Your Hurricane Playlist

Hope you’re safely out of Sandy’s path. If you’re trapped indoors with nothing to do but watch the Weather Channel or listen to your music, here are some suggestions to help you assemble a hurricane playlist:

 
After the Storm-CSN
Ain’t No Sunshine-Bill Withers
American Storm-Bob Seger
Another Rainy Day in New York City-Chicago
Ashes, the Rain & I-James Gang
Baby the Rain Must Fall-Glenn Yarbrough
Before the Deluge-Jackson Browne
Box of Rain-Grateful Dead
Bus Stop-Hollies
Cloudburst-Jon Hendricks
Cold Rain-CSN
Cold Rain and Snow-Grateful Dead
Coloured Rain-Traffic
Come Rain or Come Shine-Sinatra
Cry Like a Rainstorm-Bonnie Raitt
Crying in the Rain-Everly Bros.
Don’t Rain on My Parade-Streisand
Earthquake and Hurricane-Tina Turner
Fire and Rain-JT
Fool in the Rain-Led Zeppelin
A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall-Dylan
Have You Ever Seen the Rain-CCR
Here’s That Rainy Day-Sinatra
Hurricane-Dylan
I Love a Rainy Night-Eddie Rabbitt
I Made it Through the Rain-Barry Manilow
I Wish it Would Rain-Temptations
I Wish it Would Rain Down-Phil Collins
It Never Rains in Southern California-Albert Hammond
It’s Raining Again-Supertramp
Kentucky Rain-Elvis
Kiss Me in the Rain-Streisand
Laughter in the Rain-Neil Sedaka
Let a Smile Be Your Umbrella-Sammy Kaye
Let it Rain-Eric Clapton
Lightning Strikes-Lou Christie
Like a Hurricane-Neil Young
Love Reign O’er Me-The Who
Mandolin Rain-Bruce Hornsby
Naked in the Rain-Crosby/Nash
November Rain-Guns n Roses
Purple Rain-Prince
Quiet Storm-Smokey Robinson
Rain-Beatles
Rain On the Roof-Lovin’ Spoonful
Rain On the Scarecrow-John Mellencamp
Rain Song-Led Zeppelin
Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head-B.J. Thomas
Raining in My Heart-Buddy Holly
Rainmaker-Traffic
Rainy Day-Jimi Hendrix
Rainy Day Blues-Lightnin’ Hopkins
Rainy Day People-Gordon Lightfoot
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35
Rainy Days and Mondays-Carpenters
Rainy Night in Georgia-Brook Benton
Rhythm of the Rain-The Cascades
Riders On the Storm-Doors
Rock You Like a Hurricane-Scorpions
Roof is Leaking-Phil Collins
See the Sky About to Rain-Neil Young
September in the Rain-Sinatra
Shelter From the Storm-Dylan
Singin’ in the Rain-Gene Kelly
Sky is Crying-Clapton
Smokey Mountain Rain-Ronnie Milsap
Storms-Fleetwood Mac
Stormy-Classics IV
Stormy Blues-Billie Holiday
Stormy Monday Blues-Bobby Bland
Stormy Weather-Billie Holiday
Summer Rain-Johnny Rivers
Sure Got Cold After the Rain-ZZ Top
Texas Flood-Stevie Ray Vaughan
The Times They Are a-Changing-Dylan
Tryin’ to Reason With Hurricane Season-Jimmy Buffett
Walk Out in the Rain-Eric Clapton
Walkin’ in the Rain-Ronettes
What Have They Done to the Rain-Malvina Reynolds
When it Rains it Really Pours-Elvis
Who’ll Stop the Rain-CCR

Charlie is My Darling: The Rolling Stones in Ireland, 1965

“I’m not a musician. I just play in a band, you know”

Rare Footage: Stones Cover Beatles

(Source: Open Culture)

Today we set the Wayback Machine to Ireland, 1965, where we find a young Mick Jagger and a shockingly restored Keith Richards staving off the downtime boredom of a two-day tour with a not-entirely-reverential Beatles singalong. Despite the drabness of the room in which documentarian Peter Whitehead caught the lads clowning, it’s clear that Jagger was feeling his oats. Go ahead and read those famous lips when he wraps them around the chorus of Eight Days a Week.

This priceless private moment is culled from the just released, not-entirely-finished documentary, The Rolling Stones: Charlie Is My Darling — Ireland 1965. Former Stones’ producer Andrew Loog Oldham recently chalked the near-50-year delay to the massive explosion of the band’s popularity. Padding things out to a proper feature length would have required additional filming. (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction had shot to the top of the American charts just two months earlier,  from which point on, the lads’ dance card was filled.

Lucky thing, that. What might in its day have amounted to a fun peek behind the scenes feels far more compelling as a just-cracked time capsule. The sad spectacle of Brian Jones musing about his future options is offset by the youthful larking about of rock’s most celebrated senior citizens.

“All Shook Up”

(Don't) Shake It

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Songs You May Have Missed #208

gil

Gilberto Gil: “Andar Com Fé” (1982)

Brazilian legend and Caetano Veloso collaborator Gilberto Gil’s sometimes political and topical songs led to his arrest by the Brazilian military and eventual exile to England, where his career continued both as musician and social activist.

“Andar Com Fé” is not one of Gil’s more subversive tunes, unless catchiness is a crime. It translates thusly:

I’ll walk with faith/Faith doesn’t usually fail

Faith is in a woman/Faith is in the coral snake, in a piece of bread

Faith is in the tide, in the dagger’s blade, in light, in darkness

Faith is in the morning, Faith is in nightfall, Faith is in the summer heat

Faith is alive and healthy, Faith is also about to die, sadly in solitude

Right or even wrong, Faith goes wherever I go, on foot or by airplane

Even those who don’t have Faith, Faith usually follows

Through yes and through no

The Seekers 1968 Farewell Show

I post this with some trepidation. Either you, dear reader, will have some appreciation–or at least tolerance–for the music of the 60’s folk movement…or you will not.

If so, you’ll find the Seekers’ 1968 farewell show a treat, dubious attempts at humor aside.

The Seekers formed in Melbourne, Australia in 1962. After immigrating to England in ’64 a string of worldwide hits followed. Their music was a somewhat sugar-sprinkled hybrid, perhaps too close to pop for some folk purists, but it was a winning sound that earned them the distinction of being the first Australian act to land in the top 5 in England and the U.S. as well as their home country.

Just four years later, though, lead singer Judith Durham announced her intention to leave the Seekers for a solo career, and the group called it quits.

Their final performance together was shown live by the BBC in the form of this special, called Farewell the Seekers. It drew an estimated 10 million viewers, a testament to just how well-loved the group were in England and elsewhere.

The mode of music they specialized in is as out of fashion as Durham’s dress. But there’s no denying the talent on display here, or the timelessness of some of these songs.

Fans of singing competition TV shows like The X Factor and American Idol have been brainwashed, frankly, into thinking that a great singer is measured by the level of histrionics in a performance, or the number of notes, other than the ones on the page, that a song is adorned with. Judith Durham’s purity of voice and seemingly effortless performance–the way she gets out of the way of a great song instead of imposing herself on it–is a lesson in how it once was done, and still is by the best ones. Celine Dion is gifted. Durham is a great singer.

seeker

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2017/06/27/video-of-the-week-silver-threads-and-golden-anniversaries-the-seekers-celebrate-50-years/

 

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