#1 Rhinestone Cowboy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kAU3B9Pi_U
#2 Star Wars Theme Song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_D0ZQPqeJkk
#3 Sky High - Jigsaw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjtD8A-MWBc
I can definitely remember #1 and #2 being in that order, but there could be another #3 I'm just spacing at the moment.
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Jukebox hero
Jukebox hero
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic02W1bWeFU&pp=ygUWanVrZWJveCBoZXJvIGZvcmV...
Bear necessities
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6BH-Rxd-NBo&pp=ygUcanVuZ2xlIGJvb2sgYmVhciB...
Hip to be square (the back to the future version, not the American psycho version)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LB5YkmjalDg&pp=ygUQaGlwIHRvIGJlIHNxdWFyZQ%...
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Red Roses for a Blue Lady by
Red Roses for a Blue Lady by The Mills Brothers. My folks played it a lot.
Age.
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please dont fiddle with the
please dont fiddle with the Oreo middle, Lean on me( back seat of a chevy station wagon 3 boys...
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Bad Bad Leroy Brown
Bad Bad Leroy Brown
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Time in a Bottle
Time in a Bottle
American Pie
Edmund Fitzgerald
Blue Skies
The Boxer
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Pink Panther themehttps://www
Pink Panther theme
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VyZiIuMufTA
Linus and Lucy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00gXEn1ehDg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OODA_K5hxyc
Pink Elephants on Parade
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcZUPDMXzJ8&t=55s
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https://www.youtube.com/watch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAqx8y6mOFY
my very first "favorite" song, from when i was 4-6yo. TBH this really explains quite a bit about myself.
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Probably in 1967 I went to my
In 1967 -68 I went to my cousin's wedding in Ann Arbor and I was 7-8 years old. All my Michigan cousins were older and most of them were hippies. My Uncle Hinney was probably in his 50's, long hair, who rode a motorcycle and he used to spend time at a commune even though he was married to my aunt. Uncle Hinney was a trip, and taught me how to tie dye shirts and he also gave me a chain with Peace Bells on it to wear around my neck, which I still cherish, and they are hanging in my garage to this day. His daughter Jerry married a musician named Terry and one of my most vivid memories from that time was at their wedding, on the dance floor, dancing to Light My Fire by The Doors, with them and all of their hippie friends. The band must of played that song 10 times that night it was a fucking blast. Iconic moment in my life and Light My Fire was the soundtrack.
Seasons in the Sun
Yummy Yummy I got Love in my Tummy by the 1910 Fruitgum Co.
Tommy James and the Shondells were the shit for me - crimson and clover, Hanky Panky, I think were alone now, Mony Mony, Sweet Cherry Wine, Crystal Blue Persuasion
anything on the radio by the Beatles or Credence Clearwater Revival
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not good at reading
not good at reading, I am
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Everybody is Kung Foo
Everybody is Kung Foo Fighting
A Horse With No Name
Smoke on the Water
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She Loves You
She Loves You
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGbWU8S3vzs
Puff the Magic Dragon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z15pxWUXvLY&t=1s
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rihNRTTcztQ
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All three released when I was
All three released when I was 10 and I recall them on AM radio.
Day After Day - Badfinger
Baby I'm A Want You- Bread
What's Goin' On- Marvin Gaye
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Hey Jude
Hey Jude
Last Train To Clarksville
Theme to Mission Impossible
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3 isn't enough
3 isn't enough
i could do radio songs
disney songs
saturnday cartoon songs (banana splits!)
fun topic
radiowise:
octopus' garden
midnight at the oasis
wildfire
always grew up with a clock radio, my night time secret delight
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Where Have All The Flowers
Where Have All The Flowers Gone
Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini
Sherry
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Bob, you must be one of us
Bob, you must be one of us old people.
Sherry wasn't one for me but the other 2 were. I wish I remembered - so much good music in the '50s, '60s.
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Mungo Jerry-In The Summertime
Mungo Jerry-In The Summertime
The Jackson 5-ABC
Lou Reed-Take A Walk On The Wild Side
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles-Tears Of A Clown
The Spinners-Rubber Band Man
Wings-Band On The Run
KC & The Sunshine Bwnd-Get Down Tonight
Aerosmith-Sweet Emotion
The Bee Gees-Jive Talkin'
Elton John-Crocodile Rock
David Bowie-Fame
Lynyrd Skynyrd-Sweet Home Alabama
Kiss-Rock & Roll All Night
The Who-Won't Get Fooled Again
Led Zeppelin-Stairway To Heaven
Aretha Franklin-Rock Steady
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Gosh, who knows at that age.
Gosh, who knows at that age. The first song I remember being deep into was
The Reflex
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^^^
^^^
Yes Judit. I am a proud member of that tribe. Yes there certainly was. And most of it stands the test of time. For me, I guess it started with Folk and progressed from there to ultimately the Grateful Dead. A lot of the folk stuff I gravitated to was from my summer camp experiences. The Four Seasons were the first group I was into. Then came the Beatles and the British Invasion and again ultimately Jerry and the gang. I was fortunate to have gone on a 40 day and night cross country trip in the summer of 1968. It was my coming of age summer. Got to see the Doors in Vancouver. Then down the coast to Frisco and the rest is history. How fortunate were we?
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Things don't become iconic
Things don't become iconic until after the fact. At ages 5-10 I doubt if I knew what the word meant.
My first musical experience that I remember, other than hearing my parents classical collection, was when I got a 45 rpm record of "Davey Crockett - king of the Wild Frontier". This was at age 5 in 1956.
I started listening to "real" music at age 10 on the little transistor radio my grandpa bought me, after being introduced to such by our African-American teenage baby sitter.
At that time I liked everything I heard. Luckily I could listen to Arnie Ginsburg's Night Train show on WMEX Boston after the parents went to bed with my single ear bud. He would play music from all genres - R+R, Tex-Mex, blues. country, R+B, folk, novelty songs.
It was pretty cool hearing all this new-to-me music, all in the same place.
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Hello muddah, hello faddah,
Hello muddah, hello faddah, Here I am in Camp Granada.