The ones that never date...
I suppose tomorrow night's theme is the opposite as I'll be asking you to suggest the songs that are still as relevant now as the day they were released.
Politically charged tunes like Streets of London and One in Ten will be popular but there are plenty of love songs whose message still counts today.
Comment number 1.
At 18th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:Radio Gaga - Queen
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Comment number 2.
At 18th Oct 2011, norriemaclean wrote:This was written in 1996 so not that old but 100% relevant, a favouritolen.e of my good friend Scotch Git
Iris DeMent - Wasteland of the Free
Superb song.
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Comment number 3.
At 18th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:#1
Eric,
I can't believe they played "Message in a Bottle" AGAIN!!!
It's been played almost as often as "Hanging on the Telephone"
Nae wunner Ah drink!
>8-D
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Comment number 4.
At 18th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:#2
Norrie,
Happy to lend my support!
:o)
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Comment number 5.
At 18th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:WEDNESDAY
Still Gonna Die - Old Dogs ~ Some things never change. Gotta have a laugh!
;o)
Who's Next? - Tom Lehrer ~ The ongoing nuclear arms race. Gotta have a laugh!
;o)
All I Can Do is Write About It - Lynyrd Skynyrd
Ronnie Van Zant was environmentally aware before it became trendy! The acoustic version, please, from the All Time Greatest Hits album.
:o)
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Comment number 6.
At 18th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:#3
The sad thing is only the clinically dead would be unable to dance to it.
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Comment number 7.
At 18th Oct 2011, Florian wrote:For an age old problem send for Dr. Clap MD - Ivor Biggin
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Comment number 8.
At 18th Oct 2011, Kene Gelly wrote:'Identity' ~~ X-Ray Spex
... it's a price you still have to pay ...
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Comment number 9.
At 18th Oct 2011, Greg Tolland wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 10.
At 18th Oct 2011, JuliefromEdinburgh wrote:An upbeat song from 1972...
'Be Thankful For What You've Got' - William DeVaughn
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Comment number 11.
At 18th Oct 2011, joe-k-brown wrote:SG - happy to second Skynyrd (#5). Also:
My way - Sinatra
Jacob's ladder - Springsteen
This land is your land - Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings
Every time we say goodbye - Ella Fitzgerald
I fall to pieces - Trisha Yearwood/Aaron Neville
Will you love me tomorrow - Carole King
Superstition - Stevie Wonder
Joe
Linlithgow
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Comment number 12.
At 19th Oct 2011, Dr Biker wrote:Rat Trap by the Rats - the great use of words to describe parts of today's society:
He says the traps have been sprung long before he was born
He says "hope bites the dust behind all the closed doors
And puss and grime ooze from its scab crusted sores
There's screaming and crying in the high rise blocks"
'nuff said.
Paul in China
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Comment number 13.
At 19th Oct 2011, Thing-Fish wrote:A seventeenth hot dart…
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Comment number 14.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:#12
There can be nothing worse than feline parasites
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Comment number 15.
At 19th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:Ìý
You'll have had your flea...
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Comment number 16.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:I suppose it's better than pus in boots.
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Comment number 17.
At 19th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:Ìý
In China, cats are lucky. I refer, of course, to
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Comment number 18.
At 19th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:Ìý
Theme suggestion:- (Inspired by #12)
We've had Story Songs
The time has come for Multistorey Songs
>8-D
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Comment number 19.
At 19th Oct 2011, Scotch Get wrote:FRIDAY
Fred MacAulay is on The News Quiz
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Comment number 20.
At 19th Oct 2011, Will Power wrote:The Jam - Smithers-Jones
Come in Smithers old boy
Take a seat, take the weight off your feet
I've some news to tell you
There's no longer a position for you
Sorry Smithers-Jones
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Comment number 21.
At 19th Oct 2011, Will Power wrote:The Tubes - What Do You Want From Life?
A satirical song about consumerism and celebrity culture. Sound familiar?
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Comment number 22.
