Album: Permanent Waves by Rush [I know it's a stretch since it wasn't released until 1/80, but its genesis & recording took place in 79] Song: The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by Gordon Lightfoot [1976] Artist: Eagles
So many to choose from! Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd for best album, Elton John for best artist and Stayin’ Alive by the Bee Gees (tied with Superstition by Stevie Wonder) for best song are my picks!
Yes no doubt , I live in the south I listened to, motown ,beatles , beach boys , Johnny cash ,and never thought this is this kind of music or that kind of music , it was just good music
My moms favorite song was American Woman, and whenever it came on the radio in the car, she would turn the volume up to what we felt was eardrum splitting levels. Mom passed in 2001, and as I was driving to her funeral, this song began playing as I was pulling up to the church. I sat in the car, bawling my eyes out because I felt she was there calming my broken heart. Amazing memories.
Thanks for sharing that memory. My Mom started her own Burton Cummings/Guess Who fan club back in the late 90's. She used the title American Woman as her as her name on the message board she ran. After she passed in 2016 I put "American Woman" on her headstone.
Your Mom had great taste. She must've liked the heavy side of Rock. My kind of lady. My mom was more of a John Denver/Kenny Rogers fan. Played songs from both at her funeral in 2016. RIP Mom. We'll listen together again someday
Until Grunge & Rap ruined the AM/FM Radio & MTV! And then Rock/Hard Rock somehow became Alt. Rock? I just shake my head when I get in cars, and they turn on allegedly “Rock Stations”! I just tell them “You don’t know what Rock & Roll is.” And it’s sad. I raised my kids on 60, 70, & 80s rock. And the bands still keeping Rock & Roll ALIVE!
most 60s and 70s music is crap - but there are masterpieces. 80s ruled. Maybe too much synth. 90s went in many directions. 2000+ absolute crap with a few memorable ones.
There's nothing like the wistful nostalgic feeling I get when I watch this channel. I remember better days and I'm grateful I'm old enough to have lived in a simpler time.
I love still being alive to remember to he 60s & 70s. Not a given when I was born in the 50s. Still remember many of the hits of the early rock & roll yrs. 1955 great year!!!!
This week, 52 years ago, stands out in my mind. I was a high school senior, 17 years old, about to graduate. There were anti-war demonstrations and the killings at Kent State, bomb scares and student walk-outs. It was a time endings and beginnings. My musical tastes had already drifted from top 40. Woodstock was less than a year in the past. And, although I did know two of his brothers better, I do remember this one younger guy who would be singing to himself in the school’s hallways by the name of Dee Snider (Twisted Sister).
Oh my goodness! I was 10 yrs old in 1970. I remember very vividly everything you mentioned. There was no”shielding” kids from these events. It made us stronger. I love your Dee Snider story. He is still amazing and so interesting to listen to. My 85 yr old mom loves him too! Thx for sharing!
I did not realize No Sugar Tonight and American Woman were on the same single. The Guess Who are so incredibly underrated. Can't argue with #1, Let it Be might be the most beautiful ballad ever written! Great job as always Professor! Thanks!
I don't know what I would do without you and your channel bringing back such great memories and stories. Music is one of the most important things in my life. Thanks again for all you do!
There were some miserable times for me as a kid in the 70's and it was music that always made me feel better and saved my life really. I am still at my happiness when I hear these wonderful old songs.
I’m glad to see you’re doing something about the 70’s, I’ve always personally thought it was the best decade of music, so diverse and interesting for all genres.
Beatles, NY Dolls, Sex Pistols, Black Sabbath, CSNY, Parliment-Funkadelic, Teddy Pendergrass, Barry White, Sugar Hill Gang, Chic, Van Halen: The seeds of the 80s-today were all planted in the 70s for sure.
My mother made sure that the Beatles were my first favorite. I was born in 1964. While I was a babe in her arms... She played the HELP album over, and over, and over. She's got a ticket to ride will forever play in my head as the very first musical song I ever heard. This IS documented on 8 mm home movie film. Love you MOM!!!! Happy mothers day Bobbie K!
Also, 1964 is THE year of Beatlemania. The Beatles captured the minds of millions and made hundreds of girls scream in the process. It was so wild and exhilarating!
American Woman was everyone’s favourite in Grade 6 at Cordell’s Elementary in Toronto. I brought in my portable record player for a class party and we played that song over and over until my record player slowed down and stopped late in the party. Canadian kids seldom heard music from our side of the border in those days so that might’ve boosted the tune even higher for us, the Guess Who opened the door and now we have an outsized share of great music artists. Burton and Randy borrowed much from Whole Lotta Love by Zep on this tune!
Just to say that there was a lot of love for that song here in the states as well. They were just saying what a lot of Boomers were thinking back then. And musically the band was top shelf.
I always loved the intro to The Wonderful World of Disney. Tinkerbell would wave her wand and the television world turned from black and white into color! Everything on TV before 7PM was B&W. Damn I'm old!
I never got into show tunes. I guess since my pop loved Rock n Roll and we rarely watched television could be the reason. He did have a massive stereo set up though
The late 60’s laid the foundation and influenced so many budding young musicians who gave us the great music of the 70s. Better recording technology and FM radio didn’t hurt, either!
Love your channel. Thank you for everything you do to keep our music from the 50s, 60s and 70s relevant. We had the best music in history. I actually feel sorry for young people today who know nothing of what we had. Thank you. 😊🇨🇦
Instant Karma reminds me of my brother, he loved this song. Also loved the Doobie Brothers, Blue Oyster Cult, T-Rex, George Harrison....he passed his love of music on to me. Sadly, he passed away very young. Best memory: My brother, my cousin + me at the Concert for Bangladesh. Greatest concert ever! ❤❤❤
It’s Mother’s Day and I just got home from church where I said a prayer asking for a sign from my sweet Mama. My husband and I snuggled on the couch and settled into this podcast to nap to. I had my hand on the remote almost ready to change it because born in 66 the music first mentioned didn’t resonate with me. Then BAM!!! “Let it be” were literally my mama’s words, catch phrase. Tears of beautiful memories rolling down my cheeks. Prayers answered! Thanks Professor for the best Mother’s Day gift I could have gotten.Words of wisdom from my sweet Mom ❤️ PS You are living my dream and live it so well😎 we love your show! I’m a huge Petty Head and always love anything TPHB /Dirty Knobs. Anything Traveling Wilburys???
Don’t forget The Guess Who’s connection to Brave Belt which became BTO! I love all the tendrils that grew out of this band! Check it out it’s like 6 degrees of Kevin Bacon once you include writing producing etc just a stunning array of talent!
Steven Wright said "Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the same time." I had forgotten about some of these but had an instant flashback of the 45 and the London Records label of "Reflections of my Life" which I played about a million times. Thank you Professor, I get so much enjoyment from these segments. I can't wait for the next!
