but Joe.
Speaker 4Barry was cool.
Speaker 1And they both had the same kind of haircut and there was, I mean you can see the comparisons, there's nobody cooler than Joe Barry.
Speaker 3I might even think that his stage presence beats Keith Richards.
Speaker 2All right.
Speaker 1Cool guitar player. I'm going to tell you the what's the? The coolest, the fucking coolest video, coolest guitar player Fucking one of the coolest songs. I saw this again the other day and I just looked at this motherfucker I said there's arrogance there, there's cockiness, there's a fucking strut, there's attitude. It's in his face, it's in the way he carries himself, it's in the way he plays his guitar. No, go.
Speaker 1Nope, link Ray, oh yeah, when he plays Rumble, yes, yes, he fucking walks around that stage like a fucking king and he's got this look on his face like yeah, I'm fucking Link Wray, yeah, watch the video I've seen it. And he has this strut. I'm like how is this guy not up in the upper echelons Not the biggest, but he should have been in the top third?
Speaker 3Because when he was doing that music, at that time he was an outcast. He was almost like a punk.
Speaker 2He influenced.
Speaker 4Jimmy Fallon.
Speaker 1He was gangsta, that motherfucker.
Speaker 4He was inspiring rumbles between gangs.
Speaker 1And that's why there was a problem with the song right, Because they thought it was inciting violence.
Speaker 4Is he considered a virtuoso or is he kind of like Bo Diddley, where they have a sound and they have recognizable songs?
Speaker 3He definitely wasn't a well-versed like could do anything. He wasn't like that at all, but he did what he did.
Speaker 4He had a great sound.
Speaker 3Yeah, when I was like 10 years old we used to get the UHF channels and they would always show music shows from England on UHF. That's how I discovered ACDC. They had them on some show. I saw Link Wray and he looked older then it was in the 70s, but he still had the leather jacket and he was one mean-looking guy jacket and he was one mean looking guy. Do jimmy page right there in the movie.
Speaker 1Watch the video. Just fucking struts around the stage like it's so fucking cool you know, uh, it's link ray and his men.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's a fucking alpha dog right there, buddy absolute boss, one of the uh original native american uh rockers yeah, yeah oh that's right.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, I forgot about that yep, yeah, when they had the um, the rock and roll hall of fame inductions, I think it's now. It's a couple years ago my son-in-law was in brooklyn for it. All of a sudden, jimmy pay. He didn't know he was going to be there. He comes out on stage playing that song because he inducted link ray um, but I saw a video of it. It's, it's gloriously horrible. You know, he can't even play it. He has a million mistakes. Oh really, yeah, he. But he came out. He's like he's sitting up there. He goes is that jimmy page? He sees the double neck and he goes holy shit, it's jimmy page. You know, play down the double neck, go figure yeah, I just posted the video.
Speaker 1It's cool, I can do it. It's man, so where were we?
Speaker 3Where were we? I did mine last.
Speaker 1All right, you know what? Let's jump in. We're at an hour, let's move on to you. Make the call. You make the call. All right, you got the power. Here we go, lou, is that?
Speaker 5stuck in your head now.
Speaker 1Yes, it is by Snap Yep, and the rapper's name is Turbo. He's a German dude, german black dude. Yeah, turbo, all right.
Speaker 2Mark, you start off.
Speaker 1You make the call. Okay, jailhouse Rock or Mack the Knife.
Speaker 3I'm going with Jailhouse Rock because Mack the Knife doesn't have the menacing that Mack the Knife has. Mack the Knife's like a Broadway play, where Jailhouse Rock is more like an off-Broadway play, if you know what I mean.
Speaker 1Alright, yeah.
Speaker 4Lou Mack the Knife. I gotta go with.
Speaker 1Mack the Knife. Go to a mack the night.
Speaker 4It's just a fucking cool song if it was, if it was little sister versus mack the knife, I might have gone with elvis ah okay, I mean, jailhouse rock's heavy, it's hard hitting, you know that type is a story man, but back the knife is just like.
Speaker 1and then he ends it with look out, old Mac is back, who sang it Bobby. Darin.
Speaker 3Yeah, bobby Darin, I have trouble saying Bobby Darin's tough.
Speaker 1Well, he's not. Elvis wasn't tough either. Yeah, you're right, although he practiced karate.
Speaker 3But who did he ever fight Elvis in the?
Speaker 170s was tough. Anybody can practice karate, but who are you fighting?
Speaker 4He fought Bruce Lee, didn't he?
Speaker 3That was the guy in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
Speaker 1Brad Pitt's character. That's a great scene.
Speaker 4That was great.
Speaker 1All right, mark, you make the call. Okay, whole lot of love. I like these choices that I put. I kind of just really did them. Usually I try to find two songs that are kind of similar and so but these I'm like I'm going with this one a whole lot of love or satisfaction.
Speaker 3Oh, you fucking asshole, you know what a whole lot of love or I can't get no satisfaction I love them both, but I'm gonna have to go with Whole Lotta Love. It's a masterpiece and it's so With the orgasm in the middle. It was so against everything. Play it now, pull into a laundromat or when I ran the laundromat and play it over the PA for people doing their wash.
Speaker 2There you go.
Speaker 4Oh, look at the speakers you know, yeah, yeah, whole Lotta Love Lou. When I first started playing drums, I could do that cymbal part and a whole lot of love, and then I'd lose it because that wasn't good enough.
Speaker 2So I would say a whole lot of love.
Speaker 4I think it's a masterpiece, it's a construction.
Speaker 1Both songs have epic epic openings. Yeah.
Speaker 4It's one of the greatest riffs Both of them have some of the greatest opening r, both of them.
Speaker 1Both of them have some of the greatest opening riffs to us in the history of music. Right, there's no. You hear one note and you know exactly which song is which.
Speaker 4Yeah, I think the stones is a better riff right. I think a whole lot of love is just. Like mark said, it's just, it's a.
Speaker 1I'm going to lean toward Whole Lotta Love because, as I said this a few months back, I re-fell in love with that song again. Same here. I re-appreciated it after years and years of just discarding it because I heard it so much I didn't really pay it much attention. But that one moment when you're driving in your car or you're sitting at home or you got the headphones on and this song comes on and you're like what the? That's a fucking good song. Like what have I not been hearing again for the last 25 years? Because that's well, I'm 60, so 25 years ago.
Speaker 3For years I couldn't stand Smoke on the Water. It came on the radio. I turned it off. Then I saw the Sopranos episode where Tony has his panic attack.
Speaker 1But right before he has it, he's playing Smoke on the Water, he's banging his head and he has a panic attack and I said, oh, I forgot how good that song is that's like a syndrome, right, you hear a song on a TV show or in a movie and all of a sudden you put a visual to it like a very cool scene in a cool movie or a cool show and you're like, hey, and it's an awakening.
Speaker 3It's like an awakening to the song again. Living on a thin line in Sopranos Layla I couldn't listen to Layla when it was in Goodfellas I fell in love with it.
Speaker 4How about Sister Golden Hair in the Supremacist?
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah yeah, that's right, that's right, okay, here we go.
Speaker 1Mark, you make the call In the air tonight or don't stop believing.
Speaker 5In the air tonight.
Speaker 3Sopranos does a winner for me this time I'm going to go with in the air tonight because those lyrics are great and Mike Tyson punched someone out to that song.
Speaker 4Wow, I love a good drum riff. Yeah, steve, someone said that's one of the most recognizable 10 notes in any song and that's from the drums.
Speaker 1That is highly unusual, so the movie came out, the Secret Policemen's on the ball right, yeah, sting was in it, phil Collins was in it, they had I don't know there was some other big names that were in it and sing sting sang message in a bottle with just the, the guitar, electric guitar, not acoustic, but electric acoustic type thing. Right, and then they did the phil collins did in the air tonight, and brilliantly and you know what I'm talking about brilliantly. When he gets to that point he just stops because he's at the piano and in your head everybody to a person goes boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. And then he hits the note boom, fucking perfectly Like he knew what we were thinking Like. Whoever knew that that was just ingrained in everybody's brain was a fucking genius to figure that out, that that, like you said, luke, those 10 notes are that like powerful.
Speaker 4Yeah, well, I think when he was writing the song. You know he wrote the song with the drums in mind because you know that's the first song any I think most of us ever heard, unless you heard the peter gabriel album that came out before that, where they did that gated drum sound, but phil phil was the drummer on it. Um, just when those drums came in, the sound alone was like what the fuck was that? What is that?