At 19th Oct 2011, CaptRamius wrote:Teenage Love doesn't really change
* Billy Bragg - The Saturday Boy
* Billy Bragg - A Lover Sings
* The Saw Doctors - Red Cortina
* The Saw Doctors - D'ye Wanna Play My Guitar
* Mark Knopfler - Secondary Waltz
Parenthood doesn't really change either:
* Loudon Wainwright III - Bein' a Dad
Mind you, teenage unemployment is just as relevant now as it was in 1983:
* Billy Bragg - To Have and Have Not
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Comment number 23.
At 19th Oct 2011, Will Power wrote:The Housemartins - Flag Day
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Comment number 24.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:Rock And Roll Is Here To Stay - Danny and the Juniors - Prescience from 1958, the year Ian Donald took ultrasound from the shipyard to the maternity ward
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Comment number 25.
At 19th Oct 2011, Alfaeraferry wrote:All written in days of yore but I think would still stand up today.
Sweet Freedom / Michael McDonald
The Living Years / Mike & The Mechanics
Atmospherics Listen To The Radio / Tom Robinson
This Is The Day / The The
Jocelyn Square / Love & Money
Live To Tell / Madonna
Al.
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Comment number 26.
At 19th Oct 2011, mikeshropshire wrote:Looked through a playlist I put together for my girls, for my suggestions. Cos when you are 10 and 12 you know everything there is to know and yer auld man can tell you nothing!!... but if you hear it in a song, it MUST be true... (There's more than one way to skin a cat!)
Only mild apologies for digging out some (predicatable?) choices
Company Of Friends: Danny Schmidt
Masters Of War: Bob Dylan
The January Man: Christy Moore
You've Got A Friend: James Taylor
At Seventeen: Janis Ian
Days Like These: Billy Bragg
Cat's In The Cradle: Harry Chapin
The World Turned Upside Down: Dick Gauchan
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Comment number 27.
At 19th Oct 2011, holdontight wrote:Still relevant today ...
John Lennon's "Imagine"
More relevant than ever; "Imagine no religion"
Ian
Gartcosh
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Comment number 28.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:Just like Soviet Russia.
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Comment number 29.
At 19th Oct 2011, Adam_from_Rio wrote:Shoddy mail order service is still an issue today, so this will fit
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Comment number 30.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:#27
yep, I always thought 'Imagine no possessions' was the killer line.
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Comment number 31.
At 19th Oct 2011, Adam_from_Rio wrote:Lets Get Physical - Olivia Newton John
Norrie is living blogging proof that this is still relevant.
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Comment number 32.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:Conversely, as the recently canonised Steve Jobs said: 'I base my business philosophy on The Beatles'.
What Steve was referring to was the greatest philosophical statement ever made.When you consider the now famous 'Stanford address' it is almost entirely drawn form this:
All You Need Is Love - The Beatles
Timeless positivity and wisdom - our political masters (and the IMF) should adopt it as a mantra (I have). These lads knew how to turn a few quid and everybody was sanguine and happy about it.
regardez vous
henri
p.s. moral of the story - if you love what you do - it'll be really good. If it's really good people will still pay £13:00 for an album you made in 1963, in 2011 - and £157 for a box set.
Even more egalitarian, an accompaniment to vegetarian,is that old hippie - Morrissey!
The Smiths box set - £210:00.There's no one you can do that can't be done, as they say.
regardez youse
henri
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Comment number 33.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:Mercy Mercy Me - Marvin Gaye
Predictions of ecological disaster from What's Going On - in fact, there's proabably not a track on that album that doesn't fit this theme:
Inner City Blues - Marvin Gaye works just as well.
regardez youse
henri
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Comment number 34.
At 19th Oct 2011, norriemaclean wrote:£157?? you didnt buy the mono box then? or if you did you got it much cheaper than me!
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Comment number 35.