Ah yes, "Vehicle, Ides of March" This tune has been my all time favorite trivia question. With nearly 30 years of asking, who did the tune, only one person ever got it right. A really great tune from, as it turned out, the most unknown of the Chicago horn bands. Oddly, the only time my trivia question was answered correctly was when I was in a home improvement store and Vehicle was playing over the PA system, and I asked the question to the air. Suddenly an African-American man stepped around the corner and said, "the ides of March". I applauded him and said that he was the first person to ever get the question right. We had a really neat conversation about the Chicago horn bands. ;-)
As a teenager in 1970 all of these songs bring back so many memories of that era. For most us growing up during the early 70's, the song by Marmalade, "Reflections Of My Life" brings up images of the Vietnam war. It lends itself so well to the RUclips format, where images of the War (pics and videos) are played out during the song. Very powerful imaging with the music that brings back so many memories of the early 70's.
Just wanted to mention... Neil Diamond Gold- My dad had the original LP... I bought it on CD later and recently found a mint one at a seconds store. It was my first venture into the world of Neil, but it still also remains my favourite. Just wanted to mention that since I saw it there... Love you dad... and thank you...
I think it's time we all just acknowledge that to put The Beatles on any list, nomination, mention, ranking or rating is pointless. Lol! The Beatles are The Beatles. They are the greatest of everything. When the universe came together to get those four amazing, incredible, beautiful young men in one place, the explosion that happened showered every single person alive during the same time as any of them with a blessing. No other band, group, solo performer or artist, composer or pair, can even remotely touch The Beatles and what they did. They didn't just write good songs and play them, they changed music. They did more to influence the sounds we let run through our heads every single day than anyone else during their contemporary years, or before and even after. No one is going to be able to touch them for a really long time, if ever with the way they impacted the musical multiverse around them. People will be talking about The Beatles for 500 years...more than that! I'd like to think that Yellow Submarine and Octopuses Garden will live on for centuries as nursery rhymes and bands like The Libertines and Oasis always include a little Beatles in their repertoire. Hell, you'll be able to hear The Beatles on Mars! Aliens fifty bajillion light years away will eventually get radio signals of The Beatles...and they'll remark about how often those signals repeat and how absolutely wonderful those particular ones are! Then they'll start adding it to their own music!
I turned 13 yrs old in 1970. ALL of these songs were great but I particularly loved Marmalade's song which my friends and I believed to be a sort of protest song....about a soldier dying in a battle. I'm sure we read or heard that somewhere. I remember listening to all of these on my transistor radio , turned down low so my parents wouldn't hear, as I went to sleep at night on the great WLS out of Chicago. I had some of these songs on 45 rpm records that I listened to on my GE Wildcat stereo that I was so proud of! 1970 was definitely a GREAT year for music. Back then, I couldn't imagine being 64 years old. Those were the "don't trust anyone over 30} years :) I kept up with and loved new music until about 2004. Music started making such great changes and I wasn't a fan anymore. I guess that happens when you are aging. But, I have 40+ years of the best music ever made, the 60s through the early 00s, to listen to. Professor, thank you for this video. It was a fun one to listen to. I cannot believe it as been 52 yrs since 1970!!
Love "Vehicle!" I used to think it was Blood, Sweat & Tears because the lead singer's voice reminded me so much of David Clayton-Thomas. Plus, the horns of course. One of my favorite 70s songs!
As an army brat in 1970 the first thing I think about when asked about a date or time is "where was I living at". Some of the places I live at overseas had one television station that was in English and one or two radio stations. Television station was on for about 12 hours a day but the radio station was on all day and night, plus we had records we could play. We may not have been current on the popular TV shows but we were current on our music. We loved our music. For the record this week in 1970 I was living in Massachusetts three months away from going back to Okinawa.
I was nine years old in 1970 and I distinctly remember wondering why everyone loved Everything Is Beautiful. I thought it was goopy sentimental garbage. Still do, but the rest of this list is fantastic.
"Rainbow" was Marmalade's follow-up in America and is one of the most beautiful songs ever recorded. Shockingly, it only peaked at #51 on the Billboard Hot 100. Deserved better.
George's guitar work on "Let It Be" elevates and deepens the song remarkably and Paul stripping off that remarkable solo and those brilliant fills strikes me as sacrilege. The song builds to the unleashing of the solo but in Paul's preferred version, all that tension just drains away with a limpid, insipid organ break.
Prince’s Halftime show cannot be topped… Purple Rain IN a downpour where the stage lights made it look like actual purple rain?? No one can ever beat that. (I love the backstory, when the director told Prince, going to keep raining through the halftime show, Prince said, “Can you make it rain harder?”)
Many thanks once again for the wonderful trip down memory lane. I had goosebumps throughout. Immersing myself in music helped me deal with a really quite scary at times childhood. I would take my little blue plastic transistor radio and listen to all these songs on CKLW out of Detroit. Choosing to remember the joy and escape the music offered me rather than what was going on at home, in the neighbourhood and at school makes all the difference and allows me to enjoy the music throughout my life.
You asked which week each of us would like, I'd love to hear the Top Ten on the first week of December 1967, the year i finished school in the then Rhodesia. Now I'm living in Durban, South Africa. Great to watch your show, thanks so much. Lawrie.
50 years ago...that was my time! What a gift to come of age during the greatest time for music ever! I love 80s music, but it builds on my period, 1964 through the 70s. I got hooked on the Beatles when I was 10 and grew up with the music of the time.
Finally prof in my wheel house. What a great year for music!! Listening to WLS or WCFL for each one of these gems, all in fantastic mono. Thanks for the memories!
A little far back… I turn 60 on July 4, born in 62. Can you do that week or day? I don’t hear you going that far back . I absolutely love your show! My mom and brother,he is 8yrs older than me,always had music on. I love the 50’s through the 80’s. So much variety in sounds ❤️. By far the 70’s music was the best!!!! 💞 thank you for your great content!!! 💞
Great channel, new subscriber. Love going back in time with these stories. My love for music started with a clock radio with the flip numbers back in the mid 70's. Tuned into the local rock station where I would sit with my flip cassette player waiting to tape songs, telling my mom DON'T come into my room....I'm recording! It was always on it seemed, at night falling asleep, waking up to the morning shows. I would love to see a possible episode on two lost or rarely talked about genres of the 70's. Goofy songs like Does your chewing gum lose it flavour, You don't roller skate in a buffalo herd, Hello mother, hello father or the trucker genre with songs like Phantom 309, Convoy, Teddy Bear.