Speaker 4yeah, you know heavy metal yeah yeah, it was just such a well percussive, obviously. But yeah, that's the patient behind that, so you know when people think, when they're starting out, you realize he's dropping bass drum notes in there. It's like triplets. But uh, you know, so it's even. That's more complicated than it appears to be let me see here, here we go. But even after the drums throughout the song, for the rest of that he's playing that beat and those fills are just epic.
Speaker 3Oh, the live version. He's got to play the live version. Oh, it's the Secret Policeman's Ball. Okay, I haven't heard this in so long. Makes the lyrics more poignant, what year was this this?
Music Legends and Song Choices
Speaker 1he did this in 85. He did this version at the Live Aid show. But Secret. Policeman's on the Ball. I think came out like 80.
Speaker 4Yeah, that was a long time ago 81 maybe.
Speaker 1And so he read he, you know, does it again for live aid. So let's see, now was that when?
Speaker 3you flew to philadelphia, or was that back in england? Now, was that when you flew to Philadelphia, or was that back in England? That was England, I think England. He just did the piano, yeah.
Speaker 1Him and Sting. It's coming up on this, right, yeah, it is so we don't get again we can talk over it.
Speaker 4If you talk, it can be considered for educational purpose.
Speaker 1For educational purpose. So I wonder if he wore a suit like Lou Well. But if you listen to what he does, right, but in the movie the secret policemen's on the ball. It was totally unexpected. Yeah yeah, that was like an amazing I. It was just like fucking brilliant, brilliant.
Speaker 3Scott there's. That is an amazing thing that him as a drummer can play that and have that running in his mind. There's another drummer that is that amazing and it's Lou. Lou recorded a couple couple demos where he played the drums first, before any of the other instruments. He was able to track his drum part. You don't hear about that. And then he added his guitars later.
Speaker 4I would never do it again, but the fact that you can do that, I would never, do that again. That was a hard way to record.
Speaker 3Your drums were steady.
Speaker 4I played the drums. I sang in my head, right like I get the arrangement down. There you go, no this is this involved footage of phil collins when he's singing at the mic. But he gets up to the drums in time and he does the big fill and then finishes the rest of the song behind I loved in genesis when he would go back and forth between.
Speaker 1That was genesis yeah, all right, did we? Did we all set in the air?
Speaker 4Yeah, what was the other?
Speaker 1song Don't Stop Believing. Yeah, all right. All right, mark, you make the call. Yeah, earth, wind, fire, september or Queen, somebody to Love?
Speaker 3So September is one of those, do you?
Speaker 2remember.
Speaker 3It's one of those earworm songs and even though it was a big hit, it should be. I mean, it's a good song, but come on, somebody to love. Is Freddie crying out? He needed love. Somebody to love. I'm going with Queen. I said there's no wrong answers. Yeah, I know, but I saw Scott's patented oh Lord.
Speaker 1Nah, that was a great song. You know what I have to say to that, Mark. You know what I have to say to that?
Speaker 2Shut up no no, I say this.
Speaker 3I hear a crappy phone.
Speaker 2We're live and everything's fucking up.
Speaker 3This is why we can't go live. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That's all I hear. That's rough. I'm not allowed to express my, my heartfelt sentiment on this show.
Speaker 1September or somebody to love, september I gotta go with september too.
Speaker 4That's one of my son's favorite songs.
Speaker 1September or Somebody to Love, september.
Speaker 4I got to go with September too. It's one of my son's favorite songs too.
Speaker 1Only because of Mark's explanation on Somebody to Love. That just drove me in the other direction Poor Freddie. Poor Freddie, all right, dave Phillips, king of the 45s in the house, all right, hey, dave. All right, mark, you make the call. I won't be sappy on this one. Jackson 5, I Want you Back. Or George Harrison, I Got my Mind Set On you, ah you love George, but I want Jackson's.
Speaker 3That song is to me a much better pop song. Call into Jackson's.
Speaker 4Lou, if not just for the bass, playing Jackson's.
Speaker 1There you go who was that?
Speaker 4was that tito? Uh, might have been james jamerson.
Speaker 1I don't think that was tito which one played the good they had. Tito played the guitar, jermaine played the bass. Right. They always were holding to. There was always a guitar player on the stage right marlin at the beginning yeah, maybe it was marlin. Yeah, uh, yeah, I gotta I to go with. I Want you Back, right, is that what you said, lou, yeah, yeah, great song. All right, mark, here you go. You make the call Like a Rolling Stone, which?
Speaker 3version, the only version, bob Dylan, okay.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, the only version Jimmy's is good or Fortunate Son.
Speaker 3Ooh, or Fortunate Son. Alright, shoot me, I'm going to go with Fortunate Son. I think it's a concise, angry pop song, but like you said, there's no wrong answer.
Speaker 4Yes, there is, and this one is a wrong answer.
Speaker 3I'm sorry, mark okay, sorry, mark, you know what that means. Yes, there is, and this one is the wrong answer.
Speaker 2I'm sorry, Mark.
Speaker 1Okay, sorry, mark, you know what that means Penalty box. Well, it's been a while. He pointed the finger gun at you so I had to save you. Thank you, I had to put you in the penalty box.
Speaker 4As always, it's for his own good. What happened to Caesaresar with the dumb?
Speaker 3I was shooting you, no no, no I don't want to say anything can I have joaquin phoenix doing the uh?
Speaker 1my uh lou. What's, what's your choice? What songs? Again, like a rolling stone like a rolling stone.
Speaker 4Like a rolling stone dylan. Yeah, not a bob dylan fan.
Speaker 1But I, I gotta go with like a rolling stone, like a Rolling. Stone Dylan yeah, not a Bob Dylan fan, but I gotta go with, like a Rolling Stone. They're both great songs. There's no wrong answer here. I feel guilty now Like a Rolling Stone. That's a great song. Fortunate Son gets a little yelly and screamy, I can only listen to that. So much you know. But like a Rolling Stone is just one of those smooth moving songs where you're driving. It's like it's an all mood song, right it's an all mood song.
Speaker 4It was groundbreaking too. That was Dylan saying fuck you to the folkies, the old guard saying I'm gonna do what I'm gonna do.
Speaker 1That's right alright, mark, you make the folkies the old guard, yeah, saying I'm going to do what I'm going to do. That's right. All right, mark, you make the call.
Speaker 3Yeah, ain't no mountain high enough, or purple rain, oh, purple rain, purple rain To this day. I get goosebumps when I hear it. I can't.
Speaker 2Fuck you Lou.
Speaker 3I could say fuck you. To a man in a suit he gave you the.
Speaker 1You wanted the thumbs down. You got the. You wanted him to do it mark.
Speaker 4He did it you're empowering me mark's in the penalty box right now because, well, he wanted liberal reigns and lou didn't agree, so he gave him the thumbs down.
Speaker 5So now Mark's in the penalty box.
Speaker 1I'm sorry, I'm just you know. I'm just you know.
Speaker 3keep the show steady, harsh judge Scratching your face, lou, I'm scratching your face. I'm sorry, mark, I'm sorry.
Speaker 4Purple Rain's a great song. It's a great song.
Speaker 3It's a great because Purple Rain, to me, was an anthem in the 80s. Yeah, well, hell yeah, well, they're both anthems in a way.
Speaker 4Yeah, they are Lou, is it Marvin?
Speaker 1It's the version. Yeah, there's no other version.
Speaker 4I think that is the best Motown song of all time.
Speaker 1I love Purple Rain. Mark, Like you said, there's no wrong answer. It's your playlist. They're both fucking giant songs. Giant, but the beginning of ain't no mountain high enough, yeah yeah all that percussion and they start ain't nobody and it's just a big builder.
Speaker 2Purple.
Speaker 1Rain has the same buildup to it.
Speaker 3Yeah, it does it really does. I have to say I like a Purple Rain better than a November Rain.
Speaker 1for sure I wouldn't put those two in the same. I know Some of these, I already know the winner.
Speaker 4But these are tough. Do you know who wrote that?
Speaker 1Ain't no Mountain High Enough.
Speaker 4Yep no Ash Enough. Yep no Ashford and Simpson.
Speaker 2Wow, back then. Yeah, yeah, how far back do they go.
Speaker 4They must go back further than that. I think, yeah, they do they go back.
Speaker 1They were old in the 80s. They were older in the 80s.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, they were, weren't they.
Speaker 1But I remember what was their 70s disco yeah, ain't, no, so was ain't no stopping us now ain't no stopping us now. That was uh. Was that that was? Was that asher? That wasn't asher and simpson, that was the uh, wasn't that the brothers johnson? No, they did stop.
