DVD night at Chez ZMayhem sounds very good.
Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Many thanks to Tina and Flea for clarifying my head up.
It's John Boorman's first movie
!!!
DVD night at Chez ZMayhem sounds very good.
Dude! I can never get anybody to hang out and watch my music visuals stuffish. And I've got Serge Gainsbourg's entire video album for Melodie Nelson and rare glam videos and MTV's The Cutting Edge (great show: X, Husker Du, Tom Waits, Jonathan Richman, Hoodoo Gurus...) and Townes Van Zandt in Heartworn Highway and clips from The Old Grey Whistle Test and Memphis rock and roll and power pop clips from Don Kirshner's Rock Concert (Raspberries, Dwight Twilley, 20/20), and X's Unheard Music and jazz soundies with Duke Ellington and Lucky Millander and Pop Gear (goofy yet entertaining Brit pop '64 collection of bands like The Honeycombs) and Gorillaz animation and Tim Buckley on The Monkees and a Velvet Underground documentary and rare Tropicalia clips (Os Mutantes, Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso).
!!!
Yep. And Pauline Kael loved it too.
Well, I'd be all over it. I can host you here or parachute over to the secret Castle ZMayhem.
After the two Beatles movies (and actually, I'd place it before Help!), the Dave Clark Five movie, Having A Wild Weekend is probably the best. It's John Boorman's first movie
Also known as CATCH US IF YOU CAN. Wonder why they changed the name in the US?
Wonder why they changed the name in the US?
Probably because that song was a hit in the US at the time. It's my favorite DC5 song too. Great melody and drive.
Incidentally, I've been meaning to point out to joe and other Beatles fans that a recent NPR podcast for All Songs Considered (4/13?) was about the recent re-release of the American editions of certain Beatles albums with a lot of discussion and comparison between the US v. UK editions. Lots of interesting insight into how the markets worked and were different back then. (Little details about how royalties were paid out in each country - by song in US, by record in UK - affected how many songs would be on each album.)
I'm not an audiophile, but it was fascinating to hear the stereo version of "Twist and Shout" again with the extreme stereo separation (vocals in one ear, instruments in the other) and really focus on how fucking hard John is singing on that song. The expert they were interviewing said that John was coming off a cold and his voice was already raw, and he was gargling with milk (which I don't think would be the preferred gargle, but that's what he did) and there was blood in the milk after he spit it out. He's really ripping his vocal chords on that track.
Dude! I can never get anybody to hang out and watch my music visuals stuffish.
OK, how about next Thanksgiving, when FAQWife & I will probably be back in SF, we can schedule a movie night with you two?
"Don't Go Out Into the Rain (You're Going to Melt)."
Aww, Fred. My sister had that 45. The other 45s I remember most:
"Red Rubber Ball" - Cyrkle (written by Paul Simon!)
"New York Mining Disaster 1941" - Bee Gees
"Carrie Anne" - The Hollies (I play the janitor/you play the monitor) (Oooh! - great bridge)
Thanks for the fun memory.
Heh. Mrs. Brown is a greyhound, plus being a spoiler is making me giggle.
The expert they were interviewing said that John was coming off a cold and his voice was already raw, and he was gargling with milk (which I don't think would be the preferred gargle, but that's what he did) and there was blood in the milk after he spit it out. He's really ripping his vocal chords on that track.
Wow. That is messed up on several levels.
Wonder why they changed the name in the US?
Not sure. Was it before or after the DC5 appeared in Get Yourself a College Girl?