Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

Ep. 123 - Unpacking the Influence of 1965: A Year that Shaped Music and Film

November 02, 2023 Scott McLean
Ep. 123 - Unpacking the Influence of 1965: A Year that Shaped Music and Film
Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
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Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
Ep. 123 - Unpacking the Influence of 1965: A Year that Shaped Music and Film
Nov 02, 2023
Scott McLean

Get ready for an eclectic journey back in time as we explore the vibrant and iconic music scene of 1965. We guarantee you'll be left in awe as we share intriguing tales about music legends like the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Rod Stewart, and the Supremes. We'll also dig into fascinating moments like the 10th Eurovision Song Contest and the New Musical Express Poll Winners Concert. There's much to learn about these iconic moments that shaped the music scene of 1965 including the infamous bar fight in Downtown Boston.

The era was not only known for its music but also for films that left an indelible mark on society. Stay hooked as we discuss classic films from the year like 'Fistful of Dollars' and 'Dementia 13'. Hear about the controversies around movies like 'Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!' and how it was received back then. We'll also delve into the fashion legacy of Beau Brummel and the impressionistic sounds of Herb Albert that left a lasting impact on the scene.

But we're not stopping at music and movies! We're also going to touch base on the broader cultural and historical events of 1965, from the Supremes' fifth consecutive number one single to Bob Dylan's electric set at the Newport Folk Festival. Tune in as we discuss the Beatles' unforgettable performance at Shea Stadium and the key historical events that shaped our world. Don't miss out on this nostalgic ride as we reminisce about the evolution of music and film history. Buckle up and join us on this enthralling trip down memory lane!

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Get ready for an eclectic journey back in time as we explore the vibrant and iconic music scene of 1965. We guarantee you'll be left in awe as we share intriguing tales about music legends like the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Rod Stewart, and the Supremes. We'll also dig into fascinating moments like the 10th Eurovision Song Contest and the New Musical Express Poll Winners Concert. There's much to learn about these iconic moments that shaped the music scene of 1965 including the infamous bar fight in Downtown Boston.

The era was not only known for its music but also for films that left an indelible mark on society. Stay hooked as we discuss classic films from the year like 'Fistful of Dollars' and 'Dementia 13'. Hear about the controversies around movies like 'Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!' and how it was received back then. We'll also delve into the fashion legacy of Beau Brummel and the impressionistic sounds of Herb Albert that left a lasting impact on the scene.

But we're not stopping at music and movies! We're also going to touch base on the broader cultural and historical events of 1965, from the Supremes' fifth consecutive number one single to Bob Dylan's electric set at the Newport Folk Festival. Tune in as we discuss the Beatles' unforgettable performance at Shea Stadium and the key historical events that shaped our world. Don't miss out on this nostalgic ride as we reminisce about the evolution of music and film history. Buckle up and join us on this enthralling trip down memory lane!

Speaker 1:

Well, here we are, episode 123. In for my friend Todd Salkman, aka big head, todd the wet sprocket. That's 100 plus 23 equals 123. His head is so big yet his brain is so small. Anyway, on this episode, the wrecking two is back in action Full force. Tonight we will be talking about the year 1965. I think we've ever gone back this far, talking about the music and the movies Nice little addition, people like it Of 1965. So sit back, relax, stop making your peace signs, because that was right around the corner.

Speaker 3:

It was hosted by Scott McLean Now let's talk music.

Speaker 2:

Enjoy the show.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, amanda, for that wonderful introduction. As usual, over that wonderful introduction music created by the one and only the professor, I'm going to give him a little bit of credit. Mr Luke, here we go, here we go. I don't even have the wrecking two on the screen yet and big head Todd, the wet sprocket, comes in with I am here and to take me in my big head. He gets it. He's finally see, sometimes I can, I can kind of get it in there and just kind of just own it. Just only he has officially owned it.

Speaker 1:

Head is bulbous and a bulbous head. Speaking of bulbous, some marksman Rolling stone penalty box, not right off the bat it looks like you from the music Rebels progress. Who has never seen Jackie Brown penalty box right off the bat from both of them, motherfuckers, they're both. That I am not messing around tonight. Oh, no, no, no, we are not playing. It comes on my reading that rag rolling stone. Let's try this again, gentlemen, don't do it. Mark. I see what. I see you. I see Mark, he's reaching for it. All right, let's bring him on. What do you want to get tortured for?

