One guy's life

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

80 - 71 (my top 100 songs of all time)



80 Fascination Alphabeat new
For a long time I ummed and ahhed about which Alphabeat track to include. 10,000 Nights was on the list in 2010, but this song is such a great upbeat song it was banging on my door demanding inclusion. So which would I pick? In the end I couldn't choose. I slipped this song in as well. You can't not feel good when listening to this. The two lead voices complement each other so well and I particularly love Stine Bramsen's voice. This is brilliant feel good pop.


79 You Better You Bet The Who 76
When I was young, possibly in my early teens, I knew nothing about The Who except Pinball Wizard. Then one day during the school holidays there was a concert on tv. I watched it with no preconceptions and the song that grabbed me was this one. I don't know why. It just did. And to this day I love the song.


78 All The Things She Said T.A.T.U new
Amidst the debates about the rights and wrongs of getting two young girls to pretend to be lesbian (wrong), there is one undeniable fact: this is a stunning song. Musically, lyrically, and vocally it was a stark contrast to the safe faux bicuriosity of Katy Perry's I Kissed A Girl. You see how edgy this was, and in the light of what is happening in Russia right now it seems brave.


77 Itchycoo Park Small Faces 73
When I ran Cranfield Students' Association (98-2001) I used to DJ on Friday and Saturday night. I wasn't a dance DJ, not really liking dance music too much. Feel good songs and cheese were largely the order of the day. Curiously for a bunch of students in their 20s from around the globe, this song was a feelgood floorfiller that always had them dancing and singing at the end of the night. British psychedelic singalong tunes of the 60s don't come much better than this. Surprisingly M People recorded a version in the early 90s and didn't murder it.


76 A Change Is Gonna Come Sam Cooke 72
On the night he won the election in 2008 Barack Obama said "It's been a long time coming, but tonight, change has come to America." I knew that this was a song reference, but I thought he was quoting Otis Redding rather than Sam Cooke. I didn't know the song was originally Cooke's, but I soon found out. I love both versions, Cooke's being the better vocal, and Redding's the better orchestration. Such a talent, such powerful lyrics. What an amazing song.


75 I Want To Be Buried In Your Backyard Nightmare Of You new
I know nothing about this band. Until it cropped up on a compilation album that I ripped for my mp3 player I don't think I had ever heard it. Then it became one of those songs that you listen to, enjoy, and then have no idea who recorded it or what it was called. I had to wait for it to come up on shuffle again. I love it. The melody soars, dips and soars again like a glider riding thermal currents. The lyrics are dark but somehow it exudes positivity.


74 Landslide Fleetwood Mac 69
This is quite simply a beautiful song that I fell in love with the first time I heard it. So simple and yet so powerful. Lyrically I guess it means more the older you get. But I don't want to over-analyse it. I just want to immerse myself in the acoustic guitars and Stevie Nicks' voice.


73 Oliver's Army Elvis Costello 68
This is the first song on the list that I can blame my brothers for. Or rather, I can thank my brothers for. I remember hearing this song coming from their bedroom when I was very young. Later, I came into possession of my eldest brother's copy of Armed Forces and this was the song I zeroed in on. Right from the opening bars this song seizes you and pulls you along. There are a number of theories about the meaning behind the cryptic lyrics. My personal theory is that the Oliver of the title is Oliver Tambo, and his army being the ANC's armed wing. Hence the line "If you're out of luck or out of work, we can send you to Johannesburg". But that's just one of my pet theories developed while listening to this wonderful song.



72 Dancing In The Moonlight Thin Lizzy 67 
My brothers can indirectly take credit for this song too. They loved Thin Lizzy, and I was to inherit a copy of Jailbreak when they left home. I loved that album with a passion, and so I collected all of the Thin Lizzy that I could. Despite being into heavy metal at the time, this song with it's bouncy bass line, lyrics that spoke directly to me, and light feel became one of my firm favourites. I still love Thin Lizzy, and most of all I love this song.


71 Purple Rain Prince 66
I hated Prince. I didn't understand him. I thought he was a poor man's Michael Jackson. Then I went to University and became close friends with a girl who loved him. I can still remember very clearly the day that she brought the vhs cassette of the film Purple Rain into my Uni bedroom and we sat down to watch it. I expect she thought I would be instantly won over to Prince and admit I had been wrong. And goddammit she was right....partially. The film was corny but I loved it. The music was sophisticated and exciting. But for me, the guitar solo in the title track is a true virtuoso piece. As a guitarist myself I could see that Prince was a genuine musician, able to pour intense emotion out through his guitar. Forget the posturing and the craziness that came later. Purple Rain is a song written and performed by a genius. Did I admit I was wrong? I suspect I only did so half-heartedly. But I right that wrong here, some 22 years later. Jo, you were right!

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

4 Comments:

Anonymous Janet Cameron said...

Oh dear here only our Elvis I'm afraid! !

11:54 pm

 
Blogger Gruff said...

Listen to some of these other tunes then. You might like them

12:21 am

 
Anonymous heather s said...

Purple Rain must be the best song written about purple rain, ever ;) I'm happy to see Prince! And Elvis!

1:37 am

 
Blogger Gruff said...

I agree. Peter Gabriel did a fine song about Red Rain, but no-one tops the purple pixie of pop

10:57 am

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

 
Locations of visitors to this page