Speaker 4Yeah, I don't the brothers johnson, though I thought it was stopping us. Now I think that maybe that was asher that's what I first heard in there, shouldn't it?
Speaker 1Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 3So they did Solid, solid.
Speaker 4Solid as a rock. Is it still good to you?
Speaker 2Yeah, they did a lot of stuff.
Speaker 1All right, Mark, you make the call. This is not my favorite two songs of choice, but I'm trying to be very inclusive.
Speaker 3That's good, because this beta male likes it.
Speaker 1It's not good. I do it for you only because you're my friend.
Speaker 2You're my sacrifice. My values oh here we go, all right, stop stop stop, here we go, it's music there's no value to music, let's just move on.
Speaker 1I'm only kidding, Mark. You make the call Eye of the Tiger or Living on a Prayer. Both fucking horrible songs to me.
Speaker 4It's the worst of two evils, because you can't stand.
Speaker 3I can't stand that. They're from New Jersey. I'm just going to go with Eye of the Tiger. I can't stand that they're from new jersey. I'm just gonna go with eye of the tiger I can't stand bondo.
Speaker 1Yeah, I have a tiger it's so pathetic, hey, I I hate that song. I hate that. Who's all you know. I'm behind a movie and and he's got the fucking beret on, like with the French beret, and they're trying to walk and that video is a fucking mess. By the way, if you watch Eye of the Tiger, try to figure that fucking it's a little. Let's just say it's a little not heterosexual at moments, in that it's very weird.
Speaker 3I don't know, it's a little strange. There's anything wrong with that. It's like I don't know it's a little strange. They are Canadian, not that there's anything wrong with that.
Speaker 1It's like I don't know, it's a little strange, but I don't like Eye of the Tiger, but I like it better than Living on a Prayer, because Bon Jovi can suck ass.
Speaker 4Plus he's got that vocoder thing on Living on a Prayer that thing, peter Frampton thing right. I'm living like a prick that thing, peter Frampton thing right.
Speaker 1Yeah, is that?
Speaker 4Richie Zambuca doing that, richie Zambuca.
Speaker 3By the way, New Med Bon Jovi has set a record it's like the poorest selling album from an established artist.
Speaker 4It dropped. It sold well for a day and just disappeared.
Speaker 1And that tells you everything. Because word of mouth says don't buy it.
Speaker 4That's what that is. The reviews are trying to say, hey, it's a band backing something. Yeah, well, don't listen to reviews.
Speaker 1That's like going to rotten tomato and exactly look at rotten tomato if you see a high critic score, it'll be a low viewer score. Yeah, and they're never. Very rarely are they in the same. You know ballpark Right Very rarely. They put Captain Marvel at number five of the best Always listen to the viewers and this is their cop-out is review bombing? Nobody is that like. Maybe there's 10,000 people that are like that out of the millions that fucking go on that website, you know.
Speaker 3I got something better for you. If you're going to go see a movie and you want to know what it's like, call Tom Spallone. If he says it sucks, it's going to be great.
Speaker 4If he says it's really good, you're going to fall asleep.
Speaker 3I have not liked a movie that he's liked in 20 years, and movies he hates.
Speaker 1I love so all right, tom's number is five, seven, no, I can't do that e-o-f-u-c-k-y-o-u-r. Uh, okay, here we go. This is a tough one. Right here, I think this is a tough one. Mark you make the call. Yeah, whiter shade of pale, or let's stay together.
Speaker 3The classical on me will say White or Shaded Pale.
Speaker 1Al Green the Reverend yeah.
Speaker 3I'm going with that Tough one, but I think I'm confident. White or.
Speaker 1Shaded.
Speaker 2Pale. No wrong answer, sammy.
Speaker 3Hagar and Neil Sean did a great version of it too. Okay, lou, I'd argue with Reverend Al Green no wrong answer, no wrong answer. Sammy hagar and elshon did a great version of it too okay uh lou, I'd argue with reverend al green.
Speaker 4It's also one of my favorite songs I, yeah, I don't I always love them both, this one.
Speaker 1This was a hard for me to put this one together. What a shit it's a great song they're both fantastic songs, I mean classic. I mean, but they're just. I mean let's Stay Together is just listen. It was in Pulp Fiction.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, sublime.
Speaker 1There you go.
Speaker 3Sublime percussion track on it the way it goes.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah and I like the recording. It's so dry.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1It's a real low meaty. That's a good way to put it.
Speaker 4yeah, the it's a real low meaty, that's a good way to put it. Yeah, the drums are real dry. I don't hear any reverb that.
Speaker 3I can tell, have a lot of beat. No pun intended.
Speaker 1Very oomph, yeah, all right. Last but not least, this is a kind of unique choice. Right here, mark, you make the call Pretty Woman, the Pretty Woman, Roy Orbison's.
Speaker 3Yeah, not Van Halen. Come on, pretty Woman, the Pretty.
Speaker 1Woman.
Speaker 3Roy Orbison's, not Van Halen, come on.
Speaker 1Pretty Woman or Hit the Road Jack. Hit the Road Jack, don't you come back. No more, no more, no more.
Speaker 3I'm going with Pretty Woman, even though I'm a little tired of it.
Speaker 2Don't you come back, no, more.
Speaker 1no, no, no, no, no, I'm going with Roy.
Speaker 4All right, lou, this is the hardest one for me For sentiment, pretty Woman, although that's tough, I love Hit the Road Jack.
Speaker 3Yeah, I know, watch your side.
Speaker 1I'm going to go with Hit the Road Jack because Van Halen ruined Pretty Woman for me.
Speaker 4They really did. You didn't like the version. I didn't like it at all.
Speaker 1I didn't like it at all. I loved it. Yeah, Dave Phillips, King of the 45s, says the Wilbury for the win.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1But who fucking asked you? Dave Phillips King of the 45s.
Speaker 3Well, he puts good music on Facebook, Scott.
Speaker 1Oh, I always check it out, I always yeah.
Speaker 4His dog, tony, his dog puts the music on there.
Classic Movies of 1976
Speaker 1Get it right. Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Yeah, he has great taste. His dog has great taste. All right, let's move on to some movies from 76. There's a lot of good ones.
Speaker 4Yeah, there were.
Speaker 1We're almost at an hour and a half so we might continue these movies, because this is a lot of good movies from 76. Yeah, there's a lot. Yeah, I'm going to start off with Carrie right off the bat. Yeah, carrie was a I mean talk about a. So one of the best jump scares ever, at the end, right when. What's her name? What was her name? Amy Irving.
Speaker 5Yeah.
Speaker 1She's having the dream and she goes to the house because the house sunk, and she walks over to it's. The ground is there and she's kneeling and it's all this really nice music and it's soft and the fucking arm comes up out of the ground and grabs her yeah.
Speaker 1Fucking jumps in it, but it doesn't. It does it in the kind of slow fast motion, right the way they filmed it or the way they edited it. It's not like the quick jump, it's like, you see, you jump, you're like, ah, gives you that double pump, like oh, oh yeah, and then it grabs it. But it's just, it was just a, a very unique movie for its time. It was uh and it was, it was you know the whole thing was what's that?
Speaker 4was that it was considered in the horror genre, wasn't it? Oh, absolutely.
Speaker 1Yeah, and Piper Laurie was fucking lunatic and it was ahead of a time in which they depicted the mother as this ultra crazy religious. Yeah, there weren't many movies doing that back then. No, and they go through the whole thing. She has a menstrual cycle and they kind of. That became like a thing and they go through the whole thing. She has a menstrual cycle and that became like a thing. And so I know for a fact that had to be one of those things that girls back then looked at and went oh my God.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I never talked to, I never mentioned it to anybody. I was like you know, like I never said so what did you think? But you know, like the girls must be like, oh, I fucking know what that feels like. You know like, oh shit, yeah, but Carrie was just a great movie. John Travolta was a good bad guy.
Speaker 3Was that his first movie before? Welcome Back, Cotter.
Speaker 1I think it was.
Speaker 3Yeah, it was yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, that was before the boy in the plastic bubble.
Speaker 1Yeah, all right, let's go clockwise, I guess.
Speaker 4Did you guys see the remake of Carrie? That was a.
Speaker 3Seinfeld movie this boy in the plastic bubble.
Speaker 4Yeah, did you see the remake?
Speaker 1No, no, I won't. Why would I?
Speaker 3I won't see the remake of Carrie either.
Speaker 1see the remake of Carrie, either I refused.
