From Lou Christie after our Monday
post …
Thanks so much for posting this, Kent.
Thanks so much for posting this, Kent.
I really appreciate the kind words.
Lou
From FH Reader John LaPuzza,
courtesy of the Best Classic Bands website …
The
last of the original members of the Kingston
Trio, Bob Shane, died Sunday, January 26th, less than
a week before his 86th birthday. The folk singer’s death was confirmed on
Facebook by a niece, Liane Schoen Soer.
The
Kingston Trio was the most successful American folk group of the late 1950s and
’60s, placing 23 albums on the Billboard LPs chart. The first five of
those — The Kingston Trio (1958), The Kingston Trio at Large
(1959), Here We Go Again! (1959), Sold Out (1960) and String
Along (1960) — all reached #1, while another nine albums made the top 10.
The
trio, along with several other groups and individual performers such as Bob
Dylan and Joan Baez, is largely credited with helping to spark a folk music
revival during that era.
The Genesee Theatre has just
announced a concert featuring The Guess Who coming up on October 10th.
Now that’s gotta be rough …
Trying to tour as The Guess Who with
just the drummer and bass player while the voice, the heart and (wheatfield) soul
of The Guess Who are hitting the road together this year, too!
Burton Cummings and Randy Bachman
are teaming up to tour … but they can’t use The Guess Who name …
But my guess is there’s going to be
a FAR greater demand for THEIR shows than the ones featuring a Burton Cummings
sound-alike lead singer.
It’ll be interesting to see how it
all shakes out … but I know which show I’M going to!!! (kk)
I was reading your
column: Is prog rock still progressive, and is it still relevant? That question
for me is a resounding yes.
Prog is my favorite
genre of music and was for nearly 50 years.
I saw Yes in concert
least 50 times and tons of prog shows through the years. Although the shows
don't command the audience and large venues that they did in 70's, you can find
many of the shows in small and medium-sized halls, theatres and clubs (as you
find in 60's concerts these days).
The prog scene is even
more prevalent in Europe. A lot acts aren't household names, but they still
engender loyal fans and followings.
The Arcada Theater in
St Charles Illinois hosts many prog shows, I saw Yes, The Neil Morse Band,
Renaissance, The Musical Box, Yessongs, Transatlantic, District 97 and my
favorite band, Flying Colors, there.
Music-themed cruises
are so popular now, and the "Cruise To The Edge" is an annual event
that sells out every year. This year’s features 25 bands such as Yes,
Marillion, Steve Hackett, Saga, The Flower Kings, Glass Hammer, Flying Colors
(did I mention that they are my favorite band 🙃)? That and fun in the sun on the Western
Caribbean. This is going to be my first time attending and I’m going with my
buddy. My wife is not going … she has zero interest.
Admittedly, it will be
a "sausage fest" since prog has an overwhelming male audience. At
least we know what we like: odd time signatures, superb musicianship, how many
notes you can cram into 20 minute songs and weird lyrics!
I'm looking forward to
the cruise (sets sail the last week of March) reading Vesileios Yfantis' book (say
that tongue-tidying name three times).
Long live (prog) rock!
Bob Burns
Long time Forgotten Hits Reader
WmBradSpa (we just call him Brad!) found his Holy Grail of Surveys after Larry
Neal sent us that Oklahoma Chart from 1961.
(You’d think that after nearly sixty years of searching for it, it was all but a lost
cause … but we’ve pulled off some pretty incredible miracles over the course of
our 20+ years of doing Forgotten Hits … and this is definitely one of them!)
Brad was, if not one of the original
35 readers who came onboard back 1999, then certainly one of the first 50! (We had the chance to meet him in Texas about
twenty years ago after the Austin Record Show … and have stayed in touch ever
since.)
Here’s just another quick thank you
to FH and Larry Neal …
That's the one!!!
Mystery of almost six
decades finally resolved!!!!
My brother said about ten
years ago we'd never find the exact list!!!
Now I'll send it along
to him and make his day before he wakes up.
Thanks again … and
thanks to Larry as well, of course!
Brad
Our pleasure, Brad … this is one of
those Feel Good Moments! (kk)
Hey Kent,
I read the interview with Pete Best that FB sent in last
week.
Just remember, there are TWO sides to every story.
I have read many articles about the Best to Starr
transition that happened back then.
The bottom line is this:
Ringo was a more superior drummer and performer than Pete.
