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AC/DC You Shook Me All Night Long Adele Rolling in the Deep Al Green
AC/DC You Shook Me All Night Long Adele Rolling in the Deep Al Green Let's Stay Together Alabama Dixieland Delight Alan Jackson It's Five O'Clock Somewhere Alex Claire Too Close Alice in Chains No Excuses America Lonely People Sister Golden Hair American Authors The Best Day of My Life Avicii Hey Brother Bad Company Feel Like Making Love Can't Get Enough of Your Love Bastille Pompeii Ben Harper Steal My Kisses Bill Withers Ain't No Sunshine Lean on Me Billy Joel You May Be Right Don't Ask Me Why Just the Way You Are Only the Good Die Young Still Rock and Roll to Me Captain Jack Blake Shelton Boys 'Round Here God Gave Me You Bob Dylan Tangled Up in Blue The Man in Me To Make You Feel My Love You Belong to Me Knocking on Heaven's Door Don't Think Twice Bob Marley and the Wailers One Love Three Little Birds Bob Seger Old Time Rock & Roll Night Moves Turn the Page Bobby Darin Beyond the Sea Bon Jovi Dead or Alive Living on a Prayer You Give Love a Bad Name Brad Paisley She's Everything Bruce Springsteen Glory Days Bruno Mars Locked Out of Heaven Marry You Treasure Bryan Adams Summer of '69 Cat Stevens Wild World If You Want to Sing Out CCR Bad Moon Rising Down on the Corner Have You Ever Seen the Rain Looking Out My Backdoor Midnight Special Cee Lo Green Forget You Charlie Pride Kiss an Angel Good Morning Cheap Trick I Want You to Want Me Christina Perri A Thousand Years Counting Crows Mr. -
15 of the Most Iconic Fads from the Fifties
15 of the most iconic fads from the fifties: Car hops were THE way to get your hamburger and milkshake Hula hoops DA haircuts—yup, it stands for duck’s ass—the hair was slicked back along the sides of the head Poodle skirts are one of the most iconic fashion fads of the fifties. Invented by fashion designer Juli Lynne Charlot. Sock hops were informal dances usually held in high school gymnasiums, featuring the new Devil’s music—rock ‘n roll Saddle shoes, These casual Oxford shoes have a saddle-shaped decorative panel in the middle. Coonskin caps a major craze among young boys - a tribute to boyhood heroes of the era like Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone. Telephone booth stuffing ; college students crammed themselves into a phone booth. Drive-in movies capitalized on a fortuitous merging of the booming car culture Letterman jackets and letter sweaters: high school/college girls wanted to show off they were dating a jock. Conical bras Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, and Jane Russell were largely responsible for igniting the fad. Cateye glasses:the accessory of choice for many young women. Jell-O molds people took a serious interest in encapsulating various foods in gelatin. Fuzzy dice During WWII, fighter pilots hung them in their cockpits for good luck. Sideburns: a classic element of the greaser look, along with DA haircuts, bomber jackets, and fitted T-shirts with sleeves rolled up, Weeks Reached #1 Artist Single @ #1 7-Jan-50 Gene Autry "Rudolph, The Red-nosed Reindeer" 1 14-Jan-50 The Andrews Sisters "I Can Dream, Can't I" 4 11-Feb-50 -
4 Non Blondes What's up Abba Medley Mama
4 Non Blondes What's Up Abba Medley Mama Mia, Waterloo Abba Does Your Mother Know Adam Lambert Soaked Adam Lambert What Do You Want From Me Adele Million Years Ago Adele Someone Like You Adele Skyfall Adele Turning Tables Adele Love Song Adele Make You Feel My Love Aladdin A Whole New World Alan Silvestri Forrest Gump Alanis Morissette Ironic Alex Clare I won't Let You Down Alice Cooper Poison Amy MacDonald This Is The Life Amy Winehouse Valerie Andreas Bourani Auf Uns Andreas Gabalier Amoi seng ma uns wieder AnnenMayKantenreit Barfuß am Klavier AnnenMayKantenreit Oft Gefragt Audrey Hepburn Moonriver Avicii Addicted To You Avicii The Nights Axwell Ingrosso More Than You Know Barry Manilow When Will I Hold You Again Bastille Pompeii Bastille Weight Of Living Pt2 BeeGees