Speaker 3:

You can bomb in the first three minutes.

Speaker 1:

Come on.

Speaker 3:

It's your fault.

Speaker 1:

It's your fault and it's Lou's fault. Oh, did I say that when Luke came, before he came or after he came out? Look at, look at Lou, he's got, he's got that notebook we haven't actually brown thing you're talking about, that's. Quentin Quentin Tarantino. Okay, he did.

Speaker 2:

I think he did Pulp Fiction right. Oh, you know what?

Speaker 1:

You're in again, I agree.

Speaker 4:

How can?

Speaker 1:

I think I think Pulp Fiction was up for best picture. I mean, it got robbed. It got robbed by fucking what was it? Training day, I think? Beat it that year, oh, which is just another bad cop movie.

Speaker 3:

Were you lucky enough to see Pulp Fiction before the hype?

Speaker 1:

Oh, dude, are you kidding me? Oh yeah, me too. Multiple times in the theater, one of the only moves I've ever seen. I think I saw it in the movie theater four or five times. I couldn't get enough of it. I just heard oh, I forgot.

Speaker 3:

I just heard John Travolta's back and it's all I got to see this movie, right, you know. And I had no idea what I was in for and I man, that was good. I didn't see reservoir dogs. I didn't know anything about Quentin Wow, what a surprise when I saw that. I saw when it first came out there.

Speaker 2:

I saw with my in-laws my very old school Italian conservative in-laws. They were kind of. My mother-in-law was a little. She was pretty cool. My father-in-law was pretty uptight about it, especially the the hillbilly scene.

Speaker 1:

Oh, and Pulp Fiction, oh yeah, yeah, that was something I didn't see coming.

Speaker 2:

When I opened that door.

Speaker 1:

That's not what I thought. Hell, no, I don't think anybody thought that. You all right, I'm far from all right. Mr Soon, to be dead hillbilly rapist? Yeah, he'll, billy rapist. All right, let's say hi to Patty, I see. Hi, patty. Lauren Finn, welcome to the show. Thank you, we love you, pat. Tiffany Van Hill that's my girl there she is popping in saying good evening Y'all. Good evening Tiffany Southern. Yeah, she's a good girl, tiffany's a good girl. Oh shit, my screen just went dark. Here we go. So we're jumping right into this because we really don't have this is. This could be a? Well, it could be a two hour show. It could be a three hour show. We know we can do a three hour show on a on talking about potato chips, I think let's talk about guitar picks.

Speaker 3:

We could do two hours.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely I have the world's most stupid guitar pick. Well, I'll show it next time. How do you? Why? So? Why would you?

Speaker 1:

pick it up, absolutely.

Speaker 3:

I don't know Because.

Speaker 2:

Mark mentioned guitar picks and that I don't friend gave me the most absurd, preposterous guitar pick.

Speaker 3:

I'm like you're going to text it to us and you'll call it. It's a pick, pick, lou.

Speaker 1:

I got to tell you Lou, I have to tell you your background is so fucking bad. It's great yeah. It's it's, it's it hasn't changed. I don't know why. I don't know why the curtains clash with that. I don't know that French, but build cardboard with your pink like lamp and it's so bad, it's great.

Speaker 3:

Well, Scott, what does it say right above his head? Absent.

Speaker 1:

Absent. Let's get a close up of that.

Speaker 2:

Hold on that's exactly what I'm drinking right now.

Speaker 4:

Oh no, it's going to be a four hour show you want to talk about?

Speaker 2:

1960 or 1965? I think the Beatles did acid.

Speaker 1:

Okay, lou, lou, first of all. First of all, we got to get you off mirror, right, so get out to the little car, did he just yeah, yeah, yeah, me Mark? He just basically, you know what? Yeah, yeah, yeah, me's right, Shut the fuck up At Nipzah, at Nisba. Let's see, now he even looks better.

Speaker 2:

Okay, okay, it's me, it's me, it's backwards for me, though.

Speaker 4:

I don't know.

Speaker 2:

It's just you've been drinking that absent.