I was asked to play guitar and sing at a wedding in Liverpool. The bride and groom selected a few songs... All You Need is Love and Imagine being the two they suggested would encourage everyone to sing along. I suggested Instant Karma as a third, but due to a large number of Buddhist attendees they vetoed it. Shame...however I was delighted to share the stage with John Gorman from the band The Scaffold. Any Nerd of the Mersey Sound will know The Scaffold also contained Mike McCartney...Paul's brother. That's as close as I'm going to get to The Beatles in this lifetime. What an exciting experience to sing Imagine with John Gorman ...
I stood next to Mike McCartney at the bar in The Philharmonic about ten years ago before the OMD concert with the orchestra. He was very tall. I thought the concert was boring to be honest, partly at the time and definitely in retrospect. More recently, performances by Carol Decker, Clark Datchler of Johnny Hates Jazz and Nik Kershaw at 80s Classical in Leeds have been highly impressive. There was also another concert at the venue around the same time period of different artists. It might have been tied in with the Capital of Culture, I am not sure. OMD were on the bill and The Scaffold performed Lily the Pink. Roger McGough went to St Mary's in Crosby where my late father also attended. He must have been in the fifth year when my dad started. He went on a scholarship, coming from a poor working class background in Southport and living in rented housing. He always told me how strict it was, with corporal punishment used liberally and unjustly.
Glad Reflections Of My Life has moved up over the years. Poignant lyrics with the appropriate magnificent harmonies, make it a deserved hit to remember.
I remember when Vehicle came out, my friends swore it was by Chicago due to that opening riff, and also mistook Peterik's vocals for Terry Kath. As a huge Chicago fan, it took all I had to not give them all a Curly slap lol
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Say it ain't so! lol Vehicle is one if my favorite songs--in fact, my first email address included it--As talented a musician (better songwriter, no doubt) as Peterik is, and I give him major props, he's no Terry Kath.
@@vehicle22 I always thought it was amazing that this lead singer of “Vehicle” was the same guy behind songs like “Eye of the Tiger” and “Burning Heart”. When I first heard this song I thought it sounded like a combination of Chicago and Blood, Sweat and Tears.
RUSH is my favorite band! My first show was the Signals tour. I fell in love that night and that hasn’t changed!!! The talent and musicianship is unmatched!!! A few bands come close but the integrity and the quality are first class!!! Love them! Miss them and God bless them!!! Rest in peace Neil 🙏🤗🥰☮️☮️☮️
Fun to learn the story behind"Vehicle", as I remember that song well from my youth. Thanks for another well done and informative video, that brought back memories and feelings from long ago.
I agree. I always thought it was about a pimp. I think it was a hit around the same time as "The Pusher" by Steppenwolf. The two songs are deeply associated with each other in my memory.
This was my senior year in high school. There was a separation between AM and FM radio. This list misses all the great music that was on the FM stations.
Thank you so much ! I turned 6 on May 6th ! Lol !! So many memories of all these songs,a reel of my life then,when I still had all my siblings,Mom had just met my future Daddy,my grandparent,aunts and uncles. A more carefree time when we were able to be kids-in the house before the streetlights came on and shared everything with the family dog,from food to road trips,where the 2 of us often rode in the back window of the car since I was the smallest of 6 that would be safe enough. Great memories. Again thank so much for those spring/summer memories. Only thing that would make it better would be Mungo Jerry's in the summertime !! ❤
I believe I used to live by you in the early 80's. My father traveled a lot when I was young and we lived in Idaho Falls because he was the manager of the movie theaters like the Rio. I remember watching Ghostbusters there over a 100 times while dad was working. Just wanted to say to you that you remind me so much of the good days, good music, and Casey Kasem. Keep reaching for the stars my friend.
I've had so many debates about the quality of pop music declining, and so many people are convinced that it's merely a symptom of aging to put down the music that the kids are listening to. This is not it. People also say that it's a cream of the crop situation, where we only know the best stuff from past ages, therefore all of the crap just fell through the cracks. But shows like this demonstrate that this is not the case, because a top 10 from a week includes the long-lived and the trendy, all of which are just objectively better and better for you
This is easily my fav series on the channel, love seeing the all time streams numbers and hearing people's stories they associate with the music. Long live rock!
1972 I was just 6 years old but I remember getting a box of Sugar Smacks cereal that had a sort of plastic record on the back of the Jackson Five song. I believe it was "One, Two, Three"... something something something. I was 6 and it wasn't a real record. It was a real song. I still have that memory. Okay, maybe I got the actual song name and cereal name wrong, but the memory is still there. And "American Woman" gets a tip-of-the-hat but for something years later for a girlfriend that turned me down when I asked her to stay with me instead of going back home overseas. I changed the nationality for hers instead of American. That happened 15 years ago. Hope she's happy with her choice.
Here in Winnipeg, we're still proud of the Guess Who, even though Burton and Randy don't live here anymore. Heck, Burton has a theater named after him, which is a venue for music shows.
I can remember when it was called Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color. Only back then all we could afford was a black & white tv. The old tube type. We lived in this old trailer house and when the tv would start messing up he would stomp his heal on the floor a couple of times and the tv would work great again for a day or two. Great episode as always Professor. I don't want to write another book like I did on the other one..
I was in 8th grade in 1980 and had been a Beatles fan as long as I could remember. The year before I had won a copy of the Red & Blue set from a WLS radio call-in contest and played it constantly. My father woke me up early that morning to break the news that John Lennon had died just as if a member of the family had passed.
Even Better than "American Woman" was the 'Live at the Paramount' version of "American Woman" with the long (almost dirty) intro. Definitely MY favorite Guess Who performance !!
Burton sheepishly tells the story that the live album from Seattle was intended to be recorded at Carnegie Hall in New York, but he got high with the Grateful Dead and missed the show. Kurt Winter played guitar after Randy, he was an amazing talent and the most unglamorous rock star ever
I wound up with the 45 of Reflections of Life in 1975. My late uncle bought a huge batch of records to help out a coworker having hard times. They were given to me since he wasn’t into rock. That was one of many gems in that collection.
I occasionally sing both "Spirit in the Sky" and "American Woman" on our karaoke here at home in Mindanao Philippines. There is a comedy version of "Let It Be" that people sometimes sing with the lyrics "Letter B, Letter C, Letter D, Letter E". Easy as 1-2-3, ABC, baby you and me girl... I guess ha ha ha!
As child of the 70s, this was awesome Professor. I feel like you would be someone I would hang with in "real life". I have an MBA and work in the corporate world, which I'm at odd with often, because I'm a boho artistic person at my core, and corporate America is cold & mean (perhaps why I often self medicate even though I don't like doing it). I love popular American culture, music, corny tv shows, etc. I love this channel man. Peace be with you.