Both George Martin and Brian Epstein knew this … and
welcomed Ringo into the band.
In the studio, Pete had trouble playing "in the pocket,"
which Ringo could do, creatively.
Best was not a team player. He wouldn't conform to the
direction they wanted to go. He even refused to wear his hair style like the
others. He bragged that all the groupies would flock to him, and not to John,
Paul, or George.
When Ringo had his tonsils removed, Jimmy Nicol was called
in to sub for him … and not Pete Best.
Not only being a great drummer, Ringo also became "the
glue" of the band; always trying to maintain the peace between the others.
There you have it.
I'm sure there were sour grapes, but that's what happens in
this business.
-
John LaPuzza
Hey,
Kent -
Didja
notice that Lesley’s next single after “You Don’t Own Me” was “That’s The Way
Boys Are?”
One
was a feminist anthem BEFORE the feminist movement ... and the follow-up was
like, “Oh, gee, that’s how men roll, so I may as well accept it.”
Doesn’t
matter ... I liked both tunes!
-
Larry Cave
50yearsagoonthehot100.blogspot.com
I saw Lesley Gore once. It was either 1984 or
'85.
The one day festival took place in Edgerton,
Wisconsin.
The lineup included: Faron Young, Lesley
Gore, Lou Christie, Tommy James and Chuck Berry. What a
show!
I was a fan before I saw her, but had even more admiration
for her work after that day.
Phil – WRCO
Phil has also weighed in on our Bubblegum Countdown suggestion ...
I am also interested in the Bubblegum countdown. That
might be a great show for later this year.
I did one when Varese-Sarabande put out a 3-CD Bubblegum Collection
years ago.
I interviewed Jeff Katz from Kasenetz-Katz for that show.
Phil Nee – WRCO
To be honest with you, I’m still a
little borderline on the bubblegum countdown – I’m having a hard time trying to
decide exactly what to include. I was leaning more toward a Top 20 but it
sounds like the readers want more. Then
it becomes a matter of what does and doesn’t qualify.
If you include The Archies, do you
have to include The Monkees? (Why not - they now claim to be the original boy
band since they all responded to the same ad and then let management mold them
into teen idols ... precursors to N*Sync and The Backstreet Boys, decades later!)
But then I guess you also have to
include guys like Bobby Sherman, right?
Certainly his music catered to the teeny-bop set, as did David Cassidy
and The Partridge Family. And if you do
that, then what about all the other teen idols that came before them?
Jeez, even Fabian would make the list! Lol
So I’m admittedly dragging my feet a
little bit on this one looking for more clarification and definition. (Then again, if you limited it to just the Buddah
hits I don’t even know if you’d have 20!)
On the plus side I know I can get
Frank Jeckell to appear on your show – he’s an original founding member of The
1910 Fruitgum Company and we talk pretty often. And probably Jimy Sohns,
too, to talk about “Shake.” There were a
couple of members of The Ohio Express on the list, too, at one time, but I’m
not sure I still know how to get ahold of them … but it’d be cool to spice up
the countdown with some interview segments from some of the guys who were there
at the time creating all this good time music.
I’m going to keep taking feedback
from the readers on this one …
Convince me that we NEED to do it …
and how we should establish the criteria of who belongs and who doesn’t … and
we’ll see if we can’t put together some kind of countdown that we can run both
in Forgotten Hits and on Phil’s “Those Were The Days” weekend oldies show! (kk)
In my humble opinion,
I would only include songs from 1966 through 1970. Fabian and others
would be the Teen Idol era that cuts off around 1963. “Forget Him” by Bobby
Rydell would be one of the last of that time frame. That could be another
countdown!
“Sheila” by Tommy Roe
is more of a nod to Buddy Holly and the 50's ... but I feel like “Sweet Pea”
might be one of the records that christened in the dawn of the Bubblegum era.
The music that was
recorded to appeal to 13 and under in that four to five year span is what I
think should be considered.
I have seen lists that
include “Little Willy” by the Sweet … however, I feel 1973 is too late to
consider.
Bobby Sherman should be
included because of his appeal to the young tweens (win a date with Bobby in
Tiger Beat magazine, etc.). I believe the Monkees should absolutely be
included.
It could be a fun
countdown to do. Keep me posted.
Phil
What
say you, readers?
Send
me a list of songs that you feel belong … and we’ll see if we can put something
together from there. (kk)
*****
1970: January 29th – Actress Heather Graham is born