Candy (Sugar Shoppe)



This mediocre confection has been swirling in my head for weeks, but only, oddly, in the afternoon hours, and so it has disqualified itself from entry in the blog. Finally, I woke with it, and now, you are merrily subjected to its sickeningly sweet incestuous entendres:

Marcia:
Candy, cherry lollipop now. Sugar, candy never stop now.
Greg:
I wanna take you to my sugar shoppe, so come on.
I wanna give you all the love I got, so come on.

Cindy:
Sippin' milkshakes in the hot sun/come on sugar, gotta give me some.

Artist: The Brady Bunch
Year: circa 1973
Rating: Warm

Break It on the Kitchen Floor



Wow! Amy Miles doesn't even have a wiki page, that's how goddamned indie she is! And the album this song comes from, Dirty Stay Out, is out of print. Amber and Scott saw her open for They Might Be Giants a few years ago, and voila, she's become part of my mental soundtrack. Emotionally raw, spare, and vocally melodic, I think you'll enjoy her.

Artist: Amy Miles
Year: 2002
Rating: Luke Hot

Just the Two of Us



Wow. Not a song I would usually associate with my mental soundtrack, but here it is, in its sappy sweet ode to dyadic love! Sadly, the memorable Bill Withers vocal seems unavailable online. But the video here is Grover Washington, Jr., the composer, on sax, and Zach Sanders on vocals, who does a very nice job.

Artist: Grover Washington, Jr. and Bill Withers
Year: 1981
Rating: Warm

Kiss On My List



Heard this twice on the jukebox at a bar last night. Let's say there are reasons I woke up with this song front and center in my mind.

Artist: Hall & Oates
Year: 1980
Rating: Warm

Dreams



"Dreams of loneliness like a heartbeat drives you mad
In the stillness of remembering what you had, and what you lost..."


Probably some of the most lovely and mournful pop lyrics ever. Second F-M song to float through the brain this month.

Artist: Fleetwood Mac
Year: 1977
Rating: Hot!

Walking on a Thin Line



Huey Lewis attempts and misses when trying to get "serious" about the Vietnam war. The song is melodically easy on the ears, but he was lyrically and musically bested a year previous by fellow commercial pop master Billy Joel on Goodnight, Saigon.

Artist: Huey Lewis and the News
Year: 1983
Rating: Lukewarm

A Chicken with Its Head Cut Off



This amateur video is really stupid and kind of hilarious, but I absolutely adore the song.

Artist: Magnetic Fields
Year: 1999
Rating: Hot!

No Rain

Video here.

When this satisfyingly poppy ditty came into my head the other day, I got out my guitar and decided to play it. (I have time to do this since I'm still unemployed.) The lines:

"I just want some one to say to me
I'll always be there when you wake
Ya know I'd like to keep my cheeks dry today
So stay with me and I'll have it made "


...are always affecting. And o-o-o-oh, it's a super-fun song to sing.

Artist: Blind Melon
Year: 1992
Rating: Luke Hot
Note: R.I.P. Shannon Hoon.

Mama's Family Theme



The Mama's Family theme is one of those TV tunes that have lingered in my consciousness for the last twenty years. I remember the show fondly, but the details have obscured over the years. I suspect it's one of those shows that I liked as a kid, 'cause I was a lot less discerning about my comedy. Though the star-studded cast of Carol Burnett players and to-be-Golden Girls (this show predated G2 by a couple years) speaks to a possible DVD revival in my future.

Artist: Peter Matz (composer)
Year: 1983
Rating: Warm

Earworms


Stephen King, the legendary horror auteur, has a recurring column in Entertainment Weekly, and he's gotten on the songs-in-my-head bandwagon. In a recent column, he laments what he calls earworms and claims, among other things, that ABBA seems to be the band responsible for the most infectious songs in our collective heads.

But now that my attention has been drawn to this "earworm" concept, I feel so terribly behind the times. There's even a Wikipedia page about it. This phenomenon is also referred to as the "cognitive itch" which was coined by James Kellaris of the University of Cincinnati in his 2001 consumer psychology study on tunes that won't get out of our heads.

I knew I wasn't the first one to come up with this concept of logging the random songs lodged in the brain. When I started this project, I found a handful of other bloggers who have made some similar efforts. There's an excellent blog still active that's been up since 2006, written by New York journalist Holly Hughes. You can keep up with her mental soundtrack at The Song in My Head Today. She's a great writer, and draws from her love of influential artists like Big Star and Nick Lowe, but appreciates smooth cheese like Hall & Oates, which of course endears me to her even more.

The annals of earworm blogs unfortunately are also filled with the corpses of blogs gone by. Of note there was
brianssongs.blogspot.com which was updated during 2007-2008. I like the author's critical style and tastes. There was also mentaljukebox.blogspot.com which picked themes and then blogged about the songs that fit into the themes - good popculty fun, published in 2006. There are also plenty of other one-off entries about songs-stuck-in-various-heads within blogs that cover other subject matter as well. I will do my best to keep up the project and therefore keep forcing my arbitrary musical mind-bugs into your skulls for as long as humanly possible. Thanks for reading!

Here are some related earworm articles:

Top 10 Songs in Your Head
BBC article on the Kellaris study
Interview with Daniel Levitin of McGill University

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Earworm drawing by Smynx user JamesD
Song Stuck in my Head image by Sam Brown at explodingdog.com