Arts and Entertainment

Song of the Day 12/10: Lenny and the Squigtones, “Night After Night”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 10, 2020 2 Comments

Character actor David L. Lander, famous for his role on “Laverne & Shirley,” died last week at age 73. Lander and Michael McKean, as Andrew “Squiggy” Squiggman and Lenny Kosnowski, doofus neighbors and co-workers of the female leads, became the top-rated show’s breakout stars. Lenny and Squiggy (originally Ant’ny Squiggliano) predated the sitcom, which ran […]

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Song of the Day 12/9: Rich Allen and the Ebonistics, “Echo’s of November”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 9, 2020 5 Comments

Phillies great Dick Allen, one of the most controversial players in the history of baseball, died Monday, prompting a wave of nostalgia for a man Philadelphia fans demonized and drove out of town during the racially charged 1960s. During his playing days, Allen’s many interests outside the game drew accusations that he lacked “focus.” So […]

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Song of the Day 12/8: John Lennon and Cheap Trick, “I’m Losing You”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 8, 2020 0 Comments

Whatever else it represented, the assassination of John Lennon 40 years ago tonight closed the door on an encouraging comeback from his self-imposed exile. Not everyone saw “Double Fantasy” that way at first — negative reviews from many prominent critics were withheld from publication when Lennon was killed three weeks after its release — and […]

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Song of the Day 12/7: Glenn Miller and His Orchestra, “Chattanooga Choo Choo”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 7, 2020 5 Comments

The No. 1 song in the nation the day of the Pearl Harbor attack was also the first one ever awarded a gold record. Glenn Miller’s swing rendition of the song, which debuted in that year’s movie “Sun Valley Serenade,” hit No. 1 on Dec. 7, 1941, and stayed there (with a one-week break) until […]

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Song of the Day 12/6: Mountain, “Nantucket Sleighride (To Owen Coffin)”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 6, 2020 7 Comments

Long Island guitarist Leslie West was so impressed by Cream that he formed a band with Felix Pappalardi, who had produced the “Disraeli Gears” and “Wheels of Fire” LPs, on bass, to play the same kind of blues-soaked hard rock. Though they’re not much remembered today, Mountain was one of the bands that helped transform […]

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Song of the Day 12/4: Amy Winehouse and Paul Weller, “I Heard It Through the Grapevine”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 4, 2020 0 Comments

It’s been nearly a decade since Amy Winehouse died and she still hasn’t been replaced. In 2006, when she was on top of the world after the release of her second album, “Back to Black,” she teamed up with British blue-eyed soul icon Paul Weller on Jools Holland’s annual New Year’s Eve Hootenanny for this […]

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Song of the Day 12/2: Climax Blues Band, “Couldn’t Get It Right”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 2, 2020 0 Comments

It’s actually about the band on tour not being able to find the Holiday Inn — that’s the sign they were looking for in the middle of the night — but the title makes it a good theme song for the Trump coup plotters. Like the Top of the Pops host, I thought this lot […]

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Song of the Day 12/1: Earl-Jean, “I’m Into Something Good”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on December 1, 2020 4 Comments

If you’re old enough, you probably know this as the first record by British invaders Herman’s Hermits, one that reached No. 1 in the UK (and No. 13 in the U.S.). But the first to record this Gerry Goffin-Carole King tune was Earl-Jean Reavis, lead singer of the second incarnation of the Cookies (the original […]

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‘Bulo’s Fave Tunes: November 2020

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, Featured by on December 1, 2020 1 Comment

One more compelling eclectic set of music before I hunker down to put together my 50 Fave Tunes Of The Year.  I featured something like 160 songs in my monthly sets this year, and I’ll be culling other Best-Of lists for any songs I overlooked.  You deserve only the best (I’m still working on my […]

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Song of the Day 11/30: Derek Trucks Band, “Down in the Flood (Crash on the Levee)”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on November 30, 2020 0 Comments

Bob Dylan wrote this during the Basement Tapes sessions in 1967 and has recorded it three times (none are available on YouTube, which Dylan’s people police pretty closely). None of his renditions packed the punch Derek Trucks gave the song on his 2009 album “Already Free.” Trucks said he chose the tune because “I figured […]

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Song of the Day 11/29: Raspberries, “Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on November 29, 2020 1 Comment

Though they’re now acknowledged as founding fathers of power pop, Raspberries weren’t fully appreciated in their time. Their Mod-based sound was considered lightweight, their teen-angst lyrics banal, their matching-suits look either eight years too early or eight years too late. In 1972 their bubblegummy “Go All the Way” hit No. 5, and several lesser hits […]

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Song of the Day 11/27: L.T.D., “(Every Time I Turn Around) Back in Love Again”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on November 27, 2020 0 Comments

For reasons that don’t matter anymore, disco mostly sucked. But it was closely related to funk, which meant some truly funky music got dance-floor exposure, too. L.T.D. (it stood for Love, Togetherness and Devotion) was founded in 1968 by four horn players from Sam & Dave’s backing orchestra; by the time they landed a recording […]

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Song of the Day 11/26: Poi Dog Pondering, “Thanksgiving”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on November 26, 2020 1 Comment

This song has nothing to do with the holiday, but I don’t care, I just like the tune. For me it’s the standout song on “Wishing Like a Maountain and Thinking Like the Sea,” the 1990 breakthrough album for what was then a world-music collective based in Austin, before leader Frank Orrall moved to Chicago […]

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