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And she donβt careChicken to Ride...
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Am I the only person on this forum who has never heard of this entertainer? I have no idea of who or what, assuming music.
Nope.Does this mean I have to turn in my Hippie card?
Take a bath in patchouli oil and all is forgiven.OK, an explanation by way of personal history. Sure, I'm a product of the 60s, but I grew up in south Thurston County listening to AM Seattle radio via low grade radios, so garbled sound was normal to my experience. Couple that with a slight hearing deficiency such that I seldom could understand song lyrics. I'm almost like the person who thought "Ticket to Ride" was the Beatles singing, "She's got a chicken to ride . . ." OK, not quite that bad, but almost. If you and I talk on the phone, I'll understand about half the words you're saying. Which is one reason why I'm not a big fan of phone conversations. Couple the above with me never having subscribed to Rolling Stone or otherwise following the back stories of the rock or pop music industries. I was lucky to piece together which bands did which songs, let alone learning the names of band members. Hence some cultural illiteracy I've maintained to this day. Does this mean I have to turn in my Hippie card?
Me either Nick.Nope, you're not alone.
I consider myself fairly musically diverse and have a pretty wide knowledge of a lot of music, but I'd never heard of him either. Nor Hot Tuna for that matter.
You've been grandfathered in. You get to keep it.OK, an explanation by way of personal history. Sure, I'm a product of the 60s, but I grew up in south Thurston County listening to AM Seattle radio via low grade radios, so garbled sound was normal to my experience. Couple that with a slight hearing deficiency such that I seldom could understand song lyrics. I'm almost like the person who thought "Ticket to Ride" was the Beatles singing, "She's got a chicken to ride . . ." OK, not quite that bad, but almost. If you and I talk on the phone, I'll understand about half the words you're saying. Which is one reason why I'm not a big fan of phone conversations. Couple the above with me never having subscribed to Rolling Stone or otherwise following the back stories of the rock or pop music industries. I was lucky to piece together which bands did which songs, let alone learning the names of band members. Hence some cultural illiteracy I've maintained to this day. Does this mean I have to turn in my Hippie card?
The Kingsmen, βLouie , LouieβOK, an explanation by way of personal history. Sure, I'm a product of the 60s, but I grew up in south Thurston County listening to AM Seattle radio via low grade radios, so garbled sound was normal to my experience. Couple that with a slight hearing deficiency such that I seldom could understand song lyrics. I'm almost like the person who thought "Ticket to Ride" was the Beatles singing, "She's got a chicken to ride . . ." OK, not quite that bad, but almost. If you and I talk on the phone, I'll understand about half the words you're saying. Which is one reason why I'm not a big fan of phone conversations. Couple the above with me never having subscribed to Rolling Stone or otherwise following the back stories of the rock or pop music industries. I was lucky to piece together which bands did which songs, let alone learning the names of band members. Hence some cultural illiteracy I've maintained to this day. Does this mean I have to turn in my Hippie card?
Jack Brown Ely of the Kingsmen sang a cover of βLouie Louieβ that was released in 1963. Jack had some oral surgery at the dentist the morning before a recording time spot became availableβ¦ yes the radio signal was strong but Am radio and jacks novocaine added to the garbled factors. I first heard it on a juke box at our small town bowling alley. I was just 10. We all got our understanding of the lyrics wrong on a lot of songs back then, Salmo_gβ¦OK, an explanation by way of personal history. Sure, I'm a product of the 60s, but I grew up in south Thurston County listening to AM Seattle radio via low grade radios, so garbled sound was normal to my experience. Couple that with a slight hearing deficiency such that I seldom could understand song lyrics. I'm almost like the person who thought "Ticket to Ride" was the Beatles singing, "She's got a chicken to ride . . ." OK, not quite that bad, but almost. If you and I talk on the phone, I'll understand about half the words you're saying. Which is one reason why I'm not a big fan of phone conversations. Couple the above with me never having subscribed to Rolling Stone or otherwise following the back stories of the rock or pop music industries. I was lucky to piece together which bands did which songs, let alone learning the names of band members. Hence some cultural illiteracy I've maintained to this day. Does this mean I have to turn in my Hippie card?
The Kingsmen, βLouie , Louieβ
Good time to start.Nope, you're not alone.
I consider myself fairly musically diverse and have a pretty wide knowledge of a lot of music, but I'd never heard of him either. Nor Hot Tuna for that matter.
Heard about the so-called "Typewriter Tape" a couple of years ago. It got released last year. Here's one of the cuts (recorded in 1964):BTW, somewhere these exists a tape recording of Jorma on guitar and Janis Joplin singing in some coffee shop in the Bay Area. Just sitting around and riffing on the Blues well before they were in bands.
Reading hereβ¦Gee itβs good that oldey but goody timers consistently avoid reverse agism here. I am so proud.Good time to start.![]()