Speaker 3That's what he said, oh I thought you meant Boy in a Plastic Bucket.
Speaker 1Oh Jesus, lou give us a movie from 76.
Speaker 4Marathon man, is it?
Speaker 1safe.
Speaker 4Is it safe? Is it safe?
Speaker 1Is it safe?
Speaker 2Oh yeah yeah, it's so safe, is it safe? And then he switches it up and he goes no, no, it's so safe, is it safe?
Speaker 1and then he switches it up on, he goes no, no it's not safe.
Speaker 2It's not safe at all, is it?
Speaker 1safe, like that whole scene. Roy schneider, roy scheider was in a lot of movies in the 70s. That was a good run for him. That was right after jaws. He went on a great run. Yeah, and he's a good actor. Like he's that character, right, he looks the same in every movie. Yeah, right, just like the kevin costa syndrome he's the same fucking guy in every movie, but he pulls it off.
Speaker 4He's one of those rare actors that could pull off that yeah, and kind of the same kind of personality, the kind of leading man way, but not like john wayne or anything like that.
Speaker 1Right right, not a big leading man, but you know he did varied roles. It was seven ups, the seven ups a good movie. I might actually watch that again.
Speaker 4Was he in the? He did 2010. He did the sequel to 2001.
Speaker 1Right, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, was he in Hot Rocks? Also Hot Rock, I don't know. Did you see the Hot Rock? Oh God, with Robert Redford Forever ago, right Fucking.
Speaker 2Fucking great movie.
Speaker 1These are movies you got to go back and watch the Hot Rock Seven Ups Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Vanishing Point.
Speaker 4You know they have a lot of Jack Nicholson movies now on Max. I think it almost looks like a tribute. Right Five Easy Pieces. The Last Detail Chinatown. Wow, is he sick or something? He's really old, but he's faded, he's totally faded from view.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 4He retired from acting, I think after the Departed Right.
Speaker 1All right, Luke, give us a movie.
Speaker 4I didn't.
Speaker 1Oh, you did. That's right. That's right, mark.
Speaker 3I am not a runner. Logan's Run.
Speaker 1That hit me.
Speaker 3All right. So I used to think that my first big science fiction movie was Star Wars. But I remember I was young and seven years old and I saw that and I was taken by the dystopian society. They're in a city.
Speaker 1And then they escape to the outside. That was you right, Michael York.
Speaker 4Richard Jordan. Jenny Agutter, I'm saying it right. She just took her top off a lot.
Speaker 3Great movie. I bought the comic book series and I have it in a storage facility up in Kingston. I got to dig them out because they're probably worth something. I read all the comics and I couldn't get enough of the movie, so I used to like reenact that scene I'm not a runner and I'd like act like I was fighting in the living room. I'm not a runner. I'm not a runner. One day I'm doing it and I turn around. My dad's standing there and he's like. You know, some of us would like to take our naps, because my dad took a nap every Sunday afternoon. I got thanked for that one. But I heard they're going to remake it and I'm really pissed. Stop, just stop, don't remake it, because they're going to make it overly violent.
Speaker 3It was violent for its time.
Speaker 4Remember the TV series. No, they did a short-lived TV series, not a like Planet of the Apes, where I didn't go very long.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 4Right, it's probably too expensive to make.
Speaker 1Yeah, my brother, they're all the way from the Philippines. Andy Ordinero. He says, yeah, rocky. Rocky came out in 76.
Speaker 2Oh wow, Yep.
Speaker 1Yep, it was the number two movie of 76, guess it has here, or is this? How? When it was released. Let me know. I'm not sure on my list, but yeah, rocky, and, and what? What can you say about rocky that hasn't like? The saying is that hasn't already been said, right?
Speaker 3I always said rocky and rambo the first ones were good and then he kind of ruined the scene. I like rocky, three rocky.
Speaker 4I have, I like Rocky 3.
Speaker 3Rocky. I have a soft spot for a lot of Rockies I like the first and the third.
Speaker 4Yeah, third was good, kind of like the Plenty of Apes movie. I like the first and third one. Let me see he's a wrecking machine, rocky.
Speaker 1He's a wrecking machine. This movie came out in 76. Hold on, let me get past this. This movie came out in 76. Hold on, let me get past this.
Speaker 3YouTube ads. There we go.
Speaker 5That's today. By worth. That's today, by the way. The bank is going bust. Shopkeepers keep a gun under the counter.
Speaker 1That's today.
Speaker 5Punks are running wild in the street. There's nobody anywhere who seems to know what to do.
Speaker 2That's 2020. It is I think it's Scott, it is.
Speaker 5Our food is unfit to eat. We sit watching our TV.
Speaker 1Argue with any of this Honestly argue with any point that he's making. This was in 76.
Speaker 2It's kind of been my whole life.
Speaker 3It's the point that he's making right now. You can't. Food's been unhealthy my whole life.
Speaker 515 homicides and 63 violent crimes, as if that's the way it's supposed to be. We know things are bad, worse than bad. They're crazy. It's like everything everywhere is going crazy, so we don't go out anymore. They're crazy. It's like everything everywhere is going crazy, so we don't go out anymore.
Speaker 1We sit in the house and slowly the world we're living in is getting smaller and all we say— Technology keeps us in the house Only if you let it.
Speaker 5Let me have my toaster and my TV and my steel-belted radios and I won't say anything.
Speaker 2Just leave us alone.
Speaker 5Well, I'm not going to leave you alone. I want you to get mad. Yeah, gonna leave you alone.
Speaker 1I want you to get mad. Yeah, I don't want you to protest, I don't want you to ride, I don't want to fade down away with a smile.
Speaker 5I don't know what to do about the depression and the inflation and the russians and the crime and the yeah. All I know is that first you've got to get that's fucking today.
Speaker 1Man, there's no way you can argue with any of this.
Speaker 3This is I have never seen that movie, you know, I've never saw it've got to say I'm a human being, god damn it.
Speaker 5Yeah, my life has value. Yeah, God damn it. I want you to get up now. I want all of you to get up out of here. I can't keep going.
Speaker 3We've got our window closed.
Speaker 1I'm bad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore.
Speaker 3I've never seen that movie, fuck you I won't do what you tell me.
Speaker 1Peter Finch, you never saw Network. No, what the fuck Are you a communist?
Speaker 3No, I just never saw it.
Speaker 1I'm like Lou, you've got to fade down away.
Speaker 3You know how Lou hasn't seen a lot of movies. Me too, there's a lot of movies I have not seen you gotta watch Network though.
Speaker 4You gotta watch Network.
Speaker 3I'm writing it down.
Speaker 4Yeah, have you seen Marathon man?
Speaker 3It's so long ago I gotta re-watch it. I know more about the reenactment by Cheech and Chong Ord man.
Speaker 1I'd see papers all night.
Speaker 3No, you gotta get to the distortion on the microphone.
Speaker 1Oh, he put the cigarette in his eye. Man Eye, no, you got to get to the distortion on the microphone. Oh, he put the cigarette in his eye man, oh man, no I have seen. Rocky. Faye Dunaway at her best, partially at her best. The eyes of Laura Morris. She was really good in that one.
Speaker 2Faye Dunaway, one of the greatest beauties in the history of Hollywood.
Speaker 4Absolute, my book.
Speaker 1Married to Peter Wolfe, in the top ten beauties of all time in Hollywood I did a video. I created a video I thought were the top ten prettiest women in Hollywood. I'll send it to you guys. You can't argue with it. You can probably substitute some people, but and people did when I posted it. People were like what about her and her, and again it's my list. Anybody can create the list, but Faye Dunaway was definitely on that. I never thought Joan Crawford was that hot. No, I didn't either.
Speaker 4You know who I think the prettiest To this day, I say.
Speaker 1when I was a kid I had a fucking crush on her and I said she was the most beautiful woman ever in Hollywood Lauren Bacall. When she was young, absolutely Was a fucking hammer, yeah, holy shit, those eyes and that voice, and I mean she had the body. She. Lauren Bacall, to me, was the prettiest woman in her prime. Bogey knew what he was doing the history of Hollywood, absolutely he did. I wouldn't get to change places with that short motherfucker back in 47.
Speaker 4Ever see pictures of young Shirley Winters.
Speaker 1You know what yeah?
Speaker 4She was cute. I just think of the Poseidon Adventure.
Speaker 3You can't unsee the underwater.
Speaker 4She died earlier in that movie. Oh, why couldn't she have landed in the Christmas tree? Son of a bitch.
Speaker 1Give us a movie from 76.