Let It Be. Adore that song. "And when the night is cloudy, there is still a light that shines on me. Shine until tomorrow. Let it be." Doesn't get much better than that.
Professor, these are my favorite videos you do. My dad owned a high-end stereo store in Ft Lauderdale in 1970 so I was always exposed to good music and excellent stereos. The first music I was exposed to was Let it Be, Santana's Abraxas, and GW's American Woman (pretty sophisticated music for a 3 year old, BTW). AW is still one the best albums and best sounding record/tape/CD I have ever owned. Every track is still awesome and Humpty's Blues is still one of my favorite electric blues songs (along with Red House, and Jesus Left Chicago).
Another fantastic show professor, loved all those in the top 10. I was 11 years old then and the Beatles were so inspiring to me, the Guess Who were awesome and led me to Canadian rock, Ides of March and Vehicle was great, one hit wonder is one hit more than I ever had 😁. Thanks again friend and friends, all that are involved in these videos.
I always loved Let It Be from when I first heard it, but my all time favourite Beatles song is I Want You (She's so Heavy) which is my warm up song before I play.
what I really like about these countdown episodes is that I learn so much more about the origin of these very popular songs and what the artist's inspiration and the stories that accompany them
I always look forward to your content of amazing rock history, you’re doing a fab job. I would love to hear a top 10 of the week of June 23, 1971 which is my birthday. That year was such a landmark for some of the best music around, including Zeppelin and Carol King. Hope you can cover it, would be quite fun!
1970 I had just turned 13 in the 7th grade. My mother was going through a divorce and we had to move to subsidized housing. It was just my mother and me and my 3 sisters. I was glad my stepfather left. Unfortunately she was starting to date the future second stepfather ugh. My sisters and I had each other in a dysfunctional situation. I listened to the radio a lot and these songs take me back to a tough but innocent time.
Love to hear top 10s from 1967 and 1968 and 1969. Loved this ! I love that I got to experience each Beatle hit in real time. I was 10 in 1964! Favorite music years were 1966- 1970
1) That was about the least surprising new #1 ever. No problem, Let It Be totally deserves it. 2) Thank you very much for reminding me of Vehicle--I'm not sure I ever knew the name of the song, but boy is it familiar to anyone who was past the age of 5 that year!
When I was in high school I was in the concert choir in Livonia, MI at Bentley HS. We were a touring choir. For our final everyone was required to sing a solo in front of the class. I sang the Country Joe and the Fish Woodstock song Feel like I’m Fixin to Die Rag but the best was a friend of mine who sang Ray Steven’s Guitarzan with all the ape sounds etc - the whole banana! It was great!
I loved your interview with Jim and the story behind the song Vehicle. (My name is Karen as well.) Although I enjoyed the song when I was 9, I didn't appreciate his music until he came out with Eye of the Tiger; a connection I never knew until this episode. Thanks, Professor!
Roy Buchanan’s cover of Can I change my mind off the Livestock albums is one of my all time favorite songs. Funny I always thought it was originally by Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes.
Poll: 1970s were such a great decade. What are your picks for greatest album, song and artist of the decade?
Album: Permanent Waves by Rush [I know it's a stretch since it wasn't released until 1/80, but its genesis & recording took place in 79]
Song: The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by Gordon Lightfoot [1976]
Artist: Eagles
Album: "Rumours"- Fleetwood Mac
Song: "I Go Crazy"- Paul Davis
Artist: The Bee Gees
🤷🏻♀️ IDK 😂😎 I Love It All... RocknRoll 💯🎵🎸🎶💙
Album: The Dark Side of the Moon
Song/Artist: WAAAAAAYYY too many!
So many to choose from! Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd for best album, Elton John for best artist and Stayin’ Alive by the Bee Gees (tied with Superstition by Stevie Wonder) for best song are my picks!
Growing up in the 70's, I was exposed to such a variety of great music. I was blessed to grow up in that decade.
Same. :) So much variety and such great music for sure! We were all so blessed, such a gentle, peaceful time to be a kid, I miss it so much.
When music was actually music! 💖
Born in 57 Grew up in the 60’s and 70’s Just an Amazing Musical period in Time
Yes no doubt , I live in the south I listened to, motown ,beatles , beach boys , Johnny cash ,and never thought this is this kind of music or that kind of music , it was just good music
My moms favorite song was American Woman, and whenever it came on the radio in the car, she would turn the volume up to what we felt was eardrum splitting levels. Mom passed in 2001, and as I was driving to her funeral, this song began playing as I was pulling up to the church. I sat in the car, bawling my eyes out because I felt she was there calming my broken heart. Amazing memories.
That's a beautiful memory.
Thanks for sharing that memory. My Mom started her own Burton Cummings/Guess Who fan club back in the late 90's. She used the title American Woman as her as her name on the message board she ran. After she passed in 2016 I put "American Woman" on her headstone.
@@JimmyNotes jimmy notes.. You the man. Awesome tribute!
@@mrled8555 Thank you.
Your Mom had great taste. She must've liked the heavy side of Rock. My kind of lady. My mom was more of a John Denver/Kenny Rogers fan. Played songs from both at her funeral in 2016. RIP Mom. We'll listen together again someday
60's, 70's and 80's: the golden age of mainstream music.
Until Grunge & Rap ruined the AM/FM Radio & MTV! And then Rock/Hard Rock somehow became Alt. Rock?
I just shake my head when I get in cars, and they turn on allegedly “Rock Stations”!
I just tell them “You don’t know what Rock & Roll is.” And it’s sad. I raised my kids on 60, 70, & 80s rock. And the bands still keeping Rock & Roll ALIVE!
I like getto rap
Prob the golden age...but the 90's were pretty good too.
most 60s and 70s music is crap - but there are masterpieces. 80s ruled. Maybe too much synth. 90s went in many directions. 2000+ absolute crap with a few memorable ones.
@@commentfreely5443 most 60/70's music is crap . Probably the most musically illiterate statement I will read in my lifetime.
There's nothing like the wistful nostalgic feeling I get when I watch this channel. I remember better days and I'm grateful I'm old enough to have lived in a simpler time.
To quote Adam, “It’s nostalgia every time.”
I love still being alive to remember to he 60s & 70s. Not a given when I was born in the 50s. Still remember many of the hits of the early rock & roll yrs. 1955 great year!!!!
@@oldmanriver1955 Perfect year! And the perfect year for Chevy!
So do I... so do I.
I was born in 1960. Was 10 years old in 1970. Experienced it all. Such a wonderful trip down memory lane. Thanks!
This week, 52 years ago, stands out in my mind. I was a high school senior, 17 years old, about to graduate. There were anti-war demonstrations and the killings at Kent State, bomb scares and student walk-outs. It was a time endings and beginnings. My musical tastes had already drifted from top 40. Woodstock was less than a year in the past. And, although I did know two of his brothers better, I do remember this one younger guy who would be singing to himself in the school’s hallways by the name of Dee Snider (Twisted Sister).
