The Beach Boys’ “Dance, Dance, Dance” is Brian Wilson when the stories the songs told were about the joys and tribulations of growing up.
The story of the unlikely success of Chris Rea’s “Fool If You Think It’s Over” is the stuff of a novel about trial and redemption.
The very title of Seals and Crofts “Summer Breeze” branded it, over time, as a Summer Song, even though it’s prime happened in September.
When I was a senior in high school, we had a teacher who gave us a lesson in finding happiness that still resonates today.
Pound for pound, nothing in the Motown cannon will ever top 1969’s Temptations unforgettable “I Can’t Get Next to You”.
When Atlantic records needed a single from the “Fragile” LP, they didn’t tell the band they were cutting the 8:29 album version to 3:27. Yes first heard it on the radio when traveling between gigs and they weren’t happy about it… until it became a smash hit.
“I Shot the Sheriff” was the hit single from Eric Clapton’s “461 Ocean Blvd” LP. But, for me, “Let It Grow” is the cut that never grows old.
There is beauty in simplicity. Peel back all the conflicting stories about what the lyrics in “Itchycoo Park” mean, that’s the message.
Some don’t consider “California Soul” to be a major 5th Dimension hit. But it still hooks me, every time I hear it.
At barely two minutes, Del Amitri’s 1995 smash, “Roll To Me” is a timeless tune that channels the best of the 1960s.