How Deep Is Your Love Beatles Lady Madonna Beatles Something Beatles Michelle Beatles Blackbird Beatles All My Loving Beatles Can't Buy Me Love Beatles Hey Jude Beatles Yesterday Beatles And I Love Her Beatles Help Beatles Let It Be Beatles You've Got To Hide Your Love Away Ben E King Stand By Me Bill Withers Just The Two Of Us Bill Withers Ain't No Sunshine Billy Joel Piano Man Billy Joel Honesty Billy Joel Souvenier Billy Joel She's Always A Woman Billy Joel She's Got a Way Billy Joel Captain Jack Billy Joel Vienna Billy Joel My Life Billy Joel Only The Good Die Young Billy Joel Just The Way You Are Billy Joel New York State Of Mind Birdy Skinny Love Birdy People Help The People Birdy Words as a Weapon Bob Marley Redemption Song Bob Dylan Knocking On Heaven's Door Bodo -
Summach, the Structure, Function, and Genesis of the Prechorus
Volume 17, Number 3, October 2011 Copyright © 2011 Society for Music Theory The Structure, Function, and Genesis of the Prechorus (1) Jay Summach NOTE: The examples for the (text-only) PDF version of this item are available online at: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.11.17.3/mto.11.17.3.summach.php KEYWORDS: popular music, rock music, form, prechorus, sentence, srdc ABSTRACT: Prechoruses emerged in the mid-1960s as verse-chorus and strophic forms converged upon a four-part formal disposition that Everett (1999) calls “statement, restatement, departure, and conclusion,” or srdc. This study traces the expansion of the srdc scheme from its compact deployment in strophes to expanded iterations that approximate verse- chorus form. Received February 2011 [1] This article examines an episode in the evolution of verse-chorus form in pop/rock music. Until the mid-1960s, most verse-chorus songs alternated between the two formal sections from which verse-chorus form takes its name: verses and choruses. Example 1, Mark Dinning’s “Teen Angel,” illustrates the form.(2) As is typical for verse-chorus songs, the focal point of “Teen Angel” is the chorus: it contains the most engaging musical material; its unchanging lyric makes it easy to remember; and it is marked for special attention by additional vocal and instrumental parts. The verses, on the other hand, provide context: each verse advances the song narrative by presenting fresh lyrics; and the music is more modest in instrumentation and intensity so as not to steal attention from the chorus. In “Teen Angel,” the tempo is treated flexibly during the verses, which further distinguishes them from the choruses. -
Marvin Gaye As Vocal Composer 63 Andrew Flory
Sounding Out Pop Analytical Essays in Popular Music Edited by Mark Spicer and John Covach The University of Michigan Press • Ann Arbor Copyright © by the University of Michigan 2010 All rights reserved Published in the United States of America by The University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America c Printed on acid-free paper 2013 2012 2011 2010 4321 No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sounding out pop : analytical essays in popular music / edited by Mark Spicer and John Covach. p. cm. — (Tracking pop) Includes index. ISBN 978-0-472-11505-1 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-472-03400-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Popular music—History and criticism. 2. Popular music— Analysis, appreciation. I. Spicer, Mark Stuart. II. Covach, John Rudolph. ML3470.S635 2010 781.64—dc22 2009050341 Contents Preface vii Acknowledgments xi 1 Leiber and Stoller, the Coasters, and the “Dramatic AABA” Form 1 john covach 2 “Only the Lonely” Roy Orbison’s Sweet West Texas Style 18 albin zak 3 Ego and Alter Ego Artistic Interaction between Bob Dylan and Roger McGuinn 42 james grier 4 Marvin Gaye as Vocal Composer 63 andrew flory 5 A Study of Maximally Smooth Voice Leading in the Mid-1970s Music of Genesis 99 kevin holm-hudson 6 “Reggatta de Blanc” Analyzing -
Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 500 Songs
Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 500 Songs No. Interpret Title Year of release 1. Bob Dylan Like a Rolling Stone 1961 2. The Rolling Stones Satisfaction 1965 3. John Lennon Imagine 1971 4. Marvin Gaye What’s Going on 1971 5. Aretha Franklin Respect 1967 6. The Beach Boys Good Vibrations 1966 7. Chuck Berry Johnny B. Goode 1958 8. The Beatles Hey Jude 1968 9. Nirvana Smells Like Teen Spirit 1991 10. Ray Charles What'd I Say (part 1&2) 1959 11. The Who My Generation 1965 12. Sam Cooke A Change is Gonna Come 1964 13. The Beatles Yesterday 1965 14. Bob Dylan Blowin' in the Wind 1963 15. The Clash London Calling 1980 16. The Beatles I Want zo Hold Your Hand 1963 17. Jimmy Hendrix Purple Haze 1967 18. Chuck Berry Maybellene 1955 19. Elvis Presley Hound Dog 1956 20. The Beatles Let It Be 1970 21. Bruce Springsteen Born to Run 1975 22. The Ronettes Be My Baby 1963 23. The Beatles In my Life 1965 24. The Impressions People Get Ready 1965 25. The Beach Boys God Only Knows 1966 26. The Beatles A day in a life 1967 27. Derek and the Dominos Layla 1970 28. Otis Redding Sitting on the Dock of the Bay 1968 29. The Beatles Help 1965 30. Johnny Cash I Walk the Line 1956 31. Led Zeppelin Stairway to Heaven 1971 32. The Rolling Stones Sympathy for the Devil 1968 33. Tina Turner River Deep - Mountain High 1966 34. The Righteous Brothers You've Lost that Lovin' Feelin' 1964 35. -
The Twist”—Chubby Checker (1960) Added to the National Registry: 2012 Essay by Jim Dawson (Guest Post)*
“The Twist”—Chubby Checker (1960) Added to the National Registry: 2012 Essay by Jim Dawson (guest post)* Chubby Checker Chubby Checker’s “The Twist” has the distinction of being the only non-seasonal American recording that reached the top of “Billboard’s” pop charts twice, separately. (Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas” topped the holiday tree in 1942, 1945, and 1947). “The Twist” shot to No. 1 in 1960, fell completely off the charts, then returned over a year later like a brand new single and did it all over again. Even more remarkable was that Checker’s version was a nearly note-for- note, commissioned mimicry of the original “The Twist,” written and recorded in 1958 by R&B artist Hank Ballard and released as the B-side of a love ballad. Most remarkable of all, however, is that Chubby Checker set the whole world Twisting, from Harlem clubs to the White House to Buckingham Palace, and beyond. The Twist’s movements were so rudimentary that almost everyone, regardless of their level of coordination, could maneuver through it, usually without injuring or embarrassing themselves. Like so many rhythm and blues songs, “The Twist” had a busy pedigree going back decades. In 1912, black songwriter Perry Bradford wrote “Messin’ Around,” in which he gave instructions to a new dance called the Mess Around: “Put your hands on your hips and bend your back; stand in one spot nice and tight; and twist around with all your might.” The following year, black tunesmiths Chris Smith and Jim Burris wrote “Ballin’ the Jack” for “The Darktown Follies of 1913” at Harlem’s Lafayette Theatre, in which they elaborated on the Mess Around by telling dancers, “Twist around and twist around with all your might.” The song started a Ballin’ the Jack craze that, like nearly every new Harlem dance, moved downtown to the white ballrooms and then shimmied and shook across the country. -
100 Years: a Century of Song 1950S