Oh my goodness! I was 10 yrs old in 1970. I remember very vividly everything you mentioned. There was no”shielding” kids from these events. It made us stronger. I love your Dee Snider story. He is still amazing and so interesting to listen to. My 85 yr old mom loves him too! Thx for sharing!
I was a Sophomore , I remember the photo of the girl at Kent State with her hands out saying like Why
I did not realize No Sugar Tonight and American Woman were on the same single. The Guess Who are so incredibly underrated. Can't argue with #1, Let it Be might be the most beautiful ballad ever written! Great job as always Professor! Thanks!
All Canadian bands were underrated back in the day.
My Dad was 17 in 1970.. I'm pretty well versed in this stuff.. Love ya Dad!!
I know what you mean. I had the same great father to show the right way. Thanks for sharing.
My dad was born in 1970, when “ABC” was at #1. He would have been a week old at the time these songs were popular.
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 circle of life I guess.. its a cycle everyday
I was 17 in 1970. I'll be 71 in November.
I was born in November 1970. The song my grandma always sang to me as a baby was "Everything Is Beautiful". I miss her so much.
I don't know what I would do without you and your channel bringing back such great memories and stories. Music is one of the most important things in my life. Thanks again for all you do!
Music is my soul, my oxygen. It’s why I love this channel.
There were some miserable times for me as a kid in the 70's and it was music that always made me feel better and saved my life really. I am still at my happiness when I hear these wonderful old songs.
I’m glad to see you’re doing something about the 70’s, I’ve always personally thought it was the best decade of music, so diverse and interesting for all genres.
Beatles, NY Dolls, Sex Pistols, Black Sabbath, CSNY, Parliment-Funkadelic, Teddy Pendergrass, Barry White, Sugar Hill Gang, Chic, Van Halen: The seeds of the 80s-today were all planted in the 70s for sure.
My mother made sure that the Beatles were my first favorite.
I was born in 1964.
While I was a babe in her arms...
She played the HELP album over, and over, and over.
She's got a ticket to ride will forever play in my head as the very first musical song I ever heard.
This IS documented on 8 mm home movie film.
Love you MOM!!!!
Happy mothers day Bobbie K!
Happy Mothers Day indeed. She raised your right!
Also, 1964 is THE year of Beatlemania. The Beatles captured the minds of millions and made hundreds of girls scream in the process. It was so wild and exhilarating!
Thanks Adam for another great countdown!
My suggestion: the week of July 4, 1970, when American Top 40 debuted!
Yeah that would really be cool. That is a great suggestion
American Woman was everyone’s favourite in Grade 6 at Cordell’s Elementary in Toronto. I brought in my portable record player for a class party and we played that song over and over until my record player slowed down and stopped late in the party. Canadian kids seldom heard music from our side of the border in those days so that might’ve boosted the tune even higher for us, the Guess Who opened the door and now we have an outsized share of great music artists. Burton and Randy borrowed much from Whole Lotta Love by Zep on this tune!
Just to say that there was a lot of love for that song here in the states as well. They were just saying what a lot of Boomers were thinking back then. And musically the band was top shelf.
I always loved the intro to The Wonderful World of Disney. Tinkerbell would wave her wand and the television world turned from black and white into color! Everything on TV before 7PM was B&W. Damn I'm old!
I remember it well!
Every Sunday night. Miss that
Me too! I used to watch old episodes of that show at age four!
Not old simply experienced!
I never got into show tunes. I guess since my pop loved Rock n Roll and we rarely watched television could be the reason. He did have a massive stereo set up though
The late 60’s laid the foundation and influenced so many budding young musicians who gave us the great music of the 70s. Better recording technology and FM radio didn’t hurt, either!
Very innovative, indeed.
The seventies are a treasure trove of creativity
Love your channel. Thank you for everything you do to keep our music from the 50s, 60s and 70s relevant. We had the best music in history. I actually feel sorry for young people today who know nothing of what we had. Thank you. 😊🇨🇦
Instant Karma reminds me of my brother, he loved this song. Also loved the Doobie Brothers, Blue Oyster Cult, T-Rex, George Harrison....he passed his love of music on to me. Sadly, he passed away very young. Best memory: My brother, my cousin + me at the Concert for Bangladesh. Greatest concert ever! ❤❤❤
It’s Mother’s Day and I just got home from church where I said a prayer asking for a sign from my sweet Mama. My husband and I snuggled on the couch and settled into this podcast to nap to. I had my hand on the remote almost ready to change it because born in 66 the music first mentioned didn’t resonate with me. Then
BAM!!! “Let it be” were literally my mama’s words, catch phrase. Tears of beautiful memories rolling down my cheeks. Prayers answered! Thanks Professor for the best Mother’s Day gift I could have gotten.Words of wisdom from my sweet Mom ❤️ PS You are living my dream and live it so well😎 we love your show! I’m a huge Petty Head and always love anything TPHB /Dirty Knobs. Anything Traveling Wilburys???
married 1970 and now 52 years later , still together to sing along with hits of 60's an 70's . enjoyed this top ten.
Don’t forget The Guess Who’s connection to Brave Belt which became BTO! I love all the tendrils that grew out of this band! Check it out it’s like 6 degrees of Kevin Bacon once you include writing producing etc just a stunning array of talent!
Steven Wright said "Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the same time." I had forgotten about some of these but had an instant flashback of the 45 and the London Records label of "Reflections of my Life" which I played about a million times. Thank you Professor, I get so much enjoyment from these segments. I can't wait for the next!
I remember most of these ! I turned 10
in ‘70 ! Great songs all ! Thanks
I did too. So glad I grew up in the best eras ever!
"Reflections of My Life" great song! I never heard it until 2 years ago.
Ah yes, "Vehicle, Ides of March" This tune has been my all time favorite trivia question. With nearly 30 years of asking, who did the tune, only one person ever got it right.
A really great tune from, as it turned out, the most unknown of the Chicago horn bands.
Oddly, the only time my trivia question was answered correctly was when I was in a home improvement store and Vehicle was playing over the PA system, and I asked the question to the air. Suddenly an African-American man stepped around the corner and said, "the ides of March". I applauded him and said that he was the first person to ever get the question right. We had a really neat conversation about the Chicago horn bands. ;-)
Great story! Thanks for sharing.
I would have said BS&T
I would have gotten that one right too! I memorize artists’ names really well, impressing lots of people in the process!
@@vjr5261 That's A Great Guess 👍
That's a great song. One of my favorites to karaoke to.
