You'll never know. :)
Type: Posts; User: Sotosound
You'll never know. :)
IIRC he wrote the song to explain poetry to his son.
For me, it's the song that I often played inside my head when I was in a bad relationship that I needed to get out of. The lyrics gave me hope,...
Once I found out the song title and saw the start of the interview, I switched to watching something else.
It seems that Adam Reader must have had an extremely long interview session with this...
Many thanks for the correction.
Mr T2 did the mixing. Mr T3 is somewhere around these parts and might stick his hand up to identify himself. :)
In 1974, UK Tamla Motown issued The Supremes Featuring Mary Wilson "Greatest Hits", STMR 9010.
It had 15 tracks and included their biggest duets with Four Tops.
It opened with "Up The Ladder To...
Oo-er! I was sure that I'd seen seen a US Four Tops comp on fleabay with the UK cover. Many thanks for correcting this.
And ...... it's Dutch! It has the UK cover and the US track list.
...
I would say yes and yes.
Stevie Wonder's first Greatest Hits LP in the UK was a 16-tracker and, sadly, the mono version [[which I have) was a fold-down of the stereo release.
IIRC, Four Tops...
The shame is that you can only make one reputational comment regarding any given member until after you have also made a reputational comment about another member.
This means that if you like two...
Part of the long-term appeal is that the music isn't gimmicky. Instead, it's straight forward danceable, sing-able, and whistle-able music.
It's also not linked to any specific type of formal...
I'd always heard it as a nod towards disco, as whistleblowing was the disco thing for a couple of months back then.
Given the name of your cat, should this event go down in history as Goldfish-gate?
Perhaps Paper Lace could also issue a single about this to end their "one hit wonder" status in the USA....
Possibly slightly borrowed from "Message To Michael" by Dionne Warwick?
"Who's Lovin' You" by the Jackson Five.
Understated, bluesy, jazzy, and cool.
And then in comes Michael, who carries the theme forward in a glorious manner.
Gotta be the 7" mono mix for full...
Here: -
...
Tap on the photo on this from ebay UK.
...
Two favourites of mine, one for technical skills and the other just because I love it are: -
1) You Keep Me Hangin' On - The Supremes
OK, the intro is twin guitars playing an octave apart and...
I initially drafted a long post about how early 1970s Motown arrangements and mixing didn't really work for my ears but, to cut a long story short, YWSSL has an arrangement that has too many stops...
I've always liked "You Can Do Magic". [[Got the single.) It's a really catchy and dance-able track.
It picks up a lot of elements from the best 1960s dance-able pop a la "98.6" etc., throws in a...
Lol.
You don't have to listen to his music.
I like some of his music but not all of it.
An example of a track that I really like is "How Did She Get Here" from Something's Goin' On. If you...
My UK Tamla Motown pressing from the early 1980s has that issue.
I'd never looked that closely at the label.
Good spot! :)
In the UK we got the unreleased single mix of "Smiling Faces Sometimes" released with "Mother Nature" as the B-side. It didn't sell, however, possibly apart from to me at a discounted price. :)
It got covered by The Pearls, who charted with it IIRC. The original was a staple for my wedding gigs if the bride and groom were leaving before the end.
All the guests would form an arch through...
The original UK single contained an edit, and faded before the end of 'part 1'.
A subsequent reissue in the late 70s [[IIRC) ran up until the end of part 1 with the dead stop and, tbh, I've never...
But very few that had more than one or two hits.
TBH, I'm not a big fan of Nick Ashford's singing voice. To my ears, it's ok but not outstanding.
IMO Valerie Simpson, however, is a classy and...