Sunday, January 24, 2010

Songs of the Day

Here are three great songs from the late 60's/early 70's.


"Expressway To Your Heart" by the Soul Survivors




The Ides of March started as a group of neighborhood kids from Berwyn Illinois.  They worked their way up through Chicago and the region before hitting it big.  After the Ides broke up in the early 70's, lead singer/songwriter Jim Peterik wrote and played in the Chicago area before forming his next group, Survivor.  Even while writing songs for Survivor ("Eye of the Tiger", "I Can't Hold Back", "The Search Is Over", "Burning Heart", "Is This Love") he wrote hits for .38 Special ("Hold On Loosely", "Caught Up In You", "Fantasy Girl").  Like the Blues Brothers, he "got the band back together" and now plays with the original Ides of March.  Here they are performing "Vehicle".




Finally we have the Phil Spector song that isn't.  After Phil Spector's run of hits ("Da Doo Run Run", "Be My Baby", "Then He Kissed Me", "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'") in the early/mid 60's, a spate of "Wall of Sound" imitators cropped up.  Some learned at the hand of the master (Bill Medley, of The Righteous Brothers, produced their soundalike hit "Soul and Inspiration"), others succeeded by trial and error.  So many tried, in fact, that a series of cds was later released that consisted only of Phil Spector soundalikes (called "Phil's Spectre" OneTwo, and Three).  The most famous Spector soundalike, however, does not appear on any of those compilations.  It is The Walker Brothers hit, "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore".

 

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