As a teenager in 1970 all of these songs bring back so many memories of that era. For most us growing up during the early 70's, the song by Marmalade, "Reflections Of My Life" brings up images of the Vietnam war. It lends itself so well to the RUclips format, where images of the War (pics and videos) are played out during the song. Very powerful imaging with the music that brings back so many memories of the early 70's.
Growing up in the 70's I assumed everyone made great music. "Reflections of my life" was always a favoriteof mine.
Just wanted to mention...
Neil Diamond Gold- My dad had the original LP... I bought it on CD later and recently found a mint one at a seconds store. It was my first venture into the world of Neil, but it still also remains my favourite.
Just wanted to mention that since I saw it there...
Love you dad... and thank you...
I think it's time we all just acknowledge that to put The Beatles on any list, nomination, mention, ranking or rating is pointless. Lol! The Beatles are The Beatles. They are the greatest of everything. When the universe came together to get those four amazing, incredible, beautiful young men in one place, the explosion that happened showered every single person alive during the same time as any of them with a blessing. No other band, group, solo performer or artist, composer or pair, can even remotely touch The Beatles and what they did. They didn't just write good songs and play them, they changed music. They did more to influence the sounds we let run through our heads every single day than anyone else during their contemporary years, or before and even after. No one is going to be able to touch them for a really long time, if ever with the way they impacted the musical multiverse around them. People will be talking about The Beatles for 500 years...more than that! I'd like to think that Yellow Submarine and Octopuses Garden will live on for centuries as nursery rhymes and bands like The Libertines and Oasis always include a little Beatles in their repertoire. Hell, you'll be able to hear The Beatles on Mars! Aliens fifty bajillion light years away will eventually get radio signals of The Beatles...and they'll remark about how often those signals repeat and how absolutely wonderful those particular ones are! Then they'll start adding it to their own music!
Everything Is Beautiful was one of the few serious Ray Stevens songs that weren’t comedy based, and one of his most covered.
Love this one. How about June 1974...my high school graduation.
Thank you for all the hard work you put into this channel this music means so much to all of us.......
I turned 13 yrs old in 1970. ALL of these songs were great but I particularly loved Marmalade's song which my friends and I believed to be a sort of protest song....about a soldier dying in a battle. I'm sure we read or heard that somewhere. I remember listening to all of these on my transistor radio , turned down low so my parents wouldn't hear, as I went to sleep at night on the great WLS out of Chicago. I had some of these songs on 45 rpm records that I listened to on my GE Wildcat stereo that I was so proud of!
1970 was definitely a GREAT year for music. Back then, I couldn't imagine being 64 years old. Those were the "don't trust anyone over 30} years :) I kept up with and loved new music until about 2004. Music started making such great changes and I wasn't a fan anymore. I guess that happens when you are aging. But, I have 40+ years of the best music ever made, the 60s through the early 00s, to listen to.
Professor, thank you for this video. It was a fun one to listen to. I cannot believe it as been 52 yrs since 1970!!
Marmalade’s song is a work of art, for sure!
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 I agree wholeheartedly. Dean Ford, the lead singer, gave such heart and soul into that song. May he Rest in Peace 🌹
@@fumblebunny1993 Let us give tribute to Dean. He is the one who made this song truly amazing.
That song still makes me cry. Y’all got to see Dean sing Reflections in this MASTERPIECE
m.ruclips.net/video/Dn9bAvWS4RU/видео.html
This was only a week or two from my high school graduation. Fond memories of all those songs. Heard them over and over on top 40 AM radio.
I suggest covering Casey Kasem's first top 40 show from the weekend of July 4, 1970.
That would be cool
Love "Vehicle!" I used to think it was Blood, Sweat & Tears because the lead singer's voice reminded me so much of David Clayton-Thomas. Plus, the horns of course. One of my favorite 70s songs!
Professor, Thanks for mentioning our Spirit in the Sky story !! 😎👍
As an army brat in 1970 the first thing I think about when asked about a date or time is "where was I living at". Some of the places I live at overseas had one television station that was in English and one or two radio stations. Television station was on for about 12 hours a day but the radio station was on all day and night, plus we had records we could play. We may not have been current on the popular TV shows but we were current on our music. We loved our music. For the record this week in 1970 I was living in Massachusetts three months away from going back to Okinawa.
This show was about May in 1970....I was born in August so it's good to see what was rocking before I joined the world and became a drummer
Just anything or anytime from the 70's
When I first heard Vehicle by Ides of March on the radio when it came out, I always thought it was Blood Sweat & Tears.
I did, too! David Clayton-Thomas!
I was nine years old in 1970 and I distinctly remember wondering why everyone loved Everything Is Beautiful. I thought it was goopy sentimental garbage. Still do, but the rest of this list is fantastic.
Same here. I think the song is horrendous and the children’s choir only makes it worse. But other than that, 1970 was a fantastic time for music!
"Rainbow" was Marmalade's follow-up in America and is one of the most beautiful songs ever recorded. Shockingly, it only peaked at #51 on the Billboard Hot 100. Deserved better.
George's guitar work on "Let It Be" elevates and deepens the song remarkably and Paul stripping off that remarkable solo and those brilliant fills strikes me as sacrilege. The song builds to the unleashing of the solo but in Paul's preferred version, all that tension just drains away with a limpid, insipid organ break.
Prince’s Halftime show cannot be topped… Purple Rain IN a downpour where the stage lights made it look like actual purple rain?? No one can ever beat that. (I love the backstory, when the director told Prince, going to keep raining through the halftime show, Prince said, “Can you make it rain harder?”)
What does that have to do with 1970 ?
Many thanks once again for the wonderful trip down memory lane. I had goosebumps throughout. Immersing myself in music helped me deal with a really quite scary at times childhood. I would take my little blue plastic transistor radio and listen to all these songs on CKLW out of Detroit. Choosing to remember the joy and escape the music offered me rather than what was going on at home, in the neighbourhood and at school makes all the difference and allows me to enjoy the music throughout my life.
You asked which week each of us would like, I'd love to hear the Top Ten on the first week of December 1967, the year i finished school in the then Rhodesia. Now I'm living in Durban, South Africa.
Great to watch your show, thanks so much. Lawrie.
50 years ago...that was my time! What a gift to come of age during the greatest time for music ever! I love 80s music, but it builds on my period, 1964 through the 70s. I got hooked on the Beatles when I was 10 and grew up with the music of the time.
Finally prof in my wheel house. What a great year for music!! Listening to WLS or WCFL for each one of these gems, all in fantastic mono. Thanks for the memories!
Glad you enjoy it! Thanks for watching it!
The days of mono and AM radio, definitely takes me back to some great memories
@@MyName-pl7zn I love mono sound! It is so cool!
I used to get WLS and WABC on my stereo late at night. I would forego sleep to listen. Still have a countdown sheet from Jeff Davis, my favorite dj.