Speaker 3I don't know how you guys viewed this movie, but for me it was another one that I was a little kid I saw it in the theater, scared the fuck out of me. I don't know why, but King Kong, the image of King Kong in that, really scared the shit out of me. But it hit me hard and I love Jessicaica lang in it yeah yeah, it was a good movie.
Speaker 1It was a decent remake, yeah, um I love.
Speaker 3I think that the new version that they did is is probably probably my debate. They really nailed it, but that was good and it will always stand up for itself as a good remake yeah, yeah, lou he calls you a little piece of chicken.
Speaker 4What movie was that taxi driver? That's right, that's right yeah, a little piece of chicken now. That's a movie I'm revisiting soon because that's uh, one of those streaming channels is playing it again. It's been it's been a while since I've seen it.
Speaker 1Okay, it's a, that was heavy yeah, are you gonna watch hillbilly elegy? I think I've seen it. It's a good movie. I, I think don't put the political thing into it.
Speaker 4I saw it a while ago. I didn't think it was a great movie, though it's it's a good movie, it's not.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's not a dynamic movie by any means, but it's a story. It's like one of those movies you just gotta want to watch a story you're gonna.
Speaker 4You're gonna see a story. I live there. Okay, I don't need to see in appalachia. Oh, technically I'm in appalachia, yeah, oh shit um, but you're in modern day appalachia well, here's the deal. Like ashville, there's ashville, greenville's an hour away, south carolina, but if you go further out, I've gone further out and yeah, we had a egg and mayonnaise sandwich with you, lou, on white bread.
Speaker 4Well, that that's can. Well, that's, that's civilized for the rural part. I mean, if you go for I've gone I got down a couple roads. A guy worked with his last name. There's a street up there where I used to live, named that thing, because that's named my whole family. So I drove to the end of one time. I can't back out of this whole gravel street road. I don't have to turn around somehow when I go in someone's resemblance of a driveway. But people came out of houses looking at me. I'm like oh oh, just visit. I got North Carolina plays, I'm just visiting.
Speaker 3Well.
Speaker 4I'll tell you what. So, scott, when someone says get your ass up in them woods, don't, you don't have to do it, you're not.
Speaker 3Ned Beatty, don't worry about it, I'm not. I'm no Ned Beatty sir, when me and Perry went down to see Lou the first time, lou took us out to a, he said do you want to get breakfast? And we went to this place where we walk up. I got my long hair.
Speaker 3Perry just oozes Jersey, we all ooze Jersey and everybody stared at us, but then I was like I said hi to somebody. Everybody was cool after that. I just remember that. The egg sandwich the only choice was white bread with mayonnaise. I ate it, it was good.
Speaker 1I actually liked it. It was okay. Anything with mayo was good to me.
Speaker 3Yeah, except a.
Speaker 4Italian salad.
Speaker 3French fries or hamburgers 2008.
Speaker 1I'm in Front, royal, virginia, and I'm going through the K-9 Academy, us Customs K-9 Enforcement Center, going through the canine academy, us customs right canine enforcement center, and two of my buddies a bunch of us came up from miami and two of my buddies, one's a, his last name is rios and he's he's from chicago, but he's a mexican name, mexican descent. And the other kid, uh, the other guy's name is alvarez, he's cuban, from miami, right. So, uh, my buddy Alvarez wants to go look for a car and he really wants the Smokey and the Bandit Trans Am, right, and he finds one in the Bargain Hunter, somewhere, you know whatever. And so this is 2008. So technology wasn't really. You had to call the guy, no instant messages.
Speaker 1This is 2008, so technology wasn't really. You had to call the guy no instant message, exactly. So the guy says and so now they start driving into the hills of virginia right front royal is small town virginia, but when you start going a little deeper in they're almost near west virginia, I think, right. So, um, the guy says, when you get to the bottom of the road, call me from the store. And they're like okay, and they got the garment. I think you like, back then there was garment, was the big. Yeah, you know like, uh, uh, it was ways and it was google maps but it didn't.
Speaker 3Did it work in rural areas?
Speaker 1it did up until they get to that that gas station, and he calls the guy and the guy says see the see the road right behind the building, go up that road, just keep going up.
Speaker 1And where I'm up there, so they're like okay, and they're kind of getting like okay, this is a little weird because the garmin goes blank yeah right, it goes blank on them, but they're following the road and they're seeing these fucking shacks on each side of them, and sparsely though, and they get up to this clearing and there's this house and there's two dudes on the porch, and so they both get out and they walk up and the two, two, you know two yahoos get off the porch and they walk down and like, are you here about the car? And my buddies are like, yeah, and he says, okay, let me show it to you. And my cuban friend notices that a couple more guys come out of the house and you're like this is a little weird, right, and uh, but okay, we're cool, everything's cool. And he shows them the car and the guy says to my friend Rios, who's kind of a bigger dude, he goes, are you the one buying this? Because if you are, I hope you ain't selling it to some Mexican.
Speaker 1And at that point my buddy Alvarez goes because he looks latin. Rios looks like a white dude. Right, my buddy alvarez goes. Buddy, I'm just gonna go wait in the car. He goes and sits in the car and this guy starts talking about you know, yeah, these mexicans come up here and because virginia does have an influx of of south americans that that have migrated up there for work right, yeah and it became a thing and these dudes were like this was like fort apache, the bronx to them like
Speaker 1yeah, you ain't fucking invading this p, this piece of the land, right? And so it got a little. My buddy's like it got a little fucking weird, right. And he's like, all right, he goes, so you're going to buy this thing or what. He goes, well, you know what, let me think about it and I'll get back to you. And he goes, okay, he goes, I'm going to go. I'm just going to go talk to my friend and we'll see he goes. I'm just going to go talk to my friend and we'll see. And he goes, yeah, okay, and they all stand around and my buddy gets in the car. He's like let's get the fuck out of here, just fucking go.
Speaker 3Just go. How fast can they get down that road?
Speaker 1They fucking bang a Yui and they just take off down that hill and I think they were laughing. The white boys were not fucking around because they know you're there. This is deliverance, man this is fucking deliverance.
Speaker 4You're off the map.
Speaker 1They didn't even see the car he did see the car and he liked it, but he was he's like I'm not for bad business with them.
Speaker 1You know, that was like. I went and bought this record. It's a record holder and it's a vintage record and it has a it's. I looked it up it's I forget the name brand, but it's got this. Uh, it pulled the front, pulls down and that's where all your records go. Then you kind of fold it up and this was over in a it's in a kind of shady area here and, uh, up around where I live.
Speaker 1So it's a sunday afternoon, it's in the summer, and I said, all right, I'm gonna drive over there, and I had my jeep and I drive over there and I just notice I'm in the fucking hood. Right, all right, I'm cool, though I'm cool white guy driving around in the hood in a brand new fucking jeep, wrangler, custom dragon edition, right, it's got the big dragon thing on the side. And so I see the house and I'm like, and I look across the street and and there's like six brothers there and they're just chilling, just hanging out on the porch, you know. And then you see they're drinking. It's saturday or sunday afternoon, whatever.
Shady Neighborhood Jersey Exchange
Speaker 1And so, uh, this black guy comes out of the house. He's an older guy and he's like yeah, the uh, and he's got a fence around the yard. There's a dog in there and the dog doesn't like white people, evidently, right. So he says, yeah, yeah, it's in the house, come in the house. I'm like, oh, there, we go, right. So I go in the house. And I kind of realized at that point, when I got out of the Jeep and I looked across the street, that I'm wearing a Larry Bird jersey.
Speaker 5Now, if there was ever.
Speaker 1The consummate white boy jersey. Even in Do the Right Thing, john Savage is wearing a Larry. Bird jersey. Go back to.
Speaker 4Brooklyn. Go back to Brooklyn. No, go back to Boston. Go back to Boston, fucking racist.
Speaker 1And I got the Bird jersey on. I'm like, ah, here we go, the shaved head right, sunglasses, right, black sunglasses. So I go in the house and the dude's like, yeah, here it is right, here it's like $25. But I looked in the house and the dude's like, yeah, here it is right, here it's like 25 bucks. But I looked it up and the thing's expensive, right. So I said, all right, yeah, it looks good.
Speaker 1And he says, uh, yeah, at uh 20. I take cash. And I said, well, he said, where are you from? He said I said, well, I'm from boston. Oh, what part? I said, well, I was originally from roxbury. And then, uh, we move. He goes, oh, I know that area, I know. And he starts trying to talk. He's talking to me about that. Then he says, yeah, $20. And so I take out some cash and I go to give it to him and he goes and the bird jersey stays here, oh wow. And he just stands there and looks at me and I looked at him. I go that ain't fucking happening. But I'm thinking in my head and I looked at him I go, that ain't fucking happening.
