Showing posts with label we love the 70s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label we love the 70s. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2023

Today in Bee Gees History

February 23rd 1978
The #BeeGees won their first Grammy for “How Deep Is Your Love” at the 20th Recording Academy Awards.
This was for Best Pop Performance by a Group.



Friday, March 29, 2019

WE LOVE THE 70s


Billboard Hot 100
Top 20
March 29th 1975
The 1st and only week at #1 for LaBelle and "Lady Marmalade"




Wednesday, November 14, 2018

WE LOVE THE BEATLES

A 1974 live version was recorded by the Elton John Band with John Lennon and released as the B-side to the former's "Philadelphia Freedom" single. The song is available on the Lennon box set, and on Elton John's To Be Continued... box set as well as the expanded CD edition of his 1976 live album Here and There and Elton John's Rare Masters. Lennon's introduction:
I'd like to thank Elton and the boys for having me on tonight. We tried to think of a number to finish off with so I can get out of here and be sick, and we thought we'd do a number of an old, estranged fiancé of mine, called Paul. This is one I never sang, it's an old Beatle number, and we just about know it.
This was the last major live performance by John Lennon. After Lennon's death, the track was released as a single and reached #40 on the UK Singles Chart in March 1981, making it the first time that any version of the song had entered the UK charts.

(Forgive me, I took the above from Wikipedia but I just love this song and this version is pretty darn good and I wish I could have seen this live.)


Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Oscar For Best Original Song 1974

"We May Never Love Like This Again" - Maureen McGovern 

Winner of the Academy Award for Best Original Song of 1974, from the movie "The Towering Inferno"


Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

WE LOVE THE 70s!

The Six Million Dollar Band perform Denver's mega-hit ''Thank God I'm A Country Boy'' on his 1977 ABC Special. 

Friday, May 19, 2017

We Love the 70s

Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album
1971



Track listing[edit]

Side one[edit]

  1. Great Quotations – 2:15[12]
  2. The Devil Made Me Buy This Dress – 4:00
  3. Miss Johnson – 2:55
  4. The Great Motor Bike and Tennis Shoe Race, Honey – 3:10
  5. The Go-Rilla – 7:00

Side two[edit]

  1. Monologue Number One (Wardrobe Lady, Pt. I – Drive-In Movie – Lemonade Stand – Golf Story) – 6:00[12]
  2. Monologue Number Two (Wardrobe Lady, Pt. II – Doctors Have More Fun) – 3:40
  3. Ice – 2:58
  4. Ruby Begonia – 2:00
  5. Monologue Number Three (Seeing Ed Eat A Chittlin' On Network Television – The Pet Shop) – 2:45

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Magazine Cover of the Day

March 1st 1971 

James Taylor on the cover of TIME magazine


James Taylor’s self-titled 1968 debut album, which featured the gorgeous, downbeat ballads “Carolina in My Mind” and “Sweet Baby James,” earned him a small but dedicated following among the collegiate liberal-arts set. But as the 60s counterculture burned itself out and the 70s began, his second album made him a star. Sweet Baby James (1970) featured a now-classic title track as well as Taylor’s first true hits, “Country Road” and “Fire and Rain.”  With fellow singer-songwriters like Joni Mitchell and Carole King also in ascendancy, Time magazine saw fit to declare a trend, placing James Taylor on its March 1, 1971, cover under the headline “The New Rock: Bittersweet and Low.”
“Over the last year a far gentler variety of rock sound has begun to soothe the land,” the Time article said in contrasting Taylor’s music to the “walloping folk rock of Bob Dylan,” the “thunderous eloquence of the Beatles” and the “leer of the Rolling Stones.” The article declined to offer a straightforward explanation for the apparent shift in public tastes, but it offered a trenchant sociological analysis of James Taylor’s particular appeal. On the one hand, the story argued, there was the subject matter of his songs, most of which dealt with the kind of internal struggles that “a lavish quota of middle-class advantages—plenty of money, a loving family, good schools, health, charm and talent—do not seem to prevent, and may in fact exacerbate.” And then there was this: “Lean and hard (6 ft. 3 in., 155 Ibs.), often mustachioed, always with hair breaking at his shoulders, Taylor physically projects a blend of Heathcliffian inner fire with a melancholy look that can strike to the female heart—at any age.”
Whatever the explanation for James Taylor’s appeal, it was considerable. Just months after his appearance on the cover of Time, Taylor scored a #1 pop hit with the Carole King song “You’ve Got a Friend.” He continues to be an enormously popular and multigenerational concert draw, and his catalog of early-70s albums continues to sell well even decades after his hair started receding from his forehead instead of breaking at his shoulders.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016