Gotta give it up to those boys from the North End in Winnipeg - the Guess Who! On top of the world back in 1970! Absolute rock legends!
A little far back… I turn 60 on July 4, born in 62. Can you do that week or day? I don’t hear you going that far back . I absolutely love your show! My mom and brother,he is 8yrs older than me,always had music on. I love the 50’s through the 80’s. So much variety in sounds ❤️. By far the 70’s music was the best!!!! 💞 thank you for your great content!!! 💞
Fast Forward to 2022:
“What the hell happened to music?”
Great channel, new subscriber. Love going back in time with these stories. My love for music started with a clock radio with the flip numbers back in the mid 70's. Tuned into the local rock station where I would sit with my flip cassette player waiting to tape songs, telling my mom DON'T come into my room....I'm recording! It was always on it seemed, at night falling asleep, waking up to the morning shows.
I would love to see a possible episode on two lost or rarely talked about genres of the 70's. Goofy songs like Does your chewing gum lose it flavour, You don't roller skate in a buffalo herd, Hello mother, hello father or the trucker genre with songs like Phantom 309, Convoy, Teddy Bear.
I was asked to play guitar and sing at a wedding in Liverpool. The bride and groom selected a few songs... All You Need is Love and Imagine being the two they suggested would encourage everyone to sing along. I suggested Instant Karma as a third, but due to a large number of Buddhist attendees they vetoed it. Shame...however I was delighted to share the stage with John Gorman from the band The Scaffold. Any Nerd of the Mersey Sound will know The Scaffold also contained Mike McCartney...Paul's brother. That's as close as I'm going to get to The Beatles in this lifetime. What an exciting experience to sing Imagine with John Gorman ...
That’s a pretty cool story! You had me at Liverpool!
Liverpool! No way! I would have loved to be there.
I stood next to Mike McCartney at the bar in The Philharmonic about ten years ago before the OMD concert with the orchestra. He was very tall. I thought the concert was boring to be honest, partly at the time and definitely in retrospect. More recently, performances by Carol Decker, Clark Datchler of Johnny Hates Jazz and Nik Kershaw at 80s Classical in Leeds have been highly impressive. There was also another concert at the venue around the same time period of different artists. It might have been tied in with the Capital of Culture, I am not sure. OMD were on the bill and The Scaffold performed Lily the Pink. Roger McGough went to St Mary's in Crosby where my late father also attended. He must have been in the fifth year when my dad started. He went on a scholarship, coming from a poor working class background in Southport and living in rented housing. He always told me how strict it was, with corporal punishment used liberally and unjustly.
I'm a child of the 80's and 90's, but I generally prefer the music of the 60's and 70's. I'm really digging your channel. I've just subscribed.
Glad Reflections Of My Life has moved up over the years. Poignant lyrics with the appropriate magnificent harmonies, make it a deserved hit to remember.
I remember when Vehicle came out, my friends swore it was by Chicago due to that opening riff, and also mistook Peterik's vocals for Terry Kath. As a huge Chicago fan, it took all I had to not give them all a Curly slap lol
Ha ha. Great story.
I can see that, Fred!
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 Say it ain't so! lol Vehicle is one if my favorite songs--in fact, my first email address included it--As talented a musician (better songwriter, no doubt) as Peterik is, and I give him major props, he's no Terry Kath.
@@vehicle22 I always thought it was amazing that this lead singer of “Vehicle” was the same guy behind songs like “Eye of the Tiger” and “Burning Heart”. When I first heard this song I thought it sounded like a combination of Chicago and Blood, Sweat and Tears.
RUSH is my favorite band! My first show was the Signals tour. I fell in love that night and that hasn’t changed!!! The talent and musicianship is unmatched!!! A few bands come close but the integrity and the quality are first class!!! Love them! Miss them and God bless them!!! Rest in peace Neil 🙏🤗🥰☮️☮️☮️
I graduated in 1972, you are really right on my friend and thank you for every one of your Shows.
Fun to learn the story behind"Vehicle", as I remember that song well from my youth. Thanks for another well done and informative video, that brought back memories and feelings from long ago.
I agree. I always thought it was about a pimp.
I think it was a hit around the same time as "The Pusher" by Steppenwolf. The two songs are deeply associated with each other in my memory.
This was my senior year in high school. There was a separation between AM and FM radio. This list misses all the great music that was on the FM stations.
18:20 - I had the same sort of dream sometime in 1999-2000. I felt reassured when I woke up and thought about it.
Thank you so much ! I turned 6 on May 6th ! Lol !! So many memories of all these songs,a reel of my life then,when I still had all my siblings,Mom had just met my future Daddy,my grandparent,aunts and uncles. A more carefree time when we were able to be kids-in the house before the streetlights came on and shared everything with the family dog,from food to road trips,where the 2 of us often rode in the back window of the car since I was the smallest of 6 that would be safe enough. Great memories. Again thank so much for those spring/summer memories. Only thing that would make it better would be Mungo Jerry's in the summertime !! ❤
I believe I used to live by you in the early 80's. My father traveled a lot when I was young and we lived in Idaho Falls because he was the manager of the movie theaters like the Rio. I remember watching Ghostbusters there over a 100 times while dad was working. Just wanted to say to you that you remind me so much of the good days, good music, and Casey Kasem. Keep reaching for the stars my friend.
Wow! Shakin’ All Over…that took me back to my childhood. I was 10 years old the year it was released. I loved that song. Still do.
I've had so many debates about the quality of pop music declining, and so many people are convinced that it's merely a symptom of aging to put down the music that the kids are listening to. This is not it. People also say that it's a cream of the crop situation, where we only know the best stuff from past ages, therefore all of the crap just fell through the cracks. But shows like this demonstrate that this is not the case, because a top 10 from a week includes the long-lived and the trendy, all of which are just objectively better and better for you
The backing band for Instant Karma include Alan White of Yes and Klaus Voorman on bass and even Mal Evans their road manager on tambourine
Thanks for the memories, Professor! I remember all of these songs from my college days. Great music from 1970.
This is easily my fav series on the channel, love seeing the all time streams numbers and hearing people's stories they associate with the music. Long live rock!
1972 I was just 6 years old but I remember getting a box of Sugar Smacks cereal that had a sort of plastic record on the back of the Jackson Five song. I believe it was "One, Two, Three"... something something something. I was 6 and it wasn't a real record. It was a real song. I still have that memory. Okay, maybe I got the actual song name and cereal name wrong, but the memory is still there. And "American Woman" gets a tip-of-the-hat but for something years later for a girlfriend that turned me down when I asked her to stay with me instead of going back home overseas. I changed the nationality for hers instead of American. That happened 15 years ago. Hope she's happy with her choice.