Speaker 1:

This stuff is great man. Yeah, I wouldn't know, Thank God. All right, gentlemen, let's jump right into a January 4th 1965. He already went off the rails. Already went. Yeah, with you two starting trouble right off the bat.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I didn't see Jackie Brown. Okay, I don't know what to say. I didn't see, I'm not going to want to see it, I don't ever will.

Speaker 1:

Fuck it. They came out 10 years ago. How have you not seen it?

Speaker 2:

I haven't seen a lot of things, but I have seen a lot of things. I'm behind with Lou.

Speaker 3:

I'm sending him one time in Hollywood, I'll send him Jackie Brown to you Haven't seen what Thanks, mark.

Speaker 1:

Sorry, that's great, you're both very, very disappointing tonight.

Speaker 2:

I'm just going to say it right off the bat.

Speaker 1:

You have some catching up to do that you already started behind the eight ball. You have some catching up to do, gentlemen.

Speaker 2:

We lower the bar because it's going to be amazing. I don't have to catch up on anything. We did this in Cahoots, you don't have to catch up. Oh yeah, let me see.

Speaker 1:

You start off the show with that rag rolling stone and then you say you haven't seen months upon a time in Hollywood. That's strike two. Where's my guitar?

Speaker 3:

He looks on the floor why are you looking on the floor for your guitar? I just laid it down, I'll show you.

Speaker 1:

Everybody just lays their guitar down. All right, let's get into this. Let's get into this, all right. January 4th 1965. Let me get the captions back to chat. Last that, here we go. Some people can. We can see what they're saying. They can see that they like seeing their comments. Fendham musical instruments corporation is sold to CBS for now. Now, this is 1965. $13 million Wow. What do you think the equivalent is to that today?

Speaker 4:

More than that.

Speaker 1:

More than that the safest answer Is that, like I don't know, $500 million or $100 million, okay.

Speaker 2:

Well, I read in one of those songs from albums from tonight that when Sam Cook was murdered, the woman had he had cost. It had $20 in his pocket, which was about $169.64. Okay, so I'm trying to do the math on that. Oh, we get it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, January 12th 1965. Hullabaloo premiers on NBC. Yeah, the first show includes performances by see now, I noticed this when I was doing we're doing a little research the names of the bands back then compared to the names of the bands today, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh oh, they're just as bad like the trashy vaginas you know today. Do you think you can ever get away with that in 65? Oh no, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 1:

The movies were edgy. Yeah, that's true. Hullabaloo premiers on NBC. The first show includes performances by the new Christie Minstrels. I hated that music. Our comedian Woody Allen actress Joey Heatherden.

Speaker 2:

She was a, she was a six-piece body.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and a segment from London in which Brian Epstein introduces the zombies and Jerry and the pacemakers. Hullabaloo was a music. It was a music show.

Speaker 2:

A lot of people came out of the new Christie Minstrels.

Speaker 4:

Oh, here we go.

Speaker 2:

Redeem yourself. My favorite songwriter, or my favorite songwriter, is Gene Clark of the Birds. Ah, he won the original birds. He wrote eight miles high. Anyway, he was a new Christie Minstrels, I think John Stewart that had the that's on gold.

Speaker 1:

When the lights go down.

Speaker 2:

He was in the Kingston trio, right Kingston trio.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

But there are some. A lot of people have come out of the new Christie Minstrels.

Speaker 1:

January 17th 1965. The Rolling Stones drummer, charlie Watts. His book Ode to a High Flying Bird, a tribute to jazz great Charlie Parker, because remember now for all those people that bad mouth is the Watts. He was an accomplished jazz drummer, yes, and respected jazz drummer. His book is published. He wrote a book about Charlie.

Speaker 2:

Parker. I wonder what kind of book it was like an autobiography, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I don't know.

Speaker 2:

And a great rock and roll drummer too, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah Well, most jazz drum is a great rock drum. Oh yeah, right yeah, because rock is easy.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, easier For that it's easy.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah it's. You know, it was probably really simplistic to a.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, this group pops up a few times this year. This was every. Every year we seem to have an artist, like last week I think it was Madonna. She popped up all over the place. Maybe I think the animals show at New York's Apollo Theater is canceled after the US immigration department forces the group to leave the theater, like what they didn't work Leave the city, not leave the state, not leave the country. No, the immigration department says you have to leave this theater. What was that?