100 Years: A Century of Song 1950s Page 86 | 100 Years: A Century of song 1950 A Dream Is a Wish Choo’n Gum I Said my Pajamas Your Heart Makes / Teresa Brewer (and Put On My Pray’rs) Vals fra “Zampa” Tony Martin & Fran Warren Count Every Star Victor Silvester Ray Anthony I Wanna Be Loved Ain’t It Grand to Be Billy Eckstine Daddy’s Little Girl Bloomin’ Well Dead The Mills Brothers I’ll Never Be Free Lesley Sarony Kay Starr & Tennessee Daisy Bell Ernie Ford All My Love Katie Lawrence Percy Faith I’m Henery the Eighth, I Am Dear Hearts & Gentle People Any Old Iron Harry Champion Dinah Shore Harry Champion I’m Movin’ On Dearie Hank Snow Autumn Leaves Guy Lombardo (Les Feuilles Mortes) I’m Thinking Tonight Yves Montand Doing the Lambeth Walk of My Blue Eyes / Noel Gay Baldhead Chattanoogie John Byrd & His Don’t Dilly Dally on Shoe-Shine Boy Blues Jumpers the Way (My Old Man) Joe Loss (Professor Longhair) Marie Lloyd If I Knew You Were Comin’ Beloved, Be Faithful Down at the Old I’d Have Baked a Cake Russ Morgan Bull and Bush Eileen Barton Florrie Ford Beside the Seaside, If You were the Only Beside the Sea Enjoy Yourself (It’s Girl in the World Mark Sheridan Later Than You Think) George Robey Guy Lombardo Bewitched (bothered If You’ve Got the Money & bewildered) Foggy Mountain Breakdown (I’ve Got the Time) Doris Day Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs Lefty Frizzell Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo Frosty the Snowman It Isn’t Fair Jo Stafford & Gene Autry Sammy Kaye Gordon MacRae Goodnight, Irene It’s a Long Way Boiled Beef and Carrots Frank Sinatra to Tipperary -
1 Hey Jude the Beatles 1968 2 Stairway to Heaven Led Zeppelin 1971 3 Stayin' Alive Bee Gees 1978 4 YMCA Village People 1979 5
1 Hey Jude The Beatles 1968 2 Stairway To Heaven Led Zeppelin 1971 3 Stayin' Alive Bee Gees 1978 4 YMCA Village People 1979 5 (We're Gonna) Rock Around The Clock Bill Haley & His Comets 1955 6 Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? Rod Stewart 1979 7 Jailhouse Rock Elvis Presley 1957 8 (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction Rolling Stones 1965 9 Tragedy Bee Gees 1979 10 Le Freak Chic 1978 11 Macho Man Village People 1978 12 I Will Survive Gloria Gaynor 1979 13 Yesterday The Beatles 1965 14 Night Fever Bee Gees 1978 15 Fire Pointer Sisters 1979 16 I Want To Hold Your Hand The Beatles 1964 17 Shake Your Groove Thing Peaches & Herb 1979 18 Hound Dog Elvis Presley 1956 19 Heartbreak Hotel Elvis Presley 1956 20 The Twist Chubby Checker 1960 21 Johnny B. Goode Chuck Berry 1958 22 Too Much Heaven Bee Gees 1979 23 Last Dance Donna Summer 1978 24 American Pie Don McLean 1972 25 Heaven Knows Donna Summer & Brooklyn Dreams 1979 26 Mack The Knife Bobby Darin 1959 27 Peggy Sue Buddy Holly 1957 28 Grease Frankie Valli 1978 29 Love Me Tender Elvis Presley 1956 30 Soul Man Blues Brothers 1979 31 You Really Got Me The Kinks 1964 32 Hot Blooded Foreigner 1978 33 She Loves You The Beatles 1964 34 Layla Derek & The Dominos 1972 35 September Earth, Wind & Fire 1979 36 Don't Be Cruel Elvis Presley 1956 37 Blueberry Hill Fats Domino 1956 38 Jumpin' Jack Flash Rolling Stones 1968 39 Copacabana (At The Copa) Barry Manilow 1978 40 Shadow Dancing Andy Gibb 1978 41 Evergreen (Love Theme From "A Star Is Born") Barbra Streisand 1977 42 Miss You Rolling Stones 1978 43 Mandy Barry Manilow 1975 -
The 2015 Grooveyard Great 88 Results
THE 2015 GROOVEYARD GREAT 88 RESULTS 2015 2014 2015 2014 1 In the Still of the Night - Five Satins (1956) 18 25 Poetry in Motion - Johnny Tillotson (1960) F 2 Oh What a Night - Dells (1956) 9 26 Everyday - Buddy Holly (1957) F 3 The Lion Sleeps Tonight - Tokens (1961) 67 27 Whispering Bells - Dell-Vikings (1957) F 4 Summertime Blues - Eddie Cochran (1958) 55 28 Tossin' and Turnin' - Bobby Lewis (1961) NF 5 I Only Have Eyes for You - Flamingos (1959) 39 29 True Love Ways - Buddy Holly (1960) F 6 Blue Moon - Marcels (1961) 6 30 Dream Lover - Bobby Darin (1959) 28 7 You Belong to Me - Duprees (1962) F 31 A Million to One - Jimmy Charles (1960) NF 8 Save the Last Dance for Me - Drifters (1960) F 32 Blueberry Hill - Fats Domino (1956) F 9 Can't Help Falling in Love - Elvis Presley (1962) 88 33 Rave On - Buddy Holly (1958) 13 10 Why Do Fools Fall in Love - Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers (1956) 29 34 Only You (and You Alone) - Platters (1955) 24 11 Quarter to Three - Gary US Bonds (1961) F 35 Shout (Parts 1 and 2) - Isley Brothers (1959) 62 12 Earth Angel - Penguins (1954) 40 36 Ain't That a Shame - Fats Domino (1955) F 13 Runaway - Del Shannon (1961) 10 37 The Twist - Chubby Checker (1960 and 1962) 27 14 Runaround Sue - Dion (1961) 86 38 Surfer Girl - Beach Boys (1963) F 15 Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel) - Roy Orbison (1960) 7 39 Mack the Knife - Bobby Darin (1959) 5 16 Since I Fell for You - Lenny Welch (1963) NF 40 It's Only Make Believe - Conway Twitty (1958) F 17 Don't Be Cruel - Elvis Presley (1956) F 41 All I Have to Do is Dream - Everly Brothers (1958) 16 18 Stand By Me - Ben E. -
