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Blast from the Past - 60's, 70's, 80's Music (2021)

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16 hours ago, bannork said:

With your roots in Der Fatherland Tippers, you must feel a particular affinity for German bands seeking an identity post WW2.

Nah.  Pre-war was the best, LOL.  Nothing like tooling along the Reichsautobahn in your sleek Benz roadster whilst listening to some kick-ar$e orchestral delights.  I'll take anything featuring an accordion.  :neus:

 

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The Seeds with It's A Hard Life off of their '65 self-titled debut.
 

 

The Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation with Downhearted off of their '70 Remains To Be Heard LP.

 

 

Herman's Hermits with Dandy off of their '67 There's A Kind Of Hush All Over The World LP.
 

 

Take yer pick.  The Kinks with Dandy off of their '66 Face To Face LP.
 

 

In case anyone was thinking I was joking about the accordion.

Paul McCartney live with We Can Work it Out off of his '91 Unplugged (The Official Bootleg) release.
 

 

The Who with Squeeze Box off of their '75 The Who By Numbers LP.
 

 

The Band with When I Paint My Masterpiece off of their '70 Cahoots LP.
 

 

The Young Rascals with How Can I Be Sure off of their '67 Groovin' LP.
 

 

The Rolling Stones with Back Street Girl off of their '67 Between The Buttons album.

 

 

Bruce Springsteen with 4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy) off of his '73 The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle LP.

 

 

Can't forget this classic . . . 
 

 

Russell Morris with his '69 Aussie hit The Real Thing.
 

 

Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters with the original Cry Baby, the title track off of their '63 album.
 

 

Some easy listening music on a lazy Saturday afternoon.

 

Linda Lyndell posing in front of one of the all-time classic muscle cars with her '68 A-side single What A Man.

 

 

5 minutes ago, jvs said:

Some easy listening music on a lazy Saturday afternoon.

 

My mum liked her Those Were The Days song from '68.  Perhaps due to the European feel of the tune.  Certainly, I think, because it's a bit forlorn.
 

 

The Stones ain't got nothin' on Irma Thomas' version of the '63 Jerry Ragovoy number Time Is On My Side, which was released in '64, the same as the Stones' version.
 

 

1978  When thing started going tits up in the UK.

 

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A bluesy track from probably my fave Dylan album.

 

 

Watching the Netflix Series "The Get Down" about the beginning of rap/hip hop and all the other stuff that started in the late 70s in crumbling NYC, I learned about something I always wondered about. Where did that famous "It takes two to make a thing go right" sampling come from in the 80s songs. Doing a little search I found out and also where the "Yeah! Woo!" that goes with it most of the time.

 

Lyn Collins - "Think About It" 1972  

Woo! Yeah! includes James Brown's "Woo!" and Bobby Byrd's "Yeah!" voices

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBvXBNx0lqg

 

 

 

John Phillips was born on this day, appropriately a Monday.

 

 

 

Perhaps the genesis of rock 'n' roll was Wynonie Harris' Good Rockin' Tonight recorded in '48.
 

 

Rocket 88 was a United Kingdom-based boogie-woogie band formed in the late 70s by Ian "Stu" Stewart, Charlie Watts, Alexis Korner and Dick Morrissey.  The band recorded a live album, Rocket 88 at the Rotation Club, Hanover, while on tour in Germany, in November '79. It was released in March '81.

 

Roadhouse Boogie with Charlie Watts on drums, Jack Bruce on bass, Ian Stewart on piano, and Alexis Korner on guitar.
 

 

Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated performing Hoochie Coochie Man live in Liverpool, 23rd Feb '64 for their At The Cavern album.
 

 

Robbie Basho with California Raga live in Forlì, Italy in '82.
 

 

Robbie Basho with Basket Full Of Dragons (12 String Blues) off of his '67 Basho Sings LP.

 

 

 

Jerry Garcia, Merl Saunders, John Kahn, and Bill Vitt with Dylan's Positively 4th Street off of their '73 Live At Keystone LP.
 

 

Peter Sinfield, co-founder and former lyricist of King Crimson, with Wholefood Boogie off of his '73 Stillusion LP.
 

 

The 13th Floor Elevators with Kingdom Of Heaven off of their '66 The Psychedelic Sounds Of The 13th Floor Elevators album.

 

 

Mother Earth with the title track of their '68 Living With The Animals LP.
 

 

The British hard blues band Universe with Rolling off of their '71 self-titled debut.
 

 

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