Songs You May Have Missed #705

Stephen Moore: “Marvin” (1981)

For those not familiar with Douglas Adams’ HItchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, some explaining is in order on this one.

In the fictional book series, radio drama, TV series and movie, Marvin is a robot starship crew member who has been programmed with a human personality.

Unfortunately, Marvin is chronically depressed and bored with the mundane tasks he’s routinely asked to perform. Marvin claims to be 50,000 times more intelligient than a human, yet, as his song laments, “they make me pick the paper off the floor”.

Stephen Moore, who voiced Marvin in the British radio and TV series, released the single “Marvin” in 1981, and it reached number 52 in the British pop charts.

Aside from play on the Dr. Demento show, the song had basically zero exposure in America. And that’s exactly where I came across it, around 1985, and recorded it to a long lost cassette from the boombox beside my bed.

I'm just a robot and I know my place 
A metal servant to the human race 
I work my can off trying to satisfy 
I know they'll disconnect me by and by. 

Chip on my shoulder made of silicon 
My printed circuit's like a lexicon 
Ten billion logic functions, maybe more 
They make me pick the paper off the floor. 

Solitary solenoid 
Terminally paranoid 
Marvin 

Know what makes me really mad 
They clean me with a Brillo Pad 
A carwash wouldn't be so bad 
Life! Don't talk to me about life. 

I'm so depressed I could expectorate 
My moving parts are in a solid state 
I want to rust in peace, switch off and lie 
In that great junk yard in the sky. 

Solitary solenoid 
Terminally paranoid 
Marvin 

Nothing left to be enjoyed 
Every diode rheumatoid 
Marvin 

Outer alloy Inner void 
Marvin 

Happiness has been destroyed.

‘Fragile’ at 50: Steve Howe Tells the Story Behind Yes‘s Landmark Album

Getty Images/Michael Putland

(via Guitar Player) by Joe Bosso

There was no such thing as progressive rock, explains Howe. It was just that their sound needed a bigger canvas.

Steve Howe has no idea where the term progressive rock came from, but he makes one thing clear: It certainly didn’t start with him. “I never called us ‘progressive rock’ or ‘prog-rock,’” he says. “As I recall, when I first joined Yes, we all used to call our music different things. 

“There was ‘orchestral rock’ and ‘cinemagraphic rock.’ We never argued about it, but there were a lot of names and terms being tossed about.” So what term did he use to describe Yes’s music? 

Howe laughs. “I often called it ‘soft rock,’” he says. “I thought what I wrote was a sort of soft rock, but the phrase didn’t catch on, at least not with what we were doing. But progressive rock? Where that got started, I don’t know. I think it might have come after the fact.”  

Read more: https://www.guitarplayer.com/players/fragile-at-50-steve-howe-tells-the-story-behind-yess-landmark-album

How a Car Accident Began a Run of Bad Luck For Robert Plant

(via Ultimate Classic Rock) by Michael Gallucci

Robert Plant and his family were vacationing on Aug. 4, 1975 in Rhodes, Greece, when the car he was driving spun off the road and crashed. It was the first in a string of bad luck moments for the Led Zeppelin singer.

The band was on a short break and in between tour dates when Plant, along with his wife and children, took a trip to the Greek island of Rhodes. They rented a car, which Plant lost control of and crashed. The accident left Plant and his wife Maureen injured; his kids escaped with just a few bruises…

Read More: How a Car Accident Began a Run of Bad Luck For Robert Plant | https://ultimateclassicrock.com/robert-plant-car-accident/?utm_source=tsmclip&utm_medium=referral

Songs You May Have Missed #704

Steriogram: “Go” (2004)

Another delightful pop nugget from New Zealand’s answer to Sum 41, Weezer, Beastie Boys, Nirvana and more.

Tyson Kennedy’s rap overlapping Brad Carter’s singing, backed by some tasty riffage makes for a winning formula. This band–and this gloriously ebullient album–should have been big.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2018/12/29/songs-you-may-have-missed-632/

Songs You May Have Missed #703

Max Romeo & The Upsetters: “War Ina Babylon” (1976)

Jamaican Max Romeo was known for making rather lightweight, if at times racy, pop which performed well in both Jamaican and UK charts in the late 60’s.

But when he paired with Lee “Scratch” Perry’s studio band the Upsetters for the 1976 release War Ina Babylon he brought the goods. The religious and politically-themed album is widely acknowledged not only as Romeo’s best work but a classic of the reggae genre, and its title song, which describes the tense mood around the Jamaican election of 1972, is a highlight.

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