Posts

I thought you cared about me

Image
Continuing  my trip back through the 1958 album charts. 23/03/58 : Where Are You? - Frank Sinatra A couple of weeks skipped over, both of which had Pal Joey at #1 - I've absolutely no idea what people saw in that album back then! So what better to escape some pointless Frank tracks than with this - oh, hang on... This is one of his slow, sultry, stringy albums - I think they're well done and his voice sounds good on them, but I just never feel the need for them in my life. By the end I was totally "oh, do a get a move on!" - a whole album was just too much. We're at #4 in the charts this week on his fifth and final week of the only run it had, peaking at #3 in its third week on the chart. The rest of the top five were   Pal Joey ,  The King And I ,  Oklahoma!  and yet more  Frank  (of course!). Wikipedia tells us this is his thirteenth album and the first he did on Capital without Nelson Riddle and I do think the arrangements aren't quite as good as some we

There's just no ignoring - you're pretty but you're boring

Image
Continuing my journey across the output of The Bard Of Barking... William Bloke (1996) He took a bit of a break after DTTAH , but I continued to listen to it so I was pleased to see the follow-up finally come out and bought it - I think I listened to it a couple of times and never tried again. Which is a bit odd, because it's got one of my favourite songs of his on it... A Side 1. From Red To Blue This is quite a mournful song - it sounds like a lament and I assume that it is really, for some of his friends who have "faded from red to blue". I mean - imagining being mates with Billy and telling him you voted Conservative! 2. Upfield I knew this one and I like it - it's nicely jaunty, but listening back to it, it's maybe not the best produced, being a bit of a mess really. 3. Everyone Loves You Babe I vaguely recognised this one - I think I might have heard him play it live a couple of times. It's a most peculiar song lyrically and not his best vocal performanc

You gave me all your loving and your turtle doving

Image
Continuing  my trip back through the 1958 album charts. 13/04/58 : The "Chirping" Crickets - The Crickets No weeks skipped over this time and this is one I'm actually, for a change, quite looking forward to - I believe this is the only Crickets album with Buddy Holly. So it's got to be good, right? Well, it starts with "Oh Boy", which is certainly a good start for any album - and it actually continues in a pretty high quality vein. It's interesting because it's closest to Elvis around this time, but the harmonies are just in a different league and so it's much more obviously a path into a lot of what came later in the 60s. "That'll Be The Day" is the other stand-out track (but quite possibly only because of familiarity) but I also liked "Last Night" - I can imagine Elvis doing a good version of this. All in all, this is a fine album which was an absolute pleasure to visit, particularly within the context of the other stuff

There once was a man who loved his woman

Image
Continuing  my trip back through the 1958 album charts. 20/04/58 : The Pajama Game OST - Various Artists Another six weeks skipped over, of which  My Fair  Lady  was #1 for five of them and we saw no non-soundtrack albums at all, brings us to another soundtrack album about which I have absolutely no expectations. I had to take a punt on which version of this album to listen to because I could have gone for the musical version with John Raitt and Janis Paige or the film version with John Raitt and Doris Day - can you guess which one I went for? Yeah, you've got to love a bit of Doris, dontcha? I think few would describe this is as her finest work - it's fine and I imagine a load more fun if you're watching the visuals, but it felt very dated. John and Doris make a nice romantic couple though - even if I didn't really have the faintest idea what was going on. I was quite surprised to recognise "Hernando's Hideaway" - I never knew it came from this musical. W

She gets too hungry for dinner at eight

Image
Continuing  my trip back through the 1958 album charts. 08/06/58 : Pal Joey OST - Various Artists I've absolutely no expectations here for a bunch of songs from a film I've never heard of - what's the worst that can happen? Hmm, it's a few Sinatra songs, most notably "The Lady Is A Tramp" (which is a fine track), a couple of Jo Ann Greer numbers. of which I liked "Zip" and a LOAD of orchestral filler. There's nothing terrible about it, but it all feels very inessential - I think you'd really have to love the film to bother with this. We're at #4 in the charts this week on the last week of an eighteen week run, which seems amazingly successful. The rest of the top five were  My Fair  Lady ,  South Pacific , The Duke Wore Jeans and  The King And I  - a full house for soundtrack albums! Wikipedia doesn't have an entry for the soundtrack - there is a section in the film entry which gives the most ridiculous level of detail about which tr

He’s eight foot tall with a fibreglass heart

Image
Continuing my trip forward in time through the album charts 27/09/24 :  Gary - Blossoms Somewhat surprisingly, this is our FOURTH visit with Blossoms and it's all been a pretty peculiar mix - last time I described it as "indie-folk-disco" (whatever that is!).  So who knows quite what we're going to get here! Well, it's certainly not indie-folk-disco! On face value, it's pretty standard indie fare but the songs also have a definite 70s/80s retro vibe to them. I was trying to decide who they reminded me of and it took me most of the album, but I got there in the end - it was New Order, but the songs aren't as repetitive as you might expect from that reference. I quite enjoyed it, but it feels it would need several more listens to really get into - I'd certainly say it's worth checking out. I can't decide if I like the album cover or not though... We're at #1 with a new entry this week (their fourth #1 album) and the rest of the top five are 

What do you do when you're invited out to the joint where guys get knighted?

Image
Continuing  my trip back through the 1958 album charts. 29/06/58 : The Duke Wore Jeans OST - Tommy Steele Another week skipped over (which has absolutely nothing remarkable to discuss) brings us to someone I've not enjoyed our previous visits with and I also struggle to imagine me enjoying a film with that title, so let's just say expectations are not high here. Hmmm - it's not great, but it's not dreadful. I can see that it appealed to the "youth of the day" - it's all about a Cockney infiltrating the upper classes whilst pointing out the nonsense of it all. He's got a very characterful voice which tells a story well, if not the best singing voice - but the absolutely best bit about it was that it was only twenty minutes long. We're at #5 with a new entry on the chart this week - and that was all it ever managed. The rest of the top five were  My Fair  Lady  (a new entry at the top - our first of the year),  South Pacific  (another new entry),  Fr