Speaker 2:

They were. They were white, they played the Apollo.

Speaker 1:

Well, Eric Byrd had a lot of soul.

Speaker 2:

Oh, he sure did. The animals were dirty anyway. Yeah, he was a run. Yeah, yeah, but big voice, yeah, they play so they play the. Apollo yeah.

Speaker 1:

On the same day, the Rolling Stones and Roy Orbison traveled to Sydney to begin their Australian tour. January 23rd 1965, downtown, downtown, I hits number one in the US Singles Chats, making Petula Clock the first British. She was a cutie. Yeah, she was a cutie. A 60s cutie, totally different. Look back then.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, making a short blonde hair.

Speaker 1:

Yep, yep, and that short little dress, and I can't. I think she had a nice mouth too, if I remember correctly. But not here we go again.

Speaker 2:

So isn't that a category in the rock and the hollow frame now?

Speaker 1:

Best mouth. Yeah, should be Should be. I would judge us for that.

Speaker 2:

And you would approve of her induction. Yeah, we know who we're talking about.

Speaker 3:

Why is choice of words induction? Oh fuck, was I wrong? I don't have much to say because I wasn't born yet, so I got to come on.

Speaker 2:

You're a music guy. Come on man Mark, you've heard oldies. There's some of these songs. You can recognize some oldie stations.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah. Hey, Mark, you know what I got from Lou today that I never get from you the rare phone call and actually a phone call. My phone lit up like a nuclear reactor when Lou called me. It's just closed the bad phone. Yeah, you know, sometimes you don't have to text, Sometimes you can call me.

Speaker 3:

I feel like I'm bugging people. I don't call people Dude.

Speaker 1:

I'm freaking retired. No one talks to the people. I mean, if I'm working with the horses, you'll just get a message saying I'm working with the horses.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Okay, okay Next time. I have a profound thought.

Speaker 1:

This is now a forced phone call. So the next time he calls me I'm going to say thanks for the forced phone Call, mark, yeah, I appreciate it, Jerry.

Speaker 3:

I don't want the dinner tonight. I'll do a dinner another night.

Speaker 1:

So, uh, patula clock becomes the first British female vocalist to reach the coveted position of number one since the arrival of the Beatles. Well, uh, January 24th, the, uh, the animals appear a second time on the Ed Sullivan show, january 27th 1965. Let me see. Patty asked, says you keep freezing on me and I can't seem to keep you. I'll do the replay. Have a great night, scott, lou and Mark. Thank you, patty, I don't know what's going on.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you are on the Winthrop votes feed, you're not on the. Uh, oh shit, you did it again.

Speaker 1:

I knew I was forgetting something, I can correct it, and it's not going to work. It's not going to go through.

Speaker 3:

He needs a producer.

Speaker 1:

I knew I was forgetting something.

Speaker 3:

Hold on, it's my fault, I didn't remind you.

Speaker 1:

I know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I just don't know.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know anything, I don't know anything about that.

Speaker 1:

I don't know anything about that. Oh shit, I don't know. Podcast listeners like what's going on? Well, I got notified, because if anything you do, I get notified.

Speaker 3:

So it came up when throw boats Scott McLean is live.

Speaker 2:

I did the talking about the music.

Speaker 1:

I just didn't change it, all right. So this is what I'm going to try something. It's all good there. It's all good there. Now I'm going to hit a refresh. I'll be back, okay. So you two hold on Carrier, let's see what happens.

Speaker 3:

You're looking very dapper tonight, Lou. Well, thank you, Mark.

Speaker 2:

You too.

Speaker 3:

I like how your beer is up front there, yeah it's not only it's weird.

Speaker 2:

The camera angles have been different. When we on Last Music Relish, it was more wide open. I think I added more high definition to it. Oh okay, my dad. My dad went unsuccessful for mayor of our town. Oh nice he got. He got defeated for reelection.

Speaker 1:

I'm back.

Speaker 2:

Hey, was it Park Ridge or was it before? Oh, keensburg, new Jersey, keensburg.

Speaker 1:

Did you guys just not talk about music and then, like I lost all the comments?

Speaker 2:

I gave a personal anecdote in 19, about 1965.

Speaker 1:

Oh, all right. Well, let's continue on with 1965. I'm glad you brought that to my attention. That shit used to drive me like bananas. I would lose sleep over. Patricia, come back, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Well, while you're talking about a recent link to everybody. I sent it to, so you guys keep talking.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, yeah, do that. Do that. Probably can't hurt. So the animals are paying for the second time. On the other, on January 27th 1965, paul Simon broadcasts on BBC's five to 10 show discussing and playing 13 songs, 12 of which would appear on his May recorded in August, released UK only solo album Paul Simon songbook.

Speaker 2:

I think I think in human already we're almost broken up at that point.

Speaker 1:

It's kind of interesting, though, isn't it like he only released this album in the UK?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's um. I wonder what that's about.

Speaker 2:

I wonder, was his decision? Was an record company decision?

Speaker 1:

It's gotta be a record company thing.

Speaker 2:

Cause one of the songs that I think is a we talk about tonight. They come out Well, sounds of silence. Yeah, that came out 65. They were broken up at that point. I think that would not think that got them back together.

Speaker 1:

Could be February 6th 1965. Donovan performs the first of three performances on the British television program you know what? Let me check something I think I might have. Uh, I get a really have tech. I thought I was already, I always think I'm already, and then shit just goes kind of it's like doing a concert.

Speaker 3:

You know setting up the instruments and you check that guitar 20 times and then nothing works.

Speaker 2:

My snare drum is never right.

Speaker 1:

Like right now. I can't find my live feed. Like on Facebook. I can't find it.

Speaker 4:

It's alive.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm watching you on YouTube. It's working.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but Facebook I'm not. It says I'm live, but it doesn't show the. Uh, I really did it tonight. Let's see Facebook I'm not. It says I'm live, but it doesn't show. All right, so let me change this and it post public. I'm just going to change it like this. I'm sorry, people of the podcast world.

Speaker 3:

Hey Lou, did I ever tell you about my blue Easter cult set of all their albums? It's fantastic.

Speaker 2:

Yes, you did.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay, yeah, they even give you a.

Speaker 1:

Um they make, no, I'll say All right, I get that corrected. Cool.

Speaker 2:

Over here. What was the cult doing in 1965?

Speaker 3:

They were in school saying you want to form a band, something like.

Speaker 2:

What school were they going to? Long Island High School, Stony Brook University in 65. Well, they said they formed like 68. I mean, they might have been still nice.

Speaker 3:

Wow, yeah, they are old guys, yeah, and they're still not music.

Speaker 1:

I'm like missing my fucking. Yeah, keep talking, guys.

Speaker 2:

I really have to, that's okay.

Speaker 1:

I really don't get what's going on here, hey Lou.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm getting in a lot of crazy social media fights over the new Steve Wilson album. All the prog. I'm done with prog fans. All the prog fans are knocking it doesn't sound like old prog and they're all going nuts and I'm just like, well, you let the guy progress. You know, uh-oh, he's done. He's looking at us when he's done. Watch out, is it a more pop oriented record? Yeah, serious pop, like mature. I would highly recommend it.

Speaker 2:

I would check it out. Yeah, something's. That's it, I got it. So who's president of the United States in 1965? Johnson, mark, yes, johnson. Yeah. Who did Johnson run against in 64?

Speaker 3:

All right, I'm all set. Stephanie Barry Goldwater, that's right.

Speaker 1:

Hey, there you go, Mark, you got, you got. You have a fan, alison. There you go.

Speaker 3:

Hey, it's my sister.

Speaker 1:

Hey Ali, that's my sister. Hey Ali, what's up?

Speaker 3:

Up in Vermont. She waits for our show every week, your show, sorry, no, no no, that's okay.

Speaker 1:

Nope, it's our show. I am not that guy, I'm not that guy. Although I am the creator, host producer, but it's not, it's our show though.

Speaker 2:

By the way look behind me. Who's got the. Who's got the?

Speaker 3:

We're going to check every. It's going to get bigger every week and I can make a 24 by 36.

Speaker 1:

We're way off people right now that are watching the listening and the podcast, Like just just, I got it, Let me, let me. I have to. I got to get a picture of that.

Speaker 3:

So we're looking at my sign behind me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let's see, yeah, I'm going to sit.

Speaker 1:

That's funny. All right Back to the show. Let's get Mark it's snow in Vermont today.

Speaker 3:

Oh, it's coming, it's coming, all right.

Speaker 1:

So, uh, paul Simon Donovan all right, February 6th, uh, 1965. Sorry about the delay. People on the podcast, with 22 minutes in and we're only in February, it's going to be a three hour show. Performs the first of three performances on the British television program ready, steady go. This presents him a widespread audience for the first time. February 12th 1965, nme reports the Beatles will star in a film adaption of Richard Condon's novel a talent for loving. Hmm, wow. The story is about a 2,253 kilometer horse race that takes place in the old West. The film is never made Good, the Beatles Uh on February in a Western.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, On February 19th 1965, Rod Stewart with remember his first group. I think this was his first group, Steen packet. Hmm, the soul agents.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you know that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, perform their first important content in London club. Uh, yeah, in a London club. February 24th 1965, the Beatles began filming their second film help, yeah. March 6th 1965, the temptations my girl, written by when smokey sings I have violin, smokey Robinson and Ronald white from Motown records reaches number one. March 18th 1965, the Rolling Stones members Mick Jagger, brian Jones and Bill Wyman a five pounds for urinating on the wall of a London, of a London gas station.

Speaker 3:

I'll be in a urinate. Make it a gas station.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the band had asked to use the restroom, but it was out of order.

Speaker 2:

So yeah.

Speaker 1:

Peter on a building. Yeah Well, it's better than pissing on the Alamo.

Speaker 3:

I guess it's not out of order. In England it's out, oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

Oh, can we use your?

Speaker 1:

Lou, it's 20th 1965, the 10th Eurovision song contest. Who cares, nobody. It seems to be a common thread in this every week Nobody, it just it sounds like an old TV show broadcast thing from you know more.

Speaker 1:

We used to have this thing in Boston called community auditions. It was on every Saturday Sunday morning and was local talent. It was like America's good talent before America's good. It was like a star search before stars. That was like the first one, wasn't it the first major one? Yeah, yeah, March 21st 1965, the Supremes have their fourth number. One single stop in the name of love. Written by Hulu.

Speaker 2:

Holland, those are howling. Hey, go buddy.

Speaker 1:

April 11th 1965, the new musical express poll winner poll winners concert takes place, featuring performances by Wow, holy shit. So the new music, the new musical express poll winners. I don't know what that was, but this concert had the Beatles, the animals, the rolling stones, freddie and the dreamers, the kinks, the searches, hermes Hermits and Anita Kerr. Singers the moody blues, wayne Fontana and the mindbenders Donovan them, celia Black, dusty Springfield and the great Tom Jones. That's a fucking concert.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, oh shit yeah.

Speaker 1:

Wow.

Speaker 2:

I'd like to have seen Freddie and the dreamers Jesus, do the dance. Lou, I'll destroy the studio.

Speaker 1:

You've done that once before. Yeah, oh, yeah.

Speaker 2:

There is that song Do the Freddie, it's Freddie and the dreamers. Do the Freddie.

Speaker 4:

I'll send you the video.

Speaker 1:

It's disturbing.

Speaker 2:

It's so weird Okay.

Speaker 1:

Joanne Kosmoski. I love you, Joanne. She came in. Alison Lundy says, Mark Sister says we've got three generations watching. That's one, let's get another generation.

Speaker 3:

Where's my son?

Speaker 1:

Let's get another generation Boomers. Let's see After that massive concert that's better than Woodstock. Yeah, that's huge. April 13th, 1965, the seventh annual Grammy Awards. These are always interesting. I held in Beverly Hills. Yeah, oh, jo Beto and Stan gets right. Yeah, each win the most awards with four. The latter, stan gets winning record of the year with Astru Jo Beto, you know I love her. Yeah, andrew Dada for the song the girl from Eponema and the pair collectively winning album of the year for gets Jo Beto Louis Armstrong's Hello Dolly when song of the year, while the Beatles win best new artist. It wasn't a jinx to them.

Speaker 2:

Best, best new, or that. That's pretty wild, you know. It seems so innocent. Well, look at the jazz category. It was the big thing. Yeah, you're right, that was a monster album, yeah, you know a lot of these, these songs in like 1965, they're they span generations. It's like Malusian was saying you know, there was jazz on there, there was more musical, there was. I heard some weird stuff.

