I wake up every morning with a song stuck in my head. And now it's stuck in yours.
Heaven
I think this entered my consciousness this morning, because I had the occasion to quote the tag line to the film Grand Hotel a few days ago: "People come and go. Nothing ever happens."
Great song.
Artist: Talking Heads
Year: 1979
Rating: Luke Hot
Got My Mind Set On You
I actually don't mind this song, but I fully expect some hate mail for getting what is arguably one of the most pernicious earworms of our time into many of your heads today.
A super special bonus of posting the official video here: do you recognize that guy in the arcade? He's none other than a 21 year-old Alexis Denisof of Buffy/Angel fame. When I realized this a few years ago, I nearly blew a gasket.
Also, I don't know about you, but I had NO IDEA this song was a cover! With actual lyrics! And, not surprisingly, a much more interesting orchestration and vocal performance than the far more popular 80s version. The original artist was an R&B singer named James Ray, who unfortunately died of an overdose shortly after recording the song. He was in his early 20s.
Artist (cover): George Harrison
Year: 1987
Rating: Warm
Artist (original): James Ray
Year: 1962
Rating: Warm
Tags:
'60s,
'80s,
covers,
earworms,
George Harrison,
RnB,
soul,
standard rock,
TV,
warm
Black Water
Been remiss at updating lately. Life is just too dense with the obligatory right now, including my ever-elusive battle to get to work on time every day. The other thing is that most of the songs I've been waking up with lately have been strictly due to recent exposure (hearing it on a playlist or at the grocery store, etc.) and I've, by and large, refrained from blogging about those particular songs, because, while recent exposure is clearly my number one source for earworms, that phenomenon is just less interesting to me than when a song seems spontaneously to generate from some unconscious depth or memory trigger or other more poetic means. Anyhow, the Doobs entered the neural paths a couple days ago, and I have a moment to share 'em now. These guys just hold so much nostalgic warmth for me. I love 'em. And they happen to be from my home town.
And I ain't got no worries
'Cause I ain't in no hurry at all
I'll throw a question out to you, the reader: where do your earworms come from?
Artist: The Doobie Brothers
Year: 1974
Rating: Hot!
Never
Not my favorite Heart song, but we can't choose the earworms visited upon us. That is the essential beauty and randomness of the phenomenon. One might prefer Barracuda, but one does not get served up Barracuda. Nevertheless, these ladies certainly do rock.
Artist: Heart
Year: 1985
Rating: Warm
Tags:
'80s,
Ann Wilson,
earworms,
hard rock,
Heart,
meta,
pop,
standard rock,
women artists
Believe
Bound to infiltrate your mental jukebox, too. You're welcome.
Artist: Cher
Year: 1998
Rating: Cold
Tags:
'90s,
Cher,
cold,
dance,
earworms,
electronic,
pop,
women artists
Crazy Love, Vol. II
I don't want no part of this crazy love,
I don't want no part of your love.
Artist: Paul Simon
Year: 1986
Rating: Hot!
Tags:
'80s,
earworms,
hot,
lyrics,
Paul Simon,
pop,
Simon and Garfunkel,
standard rock,
world music
Sunshine Superman
Woke with a strong sense of the melody of this song, but only a very vague sense of the lyrics and no clue about the recording artist. I found it by googling the only bit of lyric I could conjure: "when you make your mind up." Now that I'm hearing it, of course it's Donovan. I thought maybe Turtles, Small Faces, but knew I couldn't quite get a bead on it. The magical internets also tell me that Jimmy Page (then of the Yardbirds) and John Paul Jones (later also of the Yardbirds; both soon after of Zep fame) play on the track. Kind of an epic song in the rock canon, it seems, and good trivia for a future pub quiz!
Artist: Donovan
Year: 1966
Rating: Warm
This Is It ("One Day at A Time" Theme)
One of the best TV themes, hands down. Love the show. Has anyone re-watched recently? Does it hold up?
Artist: Polly Cutter (written by Jeff Barry)
Year: 1975
Rating: Hot!
Tags:
'70s,
'80s,
earworms,
hot,
theme music,
TV,
women artists
Don't Go Breaking My Heart
A song that really should be in everyone's head, all the time. I unabashedly, unironically, love it.
Enjoy the weekend!
Artist: Elton John and Kiki Dee
Year: 1976
Rating: Hawt!
Another great song from 1976!
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