Sugar Smacks! Great memory . Thanks for sharing.
Cool. I remember getting a free record like that back in the day. It came with a guitar lesson book you cut out.
I don't remember the cereal name (maybe Sugar Puffs) but plastic records on the boxes was also a UK thing. We got the Jackson 5 on there too.
Sugar Smacks! Ahhh…nostalgia.
"Love or let me be lonely" was years later covered by Paul Davis (1981). I think his version is great as well. Well done again Professor. Cheers.
I think I remember hearing "Instant Karma" for the first time on that Nike commercial
Here in Winnipeg, we're still proud of the Guess Who, even though Burton and Randy don't live here anymore. Heck, Burton has a theater named after him, which is a venue for music shows.
A theater and a community center
I can remember when it was called Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color. Only back then all we could afford was a black & white tv. The old tube type. We lived in this old trailer house and when the tv would start messing up he would stomp his heal on the floor a couple of times and the tv would work great again for a day or two. Great episode as always Professor. I don't want to write another book like I did on the other one..
After watching you for the better part of an entire weekend I feel like we are friends! At the very least kindred spirits!
I was in 8th grade in 1980 and had been a Beatles fan as long as I could remember. The year before I had won a copy of the Red & Blue set from a WLS radio call-in contest and played it constantly. My father woke me up early that morning to break the news that John Lennon had died just as if a member of the family had passed.
Even Better than "American Woman" was the 'Live at the Paramount' version of "American Woman" with the long (almost dirty) intro. Definitely MY favorite Guess Who performance !!
And the replacement for Randy Bachman was stellar
Burton sheepishly tells the story that the live album from Seattle was intended to be recorded at Carnegie Hall in New York, but he got high with the Grateful Dead and missed the show. Kurt Winter played guitar after Randy, he was an amazing talent and the most unglamorous rock star ever
'Truckin off Across the Sky' is so great
I wound up with the 45 of Reflections of Life in 1975. My late uncle bought a huge batch of records to help out a coworker having hard times. They were given to me since he wasn’t into rock. That was one of many gems in that collection.
Sound like you had cool uncle!
I occasionally sing both "Spirit in the Sky" and "American Woman" on our karaoke here at home in Mindanao Philippines. There is a comedy version of "Let It Be" that people sometimes sing with the lyrics "Letter B, Letter C, Letter D, Letter E". Easy as 1-2-3, ABC, baby you and me girl... I guess ha ha ha!
Sometimes you just need good old fashioned, straight up rock and roll music.
No Sugar Tonight.
Another great B-side.
I listen to the 70's on 7 siriusxm. The 70's had the best music in my opinion.
A 1970 Top Ten and Adam has interviewed 3 of them? Nice. Seriously. Great job doing what you do.
As child of the 70s, this was awesome Professor. I feel like you would be someone I would hang with in "real life". I have an MBA and work in the corporate world, which I'm at odd with often, because I'm a boho artistic person at my core, and corporate America is cold & mean (perhaps why I often self medicate even though I don't like doing it). I love popular American culture, music, corny tv shows, etc. I love this channel man. Peace be with you.
Let It Be. Adore that song. "And when the night is cloudy, there is still a light that shines on me. Shine until tomorrow. Let it be." Doesn't get much better than that.
Professor, these are my favorite videos you do. My dad owned a high-end stereo store in Ft Lauderdale in 1970 so I was always exposed to good music and excellent stereos. The first music I was exposed to was Let it Be, Santana's Abraxas, and GW's American Woman (pretty sophisticated music for a 3 year old, BTW). AW is still one the best albums and best sounding record/tape/CD I have ever owned. Every track is still awesome and Humpty's Blues is still one of my favorite electric blues songs (along with Red House, and Jesus Left Chicago).
Great comment but the thumbs up is really for being a raging Dolphins maniac. Fins Up!
@@r.mageddon3385 Fins up!
Another fantastic show professor, loved all those in the top 10. I was 11 years old then and the Beatles were so inspiring to me, the Guess Who were awesome and led me to Canadian rock, Ides of March and Vehicle was great, one hit wonder is one hit more than I ever had 😁. Thanks again friend and friends, all that are involved in these videos.
Great week from a great year. Let it Be deserves no#1 not just because I am a Beatles fan and it was #1 the day I was born.
I always loved Let It Be from when I first heard it, but my all time favourite Beatles song is I Want You (She's so Heavy) which is my warm up song before I play.
what I really like about these countdown episodes is that I learn so much more about the origin of these very popular songs and what the artist's inspiration and the stories that accompany them
So glad you enjoy them!
And what the artist themselves has to say about them!
I always look forward to your content of amazing rock history, you’re doing a fab job. I would love to hear a top 10 of the week of June 23, 1971 which is my birthday. That year was such a landmark for some of the best music around, including Zeppelin and Carol King. Hope you can cover it, would be quite fun!
1970 I had just turned 13 in the 7th grade. My mother was going through a divorce and we had to move to subsidized housing. It was just my mother and me and my 3 sisters. I was glad my stepfather left. Unfortunately she was starting to date the future second stepfather ugh. My sisters and I had each other in a dysfunctional situation. I listened to the radio a lot and these songs take me back to a tough but innocent time.
I am so sorry for your sad memories, but I’m happy that you remember the music!😊😊😊😊
Love to hear top 10s from 1967 and 1968 and 1969. Loved this ! I love that I got to experience each Beatle hit in real time. I was 10 in 1964! Favorite music years were 1966- 1970
Hi. How are you doing Debbie 🌹🌹
Look at most charts from the 70's and we all remember virtually every single one...the variety of genres stand out also .
1) That was about the least surprising new #1 ever. No problem, Let It Be totally deserves it. 2) Thank you very much for reminding me of Vehicle--I'm not sure I ever knew the name of the song, but boy is it familiar to anyone who was past the age of 5 that year!
Love your content, brings back a lot of memories of being young
When I was in high school I was in the concert choir in Livonia, MI at Bentley HS. We were a touring choir. For our final everyone was required to sing a solo in front of the class. I sang the Country Joe and the Fish Woodstock song Feel like I’m Fixin to Die Rag but the best was a friend of mine who sang Ray Steven’s Guitarzan with all the ape sounds etc - the whole banana! It was great!
Marmalade. Haven't heard this since it was on the radio. Thanks for bringing it back.
I loved your interview with Jim and the story behind the song Vehicle. (My name is Karen as well.) Although I enjoyed the song when I was 9, I didn't appreciate his music until he came out with Eye of the Tiger; a connection I never knew until this episode. Thanks, Professor!
Roy Buchanan’s cover of Can I change my mind off the Livestock albums is one of my all time favorite songs. Funny I always thought it was originally by Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes.