Botho Zigarillo  performed by    Botho Lucas Singers und die Sound Masters  
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"sing little bird sing"  performed by  the left banke  
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    : I like this one too. The whole second album is near perfect. Nice to see it by itself on CD too, the way it was intended! 
    : Good to hear that someone else likes the Left Banke's second album as much as the first...they both are great! I first heard the second LP as part of the Rhino comp "There's Gonna Be a Storm". I just love the whole album, especially "Goodbye Holly" and "Nice to See You".
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"The Glow" pt. 2  performed by  Microphones  
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"glorious"  performed by  goya dress  
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"hotel room"  performed by  richard hawley  
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"Lazy Calm"  performed by  Cocteau Twins  
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"Love of My Life"  performed by  Queen
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"pretty girls make graves"  performed by  the smiths  
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"remnants"  performed by  spahn ranch  
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"Sarah Lee"  performed by  Foghat
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"she's everywhere"  performed by  strangelove
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(Quicksilver Daydreams of) Maria  performed by  Townes Van Zandt  
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    : there is a great story in the documentary film "Be Here To Love Me", as told by Guy Clark:  this song apparently came to Van Zandt in a particularly peak morning of inspiration, when Clark describes finding Townes uncharacteristically fit and alert.  after making his bed to military specification, he played Clark a new song (this one), which he intended to perform at an appearance that same evening.  i may have rendered parts of this story incorrectly, so i definitely recommend the movie if you are a fan; even if not, as it is sad but quite revelatory.
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(Want You) Back In My Life Again  performed by  The Carpenters  
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...The Collapse of Detective Dullight  performed by  Of Montreal  
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16 Toneladas (Sixteen Tons)  performed by  Noriel Vilela  
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    : I stand corrected. It's just a matter of getting in line for some of this stuff , ya'know? Soo much music, so little time...sigh... 
    : S�o Paulo group "Funk Como Le Gusta" have a wonderful version of this also from their 1999 album "Roda de Funk". It's in the same style that Noriel Vilela did, but tighter.
    : If you get a chance - try and track down a copy of Juarez Sant'ana's first LP it has a super-cool version of "Ghost Riders in the Sky" to complete the bizarre brazilian western covers.
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1900 Yesterday  performed by  Liz Damon’s Orient Express  
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    : Yep, this song is definitely of its time.  It smacks of 'easy-listening' radio, from the staid brass break, the gentle, on-the-beat marimba strokes, and the whispery thin lead vocals of Liz and her equally restrained backup fellows behind her.  Maybe the song just feels slower to you in this version.  I don't think the Betty Everett version is any faster--it's just more rhythmic with its slightly funky percussion and string arrangements.  Don't get me wrong, I like both versions, this one as much for its that kind of cool 'dated' feel as anything else.   
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1969  performed by  The Stooges  
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2002 - A Hit Song  performed by  The Free Design  
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    : heh..brilliant commentary.
    : Wow. I never thought of that song as such an exploded schematic. But it does shed light on their own self awareness even if unintentional at the time.  
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25 minutes to go  performed by  Johnny Cash
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25 or 6 to 4  performed by  Chicago  
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    : I think you're incorrect about the meaning of the song.  The compound for lsd or cocaine is nowhere close to resembling 25 or 6 to 4.  The song, written by Robert Lamm, is about staying up all night writing a song.  (3:35 am.)
    : You're right. The explanation I gave I heard once and took it as true. Thanks for the correction. I tend to question what I hear but I felt there was no harm in believing the acid explanation.
    : Actually the acid explanation is correct.  LSD-25 was a popular type of LSD in the 60's.  The drug known as Thorazine was considered to stop the effects of acid trip.  Guess what?  The number on the pill was 624.  The lyrics in every verse suggest the effects of acid, spinning in his room, staring at blurry lights, etc.  The question he asks himself is whether to take more LSD(25) and keep tripping or take Thorazine(624) and come down as the day breaks.  Your shit has officially been ruined.
bestpageever.com
    : Right on allenmurphy. I like the acid idea more anyways. I thought that that was a really stupid way to refer to the time. I mean, artistic and creative freedom aside, 25 or 6 to 4 is a stupid way to refer to an hour of the day. I give Chicago a little more credit than that. Let's see if someone else writes and says that it really is a time of day. I couldn't open bestpageever.com.
    : sorry, try again.   www.bestpageever.com  nice to hear from ya kaptnunderpnts
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5:09  performed by  Bobby And I  
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6060-842  performed by  The B-52s  
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96 Tears  performed by  Big Maybelle  
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A Fairy Tale of New York (live version)  performed by  Christy Moore  
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A Losing Battle  performed by  The Sims Twins  
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A moment to share  performed by  Charles Fox  
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    : well, you know what we do with "collaborators"...
    : Yeah, I agree with you. I do love this tune's chord changes.  They are unexpected but dramatic. For me, So Kind To Me is my most favorite track in this soundtrack, especially the last overlapped chorus is terrific.  Anyway, Love American Style, Girl, Love Boat...the more I know about Charles Fox's works, the more I think he is a genius. 
    : This is really, really nice. So typical of late '60's American soundtrack music.
There was another film out at the same time called 'April Fools' and it had a very similar sound. Lovely horns!
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A Perfect Sonnet  performed by  Bright Eyes
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A Song For You  performed by  Ray Charles  
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A song to sing  performed by  Hanson
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Abbandonati Amore  performed by  Paul Anka
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After An Afternoon  performed by  Jason Mraz
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Agitated  performed by  Die Electric Eels  
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ai no toubousha  performed by  Yoko NAGISA  
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Ain’t No Mountain High Enough  performed by  Diana Ross  
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    : I agree with you, the full length version of this is wonderful, as is her full length version of Reach Out I'll Be There recorded in 1971.
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ain�t got no home  performed by  clarence "frogman" henry  
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    : Heh, I put this song on this years holiday tape I did for my 6 year old daughter.  Quality, cheered me up whenever it rained. I went to see him perform in the 80's in a little pub in Putney.  Can't remember a thing about it though apart from it being an old style Rhythm and Blues session.  The only other song of his I know (and it was a big hit IIRC) is a ballad in the style my grandmother would have loved.  And I can't remember the name of it,  but its not a patch on this one.
"I sing like a girl, and I sing like a frog"
    : Good choice. First heard this on the Sounds of Monsterism Island compliation. It's a great feel good rock 'n' roll number guaranteed to put a smile on your face.
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Albatross  performed by  Slowdive  
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Alfie  performed by  Cilla Black  
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    : Cilla's version of this knocks spots off anyone elses, especially as Burt Bacharach conducted the orchestra at the recording session, he made Cilla do 19 takes of this, before George Martin chose take 4! Dionnes version suited the USA market more.
    : I agree with all of the sentiments above.  Fans of Ms Warwicke are generally scathing of Cilla's Bacharach/David recordings - but I have to say that I find Cilla's interpretations generally have lusher backings and definitely have more heart.  The 2 artistes voices are in fact very similar.  But for me - Cilla's recordings of "Alfie" and "Anyone Who Had A Heart" are the definitive!!
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All  The Governors  performed by  The Evens  
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All I need is the girl  performed by  Harry Connick, Jr.  
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All I really want for Christmas  performed by  Ini Kamoze  
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all the time in sunny beach  performed by  Mad Capsule Markets  
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    : actually i think that song you have there is sunny beach rd.
    : actually, rd, I think you'll find that song I have there is "all the time in sunny beach".
on my cd. and on my lovely snow white 7.
now why don't you quit carping and recommend something yourself?
    : All the Time in Sunny Beach (noise therapy remix) is one of my personal faves. Great use of traditional Taiko drum as the underpinning for a jangly DnB remix. from the Pulse EP 2001
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All The Way  performed by  Billie Holiday  
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    : This is one of my favorite Billie Holiday songs as well. Her voice is absolutely haunting here.
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All U Can Eat  performed by  Ben Folds  
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Always  performed by  Pet Shop Boys  
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Always You (Single Version)  performed by  The Sundowners  
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    : I have to agree.  What a beautiful track! Very similar to the Small Circle of Friends record, but perhaps even better! I just have the version from the compilation; I'll try and track down the single.
    : Delicado, you have the single version already, it's the one on my Roger Nichols compilation, i just somehow forgot to mark it as the single version. The single is clocking in at 2:18, the album version runs 3 minutes. 
    : Cool; I'll listen again. This track is sure to make it onto one of my comps; surely it could make a soft pop fan out of anyone!
    : great album, and a horrendously overlooked group..."dear undecided" is the best beatles song that the beatles never recorded.
    : I agree this is the best version... I think it's the same one that's on the "Sunshine days" compilation.... The one on Captain Nemo isn't awful or anything, but the orchestral intro does go on a bit...
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America  performed by  Bree Sharp  
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American English  performed by  Idlewild  
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And Our Love  performed by  The Buckinghams  
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angels of ashes  performed by  Scott Walker
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ano zero  performed by  egberto gismonti  
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Anything At All  performed by  Crosby, Stills & Nash  
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Anyway that you want me  performed by  Spiritualized  
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    : does that mean that it's almost time for a soup dragons revival?? hahahaha...
    : i heard another version of this one recently in a commercial on tv. don't remember which at the moment. spiritualized gives me goosespots. i saw them in 98 at a festival and they opened up with 'cop shoot cop', what can i say? amazing. this version is also a fav of mine.
    : I've been listening to the original Troggs version a lot recently.  The Spiritualized version is a great cover - the same in many ways but also very different and intense.  I think they're a good band; not everything they do is spot-on, but when a song by them is good, it's normally pretty mind-blowing.
    : i forgot to write that the version of the song in the commercial is sung by a female singer. 
    : The female singer may have been Evie Sands, she sang the original, which was written by Chip Taylor. Chip is famous actor John Voight's brother. My favorite version of this tune is by the band American Breed from about 1967. Haven't heard the Troggs version yet.
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Apistat Commander  performed by  Xiu Xiu  
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Apocalypso  performed by  The Monochrome Set  
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Apple Of My Eye  performed by  Ed Harcourt
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Are You There (With Another Girl)  performed by  Anita Kerr Singers  
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    : I was just about to recommend this.  Isn't it a superb version!
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Argomenti  performed by  Isobel Campbell  
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    : The singer has a great first name!!!
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Art to Zebras  performed by  Sy Richardson  
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As tears go by  performed by  Nancy Sinatra  
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    : i had to go back and listen to this album after you mentioned it...and it is an incredible version, i really love that soft bossa sound that it's got going on. the rest of the lp is great, too!
    : i was lucky enough to find a vg++ copy of this LP at Goodwill several years back and this is definitely the best track on the album!!  A great interpretation of the song!!
    : I love this version, theres a cello or something under the introduction that adds a lovely melancholy feel. Quite a sophisticated sounding track. well removed from the bludgeoning innuendo I associate (and love) with Nancy and Lee.
I had one of the few run-ins over musical policy with my old promoter over this track, he thought it far too downbeat.
    : I love this version of this song, infact I didn't know for a long time that this is a Rolling Stone's tune, but again because it's a version that is so original it really is incredible. Quite popular in Latin America (not so much w/ the Stone's version).
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Ask me no questions  performed by  Bridget St John
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Autumn Leaves  performed by  Grace Jones  
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Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You  performed by  Led Zeppelin
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baked a cake  performed by  Mick Thomas and the sure thing  
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Balada Conducatorolui  performed by  Taraf de Ha�douks  
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Balance of Nature  performed by  Burt Bacharach  
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Ballad of Billy the Kid  performed by  Ricky Fitzpatrick  
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Baoba  performed by  Claudia  
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    : Yes! I picked up a Claudia compilation LP recently in Brazil. It was all great stuff, but this was really the standout track.
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Barnacles  performed by  Ugly Casanova
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Bat Macumba  performed by  Os Mutantes  
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be with me  performed by  beach boys
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Beasts of No Nation  performed by  Fela Anikulapo-Kuti & Egypt 80  
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Beautiful Goodbye  performed by  Cilla Black  
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Beautiful night  performed by  The Burden Brothers  
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Beauty and the Beast  performed by  David Bowie  
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Bel m’es qu’eu chant   performed by  Raimon de Marival  
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Bend and Break  performed by  Dashboard Confesional
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Besame Mucho  performed by  Lila Downs
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    : I will have to find this version and give it a listen.  I am rather fond of the version by Cesaria Evora from the sountrack to the film 'Great Expectations' (1997)
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Big Saturday  performed by  The Jazz Butcher  
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Big Time  performed by  Peter Gabriel  
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Bill Drummond Said  performed by  Julian Cope  
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Bird on the Wire  performed by  Leonard Cohen  
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birmingham school of business school  performed by  the fall
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Bitter-Sweet  performed by  Roxy Music  
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Black Cherry  performed by  Goldfrapp  
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Black Cherry  performed by  Goldfrapp  
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    : Excellent recommendation and great description. Unfortunately the only track off their sophomore effort that can moodwise hold up to such exquisite songs like "Pilots" or "Utopia" from their debut.
    : I actually dig the second LP a great deal.  Very disco/electro, (as opposed to Ennio), but really high quality disco/electro. (And simply delivering a "Felt Mountain" Part II would have been a bit dull - I think.) "Forever" and "Hairy Trees" are pretty darn exquisite, likewise.
    : a beautiful track that simply melts into your ears. You get the impression that something very naughty is going on but never quite sure exactly what. Has Rachel Stevens ripped this band off or what?
    : A sumptuous moment from one of this decade's most solid slabs of sound.
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Black Eyed Dog  performed by  Nick Drake  
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    :  they say he had to have several overdubs of his voice on this track until he got it right, because of his depression his voice was trembling.. so far from the classical orchestrations of his early recordings, the sparse instrumentation and the intense emotion of "Black dog" affects you even more as Nick's haunting voice sounds like he's singing through an abyss of infinite darkness and despair.. 
    : Actually, the lyrics to this song go "A black-eyed
dog, he CALLED at my door...", but with Nick's way
of singing (or rather: expressing himself), it's
just all too easy to get confused.
The line "I'm growing old and I wanna go home" gets
through my heart like a bullet every time I hear
it. Only few songs can evoke such strong emotions in me. 
    : Yes beautiful and chilling, but it's a small comfort to know that this wasn't actually the last song he ever recorded, that sad honour going to the recently discovered Tow The Line.
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Black Is Black  performed by  Lord Sitar
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    : The details as to the group on this record are discussed quite often, because it is soo good! Most people believe it's Jim Sullivan, Who did a lot of freakbeat/psych library music during this period. Also check out his "Sitar Beat" LP ,which has great versions of Brighter Shade of Pale & She's Leaving Home!       
    : i dig this one, but i like the b-side of the single better. it's a version of "have you seen your mother..." by the rolling stones.
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black room  performed by  jun mayuzumi  
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    : I totally agree with the above. It's by far the best song I've heard by Jun Mayuzumi. Her later songs veer dangerously into Enka (Melodramatic and melancholy but largely very dull Japanese popular song)
    : oh, i own this 7" too! both sides are great, and so are her gutsy and fun vocals.
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Blame It On A Monday  performed by  Anita Kerr Singers  
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Blood / Brass  performed by  Black Lodge  
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blow him back into my arms  performed by  moneybrother  
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Blowin' Bubbles  performed by  Call and Response  
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Blues for Hari  performed by  Emil Richards
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    : Kudos for rep'n mister Richards! I love this track!
This is from the awsome "New Time Element" LP he did for UNI.The whole record is conceptual versions of contemporary pop tunes done in wild time signatures.
Check out his take on "Take 5", he does it in 4/4 time! He also does "Georgy Girl" in 5/4 & "Happy Together" in 15/8 time!Also check out Emil Richard's 
Journey To Bliss LP... MAD STUFF!!!
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Bon-Jour  performed by  Ed Lincoln  
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    : Thats the thing with Lincoln, its not just the cheese, he played alongside the best Jazz musicians in Brazil. He could cut a pretty funk when the occasion demanded, and his "Seu piano eletrico" album ranges from african tinged stompers to mid sixties style vocal cuts.
IMHO opinion underrated as a producer as well, he seems to have been active on the cutting edge of Brazilain music from the late fifties right through to the late seventies.
I intended to use this track as the payoff for a compilation I did for a cd trading ring, but I don't think I had the space.
He was in hospital just before Christmas (2003), not sure how he's doing now.
    : I have to say, I'm pretty blown away by his work.  I know you've been harping on about him for years, so I wish I had listened earlier!
    : Ed Lincolns best work is the recordings he did with Orlann Divo becasue he is a little more low-key and the arrangements are just plain better.  I love O Ganso cause its so damn crazy and his recordings under the name Claudio Marcelo are pretty good too.  A rcord seller in Brazil actually got me his autograph as a present because I bought so many of Ed Lincolns LPs.  But I gotta tell you, someone like Sergio Carvalho or Eumir Deodato are much more powerful on the Hammond and Ely Arcoverde, Juarez Sant'ana Ze Maria I think are all more mature organists.  I put Ed Lincoln with Walter Wanderley a little heavy on the cheese.
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Bones  performed by  BRANDI IFGRAY  
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Borderline  performed by  Jane  
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Born To Lose  performed by  Bouncing Souls
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Bouncing Babies  performed by  The Teardrop Explodes  
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Brassneck  performed by  The Wedding Present  
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    : I also prefer the album version.  Oddly enough I was playing the guitar in that fast-strummed jangly style this very evening...  I think the George Best album is my favorite.
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Break Fool  performed by  Rah Digga  
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Breakaway  performed by  The Beach Boys  
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    : I agree - I have just listened to the song for the first time ever and am entirely "won over" - superb - nothing childish about it; simple but great, humble, never overdoing it. This is imaginative genius at work - in this case it has gotten way, way less credit than it deserves. Thumbs up for a powerful voice in good surroundings.
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Breathe Out  performed by  Nothingface  
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Breve Amore  performed by  Mina  
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    : the 'fumo di londra' soundtrack was recently reissued as a 2lp set, with tons of outtakes. i really, really love it. i'd make a recommendation from it right now, but i can't remember the song title, and the record isn't with me. argh!
    : The one which really bowled me over was 'Mr Dante Fontana'!  Like 3 brilliant songs rolled into one!
    : wouldn't you know it? that was the one i was trying to remember! i couldn't recall if that was the title or if they just said "hey, mr. dante fontana" a lot.
    : Also from that Fumo Di Londra album: that fabulous 'You Never Told Me'.  A Brit-girl-sound lost classic!
    : Yes; that's actually an English-language version of this same song
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Bring the Boys Home  performed by  Freda Payne  
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Britney  performed by  Bebo Norman  
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Bulletproof Soul  performed by  Sade  
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Burning in the Background of My Mind  performed by  Tina Tott  
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    : This song was recorded in 1969. To the best of my knowledge, she recorded only one single. The flip is equally as good: Take Away My Emptiness Too
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By Design  performed by  Big Sky  
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Bye Babe  performed by  Lee Hazlewood
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Bye Bye Blackbird  performed by  Joe Cocker  
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C’mon  performed by  Panic!
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C'est Pas De Ma Faute  performed by  Brigitte Fontaine
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    : Ha!  If you think this song is too short, you wanna catch the Vous Et Nous album with Areski: millions of songs, most clocking in under 3 mins, many under 1.  And they look like primary school teachers on the cover.
Good call; brilliant tune.
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California Waiting  performed by  Kings of Leon  
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Call Me Irresponsible  performed by  Bobby Darin  
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Can’t Help Loving That Man  performed by  Trudy Richards  
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Captain Future  performed by  Christian Bruhn  
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Captain Jack  performed by  Ken & Beverly  
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Captain of Your Ship  performed by  Reparata & the Delrons  
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    : I agree - absolutely fantastic.  Even its use in the Muller yoghurt commercial couldn't harm its basic genius.
The fact that it's sampled by Betty Boo in Doin' The Do is another plus point!
    : I first heard this song on the Muller ad! - which led me to hunt out the original.  Great pop!
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Carcara  performed by  Nancy Ames  
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Caroline Goodbye  performed by  Colin Blunstone  
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Caroline, No  performed by  Nick DeCaro  
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    : Claudine Longet did a great version of "God Only Knows" on her Let's Spend The Night Together LP from 1972 (BR-15001). Although her version is not what i'd call jazzy, more like meadow-flower California country? Nick Decaro arranged a lot of her 60's albums. 
    : I've actually been looking for that LP.  It seems to be one of the less common Claudine records...  Thanks for the recommendation!
    : I was recently introduced to Four King Cousins version of "God only Knows", also an A&M product from 1967... It's more faithful vocally to the original arrangement, only it's four girls doing the harmonies!    
    : James Warren (of The Korgis and Stackridge) has recorded a version of "Caroline, No" which I'd be very interested to hear. 
    : I have this 45 by Nick DeCaro. What's weird is I heard 
it before I heard the Beach Boys original, which I first listened to in 1996.
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Casa Bianca  performed by  Ornella Vanoni  
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Cast Your Fate To The Wind  performed by  the Vince Guaraldi Trio  
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Cavaleiro Andante  performed by  Abilio Manoel  
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    : sounds great; I look forward to checking it out!
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Cecil Beaton�s Scrapbook  performed by  Would Be Goods  
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Cerraron sus ojos  performed by  Kissing Spell  
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Champagne And Caviar  performed by  Elegant Taste  
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Change  performed by  Blind Melon  
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Chanson D'O  performed by  Francoise Hardy  
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    : this album's a favorite of mine, too.  I also really like her album "Soliel" of a couple years earlier.  The interesting thing about this album is that the Brazilian female guitarist Tuca (just one name) backed her on this as she did on Nara Leao's gorgeous tribute to Bossa Nova (recorded in France), "Dez Anos Depois."  If you listen to these albums side by side you can clearly here the similarities, not to say they sound identical.  And doesn't Fracoise look stunning on the b&w album cover?
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Chansons Francaises  performed by  Notre Dame
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Chasing The Morning Light  performed by  Karima Francis
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Chavinha  performed by  Orlann Divo
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Chelsea Girl  performed by  Simple Minds  
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Chinon/Eleanor�s Arrival  performed by  John Barry  
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Chocolate And Strawberries  performed by  The Januaries  
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clair  performed by  Singers Unlimited  
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Close My Eyes  performed by  Matisyahu
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    : yeah, this guy is badass. i recommend.
    : Yeah for sure. I find the music of Matisyahu a refreshing blast of inspiring music for any occasion. Im amazed at how well his lyrics flow with his hip-hop/reggae beats. His story is unique too. Check out his website.... matisyahu.org      King without a Crown has got to be one of the catchiest tunes I have heard in awhile.
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CLOWN  performed by  THE HOLLIES  
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Cold Desert  performed by  Kings of Leon
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Cold Water  performed by  Tom Waits  
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Come Back Suzanne  performed by  Bill Wyman  
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Come On Let's Go  performed by  Broadcast  
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    : i love this entire album! and they put on a great live show, to boot!
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Coming Clean  performed by  Hilary Duff  
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    : Isn't it "Coming Clean"?
    : I mean "Come Clean"
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Comme  performed by  Francoise Hardy  
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Consequence of Sound  performed by  Regina Spektor
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Conservative Christian, Right-Wing Republican...  performed by  Todd Snider  
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Contact  performed by  Brigitte Bardot  
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    : Great song, easily the highlight of the cheesy picture disc compilation I have.  I particularly like the way the swirling of the organ reacts with the slapback echo on her voice. It has quite a delerious quality.
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Conversations  performed by  Cilla Black  
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Cordeiro De Nanã  performed by  João Gilberto  
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    : I agree, a beautiful, beautiful tune. You should check out the original version of this tunes, by Os Tinco�s:
http://www.luizamerico.com.br/fundamentais-tincoas.php
    : I really love very much this song with these subtile orchestration of Johnny Mandel me two, and I also know the original version of Os Tinco�s (1977) which is very different and with verses that J.Gilberto don't sing... 
Thalma de Freitas also sing this dreamy tunes in her album (2004)
_______________________
http://chantsetheres.over-blog.com/
    : Just listening to this again a few years after my initial recommendation.  It really does encapsulate a lot of the mysterious, seductive elements of Brazilian music for me.
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Couleur Caf�  performed by  Serge Gainsbourg  
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Coyote  performed by  Joni Mitchell  
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Crazy Dreams  performed by  Paul Brady  
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crazy world  performed by  bryon mack
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Creators of Rain  performed by  Smokey and his Sister  
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    : Another cover version was recorded by Ian and Sylvia
    : Sadly none of the songs of the album is as good as "Creators of rain". But this is indeed a most wonderful and magical folk-pop tune.
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Creep  performed by  Radiohead
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    : To bad its melody was copied off of the Hollies - The Air that I breathe.  That'd be a good lawsuit
    : One of the only songs I'm aware of which identify with possibly millions of people
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Creole  performed by  Charlie Hunter Quartet featuring Mos Def  
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Cry for the Moon  performed by  Epica  
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Cuckoo Clock  performed by  Rachel Sweet  
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    : Rachel was my pin-up.A slightly chubby teenager with a voice that could break rocks.So convincing is this song that I have spent many years breaking into cuckoo clocks in order to liberate the toy singer trapped within.I have yet to find her but the search goes on.
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Cucumbe  performed by  Edda Dell’Orso  
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Curbside Prophet  performed by  Jason Mraz  
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Daddy  performed by  Beyoncé Knowles  
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Dance Girl Dance  performed by  Cinerama  
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Dance Me to the End of Love  performed by  Madeleine Peyroux
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Dance, Bunny Honey, Dance  performed by  Penny McLean  
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Dancer  performed by  Gino Soccio  
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Darby And Joan  performed by  Twinkle  
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    : Wow. I really want to find this song now. Great recommendation!
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Darn That Dream  performed by  Petula Clark  
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Day Without Love  performed by  The Love Affair  
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De Cara a la Pared  performed by  Lhasa  
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Deep Down  performed by  Christy  
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    : This "Canto Morricone" volume sent me on a frantic chase for so many things; most rewarding was the "Danger: Diabolik" soundtrack. (The movie is a hoot and quite a bargain, too.)  Mina... Spaak... Miranda Martino... Rita Monico... and what about Ken Colman? "Trio Junior"???  This CD will infect you, so you'd better just go get it!  
    : I realize it has been almost 10 years since I wrote this - but just to throw it out there - this track really is absolutely amazing!
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der hund von baskerville  performed by  cindy & bert  
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    : This is a hugely bizarre cover version: Cindy & Bert were a somewhat annoying couple in the 60s & 70s doing very light pop tunes (called "Schlager" in Germany). It was recently released on a great compilation series by Bear Family Records called "Pop In Germany", with lots more of german oddities like Dusty Springfields "Son Of A Preacherman" in a hilarious version with ridiculous lyrics sung with bavarian accent...
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Destination Unknown  performed by  Missing Persons  
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detroit  performed by  primal scream  
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Detroit 442  performed by  Blondie  
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Devil, Devil, Go Away  performed by  Little Marcy  
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    : aah, little marcy. i find her oddly touching.
i adore the effect where the guitar seems to be meowing on "i love little pussy", it makes the song even more appealing than the questionable lyrics. 
"guitar festival of gospel songs" by little marcy's guitarist, bob summers is the current downloadable album over at basichip.com right now, by the way. snatch it while you can!
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Diabolic Scheme  performed by  The Hives  
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Diamonds Are Forever  performed by  The Bachelors  
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Die Antwort Weiss Ganz Allein Der Wind  performed by  Peggy March & Benny Thomas  
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Die herren dieser welt  performed by  Hildegard Knef  
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    : Really great song!, nice rhythm and harmonys.
    : this song is about "masters of this world" - the text would stir you up rather than just lift you up. It breathes the same air as a song by Alexandra "Mein Freund der Baum". Heavy bittersweet german Weltschmerz. One of the Knef's best songs is "Von nun an ging's bergab" which means "From now it went downhill". She tells us her story: Her birth in cold winter, her film career in the USA, her return to Germany, starting a second career as a singer - and everytime she comments ironically: "From now it went downhill" which is VERY funny! The last words of this song comment herself as a singer: "Es war nicht meine Schuld - ich bitte um Geduld" - "It wasnn't my idea to start singing, please be patient with me" 
    : To "bellboy": "Von nun an ging's bergab" is performed by Hildegard Knef as "From Here On It Got Rough" (LP "The World of Hildegard Knef"), last lines: "A change was overdue, from here it's rough on you.".
    : Warner Music Germany finally released "Knef" on CD ahead of the celebration of Hildegard Knef's 80th birthday. While it's completely beyond me why people had to wait until 2005 to get this masterpiece in it's entirety, i'm thrilled that it's finally arrived. Also, Hildegard Knef repeatedly expressed "Knef" was her best album.
    : "From Here On It Got Rough" is the opening track on teh recent (2005) compilation "the in-kraut".
And very witty it is too. But also a very groovy song.
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Different From The Rest  performed by  Alice Peacock  
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different samples from the LP  performed by  Los Brasilios  
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Diffrerent Stories  performed by  I Am The World Trade Center  
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Dindi (Jin-Jee)  performed by  Chris Montez  
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Dirty Harry  performed by  Gorillaz
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Dirty Paws  performed by  Of Monsters and Men  
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Distant Shores  performed by  Chad and Jeremy  
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    : Oh yes, it is pure gold.
I can recommend anything by The Left Banke, Scott Walker, Margo Guryan, New Colony Six, Sagittarius, The Millennium... Gary Usher from the last two mentioned was the producer on many of C & J's songs. 
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Distortions  performed by  Clinic
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Do Like I Do  performed by  Kim Weston  
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Do You Know The Way To San Jose?  performed by  Bossa Rio  
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Do Your Own Thing  performed by  Brook Benton  
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Don’t Be Cruel  performed by  Cheap Trick  
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Don’t Talk to Me About Love  performed by  Altered Images  
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Don�t Want To Know  performed by  John Martyn  
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Doop-Doo-De-Doop (A Doodlin' Song)  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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    : I love Blossom's stuff as well.  Haven't yet heard a bad record by her.  She did an unusual record in 1970 called 'that's just the way I want to be' on  Fontana. It's available (coupled with 'give him the ooh la la) on a japanese CD, 'whisper for you'.
    : Oh, and "London in the Rain". What a fabulous singer!
    : I have been hearing about a Japan CD which would be a reissue of Blossom Dearie's 1976 American double LP entitled 'My New Celebrity Is You'. No one however can locate it. If you can help please E me. Best Regards, egbdf.
    : Definitely a favorite! I also love to 70 album "that's just the way i want to be" and think the version of "both sides now" blows away the Judy Collins. Also a huge fan of the schoolhouse rocks stuff "unpack your adjectives" and especially "figure eight".
    : A Doodlin' Song (not to be confused with "Doodlin'") apparently had an effect in it's time.  Peggy Lee recorded it.  It was even featured in an episode of the Dick Van Dyke Show where Mary Tyler Moore and Dick did a little dance number to it in their living room for their party guests!  This song is perfect for the Blossom Touch!  Cute simple lyrics and melody make the tune perfect for Blossom's child-like voice and bouncy delivery.  She was the voice of several of the old Schoolhouse Rock shorts that used to play in Saturday mornings in the '70's.  She is also an accomplished pianist and played on many of her own recordings.  Another fave Blossom tune: "Rhode Island Is Famous For You"
    : jesus, any version of "both sides now" that isn't by judy collins blows away the judy collins version. give me dick hyman any day!
    : check out-'both sides now'by the veteran golfer tony jacklyn-from his excrutiating late 60's album-swings into...'-a superb psych-crooning version up [or down there]with william shatner and tony bennett's 'eleanor rigby' and richard harris!!
judy collins entire existence is a crime.
    : Thank you, Tinks!  I *love* Blossom Dearie, but hadn't heard that track yet.  I recently bought the eponymous CD (with a great picture of her in glasses at the microphone...), and must have played "Tout Doucement" about a thousand times.
    : can anyone identify the male voice singing behind blossom on this track?
    : I believe the male voice is Cy Coleman, the song's composer.  I have only another website comment's word for that, but it does sound like him.
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Dracula i love you  performed by  Tuca
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Dreams Never End  performed by  New Order  
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    : This track is utterly spine-tingling.  I like the Technique album, but it really doesn't have the intensity of the best early tracks.  It's worth noting that this track sounds instrumentally exactly like mid-80s Cure.
    : erm.....dreams never end is a masterpiece for the very reason that hookies vocals are in stark contrast ....probably my favourite new order/joy division track...probably an accidental classic.
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Dressed In Black  performed by  The Shangri-Las  
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driver  performed by  the damnation of adam blessing  
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Drugs  performed by  This Mortal Coil  
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    : great band.
    : Sort of ironic too, considering an interview with Ivo I once read with a short list of groups he wished he'd signed to 4AD, which included Portishead. TMC was such an ifluential project that completely escaped the 80's indie mainstream indeed. 
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dry drunk emperor  performed by  TV on the Radio  
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Duchess  performed by  Scott Walker
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Dying Crapshooter’s Blues  performed by  Blind Willie McTell
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Earth People  performed by  Dr. Octagon  
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    : I was obbbbbsessed with Blue Flowers off that same-diddly-aim album for forever... he's got the smoothest sinister technobabble ever.
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East, West, North, South  performed by  Captain  
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El-Harba Wine  performed by  Khaled (feat Amar)  
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    : Hi..
I just want to say that i love that song!!!
El-Harba Wine. And as you say, i dont understand a singel word of what they sing. That only makes it more fun. 
Do you know of any other songs like this one?
    : It seems from one site I've found that "El Harba Wine" means "To run but where". That aside, Khaled (aka Cheb or Young Khaled) has quite a few album's out, this track is from "Kenza", and is also on a comp "The King of Rai".  
You could also check out another Algerian artist Cheb Mami - The "Prince of Rai" but the album of that name is from the 80's and a little dated.  I'm also quite fond of Egyptian star Hakim, who adds Spanish guitar touches and the accordian. My favourite track is possibly called "Habibi" from the LP "Comosuena". His most recent LP "2004" has either big samples or a guest appearance from James Brown.
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Eleanor Rigby  performed by  Tony Bennett  
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ELEANOR RIGBY  performed by  KIM WESTON
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    : Kim can really belt 'em !
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Elijah  performed by  Donald Byrd  
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England 2 Columbia 0  performed by  Kirsty MacColl  
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Enjoy The Silence  performed by  Depeche Mode  
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    : absolutely. basically perfect.
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Europe Endless  performed by  Kraftwerk  
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Everyday Is Like Sunday  performed by  Pretenders  
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    : I'll have to try to find this. The Pretenders also did a cover of Radiohead's Creep - I think its a B-side (can CD singles have B-sides?) which is cracking - I much prefer it to Radiohead's versh.
    : The Pretenders cover of 'Creep' is included on the 4-CD/1-DVD box set "Pirate Radio".  I couldn't agree more, mattypenny, it is better than the original... 
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Exodus  performed by  Tielman Brothers  
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Extra Ordinary Thing  performed by  Aqualung
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Faith Hope and Charity  performed by  Tony Kingston  
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Falling Free  performed by  Bert Kaempfert  
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false advertising  performed by  bright eyes
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False Goodbyes  performed by  Echo and the Bunnymen  
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Fatal Tragedy  performed by  Dream Theater
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Fato Consumado  performed by  Djavan  
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Female of the Species  performed by  Meg Myles  
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Fidelity  performed by  Regina Spektor  
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    : wonderful song. thank you
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Fifth Dimension  performed by  Arling & Cameron  
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final solution  performed by  pere ubu  
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First Contact  performed by  Erasure  
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First Day  performed by  The Futureheads  
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Flagpole Sitta  performed by  Harvey Danger  
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    : great song
    : love this song.
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Flightless Bird, American Mouth  performed by  Iron and Wine
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Floods  performed by  Pantera  
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Fly High  performed by  Cotton Casino  
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Flying Dutchman  performed by  Tori Amos  
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    : Hmmm... I always thought your name was a reference to the great jazz label. They put out some of their best records in the early 70's... I do however acknowledge and accept the origin of your name despite my unwillingness!
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Fome Total  performed by  Zuco 103  
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For a Few Dollars More  performed by  Al Caiola  
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For a short time  performed by  Tiddas  
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For All We Know  performed by  Donny Hathaway  
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For The Dead  performed by  Gene  
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Ford Capri II  performed by  Christian Bruhn  
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    : Yeah man! Brash horns on the intro, a nice mellow bit in the middle and out with a bang.
Remixed by Ursula1000 on a 12, which although it seems redundant, isn't bad at all.
Sounds nice when driving around my own Ford Capri MkII.
Lovely!
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Frances the Mute  performed by  The Mars Volta
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Freeker By The Speaker  performed by  Keller Williams  
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Fuel  performed by  Ani Difranco
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Fumemos Un Cigarrillo  performed by  Piero  
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    : choose the italian compositers but choose them better:
isn't "luiz henrique" , is LUIS ENRIQUEZ. other marvellous song of his: lo scatenato. 
sorry for my english!!!
    : Pretty sure "Luiz Henrique" is the correct spelling, and that he is Brazilian. Must be a different guy than the similarly named Italian.
    : Piero is from Argentina.
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Funeral of Hearts  performed by  HIM  
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Gay  performed by  Stephen Lynch  
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Genesis 3:23  performed by  The Mountain Goats  
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Get a Room  performed by  Jim O’Rourke  
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Get In Line  performed by  I’m From Barcelona  
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Get It Up For Love  performed by  David Cassidy  
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Getting Away With It  performed by  Electronic  
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    : odd - I was thinking about this song just yesterday.  The B-side, 'lucky bag', was also quite good as I recall.
    : Electronic could be very good indeed when they started out and I'm a big fan of a number of their songs from this period. Tennant and Marr went on to work together on the last PSB album, but I'd like to hear more collaborative work from Tennant and Sumner.
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Girl Don’t Come  performed by  Sandie Shaw  
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    : Quite agree.  One of my first LPs as a teen was a greatest hits - and for me she summed up the 60s female vocal.  For big, brassy and emotion-laden power pop, see also Long Walk Home.
    : It was initially released as the 'B' side of the much weaker: 'I'd Be Far Better Off Without You'. Someone, probably a DJ, flipped it over.
I love the arrangement on this. It's full of atmosphere. It seems to completely capture the time.
Another of her songs that has a similar effect is 'You've Not Changed', which wasn't as big a hit and seems to have been forgotten and is often excluded from Greatest Hits Comps.
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Girl In A Sportscar  performed by  Alan Hawkshaw  
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    : Oh yeah, i love this song. i play it at least once a week.
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Glamorous Glue  performed by  Morrissey  
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    : and of course, not long after that Morrissey moved to Los Angeles, to live the life of a fading rock star in the Hollywood Hills. All of "Your Arsenal" is brilliant ......
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Glory Box  performed by  Portishead  
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    : Hey man... Since you're into Portishead, I think you may also like Goldfrapp, especially "Felt Mountain" album... Try listening to Horse Tears or Deer Stop!
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Golden Lights  performed by  Twinkle  
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Gone...Like the Swallows  performed by  And Also The Trees  
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Good Fruit  performed by  Hefner  
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    : Good taste my friend! That is one of my favourite Hefner songs. Should have been a huge hit, it only made number 50 in the UK charts for 1 week. It did go straight in at 1 in the indie charts though!
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Good Night Sweet Night  performed by  Jason Falkner  
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Good Old Owl  performed by  Niobe  
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Good to Me  performed by  Brendan Benson  
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Goodnight Moon  performed by  Shivaree  
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Guess Who I Saw Today?  performed by  Eartha Kitt  
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Gypsy Rose Lee  performed by  The Distillers
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Hair  performed by  Zen  
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Hannah Jane  performed by  Hootie & The Blowfish  
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Happy Together  performed by  Hugo Montenegro  
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Hard Time Killing Floor Blues  performed by  Skip James
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    : The Twilight Singers (actually just Greg Dulli, from the Afghan Whigs, and Mark Lanegan from The Screaming Trees) just released a very good cover of this on their album SHE LOVES YOU, which I highly recommend...
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He hit me (it felt like a kiss)  performed by  The Crystals  
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He was here but not for long  performed by  Sally Dastey  
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Head Like A Hole  performed by  AFI  
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    : good cover, you like KMFDM?
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Head Up  performed by  Deftones  
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Headstart for Happiness  performed by  The Style Council  
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Heartbeats  performed by  The Knife  
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    : Some swedish guy named svante recently made a bootleg remix combining the original and the jos� gonzales version...i'ts pretty cool, so check it out if you can find it.
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Hearth And Soul  performed by  Joy Division  
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Heaven Up Here  performed by  Echo & the Bunnymen  
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Hellhound on my trail  performed by  Robert Johnson
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Hermaphrodite  performed by  Stephen Lynch  
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Heroes Symphony  performed by  David Bowie, Philip Glass, Aphex Twin
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het gerucht  performed by  egbert douwe  
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Hey  performed by  Julio Iglesisas  
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Hiding  performed by  Simon Warner  
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    : Yes, Hiding is a superbly melancholy and well crafted song - also one of my favourites, though it depends what mood I'm in.  Thankfully, Waiting Rooms has a song for almost any mood (including irritation at slobby flatmates; inappropriate lust; drunken joy et al).
I can't actually think of another songwriter as talented as this guy - writing the lyrics and the music and bringing them together so cleverly.  Makes ya sick!
    : It strikes me that the music world just isn't ready for someone as eccentric and talented as Simon Warner... who bothers with lyrics these days?  Does anyone really appreciate a good witty tale, smattered with drama and an edgy charm?  No.  Does anyone long for real music, as opposed to a monotonous beat overlaid with a dull mantra?  No.  But this shouldn't stop the creation of brilliant songs.  Simon, you're not the only one swimming against the tide.  If you're happy doing it then that's all that matters.  Oh, and it looks like you've picked up a few fans along the way - despite the lack of media support!
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High Hopes  performed by  Pink Floyd  
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    : One of the things I am always concerned about when deciding what music to listen to is how much it will tend to make me fart (and then of course there is the issue of the precise type of fart which will tend to result). 
    : Oh, and it's from The Division Bell, released in 1994. I just sold my copy...made me fart too much
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holiday  performed by  T.V. Jesus  
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Holiday  performed by  Bee Gees  
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Holocaust  performed by  Crisis  
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Home Of The Brave  performed by  Bonnie & The Treasures  
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    : Indeed a great song and a terriffic production. The only problem is that it's supposedly not produced by Spector, but by a young aspiring songwriter/producer named Jerry Riopelle who was assigned to Philles Records at the time. Riopelle himself has acknowledged this and other evidence seems to indicate he's right.
As for Veronica singin lead, it has been established that the girl in question was a singer called Charlotte O'Hara, as far as I recall...
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Honeytree  performed by  The Wolfgang Press  
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    : I always liked these guys too. Queer did miss the mark in america for sure, although I think "Going South" got some airplay... I'm a big fan of the Birdwood Cage LP. A very underrated group from a very popular label. 
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Horse Tears  performed by  Goldfrapp  
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Hug My Soul  performed by  Saint Etienne  
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Hurricane Fighter Plane  performed by  The Red Crayola  
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hvis du bare ville  performed by  ranveig kvello  
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I believe  performed by  jackson sisters  
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I Believe In a Thing Called Love  performed by  The Darkness  
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    : edson have a pretty odd acoustic cover of this.
    : cool song, fun, the video makes the song: http://www.thedarknessrock.com/media/video/
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I Belong To You - Mon CÅ�ur S’ouvre Ã� Ta Voix  performed by  Muse
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I could never live without your love  performed by  Craig Scott  
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I Could Write A Book  performed by  Dinah Washington  
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I Didn�t Get Where I Am Today  performed by  Pet Shop Boys  
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I Don’t Know How To Love Him  performed by  Cilla Black  
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i don't want another man  performed by  the feminine complex  
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I Dream of Wire  performed by  Robert Palmer  
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I Got Rhythm  performed by  Ethel Merman  
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I Hate You  performed by  The Monks  
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    : Over-Beat is Punk Rock! Glad to meet another convert.
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i left you (?)--hidden track  performed by  rx bandits  
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I Love Every Little Thing About You  performed by  Syreeta  
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I Promise to Wait My Love  performed by  Martha Reeves & the Vandellas  
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I Put A Spell On You  performed by  Alan Price  
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i sing i swim  performed by  seabear
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I Think I Love You  performed by  Partridge Family  
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I Think It’s Going To Rain Today  performed by  Dusty Springfield  
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    : I must say, this is a quite brilliant recording; thanks for mentioning it!  I heard the original Randy Newman version the other day, but to me, neither the arrangement or vocal performance were a patch on Dusty.  Not that I'm biased or anything!
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I think We're Alone Now (Japanese)  performed by  Lene Lovich
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I Want To Be Around  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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I want to kiss the Bangles  performed by  The Saw Doctors  
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I want your kiss  performed by  Lani Groves (with Phil Moore and the Afro Latin Soultet)  
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I’m A Bitch  performed by  Fred Barton (as Almira Gulch)  
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I’m a Good Woman  performed by  Barbara Lynn  
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I’m a Terrible Person  performed by  Rooney  
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I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face  performed by  Stan Getz and Cal Tjader Sextet  
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I'm Alive  performed by  Don Fardon  
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    : Very swinging indeed...never heard of Don...I'm gonna track him down though.
Very American 1969 sound...for a Scottish guy.
    : I thought he was English, not Scottish! Anyhow, I have
two 45s by him, "Indian Reservation" and "Lola". Of course, Paul Revere and the Raiders covered "Indian Reservation" and had a number one hit. Fardon isn't well known here in the U.S.
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I'm Gonna Miss You  performed by  The Mingles  
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if i can dream  performed by  elvis presley  
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If I Ever Feel Better  performed by  Phoenix  
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    : Couldn't agree more. This is one of my favourite singles of the last five years. The album certainly is patchy, but there's a few things on there that reach similar heights, notably the other single, 'Too Young'. 
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If I Should Lose You  performed by  Aretha Franklin  
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If You Don’t Miss Me  performed by  Gone Til November / Aimee Proal  
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If You Go Away  performed by  Dusty Springfield  
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Image - Part 1  performed by  Hank Levine Orchestra  
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In Bloom  performed by  Nirvana  
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In the Name of Love  performed by  Kenny Rankin  
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    : Great album. I love the versions of "Penny Lane" & "Berimbau" as well!  James Taylor, eat your heart out! 
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Interlude (Time)  performed by  Diamanda Galas  
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Intermission Riff  performed by  Bert Kaempfert  
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Iris  performed by  Goo Goo Dolls  
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Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby  performed by  Renee Olstead  
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Isadora  performed by  Illusion  
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It Don’t Mean A Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing  performed by  Duke Ellington w. Ivie Anderson  
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It’s Cool Not To Care  performed by  Mark and the No-Marks  
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    : This would be your band perhaps?   
I think I recognise the attempt to write about ones own music.
    : good guess, but not my band no. i'm much too young. just used know a couple of No-Marks. local heroes/weirdos about town. they were very resentful of the whole experience, so i thought i'd give them their small dues.
    : Was this the same Mark from 'Mark and the Monsters' infamy?
I saw them once, in a mirror. Their sound made me want to pull my brain out through my ears and beat myself about the head with it.
Shame, really, they looked really mad.
    : No, Gnasher, what you see in a mirror is a very troubled and confused soul, who needs alot of care and attention.  Unfortunately musicaltaste.com is not the place. 
    : Be nice!
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It’s Love  performed by  Trudy Richards  
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It's My Life  performed by  Talk Talk  
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It's what's really happening  performed by  Wendy and Bonnie  
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Itzcuintli-Totzli Days  performed by  the Mountain Goats  
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I�ll keep it with mine  performed by  Nico
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I�m not saying  performed by  Nico  
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    : I love this song, Nico is one of my favorites. Her voice has such a uniqueness. It's very deep and peaceful.
    : Oh, wow. This comment is four years old! But I just joined this place and this is one of my favorite songs right now, in 2006. I harbor a little resentment for Delicado, who claims the bridge is corny. I know it's not so insightful to say this since two of Nico's songs were used in another Wes Anderson movie, but the bridge section reminds me a lot of Rushmore, when Max and Blume do a simultaneous jump on bikes at the end, after their reconciliation. I guess that's why I like it. I wish Nico would have done more stuff like this.
    : i grew up on the gordon lightfoot version--but cripes, leave it to nico to so deliciously catastrophize a perfectly good tune.  hers is amazingly well executed in the sentiments conveyed, ...and some catchy, too! love it, love it, love it.
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I�m Shadowing You  performed by  The Singers Unlimited  
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I�m The Man Who Loves You  performed by  Wilco  
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I�m Yours  performed by  Jason Mraz
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J’Attendrai  performed by  Michael Berard  
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J'Attendrai  performed by  Rina Ketty  
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James Brown  performed by  Nancy Dupree  
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Janela De Ouro  performed by  Egberto Gismonti  
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Jellypop Perky Jean  performed by  Julian Cope  
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Jet Generation  performed by  Guitar Wolf
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    : So is Jet Generation the album to get? I spent an age trying to hunt down that 'Planet of the Wolves', and then after a while I just cut my losses and I tried to move on, I tried to forget about Guitar Wolf... But, damn it, here they are again. And wow, they still sound fantastic. But then 'Japanese', 'insane' and 'destroy' are my music watch words...   
    : they put on a great live show...i remember that all i was able to understand was something that sounded like "hoochie in the back, hoochie attack!"
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Jumpin Jack Flash  performed by  Thelma Houston  
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Just A Touch Away  performed by  Echo & The Bunnymen  
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Just In Time  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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Just Like the Movies  performed by  Regina Spektor
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Just Lust  performed by  Buzzcocks  
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Just Melancholy  performed by  Roy Montgomery  
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just watch the fireworks  performed by  jimmy eat world  
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Just What I’ve Been Looking For  performed by  The Vogues  
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J�oublie La Pluie Et Le Soleil  performed by  Mireille Mathieu  
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Kala  performed by  Yann Tiersen
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Kee-ka-roo  performed by  Walter Wanderley and Luiz Henrique  
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King of Carrot Flowers, Pt. 1  performed by  Neutral Milk Hotel  
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King of the Carrot Flowers Prt. 1,2 & 3.  performed by  Neutral Milk Hotel  
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King’s Crossing  performed by  To Live and Die in L.A.
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Knocking  performed by  Motion Soundtrack  
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Kojak Theme  performed by  "The Pop Singers & Orchestra"  
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La Bamba  performed by  Edmundo Ros and Catarina valente  
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La Foresta Incantata  performed by  Piero Umiliani  
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    : Magical track.  It's can also be found on Easy Tempo, Vol. 9.  Too bad atrecordings has shut down.
    : Magical indeed!  Morricone, Piccioni, Umiliani, and Trovaioli are like Sirens... I am sure there are others - God grant me the time and good fortune to find them!
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La Grippe  performed by  Jacques Higelin avec Brigitte Fontaine  
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la planete sauvage  performed by  alain goraguer  
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    : Actually, the film La Planete Sauvage is quite good.  There are lots of really great visuals that go perfectly with the music.  It can be a bit slow at times, and the music is fantastic on its own, but I urge anyone towards viewing of this masterpiece of French cinema.
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La Princesa y El Soldado  performed by  Carlos Vives  
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La Rue  performed by  Damia  
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Land Of Sunshine  performed by  Faith No More  
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Last Night  performed by  Vitamin C  
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    : oh come on unathanthium, I iike your style, Last Nite, is a great song but it is a very obvious sub motown parody...and Dr. Feelgood- She Does It Right does it a milllion times better
    : Sub motown,I love sub motown.Parody,I love that too.And if Dr.Feelgood do it better,congratulations to them.A million times better,though,hm,that's an awful lot of noughts.And I don't think we need a pub rock revival.
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last of the hobo kings  performed by  gauthier mary  
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Last Summer  performed by  Lostprophets  
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Late Again  performed by  Judie Tzuke  
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Late Goodbye  performed by  Poets of the Fall  
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Laughter Ever After  performed by  Andy Lewis featuring Bettye Lavette  
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Lay Me Down (Wake Me Up)  performed by  Four Seasons  
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Le Locomotion  performed by  Sylvie Vartan
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    : i love the scopitone video to this track. nice and silly. it's probably the reason she's considered to be cheesy.
it _was_ downloadable on http://scopitones.com a while ago, but they seem to have removed it. oh well, it will probably resurface somewhere.
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Leaving So Soon  performed by  Keane  
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legal man  performed by  belle & sebastian  
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    : Although I have most of their records, I'd never heard this track before, and it really surprised me.  It sounds almost like a vintage organ/sitar instrumental, but then the drumming gives it kind of a stone roses feel.  Interesting stuff!
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Let the Sunshine In (The Flesh Failures)  performed by  The Don Kirshner Concept  
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Let Your Conscience Be Your Guide  performed by  Jackie Lee  
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Let your halo  performed by  Woke Up Falling
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Let’s Get Lost  performed by  Chet Baker  
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    : I totally disagree with you about Chet Baker's singing. I think he has one of the smoothest, sexiest voices of any Jazz singer. Check out his version of 'The more I see you' and 'Do it the hard way'. 
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Let’s Get Married  performed by  Mariya Takeuchi  
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Let�s Stay Inside  performed by  Ivy  
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Life and Breath  performed by  Frankie Valli
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Life In Mono  performed by  Mono  
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    : Yes, a superb song.  Simple, but beautiful.  The tune reminds me of 'The Shadow of your smile'. The singer's voice echoes that of Claudine Longet nicely, and they appropriate some elements of classic film music in order to create a compelling backdrop. I have the US-issue CD single, which also includes 4 mixes and an instrumental version. None really match the elegance of the original though.
    : This track got a lot of exposure as part of the "Great Expectations" soundtrack. The entire cd is quite good as well. Formica Blues was Mono's only full length effort, though there are several cd singles available. A wonderfully successful example of how trip-hip and jazz/lounge styles work well together. Reminds me of Love Spirals Downwards' recent cds Temporal and Flux. Mono's vocalis Siobhan de Mar moved on to do work with Cocteau Twins frontman Robin Guthrie. Their band, Violet Indiana is on Guthrie's Bella Union label.
    : It's very appealing but I also find it almost comically artifical and that I tire of it very easily. 
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Life on Mars  performed by  Barbara Streisand  
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Light Enough to Travel  performed by  the Be Good Tanyas  
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    : There's something about the attitude of this song that I love. The song is originally written by this guy who only plays and composes on accordian. I heard him play once on CBC Radio and he brought his two kids because he couldn't afford a babysitter and the kids kept talking all the way through his songs. This is perfect mixed tape fodder. For that driving mix you're giving to your best gal friend.
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Light Flight  performed by  Pentangle
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Listen Here  performed by  Valorie Keys  
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    : This one is really HAPPENING, baby.
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Little Bit  performed by  Lykke Li
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Lluvia de Primavera/Spring Rain  performed by  Bebu Silvetti  
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    : To correct: the "full-length version" is in fact a disco mix by Salsoul stalwart Tom Moulton. So good, man... Crazy percussive middle part galore! Available as a Salsoul 12". Tell me if you bump into one!
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Lonely is as lonely does  performed by  The Fleetwoods  
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Long Way Down  performed by  Jimmie Spheeris  
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Look After You  performed by  The Fray
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Look Away  performed by  Eternity�s Children
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    : Eternity's Children.
Somehow the name got messed up and I can't edit it so I'm posting this correct spelling to help the search engine.....
    : Eternity's Children are a fantastic group...I remember when I first heard "Mrs. Bluebird" and was blown away. 
That was around 1985 and just last year I picked up their singles collection on CD. Thanks for recommending their individual albums, I definitely want to check them out.
    : I can't recommend the first album highly enough ... it's a pop masterpiece... My introduction to ET was through that singles package, which is good enough for what it is, but trusty me the first album really needs to be heard in the original order with all the tracks.
    : I had the great experience of working with Mike "the Kid", Linda, and Charlie. you oughta hear linda do 5th Dimension live ot Mike kick it with a keyboard. First worked with some of them in memphis with Tommy Cogsbill. Linda was present-we were friends socially in '69 and then again with Mike, Charlie, drummer Johnny Thomasie from N.O.,sometime later. I can't remember the Guitar player's name-maybe Norman or something like that. We were doing the "B" side to a single of mine at Robin Hood Bryan's studio. All of us lived in Baton Rouge at the time and worked respectively for Crocked Fox Prod.(but this session was maybe a solo adventure with co-member of the production team, Guy Bellello [[R.I.P.]}since only he was present-who knows.) 
The "A" side was done at one of my sessions at American Studios, Memphis and featured the Memphis Horns, the Sweet Inpirations as female back ups, Cimmaron as writer/male harmonies. Elvis had been there the week before (recorded In the Ghetto, I think)and Neil Diamond was due the following week there in Memphis. I felt like such a nobody with life-sized pics of Elvis everywhere and everybody making their comparisons of Alex from the "Boxtops" and me. Pinning a VU meter the same way Alex did was not exactly the feedback I was looking for. Anyway, I guess I am saying we spent a little time together, I miss listening to and working with them. If anyone hears from them, it would be great to STS again. I started back playing professionally a couple of years ago and still consider them the gold standard in terms of harmony and think that the Hammond B3 has "the Kid's" name on it. As an update, Guy died an untimely death about 10 years ago and I only wish I could find Bubba Anthony if living, a sometimes ET drummer and any of that crowd.
Kindest regards,
Scatdaddy2002
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Losin Yo Head  performed by  Monsters of Folk  
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losing grip  performed by  avril lavigne
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Lost  performed by  Morrissey  
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Lost In The Paradise  performed by  Gal Costa  
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    : a fantastic recording; thanks for drawing my attention to it.  Sergio Mendes and Brasil 66 do a great version on their 1970 'Stillness' album as well.
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Lottery Winners on Acid  performed by  The Crimea  
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Love and Pride   performed by  KING  
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Love For Sale  performed by  Annie Ross  
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Love in Rewind  performed by  Dino Merlin  
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Love Is a Necessary Evil  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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    : I love this Blossom Dearie album. While small combos normally backed her up, Jack Marshall really made the orchestra work, very sensitive, and subdued to not cramp her style...... 
I have been looking for charts/sheet music for this tune for my combo to use, NO LUCK so far..... 
If anyone has a lead on it, I'd REALLY appreciate. 
THANKS
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Love so fine  performed by  Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends  
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    : I couldn't agree more. This is the epitome of what Pizzicato Five were trying to recreate in the early 90's.
    : I didn't realize someone had picked this one already! I spelled it "&" instead of "and". Excellent choice!
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Love so fine  performed by  Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends  
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    : Roger Nichols/pop genius and Roger Nichols/Steely Dan engineer are actually two different people. When Steely Dan toured Japan, people kept asking him to sign their "Small Circle" CDs! So funny!
    : How embarrassing to be the spreader of internet misinformation! I've heard that from several places. It seemed so plausible, with the Ted Templeman Harper's Bizarre/Van Halen connection. Or is that two Ted Templemans? Thanks for the correction. So it's probably the Steely Dan guy who writes the article? I'll have to check that out.
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Love Song  performed by  Lani Hall  
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    : By coincidence I picked up a compilation CD of Lani's work (a 25 year A and M anniversary disc that came out in 1987!) just yesterday, and this track and 'we could be flying' were the ones that really stood out. I'm a big Brasil 66 fan but had never picked up her albums. Strange that you happened to recommend this track today!
    : You're right -- this is a lovely, understated yet passionate song. That male singer might possibly be Burt Bacharach, since the tune was included on a Bacharach collection.
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Love Will Take Its Time  performed by  Mary Margaret O'Hara  
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Love’s Secert Domain  performed by  Coil  
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Love, love, love  performed by  Gerhard Heinz  
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Lovelier than you  performed by  Bobby ray
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Lovely Head  performed by  Goldfrapp
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Lullaby  performed by  Krzysztof Komeda & Mia Farrow  
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    : I love this too! It seems to pull the whole movie into a class of it's own.
I've been trying to find the Claudine Longet version for years!
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Lullaby (the Divorce Song)  performed by  Stephen Lynch  
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Lynn�s Baby  performed by  Mark Eric  
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Mad World  performed by  Gary Jules  
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    : This is a rare occasion where I love the cover more than the original. A very awesome song.
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Main title - Vampire Killers  performed by  Krzysztof Komeda  
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Make it Easy on Yourself  performed by  Burt Bacharach  
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    : Cilla Black does a brilliant cover of this song on her 1966 album "Sing A Rainbow".  Rich lush orchestration and Cilla at full ballad belt. It was her early interpretations of songs like this that brought her to the attention of Bacharach himself!!
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Make The Madness Stop  performed by  Free Design  
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    : No, you have it backwards, because your emotions get in the way. Understandable though, with this group, and particularly this song (which is one of my all-time faves). It "blows your mind but not completely..." is what I like to say. Stereolab have always worn their influences on their sleeves, from the Beach Boys to Can. And it seems like I should explain by saying that they are a gateway group for so many young people to discover older pop, but shallow as some are, they only like the FD songs that sound like more contemporary artists. Not that it's a super bad thing, just a little dissapointing, considering the depth and beauty of this groups entire body of work...  Dig?
Love,
Bonehead.    
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Make You Feel My Love  performed by  Adele  
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Mambo Italiano  performed by  Bette Midler
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Manon  performed by  Serge Gainsbourg
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Marley Medley  performed by  Sublime
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Marquee Moon  performed by  Television  
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Marquee Moon  performed by  Television  
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mashin' on the motorway  performed by  dj shadow  
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maybe  performed by  emma bunton  
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Maybe in the next life  performed by  Cinnamon  
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    : I'm a big fan of this song as well.  The album this if from,  Vertigo, is worth picking up if you can find it.  Louis Philippe arranged the strings on it with Burgalat producing.  I hope this isn't all we are going to hear from Cinnamon.
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me japanese boy  performed by  Pizzicato Five  
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    : I enjoy this song very much as well, although I think I've only heard P5's more dancey versions.  I would recommend an obscure version by 'The Young Generation', a group of English children recording in the early 70s.
    : the only version of this i know is the one on the "five by five" ep, which i believe is earlier? great song nonetheless.
    : I just found out that my 'Young Generation' LP containing this song is a notorious ebay rarity, selling for around $100.  Damn - I gave the record away to a thrift store after taping the songs I liked...!
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Mecca  performed by  Gene Pitney  
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Meet Me At The Love-In  performed by  Love Generation  
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Melody  performed by  Serge Gainsbourg  
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    : One of the BEST LPs ever, period, end of sentence!
Also - a great lost piece of the UK glam rock jigsaw, I think.  Listen to this record, then listen to Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust" or "Aladdin Sane", Roxy Music's "Stranded" or "For Your Pleasure", even "The Slider" or "Tanx" by T. Rex. Serge's fingerprints are all over those records.
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Metalingus  performed by  Alter Bridge  
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Mi Querido Amor  (My Cherie Amour)  performed by  Cristian Castro  
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Mia Madre Si Chiama Francesca  performed by  Milva  
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    : I absolutely agree, Robert! This is one amazing album, check out the maestros collaboration with Mireille Mathieu (Mireille Mathieu chante Ennio Morricone from 1974) as well if you haven't done that already, it's equally impressive emotionally. To clear things up, this track originates from the "La moglie piu bella" soundtrack from 1970.
    : Tanx for the info - and Ms. Mathieu's LP is really great likewise - as is Milva's collaboration w/Francis Lai from 1973
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Middle Of The Road  performed by  Denim  
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Middle Of The Road  performed by  The Pretenders  
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Minas De Cobre (extended mix)  performed by  Calexico  
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Minitoka  performed by  DJ Food  
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    : I'm also a fan of the album, and I adore this track.  The way the thick synth sound merges with the 40-year old sample is quite brilliant.
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Mirage  performed by  Siouxsie & The Banshees  
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Miserlou  performed by  Caterina Valente  
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Mommie's Drunk  performed by  MAOW  
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Moonchild  performed by  Rick James  
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More Today Than Yesterday  performed by  Spiral Starecase  
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    : Bout' time someone handed this one in. I guess I take it for granted like most americans who still like AM radio... right up there with "Lovin' You" for songs that you can't sing along to without looking like a fool.
    : It is indeed one of those unabashedly ecstatic, so-in-love songs that plaster a foolish grin onto your face.
    : Much covered song - versions by Barbara McNair, Sam Fletcher , Barbara Acklin and Richard 'Groove' Holmes spring to mind. Pat Upton's solo stuff is very similar and if you like this one look out for anything by Robert John too.
    : Oh yes, a great song. Reminds me of when I had my first transistor radio. 
All I've got is a very scratchy 45...time to remedy that.
This sort of reminds me of Blood, Sweat & Tears.
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Movies  performed by  Alien Ant Farm
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Mr Peacock  performed by  Orange Colored Sky  
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    : Based on your enthusiastic description, I tracked this song down (it wasn't an easy task!), and I can't say I was disappointed. Very groovy indeed! The best song ever written about peacocks.    
    : For those who don't know - the song is from the movie "The Love God" starring Don Knotts.
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Mrs. Bluebird  performed by  Sunshine Day  
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Mrs. Robinson  performed by  The Ray Bloch Singers  
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    : Too true... I love the cover too. With the spunky teens shopping and sippin' on ice cream sodas in a flower montage. 
    : i'm glad i'm not alone in my unholy obsession!
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mundian to bach ke  performed by  panjabi mc
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My  Way  performed by  Frank Sinatra  
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My Doctor  performed by  Bruz Fletcher  
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My Heart Took A Licking (But It Kept On Ticking)  performed by  Millie Jackson  
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My John the Conqueror Root  performed by  Muddy Waters  
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My Love�s A Monster  performed by  Clea Bradford  
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My Style  performed by  The Black Eyed Peas  
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My Suitor  performed by  Berntholer  
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My Town  performed by  Michael Stanley Band  
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My Way  performed by  Brook Benton  
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Nails in my feet  performed by  Crowded House  
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Name  performed by  Goo Goo Dolls  
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Name of the Game  performed by  ABBA  
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Narco Montenot  performed by  Stereolab  
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Natural To Be Gone  performed by  Anita Kerr Singers  
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    : John Hartford was a regular on The Glen Campbell television showof the late 60s, he wrote "Gentle on my mind" among other pop hits done by other artists.. talented writer and musician..
    : Hartford was a favorite of mine as a kid, I used to see him on the Smothers Brothers and Glen Campbell shows, where he was somewhat of a regular. He was a celebrity back then for writing "Gentle on My Mind" which became a 60s standard. I do recall that he was a riverboat captain as well as a musician. He died a few years ago, which I was sorry to hear, but I've seen a number of his CDs that were on the market. I love his 60's stuff, he had a great laconic style.
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Nature's Hated  performed by  Orlando  
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New Partner  performed by  Palace Music
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    : now THAT's what i call a recommendation.
I�m gonna have to find and soak this up now...
    : beautiful song. i've been a sporadic fan of will oldham related stuff for some years now, but hadn�t heard this until now. thanks!
hmm. on a side note, this is the 666th american release that has been recommended here. i might be a bit childish, but i was hoping that number would go to some really, really bad contemporary pop music. Hey, you can't always get what you want:)
    : This song was the soundtrack to my incorrigible devotion to a lovely young girl when I myself was a bit younger.  I used to listen to this tune repeatedly in my tiny little newly discovered room in the immensely overwhelming new land in which I found myself during the adventure which was to last the next four years, wandering Europe by my heartstrings.  This was the song.  I used to drink gin martinis to it.  And eat the olive.  And shudder because winter had come to my little home, and she was always, at least as often as the song played, on my mind.  
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new slang  performed by  the shins
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New York New York  performed by  Nina Hagen  
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Night Game  performed by  Paul Simon  
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No Children  performed by  the Mountain Goats
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No Control  performed by  Bad Religion  
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No Time To Cry  performed by  Iris Dement  
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Noah’s Dove  performed by  10,000 Maniacs  
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Nobody Loves Us  performed by  Morrissey  
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Not A Pretty Girl  performed by  Ani Difranco  
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Nothing Shaking  performed by  Eddie Fontaine  
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Obscurity Knocks  performed by  The Trash Can Sinatras  
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Off Night Backstreet  performed by  Joni Mitchell  
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Oh Well, I'll never learn  performed by  Morrissey  
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    : I couldn't agree more!  Having purchased the US 12 inch of 'suedehead' which didn't include this track, it was such a nice surprise in 1994 when I purchased the 13-cd british singles box set and found this track.  Moz sings this song with such a great since of joyous naughtiness that you just want to tweak his delinquent little nose.
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oh yeah  performed by  can  
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Oh, Calcutta!  performed by  Dave Pell Singers  
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    : Its funny that it should make you think of people wearing sparkly dresses, when of course the show itself was primarily famous for having large numbers of hairy hippies naked onstage.
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On a clear day you can see forever  performed by  The Peddlers  
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On Broadway  performed by  BILL EVANS AND ORCHESTRA
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on nous cache tout, on nous dit rien  performed by  jacques dutronc  
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    : very cool song, it's been a long-time favorite of mine!
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On the Nature of Daylight  performed by  Max Richter  
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Once in Lifetime  performed by  Talking Heads  
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Once Upon a Summertime  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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One Man in My Heart  performed by  The Human League  
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One Mint Julep  performed by  Ray Charles  
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One More Time  performed by  The Clash  
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One of the Broken  performed by  Prefab Sprout  
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One,Two,Three  performed by  Tony Scotti  
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Ordinary Joe  performed by  Terry Callier
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    : This song doesn't rock...it bounces!
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Osmijeh  performed by  Grupa 220  
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Our Drive to the Sun / Can a Man Mark it?  performed by  Tripping Daisy  
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Out of my hands  performed by  Richard x Heyman  
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Out of my mind on dope and speed  performed by  Julian Cope  
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Pacific 202  performed by  Acid Brass (The Williams Fairey Brass Band)  
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Paint A Vulgar Picture  performed by  the Smiths  
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    : Am I the only one who thinks this song is about Ian Curtis and Factory Records?  Think about it.  Morrissey would have certainly gone to JD shows in the late 70's.  Reportedly, he was at the 4 June 1976 Pistols show at Lesser Free Trade Hall.  Clearly, Moz and the Smiths rejected Factory Records when their time came about to find a label.  Maybe, Moz was not only disgusted with Factory's obsession with repackageing JD material into new releases, but perhaps Moz had a romantic eye for Curtis.  Perhaps, they touched "at the soundcheck."  And though somewhat morbid, he sang about never tainting his love for Curtis because Curtis was "on their hands a dead star."
    : I wouldn't have thought it was the case, it must have been 20 years before factory compiled Joy Divisions stuff. When he died they bought out the scheduled releases: "love will tear us apart", "Closer" and then I think it was a few years before "Still" appeared.  They got on pretty quickly with developing new Order IIRC, it couldn't have been that long before "ceremony" appeared.  
I'm not Tony Wilsons biggest fan, but I think Factory did a pretty good job of handling Curtis' suicide. And they weren't really that popular anyway, at that time. 
Now, the frenzy that marked John Lennons death. That was something else.
    : Paint a Vulgar Picture was 1987, long after Factory, and the remainder of JD had moved on to New Order.  By that time, NO had released numerous 12" singles and LP's all the way through FAC 150, Brotherhood.  For the record, FAC 37 was a video release called Here Are The Young Men of JD in Aug '82, FAC 40 is the JD compilation Still released in Oct '81, and NO's first release Ceremony is FAC 33 in Jan '81.  There are also many JD appearances on various Factory Records compilations, both LP and video.  All of this, of course, going on long before Moz, Marr, Rourke, and Joyce ever were together as the Smiths.  One final thought, and please excuse the macabre, listen very closely to the last line of lyric in Vulgar, there is a distinct, but obvious choking sound just after the last word.  If Moz hadn't made a career of singing about the "romantic" side of death, suicide, et. al. I would dismiss it as just a gutteral noise, but...
    : I bow to your superior research. 
And wince to your final thought!
    : I just tonight thought for the first time about who the song might be about (bizarre, since it's one of my favorite songs) and the first person I came up with was Ian Curtis.  This story is old (I know) but it goes on...
    : The new Smiths bootleg "Unreleased Demos and B-sides" has a great rendition of this song with slightly different lyrics.   Grab a copy of you have the chance.
    : It has literally never occurred to me that this could be who it's about.  I guess it's possible but it just seems wrong to me somehow.  And I don't remember any tacky badges on Factory releases (unless I missed them). Interesting bootleg for sure...
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Pale Blue Eyes  performed by  the Velvet Underground  
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Paper Castle  performed by  Rotary Connection  
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    :  A strange hybrid of styles.. Psychedelic soul? 
    : yeah, and it wasn't even the strangest...there was an off-shoot that i'll hereby dub "native soul", which was a blend of psychedelic soul, with it's fuzz guitars and such, and native american drums. the sound is best exemplified by the instrumental group the electric indian, who were from philadelphia (and featured len barry of "1-2-3" fame") and had a moderate-sized hit with "keem-o-sabe". they recorded a couple of lps in the idiom, while all other examples i've heard have been one-off attempts. there's also good stuff out there by a group called the little big horns and a song called "warpath" by the isley brothers which is an all-out masterpiece.
    : Thought I didn't like The Rotary connection. Hearing that, I've changed my mind.
It's outa-sight!
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Paper Thin Hotel  performed by  Leonard Cohen  
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Passing Me By  performed by  Pharcyde
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Past, Present & Future  performed by  The Shangri-Las  
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    : This song is utter genius.  'just don't try to touch me... because that will never  happen  again'.  They are indeed under-rated.  It's strange really.  There are CD compilations out there, but they all seem to marketed in a budget kind of way. 
    : There's hot debate as to what this song means... I've read that it's about a rape survivor which kind of makes sense but I think it has too much mystery to it to define completely.  George "Shadow" Morton surpasses even the greatest hopes for girl-group trash-drama.
As to the compilations, there's a great one on RPM called "Myrmidons Of Melodrama".  Strangely, its available in two different covers, with slightly altered tracklisting (a few songs on one not on the other and vice versa) but either one contains all their best tracks and some amusing "Radio Spots" with Mary Weiss (lead singer) giving tips on how to behave on a date.  "Don't barge on ahead like a baby elephant" she advises; "you'll get attention all right, but it won't be favourable".
    : The two different versions of "Myrmidons of Melodrama" are quite different, not only because of the tracklisting, but also becouse the most recent one(2002, by RPM) has stereo versions of 5 songs. I'm not sure that these songs sound better in stereo than in mono...
    : I now have the newer 'Myrmidons' comp. So many great tracks. My favorite bit of this song is right at the end when she says "I'm all packed up and I'm on my way - and I'm going to fall in love ... but at the moment, it doesn't look good ... At the moment, it will never happen again."
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Pavane for a Dead Princess  performed by  Eumir Deodato  
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    : While I find Deodato to be a stimulating and interesting artist (and am far from being a "classical purist" of any sort), I can't really muster any great enthusiasm for this recording. Too close to being a kind of synthesis of Ravel's original for solo piano (1899) and version for full orchestra (1910), I find Deodato's funky adaptations of Stauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra" and, particularly Debussy's "Prelude to the afternoon of a faun" somewhat more worthwhile. Maybe I should listen again to the Ravel adaptation, but in the past I have found its blandness a little irritating... 
    : What I like about this track is the fact that it's a very black, funky take on a piece with questionable Aryan overtones. It can be heard to great affect in Hal Ashby's  'Being There', which I think was Peter Sellers' last film.
    : Re the above comment: I was talking about  'Also Sprach Zarathrustra', not the Ravel piece. Sorry for any confusion.
    : As far as the Ravel adaptation goes, I find it pleasant if a little bit chocolate-boxey, reminiscent of the 60s soundtracks of Francis Lai. I can't argue with Delicado's comments about the string sound though, which is astonishing.
    : Bore - Ring!  If you are going to listen to Deodato.  Listen to the early Equipe LPs.  When his sound was so hip, hipper than hip, the bastard brazilian son of Henry Mancini hip. Get a copy of "Tremendao" grab a beer and try to find a nice warm spot of sunshine.
    : Well, you have to remember that I'm someone who is obsessed with string sounds.  I listen fanatically to late 50s and 60s mood music records, and am a fan of both Percy Faith and Jackie Gleason's records.  Yes, I love Brazilian music, and enjoy all of Deodato's 60s Equipe LPs, but I also have a very real and intense love of what my pal G400 defines as 'chocolate-boxy' easy listening music. Deodato's 1972 LP 'Percepcao' (recently reissued on CD in Brazil) also falls into this category, and I adore it!
    : One of the purist fusion jazz artists of his time. Listen to the music, don't try to interpret it or rationalize it. Your missing the point. Eumir is unmistakeably one of the pioneers in this gendre.
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Pe  performed by  Silvia Machete
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peace  performed by  plastics  
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Peaceful  performed by  Georgie Fame  
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    : This song was written by Kenny Rankin. A legend in his own right in the US. The Fame version is awesome indeed, i've heard a lot of takes on this one and his takes the prize. 
    : I agree I re-discovered this song recently and it has been added to my best songs of all time.
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Pense à moi  performed by  France Gall  
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    : most of france gall's 60's output from her yeh yeh bubble pop to the NOW sounds is excellent and highly recommended by moi. her compilation poupee de son is a great place to start for anyone new to the charms of france and her lovely songs. her later 70's records are not so wonderfull but then thats only my opinion, some of us may feel different. happy listening everyone.
    : Great song, this. I find much of her mid-60s output highly enjoyable, however throwaway they were supposed to be. 'Laisse tomber les filles' from around the same time is great too.
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People and places  performed by  Constantin Veis
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People Who Died  performed by  The Jim Carroll Band  
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per second second  performed by  wrens
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    : They're new album is absolutely phenomenal, no?
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Picturama / The Middle Bit / Soul Surrender  performed by  The Motors  
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Pigs On The Wing  performed by  Pink Floyd  
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Pinball Number Count  performed by  The Pointer Sisters  
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    : Wow! What a great track! This song has always been lurking around the darkest depths of my mind, every now and again inexplicably popping out into the sunshine. Now I know what it's called and who did it. Thanx Festy!
    : 
It's so true that this is either embedded in you as a kid, or you missed it altogether. There is a letter kicking around on the web from Walt Kramer to Matthew Jones of the Helium site in which he discusses this tune and the recording session. Fun stuff.
[Walt's letter]
This is from the NinjaTune.net SolidSteel subsite:
"It all started a couple of years ago when Strictly Kev, part of DJ Food, desperately wanted to include the infamous 'Pinball Number Count' on the first 'Solid Steel Presents' mix CD. You know the track, it was super funky and was accompanied by the cool animation of a pinball rolling around strange landscapes. Now this track is the stuff of legends within beat digging circles, DJs have scoured record bins for decades in the hope of finding it included on old Sesame compilations but alas, it was never on any of them.
"Fortunately Kev knew this and rang Sesame Workshop in New York asking for a copy of the tape. It never actually made it onto the mix CD but that's another story. What you have here is a composite of numbers 2-12 of the 'Pinball Number Count' animations (number 1 was never created). Kev has re-edited all the key elements and cleaned up the sound while he's at it. And cooing those syncopated numbers and do-dos in the background is only the Pointer Sisters on a session singing assignment."
You can also SEE the old cartoon segments that the song accompanied. The entire series seems to have been included with several other number classics on the DVD "Sesame Street - The Great Numbers Game."
    : My pleasure, Snafkin! Thanks Katya for the extra info and links. It was great to read up on the history of the track and also see the lengths some people were going to when trying to find the track before it became readily available. I noted DJ Food refer to another release on Ninja Tunes featuring Sesame Street toons in the near future. Yay! Also, there were quite a few references to an earlier, jazzier track titled "Jazz Numbers". I hope this pops up somewhere too.
    : The pinball skits are one of my fondest classic Sesame Street memories.  I was born in 1980 and remember seeing this skit from about 1983 to 1986.  So sad they don't use it anymore.  The song brought back great memories!  Thanks!
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Pinocchio  performed by  Mary Roos  
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pissing in a river  performed by  the patti smith group  
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    : patti was totally out there back when this track was happening. those first two albums were brilliant, esspecially the radio ethiopia track on same name album. sadly for her early supporters it was not listening heaven after she had a fluke hit and commercialism raised its tired and ugly head and patti was somehow lead to believe she only wrote songs that were as good as other 70's songwriters when in reality she used to write songs that were way above any other writers.the songs on the first two albums have incredible atmosphere and that was all lost after because the night hit mainstream ears. the first two albums and any bootlegs from 75/76 are worth anyones time and money.
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Please Let Me Wonder  performed by  the Beach Boys  
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Poema Ritmico do Malandro  performed by  Sonia Santos e Zito Righi  
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Poetry Man  performed by  Phoebe Snow  
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Poor Boy  performed by  Shocking Blue  
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Power in the Darkness  performed by  Tom Robinson Band  
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Prams  performed by  Vital Disorders  
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Prisencolinensinainciusol  performed by  Adriano Celentano -  
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public image  performed by  public image limited  
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    : i love that song--the bass line!...but am not fortunate enough to have the 1st record. i'm also a big fan of "poptones" off their second edition lp.
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Pula Yetla  performed by  Letta Mbulu  
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Punk Girl  performed by  Thee Headcoatees  
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purple haze  performed by  Johnny Jones & The King Casuals
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    : I meant to say to you before: this is utter genius, thanks so much for recommending it!
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Put Your Hands On The Screen  performed by  Martin Briley  
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Que é isso menina  performed by  The Pops  
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Question Mark  performed by  Billy Nicholls  
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Quiet Friend  performed by  Steve Roach  
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Radio #1  performed by  Air  
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    : I've had a remarkably similar experience with this album; dig the sing along at the end of 'radio #1' as well!
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Ragam / Tanam / Pallavi  performed by  L. Subramaniam  
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Redemption Song  performed by  Johnny Cash and Joe Strummer  
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Redemtion  performed by  Switchfoot
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Rei do Carnaval  performed by  Ivan Lins  
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Requiem: 820 Latham  performed by  Mel Torme  
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Rest in Peace  performed by  Chad & Jeremy  
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Restons Group�s  performed by  Alexandre Desplat  
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    : Excellent description, for me the track evokes similar scenes when listening to it. And you're not wrong, the track really is from 1998, but sounds absolutely late 60s/early 70s. Well, the whole compilation ain't that bad either i guess :-) If anyone is interested: http://www.artofthemix.org/FindAMix/getcontents.asp?strMixID=84985
    : This song alone almost makes me want to see the movie! I wonder if the whole soundtrack is like this? Btw. I almost got a eargasm at 2:15 minutes into the track. :)
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Revenge  performed by  Mindless Self Indulgence  
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Rhode Island Is Famous For You  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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Richard Nixon  performed by  Rod & The MSR Singers  
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Ring Worm  performed by  Van Morrison  
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    : I already knew this weird story, but being a fan of Van for 15 years or so it wasn't until these 2 tracks (together with "You Say France And I Whistle") were featured on Otis Fodder's 365 Days Project that i eventually heard them. Hilarious stuff. It's pretty much a precedence that shows what happens when record companies force artists to be creative and deliver what they want...
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Ripple  performed by  The Church  
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Road ode  performed by  The Carpenters  
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    : You are not alone in you love of the Carpenters!  I am proud to say that I have every studio album produced by Richard and Karen and still play them all the time.  I need to pull them off the shelves and post a few songs on here... thanks for bringing it to my attention!
    : I like the Carpenters too. They have a pristine  flawless and happy quality that is slightly unreal. It's fascinating and yet there's a kind of tragic undercurrent in some of their music too.
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Rock Lobster  performed by  The B-52’s  
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Romeo’s Tune  performed by  Steve Forbert  
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Rose Kennedy  performed by  Benjamin Biolay  
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    : Can you call him the french version of Scott Walker? This song reminds me of some of Walkers songs from the '60s, and what a great song 'Rose Kennedy' is. I love the strings and Biolay's deep voice.
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Rose Petals, Incense, and a Kitten  performed by  The Association  
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    : This is a truly exquisite track. I've been listening to this album a lot recently actually.
    : A track so great it abolutely deserves to be recommended twice, here is my entry: http://www.musicaltaste.com/filter.php?songtitle=Rose%20Petals%2C%20Incense%20and%20a%20Kitten
    : I'm glad so many people like this song...you can't go wrong with this album, in addition to "Rose Petals", there is "Everything That Touches You", "Toymaker", "Hear in Here", and "The Time it is Today", all great tunes. I just wonder what the results would have been if the Association had recorded "MacArthur Park" like they were requested to at that time!
    : Seconded! Birthday is my favorite Association album containing some of the finest Sunshine Pop tracks ever!
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Rosemary  performed by  Scott Walker  
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    : I feel like making a movie just based on this song alone. This is a great piece of music and probably one of Scott Walkers best achivements. I love the gloomy, rainy feeling you get listening to it, Walker's voice is incredible. 
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Roses  performed by  RPWL  
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Roses and Revolvers  performed by  Janko Nilovic  
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Ruby  performed by  The Apples in Stereo  
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    : I agree, this is one of the best tracks by The Apples in Stereo! And of of my overall favorite songs! I can listen to it over and over..
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Rumors  performed by  Eternity’s Children  
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    : this song was on one of the two LP's
    : yea, bruce was there in the very beginning, but he was not there when we recorded the second lp or the last single we recorded in tyler, texas with robin hood bryant.  he wrote NO songs on the "timeless" album and you HAVE NOT heard the TRUE story about "eternity's children."  I thank you for your time...but I am not impressed by what Mr. Blackmon is writing. If you would like the REAL story, please let me, Roy Whitaker, Linda Lawley or Mike McClain hear from you. Thanks a lot and keep on rockin'.  Charlie Ross
    : wow.... are you Mr. Charlie Ross???  I'd really like to hear the REAL story!!  Actually I can't get just a little information about Eternity's Children while it's my favorite group...
    : charlie, hope you remember me.Iworked with you as your road man in 66.I've often wondered where you and johnny walker went to. I'm still in B'ham Al. If you remember me send a phone no.I can reach you at.Would like to ask some questions about old times and friends.Those were good times in my life.                                                Your old friend Jimmy [email protected]
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Run for Your Life  performed by  Lara & the Trailers  
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    : AY RUVV!   
    : That one's a lot of fun!
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Run Mascara  performed by  The Exciters  
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Run To The Sun  performed by  The Owl  
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Rye Bread  performed by  Edd Kalehoff  
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Sa Marina  performed by  Wilson Simonal  
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Sabor A Mi  performed by  Eydie Gorme & the Trio Los Panchos  
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Sagittarius Black  performed by  Timothy McNealy  
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Saiupa  performed by  Bossa Rio  
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    : hey, bossa rio!! i have their "alegria!" lp on blue thumb, which was also produced by sergio mendes. really great covers of "spinning wheel", "blackbird", "girl talk", and a few more jorge ben tunes.
    : ...including the ben song "zazueira", which, coincidentally, i have recommended astrud gilberto & stanley turrentine's version of!
    : I was interested to note that the bass line from Jorge Ben's Saiupa as played by Bossa Rio (1969)(listen for break after long chorus) sounds remarkably like Gordon Gano's "Gone Daddy Gone" (1980). Is there any aknowledgement from GG on the Violent Femmes album?
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Same Girl  performed by  Randy Newman
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Satan is in my Ass  performed by  Evil Superstars  
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Say Hello, Wave Goodbye  performed by  Soft Cell  
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    : Yes, isn't this a brilliant, devastating track.  I think the out-of-tune vocals are all part of the package!  This shares some of the desolate and empty electronic feel of some of Joy Division's work, but puts it into a pop context.
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Scatterbrain (As Dead As Leaves)  performed by  Radiohead  
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Seasick yet still Docked(live)  performed by  Morrissey
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Secret Love  performed by  Kathy Kirby  
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Self-conscious over you  performed by  The Outcasts  
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Senza Una Donna  performed by  Zucchero; Paul Young  
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Sexual Healing  performed by  Hot-8 Brass Band  
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She  performed by  Gram Parsons   
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She Loves You  performed by  Ted Chippington  
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she makes me wanna die  performed by  tricky
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She’s Not Just Anybody  performed by  Dovers  
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She's hit  performed by  The Birthday Party  
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She's Losing it  performed by  Belle & Sebastian  
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Ship Rolls In  performed by  Faster Pussycat  
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Shoots and Ladders  performed by  Korn
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showroom dummies  performed by  kraftwerk  
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Silverbird  performed by  Justin Hayward
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Sing Out  performed by  Cat Stevens
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Sing Sang Sung  performed by  Air  
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Sing To Me  performed by  Boo Hewerdine  
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Sing To Me  performed by  apple rabbits  
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Sinnerman  performed by  Nina Simone
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Skin Trade  performed by  Duran Duran  
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Sky�s the Limit  performed by  Bernard Kawka  
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Sleep alone  performed by  Rowland S. Howard  
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    : Love him. Do you have his Pop Crimes album? 
    : Oh yes. I\'ve been obsessed with this man for a while now =)
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Sleep The Clock Around  performed by  Belle & Sebastian  
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    : yeah, great song.  'electronic renaissance' is from 'tiger milk', right?  If it's the one I'm thinking of, I'm a big fan as well; I particularly enjoy the way it appropriates the mood of New Order's 'Procession'.
    : yes, electronic renaissance is from tiger milk, which is their first album, and best in my opinion. the synth does add a bit of new order quality to it, now that you meantion it. Mmaybe that's why i like it so much...
    : Has to be one of my favorite B&S songs for the simple reason of the bag pipe howl at the end.  Incredible arrangers to be sure.  "Electronic Renaissance" is a wonderful tune as well, establishes Tiger Milk as their best attempt, a sprawling masterpiece.
    : "Delicate singing" stands here for bad singing and quaveringvoice, "streaming trumpet" for rather cheap synth preset. Melody is rather uninteresting and ultra repetitive. I have often tried Belle & Sebastian. It is a very mediocre band.
    : This coming from a guy (fmars) who thinks Brian Eno can sing.
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Sleeper 1972  performed by  Manchester Orchestra
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Slide  performed by  Goo Goo Dolls  
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    : Thank you for mentioning the goo goo dolls in your recommendations but aren't you overlooking their older albums that aren't as well known? They have amazing music in their past - check it out.
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Slipped Away  performed by  Avril Lavigne  
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Slipping Away  performed by  Dave Edmunds
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Slowly Surely (Theo Parrish Remix)  performed by  Jill Scott + Theo Parrish  
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Sly  performed by  Herbie Hancock  
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smells like teen spirit  performed by  pleasure beach  
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smile  performed by  The Peddlers  
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    : Hi Klatu
I too remember well the Peddlers.My Favourite track of theirs was "Day in,Day out" an old Sinatra number.Also a track called "City Living" springs to mind.They were, without a doubt ,pretty cool!
Regards Mo
    : Yes, isn't this a winner!  When I heard it again the other day I noticed that Pizzicato have very obviously sampled it as the basis of one of their tracks (the one where the girl just says 'Pizz-i-ca-to FIVE' again and again.
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Snake Hill  performed by  Conor Oberst and The Mystic Valley Band
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Social Studies  performed by  David Singer & the Sweet Science  
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some enchanted evening  performed by  jay black and the americans  
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Some of your lovin'  performed by  Dusty Springfield  
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    : Nice pun on "slays" and "executed" there.
    : Dusty said that this was the only song she sang that she actually took home after recording it and played it over & over.
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Some Sing, Some Dance  performed by  Michel Pagliaro  
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Somebody to Love  performed by  Queen  
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Somebody To Love  performed by  The Boogie Pimps  
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    : I've not heard this, and I'm not really going to go out of my way to find it, although I appreciate your sentiments.  Anyway, before Jefferson Airplane, Grace Slick and some of the others were in a band called The Great Society, and they also did a version of this song, produced by Sly Stone. So it feels like something of a circle turning, although in 1966 he hadn't formed the great melting pot of the family. 
There are stories attached to that session, but thats by the by, the Great Societys' legacy would be a very fine live album.  You should track it down. Proper Psychedelia.
    : Jeff, thanks for the comment. Sly Stone being involved in a version of this sounds intriguing, I will try to track it down. 
Also interesting that you should use the word 'psychedelia'. You're absolutely right to - I think I didn't because I tend to associate it with either very surreal type of music (e.g. early Pink Floyd) or fairly mellow music (e.g Albatross, Good Morning Starshine, or late Pink Floyd), and both Somebody To Love and White Rabbit are neither.....Well, I suppose White Rabbit is surreal, but in a direct kind of way if that makes sense. You could say its closer to punk than hippy.
I know very little about this period to be honest - as you can probably tell - but there's more interesting music there than I once thought.
P.S. I wouldn't 'go out of your way to find' the Boogie Pimps version. In the context of the video channel they have on in the gym it was great when it came on - the vocal is similar and as I say the video is just so wierd it's worth watching. All in all quite fun but not essential. 
cheers, Matt
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Someone you love  performed by  Popguns  
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Something  performed by  Chet Baker  
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Something Better Change  performed by  The Stranglers  
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Something Big  performed by  Burt Bacharach  
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Somewhere only we know  performed by  Keane  
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    : This is a great song, its pretty and interesting to listen to.
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Son of a Travelin' Man  performed by  Ed Ames
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song of the siren  performed by  this mortal coil
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Sonnet 29  performed by  Rufus Wainwright  
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Sorry for laughing  performed by  Josef K  
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    : Their debut LP 'The Only Fun In Town' on Postcard Records is an absolute gem. Full on 60's garage band production with spiny guitars and frantic beats. Long live 'The Sound Of Young Scotland'!
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space age lullaby  performed by  jackie lee  
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Spacebeach  performed by  Arling & Cameron  
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    : great track - best song on the LP
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Speak Low  performed by  Harpers Bizarre  
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Spin, Spin, Spin  performed by  Terry Callier  
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Spirit Compass  performed by  The Kennedys  
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Split  performed by  LiLiPUT  
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    : Kleenex were great - this (and its b-side Die Matrosen) were Liliput's greatest moments.  Their entire output Kleenex + Lilipt is available on a double CD.  Also listen to 'Hitchhike'... and When The Cat's Away.
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Stand By Me  performed by  Sonny & Cher  
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Standing In The Rain  performed by  Hambi and the Dance  
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Stars  performed by  Tatu  
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    : now that's a careful, careful recommendation:)
    : Hmm, yes. I'm a very careful kind of guy!!!! 
    : And I think you'd be a lot more concerned if you'd seen a less than careful recommendation for this one!
    : hmm, yes. true.
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Starsign  performed by  Teenage Fanclub  
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State of the Nation  performed by  Fad Gadget  
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Stay Here  performed by  Mike Golden and Friends  
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Steal Yo Sixes  performed by  Avocado Baby  
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Stella  performed by  Andreas Vollenweider
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Step On  performed by  Happy Mondays  
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Steppin� Out  performed by  Joe Jackson  
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    : I'll second your comments regarding Joe Jackson. I'm surprised that with classic albums such as "I'm the Man", "Look Sharp", "Body & Soul" and the aformentioned "Steppin' Out", Joe Jackson doesn't, in my opinion, recieve the credit he deserves.
"Steppin' Out" is a great track, but my favourite version is actually from "Live 1980/86" where he takes a dramatic - perhaps even melodramatic - approach to the song. It shimmers then swells into this wonderful sound, evocative of a kind of fantasy 40's New York, but anchored by JJ's usual lyrical poignancy.
Somewhat overblown? Perhaps, but wonderful stuff nonetheless, and definately one to check out if you've not heard it before.
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Still  performed by  Elvis Costello  
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Still is Still Moving To Me  performed by  Toots & The Maytals w/ Willie Nelson
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Stop  performed by  Julie Grant  
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Stop Loving Me,Stop Loving You  performed by  Marvin Gaye  
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Strip-Tease  performed by  Nico  
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    : this is the best ever. i love this.
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Sublimation Hour  performed by  Destroyer  
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    : I'm a big Destroyer fan. He's an amazing vocalis. I don't know what you're talking about. The new album wasn't all everyone had hoped for, but has a couple of good songs in particular "Students Carve Hearts out of Coal".
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Sugababes On The Run  performed by  Sugababes  
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Sugartown  performed by  Les Miladys  
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Summer  performed by  Buffalo Tom  
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Summer (The First Time)  performed by  BOBBY GOLDSBORO  
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    : Millie Jackson covered this song and takes all the saccharine out of it!
    : 'Summer the first time' by Bobby G doesn't have an ounce of Saccharine, it is a powerfully evocative track taking me back to when I was 19 (and that's 32 years ago!)so completely that I can smell, taste and feel everything as if I'd dropped back into 1973 from a time machine! And if you think that I write with Saccharine, then hey,I get paid for it!
    : I am just listening to this tack as I am typing and it really is an excellent example for nostalgia. The way the song is constructed makes it easily slip into your mind and float downstream to past encounters...
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Sur ton r�pondeur  performed by  Notre-Dame  
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Surrender  performed by  U2  
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Suzanne  performed by  Leonard Cohen  
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    : I find too much Leonard Cohen can be a little on the bleak side, but this song is a real gem,  A shiny, strangely uplifting jewel.  I also have a version by Jack Jones, and I'm pleased that Jack Jones covered this song, in many ways its braver for him to have covered such un mainstream material than, say, Johnny Cash. My Girlfriend, however,  finds Jack Jones' version very disturbing.
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sway of the verses  performed by  Talvin Singh  
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Sweden  performed by  Tito Fontana
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Sweet Lips  performed by  MONACO  
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    : Yeah, i still remember this really hooked (kinda lame pun, i know) me when it came out. At the time the prospect of New Order ever coming together again was very unlikely, so this was a welcome substitute at least for me. The first single off "Music For Pleasure", "What Do You Want From Me", was equally New Order-esque with Potts' voice sounding strikingly similar to Sumners'.
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Sweet Susan  performed by  Ennio Morricone  
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    : Yes, this song, hidden away on the "La Banda J & S" soundtrack is quintessential Morricone, it is truly sublime.
One of the joys of Morricone is discovering tracks like this given his overwhelming output so thankyou for pointing this song out.  
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Sweet Talking Candyman  performed by  Lynn Carey (visually performed by ’The Carrie Nations’)  
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    : Is it camp?  Am I just too out of touch with my taste?  To me its a great song off one of my favourite Soundtracks.  I may have chosen "in the long run" over it, but not necessarily.  Maybe Lynn Careys vocal performance is a little powerful for modern tastes.  Dunno still don't get camp.  
Great choice anyway!
    : Both the song and the film are amazing, in my opinion.  I think the only reason it gets tarred with that 'camp' brush is the movie is one of those all-but-the-kitchen-sink storylines and the songs get lumped in too.  I hope that DVD rumour is true.
BTW, struck very lucky at a record fair today and got the 7" of Come With The Gentle People for a mere 50p, surely worth miles more than that??!
    : "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" 2-Disc DVD will be released on June 13, 2006.
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Swing, Swing  performed by  The All-American Rejects  
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Sympathy For the Devil  performed by  The Rolling Stones  
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Take it easy my brother Charlie  performed by  Astrud Gilberto  
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Take Me With You  performed by  Lyn Christopher  
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Take Your Time (Coming Home)  performed by  Fun.
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Tales from the Riverbank  performed by  The Jam  
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Teenage Wristband  performed by  The Twilight Singers  
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teenie weenie boppie  performed by  france gall  
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    : Yeah, I love this track. It was written by Serge Gainsbourg and recorded in 1967. It was released on the "1968" LP, which is available on CD as a French import. Also includes the great song "Made in France".
    : i should also mention that the song isn't really about lsd...it's not really *about* anything. kinda like seinfeld. she just mentions it in there.
    : yeh, i really wasn't too sure about this. i was merely going off of information from a source. ^.^
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Tell me why  performed by  Nick Heyward
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Temptation  performed by  New Order  
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    : I've not heard the 7 since I was at college in 82,  but there is also a version about 15-20 minutes long on one of the first "Touch" cassettes, where they have cut it with an interview.  The whole thing seems to have been a lengthy Jam, edited differently for different releases.  So the 7 would give you the most focused version.  Compare the 7 and 12 edits of the KLF's "3am Eternal" for the enhancing effect of a great edit.
    : I totally agree with everything delicado says. Early New Order rocks. Everything after and including Blue Monday is more poppy - and I can live with that. But most of their albums are very patchy - with half the tracks good and the other half almost unlistenable. But Temptation is an utter, utter classic. And I just love Dreams Never End, Cries and Whispers and In a Lonely Place. Well, any early New Order - it all that has tinny dance-music quality but still holds that desolate Joy Division sound.
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temptation  performed by  billy stewart  
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    : Nice one! Not one of his best albums, but the best cut by far. He had some really nice minor hits in his time. "Sitting In The Park" always makes me swoon, and his version of "Summertime" has to be heard to be believed!
    : yeah, i totally agree, his version of summertime is amazing. from what i heard, that was actually the track that brought him into recording, as he won a talent show with it in the forties. i'm currently hunting down some of his more "critically acclaimed" work. this lp (new tricks) was my first exposure to him, and i liked the glimpse i got from that enough to start looking for mp3's of his other work. now, to get that precious vinyl....
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Tereza and Tomas  performed by  Bright Eyes  
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That�s Not Love  performed by  Dee Dee Warwick  
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The Ambushers  performed by  Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart  
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    :  Super underrated songwriting duo. Fab stuff! Also check out their exellent LP "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight?",a big hit for them, but the whole record is really solid! From what i've read, these guys are virtuosos, and did all their own arranging as well as guitar & keys! Very fun stuff...
    : I just listened to this track (off their Anthology collection), and frankly it just sounds immature.  For me the outstanding track by Boyce & Hart has to be "Alice Long", with its kitchen-sink production style; if I had to list my favourite 10 songs of all time I'm sure it would be right in there!
    : i think immaturity is the a-number-one thing these cats had going for them...i mean, they wrote songs for paul revere & the raiders and the monkees for cryin' out loud! granted, this isn't my fave b&h tune (that title probably goes to "p.o. box 9847", but i digress) but it's good. not everything has to be of pet sounds calibre, after all.
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The Ballad of Mary Magdalen  performed by  Cry Cry Cry  
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The Beat  performed by  ESG  
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the beer  performed by  kimya dawson  
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The Cast and Crew  performed by  Harry Nilsson  
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The Classical  performed by  The Fall  
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The Crickets Sing for Anamaria  performed by  Marcos Valle  
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    : This song screams summer - even on the coldest wettest London day. 
Take of your shoes and mix yourself a caiparina!
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The Cutter  performed by  Echo & The Bunnymen  
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the dark is rising  performed by  mercury rev
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The Dark of the Matinee  performed by  Franz Ferdinand  
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The Dogs and the Horses (NYC acoustic)  performed by  The Divine Comedy  
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The End of Life  performed by  Gabor Szabo  
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The End of the Line  performed by  Sandra Barry  
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the end of the reign of terror is soon near  performed by  the anniversary
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The Face I Love  performed by  Chris Montez  
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The Flower Shop  performed by  Our Front Porch  
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The Fog  performed by  Kate Bush  
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    : I agree. This song is stunning. 
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The Folks Who Live on the Hill  performed by  Little Jimmy Scott  
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The Funeral  performed by  Greg Edmonson
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The Girl from Ipanema  performed by  Antonio CArlos Jobim  
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the great gig in the sky  performed by  pink floyd
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The Happy Phantom  performed by  Tori Amos
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The Hardest Part of Hurting Is The Hope  performed by  Scott Gibson  
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the lady is a tramp  performed by  della reese
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    : I've always really loved Buddy Greco's version of this song. Late 50s Vegas mob-pop at it's finest.
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The Lament Of Pretty Baby  performed by  Cursive  
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The Liberty of Norton Folgate  performed by  Madness  
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The Lively Ones  performed by  Mel Henke  
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The Look Of Love  performed by  Diana Krall  
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    : It reminds me of some of Ogerman's work for Verve/CTI in the late 60's. Really the nicest version of this song in years.
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The Madman Running Through the Fields   performed by  Dantalions Chariot  
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The marionettes  performed by  Caravelli and his orchestra  
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The Model  performed by  Rock, Onic & Bob  
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The Moon Was Yellow  performed by  Ferrante and Teicher  
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The Next Step You�ll Take  performed by  Club 8  
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The Nights  performed by  Lee Hazlewood  
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The Past (7�� Mix)  performed by  Intastella  
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The Real World  performed by  The Ga Ga’s  
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The Rip  performed by  Portishead  
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the rising tide  performed by  sunny day real estate
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The River(live)  performed by  Bruce Springsteen  
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    : Hm - a very good friend of mine is really into Bruce Springsteen, and out of the respect I hold him in I have tried listening to the Boss' stuff. And I really began to like this one - I have a live version of this from Barcelona which is really very moving, in which Bruce talks about failing his medical for the Vietnam draft.
   
It always strikes me as - er - outdoor music, quite different from the hair-splitting, neurotic, urban stuff I usually listen to. Definitely worth a listen if you have previously sniffed at the springsteen but are willing to have another go - as giant says, it's real great american folk singer stuff. 
  
Incidentally, while recording my band's last demo, the rest of the band described a solo I played as 'sounding like bruce springsteen'. A small chill ran down my spine.
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The Saddest Song  performed by  The Ataris  
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The Scientist  performed by  Coldplay  
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The Stalker  performed by  Green Velvet
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The Sword and the Pen  performed by  Regina Spektor  
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The Things we do for Love  performed by  10cc  
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    : My passion for love and life has made me take on here to tell everyone how DR JAMIN ABAYOMI brought back my lover who has been gone for 6 years.It was all confusion and distress to me when my lover whom i love and cherish wouldn\'t love me anymore but
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The Town I Live In  performed by  Jackie Lee  
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The Way You Look Tonight  performed by  Air  (french band)  
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The wind blows her hair  performed by  The Seeds  
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    : i like mr farmer alot better
    : can't seem to make you mine is pretty good, too.
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The Wind In My Face  performed by  Nico Fidenco & Stephen Boyd  
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The Windmills of your Mind  performed by  Dusty Springfield
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The Witch  performed by  The Sonics  
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theo b  performed by  sunny day real estate  
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There She Goes  performed by  The Las  
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These words  performed by  Natasha Beddingfield  
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Things Behind The Sun  performed by  Nick Drake  
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Things you´ll keep  performed by  The Apartments
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This Afternoon  performed by  Chad Mitchell  
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    : The album "Chad" on Bell records is the one to get.
Great songs (by Jake Holmes, Joni Mitchell and others) and fantastic arrangements. Hal Blaine and a couple of other wrecking crew members and great musicians are on it, too. In places it also reminds me of the group H.P. Lovecraft. So it might even be interesting for lovers of psychedelic music (not for those who hate strings, of course). I wonder if I should call it a masterpiece. 
    : I second that on the "Chad" album...it's terrific. There's a 7-minute plus cover of Tim Buckley's "Goodbye and Hello" on there that rather stunned me, since it seems like a very challenging song to sing. The H.P.Lovecraft connection comes through Chicago producer Bill Traut, who owned Dunwich Records (the album is a Dunwich production). Traut was involved with H.P. Lovecraft, and of course the Shadows of Knight. 
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This Corrosion  performed by  The Sisters of Mercy  
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This Is What She’s Like  performed by  Dexys Midnight Runners
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This Isn't Maybe  performed by  Waldeck  
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This Side of Brightness  performed by  Thursday  
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This Way Mary  performed by  John Barry  
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This year  performed by   Mountain goats
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Through The Sky  performed by  Swing Out Sister  
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    : I have to say I am thoroughly delighted at learning of the continued career of SOS.  I always had time for them, and thought Breakout was actually the weakest of the singles I heard.  I particularly remember liking 'Fooled By A Smile' and 'You On My Mind'.
Hearing the snippets of these songs here, I can say I'm intrigued enough to try and seek out some of this later work.  It reminds me of the more produced end of Siesta records' (Spanish easy-pop label) output.
    : You probably should try "Shapes and Patterns" from 1997 first, it's pretty much in the vein of 1989's "Kaleidoscope World" and thus a good starting point to rediscover SOS. This and the aforementioned "Somewhere Deep In The Night" (2001) as well.
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Through the Yard of Blonde Girls  performed by  Jeff Buckley
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    : Hi,
Just to say that Jeff Buckley didn't write Yard of Blonde Girls (not that you'd ever know from the way he performs it.  *sigh*)  It was written by A.Clark - L.Kramer - I.Lorre.  But yes, girls do love this song.  Espencially we blonde ones!!!!