The Temptations and the Four Tops
Nicole'a Macris Nicole'[email protected] 410-900-1151 For Immediate Release THE TEMPTATIONS AND THE FOUR TOPS coming to The Modell Lyric on October 26! Tickets go on sale Friday, April 26th at 10am (BalBmore, MD – April 19) The TEMPTATIONS and The FOUR TOPS together on one stage for one night only at The Modell Lyric on Saturday, October 26 at 7:30pm! THE TEMPTATIONS are notable for their success with Motown Records during the 60’s and 70’s and have sold 10’s of millions of albums, making them one of the most successful groups in music history! For over 40 years The Temptaons have prospered, with an avalanche of smash hits, and sold-out performances throughout the world! “The crowds are bigger, the sales are sizzling,” says one industry report. “The outpouring of affection for this super-group has never been greater”. Beyond their unique blend of voices and flashy wardrobe, The Temptaons became known for their sharp choreography known as “The Temptaon Walk” which became a staple of American style, flair, flash and class and one of the defining legacies of Motown Records. Millions of fans saw the Temptaons as cultural heroes. The group had thirty seven, Top 40 hits to their credit, including fi\een Top 10 hits, fi\een No 1 singles and seventeen No 1 albums spanning from the mid-1960’s to the late 80’s in addiBon to a quartet which soared to No. 1 on the R &B charts. The song Btles alone summon memories beyond measure to include; “The Way You Do The Things You Do,” “My Girl,” “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg,” “I Wish It Would Rain,” “I Can’t Get Next To You”, “Get Ready”, “Just My ImaginaDon (Running Away With Me),” “Ball of Confusion”, “Papa Was A Rollin’ Stone.” “Beauty is Only Skin Deep”, “Cloud Nine,” “Psychedelic Shack”, “Runaway Child”, “Since I Lost My Baby”, “Treat Her Like a Lady” to name a few…. -
Our 60'S R & B, Soul and Motown Song List the Love
Our 60's R & B, Soul and Motown Song List The Love you Save - Michael Jackson I Want you Back - Michael Jackson What Becomes of the Broken Hearted-David Ruffin Tears of a Clown - Smokey Robinson Going to a Go Go- Smokey Robinson Hey there Lonely Girl - Eddie Holeman Tracks of my Tears - Smokey Robinson Ain't no Mountain - Marvin Gaye/ Tammie Terrell Can't take my eyes off of you - Frankie Valli Bernadette - Four Tops Can't Help Myself - Four Tops Standing in the Shadows of Love - Four Tops It's the Same Old Song - Four Tops Reach Out - Four Tops Betcha By Golly Wow - Stylistics But It's Alright - J.J. Jackson You make me feel Brand New - Stylistics Stoned in Love - Stylistics You are Everything - Stylistics Dancin in the Streets - Martha and the Vandellas When a Man Loves a Woman - Percy Sledge Come see about me - Supremes Can't Hurry Love - Supremes Stop in the name of Love - Supremes You keep me Hangin on - Supremes Under the Boardwalk - Drifters Up on the Roof - Drifters Whats Goin On - Marvin Gaye You are the Sunshine - Stevie Wonder Who's Makin Love - Johnny Taylor You Send Me - Sam Cook Hold on I'm Comin - Sam & Dave Soulman - Sam & Dave Heatwave - Martha and the Vandellas I Feel Good - James Brown Get Ready - Temptations My Girl - Temptations Can't get next to you - Temptations Pap was a Rolling Stone - Temptations Cloud Nine - Temptations Just my Imagination - Temptations Phsycadelic Shack - Temptations Page Two 60's R & B, Soul and Motown Song List continued I wish it would Rain - Temptations The Way you do the things you do