At 19th Oct 2011, Thing-Fish wrote:These are all old songs which are relevant today: ~
BLOWIN’ IN THE WIND from THE FREEWHEELIN’ BOB DYLAN by BOB DYLAN
THE SUN NEVER SHINES ON THE POOR from HOKEY POKEY by RICHARD AND LINDA THOMPSON
NOTHING CHANGES from STRANGE TIMES by THE MOODY BLUES
POLITICAL LIES from THE TEN OF SONGS by ROBIN WILLIAMSON
HEROIN from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND AND NICO by THE VELVET UNDERGROUND
WHEN THE LIE’S SO BIG from BROADWAY THE HARDWAY by FRANK ZAPPA
DROOLING MIDRANGE ACCOUNTANTS IN EASTER HAY from QuAUDIOPHILLIAc by FRANK ZAPPA
and Get It On fits right in to the sentiment behind the narrative at the end of the last song.
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Comment number 36.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:Train In The Distance - Paul Simon
a commentary on the complex lives we lead, still true now - the idea that things could be better refuses to die....
Every Kinda People - Robert Palmer
yep, in praise of persistence and integrity, which alone are omnipotant, a lesson society keeps on having to relearn.I preferred Dr Fox when he used to countdown the top 20.
Blood On The Rooftops - Genesis
This theme has had me revisiting old hippie albums: This comes from Genesis post hippie mythology late 70's mega stardom period, just as punk put the knife in. It's a really great track though about watching TV and deciding:
' let's skip the news, boy
I'll make some tea
The Arabs and the Jews, boy
Too much for me'
everything changes, everything stays the same....
Wake Up Everybody - Harold Melvin & The Bluenotes
'The world won't get no better if we just let it be - we gotta change it, girl, just you and me...'
Written for a Presidential candidate's campaign, we now know it's all Harold Melvin's fault that the political class are now incapable of offering us anything except 'change'. De Facto, the promise of endless change is no change at all.
that'll do for now...
regardez youse
henru
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Comment number 37.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:I can't recall a more depressing set of requests. No half-baked, utopian, "feel my pain" scribbling has been overlooked.
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Comment number 38.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:Oh and this can go on endless repeat: Won't Get Fooled Again - The Who
....O yes we will...
Do Anything You Wanna Do - Eddie And the Hot Rods
similar, but different.
The Game - Dory Previn a song about Casinos. Of which we have quite a few now.... and then there's Casino banking.. if only Dory hadn't said 'deal me in' at the end, we'd be on the moral high ground, but hey, that's life.
She Works Hard For the Money - Donna Summer
Nothing changes...sounding very like my mother on this one..
regardez youse
henri
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Comment number 39.
At 19th Oct 2011, Thing-Fish wrote:#37 Thank you very much
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Comment number 40.
At 19th Oct 2011, Goldberry wrote:Oliver's Army - Elvis Costello & the Attractions. I think about this song every time I see one of those 'Join the Forces' types ads.
Hard Rain - the Roxy Music version. A dire warning!
Ghost Town - The Specials
This town, is coming like a ghost town
Why must the youth fight against themselves?
Government leaving the youth on the shelf
This place, is coming like a ghost town
No job to be found in this country
Sadly too true - but a great song!
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Comment number 41.
At 19th Oct 2011, henri hannah wrote:#37
who? surely not me, faither?
.... I'm all positve affirmation:-)) My natural exuberance just spills out all over the place:-))
here's a few more...
Don't Give Up - Peter Gabriel more relevant now, if anything..
Stormy Weather - Etta James well, we live here, this is what we get.
No Fish Today - Kid Creole how society really works..this is fabby!!!
Luka - Suzanne Vega the story of too many children..
What Is Life George Harrison still we have no scoobie..
regardez youse
henri
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Comment number 42.
At 19th Oct 2011, dale_kelvin wrote:welkom from amsterdaam.............well since its 4 decades since i've been here and one that has never dated and first heard here........Ãmagine'............john lennon.......which is a poignant reminder as i'm just bac'k from a visit to the ''anne frank huis''.........................cheers frae the dam
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Comment number 43.
At 19th Oct 2011, ericinelgin wrote:#41
And you don't exist
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