    : 'yard of blonde girls' seems to be a somewhat pejorative term (the middle-upper class socialites, the 'gold sharks') so while Jeff Buckley may have stood rock god-like and looked upon legions of blonde girls (somehow I doubt that was his main audience) with a sexually approving eye, if the song spoke anything about his truth, he would probably have been looking out for the different one, the pure one who rises above social politicking in her innocence, the Lola.
    : eloquently said elison; i have to agree with you, especially in reference to the "gold sharks glittering." in david browne's dual biography on tim and jeff buckley titled "dream brother," he points out that when jeff recorded this song he made it very apparent that he didn't want any Sony reps to get a hold of it...
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Tiao bra�o forte  performed by  Marcos Valle  
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Ticket To The Moon  performed by  Electric Light Orchestra  
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    : Nice to see this recommendation! Simple song with a pretty post-Beatles melody. I've just dug out my LP of Time and have been playing side 1. It really sparkles!    
    : My favourite song on the album is "21st Century Man" on side 2, which I thing rates highly among their overall output and is maybe the last great song they produced. The weakest song on the album has to be the single "Hold on Tight" which sounds as though they were trying to compete with Shakin' Stevens!
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Time Jesum Transeuntum Et Non Riverentum  performed by  Nick Cave and The Dirty Three  
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    : A brilliant collaboration. One that should be commited to an entire album to say the least. Also look for Dirty 3's "Sharks" EP, which has Nick and the boys doing a great version of "Running Scared" live. I think it's a promo tour release from 98'.
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times like these (acoustic)  performed by  dave grohl of foo fighters
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Tinseltown In The Rain  performed by  The Blue Nile  
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    : "Tinseltown in the Rain" brought BN to the DC airwaves, as also did "Stay."  A band not based on 3 guitars, and I actually liked it!  "Easter Parade," also on lp, is a very slow, detailed description of an event, loaded w/haunting atmospherics, coming to an understated climax. (To me "Hats" is their least exciting work.)  "Peace at Last" and "A Walk Across.." are the most exhilarating... electronics/Linn drum machines aside, it's the magic of Paul Buchanan's incredibly moving voice.  His heart's on his sleeve... a big sleeve.  Emotion drips from every syllable.  These get constant airplay at home.
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Tiny Dancer  performed by  Elton John  
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To know him is to love him  performed by  The Teddy Bears  
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Tomorrowland  performed by  Debra Kerr in "An Affair to Remember"  
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Too Much Tenderness  performed by  Stark Reality  
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Torpedo  performed by  Novi Singers  
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    : yeah, great track! I highly recommend the Polski Nagrania CD of the albums 'Bossa Nova' and Torpedo' - incredible stuff...
    :  Compost records (of Jazzanova fame) have also reissued an compilation album with the Novi singers' best tracks..well worth checking out in all their glory.. Especially the contrast between the male/female voices is fresh &innovative sounding.. 
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Totally Wired  performed by  The Fall  
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    : There's also a cover version by God Is My Co-Pilot, available on their best of.  However, it falls into the 'interesting' rather than 'good' category.  Not many people could cover The Fall with appropriate justice.
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Tous Les Gar�ons Et Les Filles  performed by  Fran�oise Hardy  
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Town I Live In  performed by  Jackie Lee  
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Toxic Girl (Monte Carlo 1963 Version)  performed by  Kings of Convenience  
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Trampoline  performed by  The Greenberry Woods  
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    : Sugar by Stretch Princess IS VERY VERY VERRRRRY similar to There She Goes by the La's.  A similar high-pitch vocal with an addictive hit chorus:
"Sugar Sugar
sticking me to my babe
Sugar Sugar
sticking me to my babe
Sticking up to my babe
sticking up to my babe
sticking up to my babe"
Beautifully sung, I can't stop listening to it.
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Traveller  performed by  Talvin Singh  
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Tres Cosas  performed by  juana molina  
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Triste  performed by  Pizzicato Five  
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Trojan Curfew  performed by  Stephen Malkmus  
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True  performed by  Spandau Ballet  
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Try To Understand  performed by  Lulu  
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Trzeba Wracać  performed by  Novi Singers  
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    : just to reiterate, this IS the best song ever!
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Tuareg  performed by  Gal Costa  
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Turkish Bath  performed by  The Don Ellis Orchestra  
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Two Wings Mambo  performed by  Gallon Drunk  
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Two-Headed Boy  performed by  Neutral Milk Hotel  
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un poison voilent, c�est ca l�amour  performed by  serge gainsbourg
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Unas the Slayer of the Gods  performed by  Nile  
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Unleashed  performed by  Epica  
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Until I Believe in my Soul  performed by  Dexys Midnight Runners  
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Up Je t'aime  performed by  frankie howerd  
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Upside Down  performed by  Tori Amos  
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    : Indeed a great track... I would have worn out a cassette single listening to it, luckily it was a b-side on the CD single for 'Winter'.  
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uptown top ranking  performed by  althea and donna  
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Veleiro  performed by  Elis Regina  
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Velocity Girl  performed by  Primal Scream  
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    : This comes from the 12-inch of 'Crystal Crescent' as I remember, which I think is a much better song: loads of brass, a bit like the Teardrop Explodes. For what it's worth, I despise 'Screamadelica' like few other albums. The band: bunch of muppet longhairs with guitars. The music: crusty dance shite. Didn't anyone notice the discrepancy? Conclusion: Primal Scream themselves had sod all to do with the making of the album, although they did appear on its follow-up. Which was also crap.
    : Har, har.  Get it off your chest, mate.  I more or less disagree with all of that,  but its not for me to criticise anyone for ranting.....
    : hey! i like that song. but i think it's probably written by beattie/gillespie. beattie later had some adventures in stereo if i'm not terribly mistaken.
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Velouria  performed by  The Pixies  
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Vem Vet  performed by  Lisa Ekdahl  
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    : "Vem Vet" means simply "Who Knows"
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Vesti Azul  performed by  Wilson Simonal  
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Vicious  performed by  Lou Reed  
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    : It's on Lou Reed's "Transformer" LP so that would be 1971, I think. Not that it probably wasn't written before then. And possibly the coolest LP Rick Wakeman played on.
If you only know this song from the greatest hits you should check out Transformer itself, a quality record.  In fact all the Velvets LP's individually, including 1969 and everything Reed did solo up to, say, 1975.
    : The coolest LP Rick Wakeman played on (apart from the Six Wives of Henry VIII and the Yes oevre, of course)  - Hunky Dory.
    : Transformer was released in 1972, and Rick Wakeman played on Lou\'s first solo album released earlier in that year, not on Transformer, just wanted to clear things up.
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Waiting for the Moving Van  performed by  David Ackles  
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Waiting on a Friend  performed by  The Rolling Stones
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wall street village day  performed by  The Four Seasons  
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    : Thought I was the only person in the world who knew this album (and this cut). It's an incredible musical and creative adventure. Nothing at all like the other 4 Seasons material.
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wan’drin’ star  performed by  lee marvin  
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    : heh, and for the hit single the flip was Clint Eastwoods ultra weedy version of "I talk 
to the trees".  Great for starting conversations while DJing in clubs.  
"Whats this sh***!?"
"Clint Eastwood"
"Really?, No! what?"
heh.
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Wanderlove  performed by  Claudine Longet  
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Warning Sign  performed by  Coldplay  
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Waters Of March  performed by  Akiko  
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We Ate Each Other  performed by  The Robot Ate Me  
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We Could Be Flying  performed by  The Singers Unlimited w/ Art Van Damme  
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    : I only ever heard this once - been looking for it ever since. It's truly lovely. 
I should say that Scott Walker does a really nice  version of the song on his much-maligned (but actually pretty OK - albeit covers only) LP Any Day Now.
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We're Still Free  performed by  Skeleton Crew  
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Wedding Day  performed by  Swift Ships  
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Werewolves of London  performed by  Warren Zevon  
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    : You really should check out more Zevon, Groucho_75. One of America's greatest songwriters who sadly passed last year. Who else could write moving rock songs about topics as diverse as mercenaries in Africa (Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner), eternal Middle East tension (The Envoy), and toxic pollution by organic chemicals (Run Straight Down)?
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What Color Is Love  performed by  Terry Callier  
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What do I feel?  performed by  Jackie & Roy  
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    : I heard "What do I Feel" at my friend's house a few months back, and long story short, I absolutely fell in love with the song. I thought I was the only one that liked/knew about the song. I love this site!!! 
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What Sarah Said  performed by  Death Cab for Cutie  
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What You Don’t Want To Hear  performed by  Sam Phillips  
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Whatever Happened To Claudine Longet ?  performed by  The Crooner  
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    : You kind of have to dissapear for a while after you kill someone and get away with it. I mean, you don't see OJ hurdling suitcases anymore do you? Cool song though. I thought it would sound like Momus just from the description, and it does bear a resemblance in a way... maybe more like early Jimi Tenor?
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What�s Baby Singin�  performed by  Himiko Kikuchi  
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    : I totaly agree with you! What�s baby singin�catch my ears since the first time i�ve listened to it on "Gl�cklich IV". This sax "a la Kenny G" could be avoided and a trombone would sound better, but even so  this almost little slip is very well maked up by the great solo rhodes and the super cool female vocal singing a la Flora Purim the gorgeous melody, that grap in in your ears instantaneously. A lovely, sweet and beautiful song that won�t never stop to play at my playlist. Classic!
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When Dreams Turn to Dust  performed by  Cathy Dennis  
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When the Wind Blows  performed by  David Bowie  
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When Will I Come Home To You  performed by  Diana Ross  
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When You�re Evil  performed by  Voltaire
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Where did you all go  performed by  Thirteen moons  
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Where Is the Soul of America  performed by  Mike Stout  
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Whistle for happiness  performed by  Peggy Lee  
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White Car in Germany  performed by  The Associates  
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White Rabbit  performed by  Jefferson Airplane  
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Who needs forever  performed by  Astrud Gilberto  
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who needs forever  performed by  astrud gilberto  
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    : you must pick-up the quincy jones soundtrack (released with the score to "the pawnbroker") with astrud singing "who needs forever". The lush quincy jones score is hauntingly beautiful, and astrud never sounded better. This version is the real deal for me..
    : Amazing guitar on this piece.
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Why Does It Have To Rain On Sunday?  performed by  Bob McGrath  
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Wild Is The Wind  performed by  Nina Simone  
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    : This song is also available on the original release, Wild Is the Wind, available now as a double-release combined with High Priestess of Soul on CD.  It's been available for over ten years on Polydor and is wonderful!
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Winkin, Blinkin and Nod  performed by  The Big Three  
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    : Obviously Mr Scruff is well ahead of the field then, with three songs about Fish (ing) on his first LP...
    : Yo ho ho, me hearties.  Well I never. Thanks for the tip/warning Rum (where's the bum and baccy?) 
I predict that this year (in the UK) will belong to The Coral. 
    : Um... what about Weens album "The Mollusk"? That was shit was shanty-city! So, whats next? Weavers laments??
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Without Her  performed by  Herb Alpert  
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    : This is perhaps one of the greatest songs of all time! I can say without a doubt that I have spent days listening to this one; it got me addicted. I just couldn't keep my finger away from the repeat button. I recommend the original by Harry Nilsson, who isn't with us anymore.
    : Yes, great songs & so many people tried to have hits with it...little Lulu springs to mind, but every version failed to dent the charts.
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wo yao ni de ai  performed by  grace chang ge lan  
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    : you're right, jon hendricks wrote this, but i don't believe he ever recorded it with lambert, hendricks and ross. it was originally recorded by louis jordan in 1952, and lillian briggs had a modest-sized hit with it in 1955. nonetheless, it's a terrific song, and this version sounds very, very interesting.
    : Great to hear I'm not the only one who loves this song. Now that I know the proper English title I searched my record collection for other versions and found one by Ellie Greenwich - but Grace's version is definately the keeper.
    : this song has also been recently used in a mcdonald's commercial here in taiwan. now if they'd start re-issuing her stuff again i'd be very happy indeed.
    : Love the song too but unfortunately there is limited information about it provided online. Do you know where I can obtain both the Chinese and English lyrics for it? And also an English website on Grace Chang? I am turning into a fan of her songs!
    : Tsai ming-liang uses another Grace Chang (Ge Lan) song in his latest film, "Goodbye, Dragon Inn," now out on DVD.  I believe the song is called "Chong Feng."  It's beautiful, in a quaint, old-fashioned way.  Not an up-tempo pop number like wo yao ni de ai--more of a ballroom-y ballad.  Anybody know whether this song is available on CD?
    : The book mentioned above is unfortunatly not available outside china. But I just got two 10" and one CD of Grace Chang. Unfortunately all is written in chinese that I can not read, so I don`t know, what song you are talking about. But there is one funny song, where she sneezes and then sings: "Gesundheit" in German. Very funny stuff :-). Actually I'm a great fan of japanese singer Eri Chiemi, that is a bit similiar stuff...   
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Woman  performed by  Peter & Gordon  
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Woman of the ghetto  performed by  Marlena Shaw  
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World Spins Madly On  performed by  The Weepies
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Write To Your MP Today  performed by  McCarthy  
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Yesterday  performed by  Dick Hyman  
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Yesterday when I was young  performed by  Blossom Dearie  
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    : I love this version too, but oddly enough I once played it to someone I met on a plane who was a huge Aznavour fan.  She felt that Blossom's version deprived the song of its drama.  I agree with you that the contrast of the sad song and the light, happy bossa arrangement works very well.
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You Are the Generation That Bought More Shoes and You Get...  performed by  Johnny Boy  
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You are the one  performed by  Mike + the Mechanics  
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You can make me Dance ,Sing,or Anything  performed by  The Faces  
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You Can�t Win  performed by  Ann Sexton  
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You Get What you Give  performed by  New Radicals  
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    : An opera singer included this in her \"Desert Island Discs\" selection last week.
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You know how it is with a woman  performed by  Jefferson  
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You Used To  performed by  Distant Cousins  
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you’re right, i’m left, she’s gone  performed by  elvis  
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You’ve change  performed by  Billie Holiday  
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You’ve Come This Way Before  performed by  Nancy Priddy  
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You've Lost that Lovin' Feeling  performed by  Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra  
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    :  Lee's voice is a bit of an acquired taste(-but too,uh,rusty for me anyway-),but as for Nancy,her best recordings from this period(the 60's)are top quality..she became something of a cult heroine for die-hard 60's collectors..and went into pop history..
    : I'll always remember them for "Some Velvet Morning When I'm Straight," which I never understood, but liked anyway--his rather drawling delivery opposite her more conventional one.
    : Post Top Gun this song is remarkably popular in its Righteous Brothers version amongst the local rugby and hockey playing types, so when doing sports parties its always good fun to play the nancy and Lee version for its disturbing "Slowed down" feeling.  But at home, its always just good to play it.
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You, Assassin  performed by  San Serac  
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you, you, you  performed by  second story man  
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Your ex-lover is dead  performed by  Stars  
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your hidden dreams  performed by  white noise  
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    : My dad's prog-rock friend brought this album over when my dad got his first proper stereo in 1972 and played us the scary side... These days, I love "Firebird" and "Here Come The Fleas". Quirky UK electronica by (BBC Radiophonic Workshop) Delia Derbyshire and David Vorhaus.
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Your Lies  performed by  Shelby Lynne  
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Your Love Is Free (Just Like The Wind)  performed by  Cilla Black  
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Zigarillo  performed by  Botho Lucas Singers und die Sound Masters  
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Zuhalterb�ssatle  performed by  Harald Paulsen & Lotte Lenya  
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