( continues...) enchanted, not knowing where it was goign when it segued into the reprise of the Supremes song. It was one of the best musical surprises of my life, I think in retrospect, which has rarely been topped.
(Note that it would amply fill the requirements for #27 as well.)
18. A song that reminds you of your first love
"Astro Boy: Main Theme" credited to "Orchestra". I flailed a little for this one, meaning to get a Monkees or Iggy cut, since I wanted to Go Cute, but due to technical difficulties (like not having them at home, just on my Work Computer) I needed something else, and when I looked up #13, there it was just a few cuts below, and I remembered how much my childish heart twingled for Astro Boy and Space Ghost and Kimba the White Lion. Falling in love all over again with anime seems like a natural progression for me, really.
19. A song that references some kind of technology
"Radio Rhythm" by Fletcher Henderson. I'd shoot myself if I couldn't find at least one out and out jazz cut to include here, so going with this 1931 song -- back when radio was still new, and imagining it coming out of somebody's parlor radio just as the Depression was really hitting it's stride -- oh yeah. This band was so tight you could bounce quarters off it... and that was back when quarters were worth something.
It also counts for a lot of other categories. For all I know, there might be cowbell in it too, as well as a kitchen sink.
20. A song with a chorus that compels you to sing along or that you cannot not dance to
"Saved" by LaVern Baker. In another decade, Baker would have been lionessed like Ethel Merman or Billie Holiday, but she had the bad luck of coming along after the era of big shouters had passed. She made some glorious and fun music, and I ran across this cut fairly recently, and had the audio equivalent of my ears streaming back in the breeze. "I used to lie/And cheat/And step on people's feet...." -- salvation has never sounded more fun, you know? I sometimes really do get up and dance around to this -- love the bass drum beating away in the background. 21. A song that starts with a bassline
"Twine Time" by Alvin Cash and the Crawlers. Oh, so many to pick from here, but I ended up with a cut that is basically all bass with intermittent bursts of shouting and drumming and horns -- horns like the tromp of doom, and a rinky-tink organ going all-out spooky. And did I mention the falsetto screams? There's something so hypnotically primitive about this, like you boiled down the essence of rhythm and blues, and bottled it up to apply as you need. Take two before you go to bed.
22. A song that relates to science
"Lovin' Machine" by Wynonie Harris. Long before Alan Parsons thought up the first note of "I, Robot", long before Thomas Dolby was even conceived, Wynonie Harris was taking technology where it had never gone before, and would still probably be illegal in many states, in fact. Plus, this song was recorded in 1951, well before the formal definition of "rock and roll" was established....
23. A song you sing (or would sing) to your pet and/or child
"Ragtime Cowboy Joe" by Alvin and the Chipmunks. Don't ask me how we ended up with this and #21 as they both have leads named Alvin, which strikes me as weird indeed. But I loved this song as a kid, and now that I'm this old, I still love in all its considerable weirdness, and repeat phrases from it to myself on occasion, like "Reach for the sky, you sidewinder!" Plus, those Grammies that Ross Bagdasarian got for engineering these songs weren't for nothing. (I didn't know that he did all the Chipmunk voices until I was reading up in preparation for this -- I thought it was three random singers, speeded up, of course.)
24. A song that haunts you
"Goodnight Moon" by Shivaree. My friend Lynnmonster had an awesomely good Halloween mix last fall, and from it I got this exquisite song, which sounds all soft and nonthreatening until you really listen to the lyrics. Best listened (continued...)