Speaker 1But I'm thinking in my head this is a bad situation. I'm in his house, right, and all he has to do is yell out the door and I am fucked, right. And I looked at him and I said that ain't fucking happening. And we have this standoff for literally like 20 seconds. We just look at each other and then he goes. I'm only fucking with you.
Speaker 4He wasn't though, but he wasn't.
Speaker 1He thought he was going to scare the white boy.
Speaker 4Like he thought I'm going to. I'm going to, you're going to walk out with a shirt.
Speaker 3That's how you extricate yourself from that.
Speaker 1You're like, oh, I can't scare him, so now I gotta get out of it well, that and that's what he was like, but I was thinking in my head this is a bad fucking scene right here.
Speaker 1This, this could really turn left real fast and I, I just stared him down, I was like I've been in worse situations. And he just ah, I'm only kidding, come on man. I man, I'll say yeah. And in my head I'm like you weren't kidding. If I took that jersey off, he'd be like now you can go. Now he got me.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, right, oh, no, no, no no, no yeah. Do you think he would have worn the shirt if you had left it?
Speaker 1Oh, of course he would have. Because, then, because? Then I took it off that white boy that came over.
Speaker 5Yeah yeah, and I kept his $20.
Speaker 1And I kept his $20. And I got this Mitchell Ness fucking $170 Larry Bird jersey. You know Like what the vintage I'm like, oh so, needless to say, it doesn't matter if you go there in the daytime or the nighttime, those are always shady it. Those are always shady those situations are always shady.
Speaker 3You did mention and I'm not going to tell a story because I have too many to tell, but you mentioned fort apache, fort apache the bronx yeah I started going down to that neighborhood in that area to see my wife when we were going out, and back then I was wearing leather pants. I was a heavy metal guy, I had my bu Buick Skylark, yellow Buick Skylark. My brother had a yellow Buick Skylark and, no, a lot of things happened, but I never had anything happen to me, but it was yeah, oh yeah, this was.
Speaker 1I was in his house, in his territory. Well, the cops would.
Speaker 3Every so often they would do the walking patrol and a cop would come up to me and look at me and say what are you doing here? And I'd say I'm coming to pick up my girlfriend. And when he looked at me, I guess he saw my eyes and said all right, because why would a white guy be down there? You're buying drugs, buying drugs yeah. No, and then I'd be like I told it with all honesty. And then one time I had a zebra thing in the car and he goes goes I'm a long island zebra.
Speaker 3They're great, you know.
Classic Movies and Music Favorites
Speaker 1So I was like yeah but I yeah, it's like I could tell stories, but not on the show. There you go. Uh, perry denovich, the ai about I don't know. 10 minutes ago he commented perry oozes america mark, not just new jersey he oozes a few things apparently oh, oh, oh, oh you know we're gonna pick up movies again next week, we, why not? Right there's a lot there's a lot of good movies here. Let's do one more round of movies okay, uh, lou um the omen yeah, yeah, I never did this for you.
Speaker 4That was messed up. That that was shocking. Was that? Yeah, I was 15. Oh, I never saw. I never. I don't think I ever saw anything like that before. Yeah, I think, after night of the living dead, for me this was the second scariest movie I think I'd seen.
Speaker 3When you, when you grow up when you grow up in a very strict religious household where you have a literal translation of the bible. This movie was, like to me, cool because it scared the shit out of me that if you read the book, the very first line says god is dead, and I thought to myself how could god be dead? You know, and it's just like yeah it's where the priest gets the spear through him, or whatever.
Speaker 1I was like that was like I have a friend that we grew up with. Name is timmy king. His father was the governor of massachusetts for for a term, fucking looks just like damien. Oh shit, it looked just like him look just fucking like him he was a fucking crazy motherfucker.
Speaker 4Cute little kid, yeah, yeah uh, the scene where he turns around and looks at everybody.
Speaker 1I'm going to go with. Are you going to pull those pistols and whistle Dixie?
Speaker 4Ah, that was Josie Wells.
Speaker 1Yeah, the poor dog. How many times did that dog get spit on or close to it? Close enough, right yeah, today is a good day to die. That was that movie right, great movie.
Speaker 3Yeah, I think it was With the Indian, the old Indian. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1Today is a Good Day to Die, yeah, and then he never dies. He's like you're not dying, right.
Speaker 3Yeah, he hit it right when he did those movies in the 70s, because he got away from the spaghetti Westerns and he did westerns the way he thought they should be done and they were great. You know, like those were clint eastwood clint eastwood ever done a bad movie I would say this he's one of these actors if the movie's not good, he is great in it. I've never like I wasn't a fan of the one where he's a confederate uh, confederate soldier and he's like yeah, the beguiled.
Speaker 1the beguiled itiled, but he was great in it. They cut his leg off.
Speaker 3And then the other one play Misty. For me it's kind of esoteric, but he's great in it.
Speaker 1That's kind of different for him too, I think he wanted to do that because you don't want to pigeonhole yourself and he was getting pigeonholed.
Speaker 4That's why he did those comedies too?
Speaker 1Right Turn Clyde Awesome movies. Did man with no name? Comedies too, uh, right turn clyde awesome movies.
Speaker 4They're gonna fucking italy, make some fucking westerns so outlawed josie wales, great movie, great movie yeah yeah, great movie then pal rider are just like companion pieces so no pale rider that was the 80s, it wasn't no it wasn't outlawed.
Speaker 1Josie's wheels pale rider was the, uh, the, the sequel to high plains drifter. Right, okay, right right.
Speaker 4He just came out of nowhere there's a link, like he's supposed to, maybe the same character yeah, right, only he's a preacher.
Speaker 1But yeah, this is later, a little later on, and uh, but yeah, uh, high plains Drifter, another fucking. I mean epic. But the good, the bad and the ugly is the greatest Western ever made. Just bought it on 4K Greatest Western ever made and for the 4K.
Speaker 3It's amazing, it's better than the bridges of Madison County all right, all right, I'll stick with clint and I'll go with the enforcer, because you can't go wrong with any dirty harry movie nope, you cannot, you cannot.
Speaker 1Um, I have this little thing that I stumbled on.
Speaker 3This it's a sore on my uh.
Speaker 1Oh sorry no, uh, and it's this. I found this site and it has a song meeting song meanings, right, yeah, so what? What? What meaning do you want to hear? Do you want to hear, uh, the meaning of the song, let's get it on by marvin gaye. Uh, long train running by the doobie brothers, or uh, let me see. Or lucky man by emerson lego palmer. What song meaning do you?
Speaker 3want, I would say, long train running, only because I know about the other two, I mean okay, so what do you?
Speaker 1long train running. Okay, right, the story behind the song is rock and roll fans heatily debate which incarnation of the doobie brothers was. The better of the two, the earlier and we've talked about this tom johnson doobies of long train running fame yep, or the minute by minute-minute Michael McDonald-led band. In fact, both deserve recognition for their contributions to popular music. The original quartet was built around the guitarist, lead singer Johnson, drummer John Hartman, who played together in PUD. An initial album released in the spring, I know 71 flopped. A second the following year landed them on the charts. The captain in me broke the Doobie Brothers nationally with its blazing lead-off single Long Train Runnin'. Like music, long Train Runnin' was written by Johnston and bore the trademark sound of guitar-based rock and roll with a driving beat. I don't know what this means then. It doesn't give us the meaning of the song. How it was. Fucking.
Speaker 3Let me see lyrics and yeah so yeah, I mean lucky man was written by lake when he was like 14. It's about a man that was, you know whatever. He became a king and let's get it on, you know, let's, let's, let's have sex, right? Is that what that means? Yeah, it says the man in the suit.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, yeah, I don't know, I'll have to look some of these over, but let's get on to, uh, uh, the top 10 songs. This this uh this week in 1976. Uh, number 10 this week in 1976, rock and roll music by the Beach Boys.
Speaker 4That was the 15 Big Ones album.
Speaker 1Yep, yep.
Speaker 4Also was that when they were on SNL too, and they made Brian Wilson surf. They took him in his bathrobe and they made him walk into the ocean.
Speaker 1Number 9 this week in 1976, silly love songs Wings. Uh.
Speaker 4Number nine this week in 1976 silly love songs wings still holds up today uh number eight this week.
Speaker 1Uh, in 1976 got to get you into my life are you doing the earth, wind and fire version this is the beatles version that was more like the sergeant pepper movie version you were doing.
Speaker 4Yeah, oh my god, that was a good. That was a good cover, actually, yeah I don't like the song enough.
Speaker 3I didn't even like the cover all right, number seven this week.
Speaker 1Uh, in 1976 my mother told me you better shop around, captain. To you better shop around lots of cover, right? Yeah, smoky robinson yep, yep, and the miracle is that's right, captain and steel covered that yeah oh, it's so pure. It's good, it's actually. They did a good job with it okay they did a good job with it.
Speaker 4Now, hey, listen, it hit the top. Yeah, it does. They did a good version they did a good version.
Chart-Topping Hits and Music News
Speaker 1Listen, they were all good. Whatever they sang was good, it was just camp, it was 70s camp, it was pop. She had a great voice and they had great melodies and they had pop music. They were good pop artists.
Speaker 4And he was a bottomless well of hat jokes if you saw the TV series.
Speaker 1Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 4Remember his hat jokes.
Speaker 1Number six this week in 1976.
Speaker 4I always woke up with a hat on.
Speaker 1Here we go, number six this week in 1976. One of the best opening riffs in music.
Speaker 2Gary Wright well, I think it's time to get ready, oh it's funny.
Speaker 3I just recently mentioned on the on the other show I discovered that whole album. I ordered the cd somebody at work to get the whole cd.
Speaker 4It's a great album it's called the music relish show mark all right.
Speaker 3Mark you ever listen, got me all right you ever listen?
Speaker 1to third base. Mark you ever listen to third base. He's never gotten a third base because you look for those executives on linkedin. I know mark have you ever listened to third base, uh, the rappers yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, white rappers mc surge and yeah, uh, they have a. They use that whole riff in one of their songs. Um, I forget the name of it. It's on the cactus album.
Speaker 1Check it out, okay I think they do a great job with this, like using that riff as a sample. Okay, so, uh, number five this week. Uh, let me see, that was number five. No, this is number five. Oh, I love this song too. Number five this week in 1976 moonlight feels right, starbuck my favorite yacht rock song.
Speaker 1One of those songs, right, one of those songs. It's a feel-good song. Uh, number four this week in 1976, uh sang maybe written by I'm not sure a former porn star, andrea True, more, more, more. Which is that song is about filming a porn video. Listen to the lyrics.
Speaker 4Me and my dad saw all her work Brilliant, brilliant.
Speaker 1She could actually act.
Speaker 3She could really act too. Did your dad take you to the queen anne theater? Come on mark, come on every every that was the only theater we had in bergen, county the queen I know yeah okay we had family passes yeah, we had the pussycat theaters in boston oh, I like that yeah
Speaker 4yeah, the pussycat and the old, the old time square.
Speaker 1I was never at the old time square and we had the combat place, but we had one over by the boston garden, right over my, down across the street, down a little from the boston garden. The old boston was a porno theater. Yeah, uh. Number three this week in 1976. I'll be good to you, the brothers johnson, cool, good song. All right, motherfuckers. This is why I should have fucking won, but I gave it because you guys contested, you thought about it, you hemmed and hawed. Number two this week in 1976 kiss and say goodbye by the motherfucking manh.
Speaker 1I fucking told you that was a big hit. No, I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 4Well, what is the chart placement of the other song in contention?
Speaker 1I don't know, but this one was number two, soon to be number one, because it knocked the number one song this week in 1976.
Speaker 2Wait wait, wait, wait, wait. Damn right, this has got to be, the saddest day of my life. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Damn right, this has got to be the saddest day of my life.
Speaker 1Yeah, baby, yeah, I called you here today. Yeah, look at her baby. That's what I'm talking about Little sucky, sucky, yeah. And number one Afternoon Delight. So let's get rid of that. We're at two hours this day in music, this day in music. Let's see, I don't care about Ed Sheeran. I don't care about R Kelly he deserves to be in prison. I don't care about Pink 2008. Rolling Stones All right, rolling Stone guitarist Ronnie Wood was seeking help with his battle with alcohol in a rehab center seeking help with his battle with alcohol in a rehab center.
Speaker 1The boy followed a tabloid speculation over the state of his 23-year marriage to former model Joe Wood. Following Ronnie's continued battle with the alcohol, he has entered a period of rehab this day. In 2007, paul Simon filed a lawsuit against Rhythm USA Inc, claiming the company never had his permission to sell wall clocks that played bridge over troubled water, that motherfuckers made a million off those things. The suit claimed that, as one of the best known songs throughout the world, a proper licensing agreement would earn at least $1 million licensing fee. I don't know. They should have the outcomes. They never give you the outcomes, I think the singing fish wall clocks are more popular.
Music History and Musical Anecdotes
Speaker 1On this day in 2007, the arrogant asshole Sting and his wife Trudy Styler were ordered to pay their former chef compensation after losing a sexual discrimination case. Jane Martin, 41, was awarded 24,000, about 25,000 pounds, which is about $33,000 at an employment tribunal in Southampton, England, after she was sacked by Miss Styler from the couple's estate in Wilshire when she came because she was pregnant. See Assholes, Fucking assholes. Let's see. On this day in 2002, the Rolling Stones crew chief, 50-year-old Royden McGee, who had worked with the band for 30 years, died during a rehearsal in Toronto. Spokesman for the band said McGee had said that he wasn't feeling well and went to another room to take a nap. Stones had just finished dinner and resumed rehearsing. When they got the word, McGee had collapsed and stopped breathing. Let's see.
Speaker 1On this day in 2001, Kiss added another product to their ever-growing merchandising universe the Kiss casket Yep. The coffin featured the faces of the four founding members of the band, the Kiss logo and the words Kiss Forever. Panterist guitarist Dimebag Darrell was buried in one after he was shot and killed on stage in 2000. And Eddie?
Speaker 3Van Halen put his Frankenstein guitar in the coffin.
Speaker 1As he should.
Speaker 3I don't know about that, I don't know.
Speaker 1No, hey, listen, that was listen, that's.
Speaker 3Eddie's a good guy.
Speaker 2That's paying respect.
Speaker 3Eddie was a good guy, absolutely.
Speaker 1Eddie Van Halen. You know that was respect, because he knew Dimebag.
Speaker 3He knew Dimebag was the generation that was influenced directly by him.
Speaker 1Yeah, and to think that, Dimebag, he didn't know. It always amazes me that these guys they don't have any formal training know nothing. They pick up a guitar and they learn to play like that. Yeah, yeah, you know. I don't know, I don't I just don't think I have that ability, but I evidently I don't.
Speaker 3I think you do, you just don't know it. I feel like you have to try it Possibly.
Speaker 1I'm doing too many other things now to pick up an instrument.
Speaker 3I'm looking behind you. That's the last thing I need to do. Look, and it's great shit. Why don't you buy yourself a good guitar?
Speaker 1Because I won't dedicate myself to it. I'll come down and give you lessons. If you pay my airfare, I got three extra bedrooms, so you and Luke can come down anytime.
Speaker 4Let's see, can I bring my drums?
Speaker 1Bring your drums, buddy. Bring your drums, we'll set them up in here.
Speaker 3Your wife will never forgive you.
Speaker 1On this day in 1998, the Beastie Boys went to number one in the UK album charts with Hello Nasty. On this day in 1992, bobby Brown married Whitney Houston. On this day in 1991, the first night of the Lollapalooza tour at the Compton Terrace. Phoenix, featuring Living Color, suzy and the Banshees, jane's Addiction Nine. Phoenix featuring Living Color, suzy and the Banshees, jane's Addiction Nine Inch Nails, henry Rollins Band and the Butthole Surfers what a great lineup. On this day in 1988, ike Turner was sentenced in Santa Monica, california, to one year in jail for possessing and transporting cocaine. On this day in 1988, nico died after suffering a minor heart attack while riding a bicycle on holiday with her son in Ibiza, spain. The German-born singer-songwriter and keyboardist player with the most overrated fucking band ever, the Velvet Underground.
Speaker 1It also worked as a fashion model and actress.
Speaker 4Is it a mild heart attack?
Speaker 3I guess Evidently that's not a mild heart attack we can fucking die from it, unless you laid on the street for like 10 hours, I don't know on this day in 1980, billy joel held the top position in both us albums and single charts.
Speaker 1His album glass houses contained his first and biggest number one hit. It's still rock and roll to me. Nah, didn't like it. On this day in 1978, def Leppard made their live debut at Westfield School in Sheffield, england in front of 150 students.
Speaker 4They were probably children back then.
Speaker 1There's a rumor that back in the day, when we used to have dances in junior high in the 70s, early 70s and all that, that Aerosmith was one of those bands could have been.
Speaker 4I don't know remember the mighty limit I was. I was busy drinking fucking mad dog. 2020 there you go so so which, which flavor was it? The orange jubilee? Is the grape, always the grape grape.
Speaker 1That's why I don't drink grape anything today I don don't drink peppermint.
Speaker 3I don't touch peppermint, anything Schnapps, that's another story, for another time.
Speaker 5That's all I'm going to say about that.
Speaker 1On this day in 1974, the US Justice Department ordered John Lennon out of the country. We all know that story. On this day in 1973, bruce Springsteen played the first of four nights at Max's Kansas City in New York, supported by Bob Marley, and the Wailers Were on their first ever North American tour On the stay. In 1972, sly and the Family Stone right Members of the Sly and the Family Stone were arrested after police found two pounds of marijuana. Now, that's going big. That's a lot. In 72, that's going big. Found it in the group's motorhome. Yay, dude, that's going big. Found it in the group's motorhome. Yay, on this day in 1970, pink Floyd's Roy Hopper, kevin Ayers and the Edgar Burden Band all appeared as a I don't care. On this day in 1970, I don't care. On this day in 69, the Beatles During a session in Abbey Road. Ringo recorded his vocals for Octopus's Garden, who won the Eurovision.
Speaker 1Song Contest that's what we do a year. Oh man, I just want to know yeah Well, we'll do I mean maybe we'll do 69 next week, Maybe we'll finish up the movie.
Speaker 3We're going to do 69? I'm out, I'm out.
Speaker 1Let's see. On this day in 1966, Bobby Fuller, leader of the Bobby Fuller Four, was found dead in his car in Los Angeles. He died mysteriously from gasoline asphyxiation while parked outside his apartment. Police labeled it a suicide. But possibility of foul play has always been mentioned.
Speaker 4The bass player always suspected it might have been the Manson family Early on hired by the manager. Wow.
Speaker 2Yeah, well.
Speaker 4Worth more dead than alive.
Speaker 1Yep. On this day in 1964, the Rolling Stones appeared in the US charts for the first time with the cover of Buddy Holly's Not Fade Away. They peaked at number 48. On this day in 64, the Four Se seasons started the two-week run at number one with ragdoll. On this day in 1960, brenda lee went to number one in the us single charts with I'm sorry.
Speaker 1On this day in 1953, truck driver elvis presley made his first ever recording when he was paid three dollars and 98 cents at the memphis recording service singing two songs my happiness, and that's when your heartaches begin. The so-called vanity disc was a gift for his mother. It would surface 37 years later as part of an rca compliment uh compilation called elvis the great, the great performances. I'm born on this day, july 18th. Let's see, I don't care about that guy. Jack Irons. Jack Irons, drummer, worked with Pearl Jam, red Hot Chili Peppers and Joe Strummer. Let me see, born on this day in 19. I'll just say 1957, 1955. Terry Chambers, drummer with the English group XTC Muttonchops, born on this day in 1954, ricky Skaggs, country singer, born on this day in 1950, glenn Hughes. Do you know who Glenn Hughes is? Oh, yeah, deep Purple. Nope, as far away from Deep Purple as you can get. There's two glenn hughes, two glenn hughes.
Speaker 3Yeah, this guy was uh, he was with the village people oh, is he the motorcycle guy uh, they don't say let me see the group's you know what lou that could have been glenn hughes, because he was kind of like that okay, guys, guys, who was your?
Speaker 1favorite Village person. I always thought the construction dude was the coolest. I always thought there was something wrong with the leather guy, though I was like why is he? What is that? They pulled off one of the best bait and switches in the history of music. Why bait and switch? Because nobody knew they were gay when the first album came out, are you sure?
Speaker 4Are you sure?
Speaker 1I'm absolutely positive. When the first album came out, you knew what. Leather Daddy was. Come on, I'm telling you when the first album came out. Listen to the song San Francisco. It's a fucking good song, it really is a good song. They had really good you know. Uh, it was good pop music.
Speaker 3It was real dancey, but it was heavy I can attest to that because, lou you know, I grew up in a religious household. So when they came out they were like kind of this new thing and they were on a lot of the talk shows and my parents would watch it. Then it was discovered oh, and my church said do not listen to him and my you know, father, he never really went with the church.
Speaker 3He kind of did his own thing. But what I used to say to my dad was but wasn't the music good? Some of their music was really good.
Speaker 1But you listen to the lyrics and then you get it. You listen to the lyrics, then you get it. But San Francisco, listen to them by the Village People. Really good song. Do you remember the?
Speaker 3SNL parody I remember the Wayne's World parody.
Speaker 4SNL did a parody. It's hysterical. The song is called Bend Over Chuck Berry, but they cast it. They cast it really dead.
Speaker 1Born in the state of 1941.
Speaker 4Did you know that in the World Trade Center, when it went down, the Falling man is the brother of? I think it's the uh, the cowboy one that he's a?
Speaker 1they confirm he's one of the brother of one of the village people I saw the cowboy uh at the uh, he was at a comic-con and he like had a table. You know, he fucking guy looks the same, looks the same well, didn't?
Speaker 4one of them was allegedly the grease man. What was that? The guy that had a radio show? I'm the Greaseman, the Greaseman.
Speaker 3I'm the.
Speaker 4Greaseman yeah. Rumor has it, he was a village person.
Speaker 1You know the village people. Originally there was like eight of them or nine of them and they eliminated. They got it down to like whatever. There was six of them, I think, but originally there was like eight or nine of them. Wow, that's a lot. Born in this day in 1941, martha Reeves. Born in this day in 1941,.
Speaker 1Lonnie Mack oh great guitarist Yep great guitarist, and let's see Born in this day in 1939, dion DiMucci. Not to be confused with the great wrestler Dominic DiMucci, bruno Sabastino's fucking Italian tag team partner. Let's see Born in this, the state of 1938 Ian Stewart. You know who, ian?
Speaker 4Stewart was yeah, he was a Rolling Stone. He was too ugly to be one.
Speaker 1Yeah, let's see. Stewart died of a heart attack in his doctor's Harley Street waiting room. Jesus Christ, that sucks.
Speaker 4Yeah, that's like the guy that got hit with the. Who was the guy that got hit with the bail-out. Hay you were talking about one time. Oh yeah, Poor son of a bitch man.
Speaker 1Born on a day in 1929, screaming Jay Hawkins.
Speaker 4He's a crazy man.
Speaker 1He was great, Yep yep, have you ever seen his videos? I have. I put a spell on you guys. Fucking terrifying, yeah, exactly, yeah, uh. And finally born this day in 1913, deke watson from the ink spots. In 1939, they recorded the version of if I didn't care, which became the 10th best-selling single of all time, with over 19 million copies sold, making it one, making it one of the fewer than 40 all-time singles to have sold 10 million or more physical copies worldwide. Deke Watson died on November 4th 1969. And, gentlemen, that is that.
Speaker 3Scott, I got to tell you something. I've been up since 4 am this morning. Oh my God, you kept me awake. You did great. I have not slept since 4 am. God, dude, go to morning. You kept me awake, you did great. I have not slept since 4 am the life of an insomniac, but you did it good, you kept me going.
Thank You for Watching Podcast Show
Speaker 1Thank you, I'll make this fast for you. Alright, everybody, thank you for watching. Thank you for listening. If you like it, share it. If you didn't like it, well, thanks for watching for 2 hours and 14 minutes. As I always say, you are the engine that runs the machine. Without you, it would just be me talking to these two guys. And, by the way, gentlemen, as I always say, thank you for your time, thank you for your knowledge, but, most of all, I really thank you for your friendship. You're a huge asset to this podcast.
Speaker 3Thank you for your phone calls. I hope you didn't call Lou this week, lou doesn't take my calls.
Speaker 4I haven't spoken to him not until the election's over anyway.
Speaker 1No, I'm only kidding, I know you are.
Speaker 4I was trying to look, I was trying to look presidential tonight.
Speaker 3Well you look very presidential.
Speaker 1well, mr Stipe, you look very good, you look like you're ready for a comeback and, as I always say, doing this show for you, to quote my favorite artist, morrissey, the pleasure, the privilege is mine and we will see you guys next week. Thank you, patty, she loved the show. Thank you, yeah, and yeah, I'm trying to find the area to page 72.
Speaker 3Skylar.