Speaker 1:

Her album was big in 1965. Oh, huge yeah. Oh yeah, those album covers too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, man, greatest album covers In other delights Wip Cream 1965, mark yeah, collectively the greatest album covers ever.

Speaker 1:

You know what Each one of those should be a T-shirt. That would be a pretty cool T-shirt, harry makes T-shirt Like a backdrop.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he makes T-shirts. I want to talk to him about it. Right, lou, I didn't know.

Speaker 2:

this Does he. Is he making them himself? Yeah?

Speaker 3:

I just gave up his secret.

Speaker 1:

All those album covers oh shit, yeah, I need some T-shirts made.

Speaker 3:

Well, he's retired too. So you see, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I have something to say about that. Must be nice.

Speaker 4:

Oh, scott, I saw the poster.

Speaker 2:

It was so close to the other.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Hey, if you weren't there at three in the morning. I'm in the fucking engine room of a container ship with a fucking 90 pound golden retriever and seven other fucking guys, animals searching the whole fucking container ship for narcotics.

Speaker 1:

They weren't there. It wasn't nice then. I didn't hear that shit then. And that's just one story over a 22 year career. Yeah, fuckers, thanks.

Speaker 2:

Let's not get mad.

Speaker 3:

Let's just climb, let's go, let's go.

Speaker 1:

This shows off kilter from the beginning, with you two in the box.

Speaker 2:

I don't think it's this edgy.

Speaker 1:

It is. That's a little edge to it.

Speaker 2:

I see a train going off a bridge into a river right now I love a good train wreck. April 21st Can't take your eyes off.

Speaker 1:

That's right. April 21st 1965. The Beach Boys appearance and Shindig Shindig Yep Performing their most recent hit Help me run, do you want to dance? April 26th 1965. Leopold Stuckowski, leopold, leopold Leopold.

Speaker 3:

The bug's buddy cartoon.

Speaker 1:

Leopold Leopold, the conductor comes walking down the aisle.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, okay.

Speaker 1:

Leopold Stuckowski, you didn't. You never put that together. Look at me, I know stuff, yeah, I know stuff?

Speaker 3:

Hey, bugs bunny introduced a lot of people to classical. He introduced me to classical, so Kill the rabbit.

Speaker 1:

Kill the rabbit.

Speaker 3:

And.

Speaker 2:

Liberace.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I didn't watch Liberace. Who was the wrestler that they were parroting? Ravishing Ronald, yeah.

Speaker 1:

It was gorgeous, george. But the greatest wrestler of all time on the bugs bunny is the crush yeah.

Speaker 2:

We're out.

Speaker 1:

He had these little tiny legs and a giant torso with a giant head on his shoulder. He was just all muscle Crush Greatest. Let's see. Leopold Stuckowski conducts the first complete performance of Charles Ivy's symphony number four, more than 10 years after the composer's death. Wow, no one ever played it. Jesus, wow, may 5th 1965. Allen Price leaves the animals to be replaced temporarily by Mick Gallagher and permanently by Dave Raubary. Thank you, uh, may 6th 1965, keith Richards and Mick Jagger. Uh, after they get done pissing on a gas station wall, uh, begin work on satisfaction in their clear water Florida hotel room. All great things happen in Florida. Richards comes up with a classic guitar riff while playing around with his brand new Gibson fuzz box.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so, there's a story out there and I believe, uh, keith Richards told it himself when he was drinking and writing, and drinking and writing, and he, uh, he had been, uh, he left the tape recorder on and he woke up that he passed out. He wakes up the next morning and he doesn't remember anything and he plays the tape back and he hears that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that. I think that was that's how he created the riff.

Speaker 3:

He said he woke, he dreamt it, did he dream it? And he woke up and recorded it. And the next, if he didn't record it, he wouldn't remember this.

Speaker 1:

I like my story better. I think my story is more rock and roll.

Speaker 3:

Your story is better.

Speaker 1:

Your story is more rock and roll. Thanks for just keeping this show, fucking itchy. Thanks mother.

Speaker 3:

It may not be right, but it's much better.

Speaker 2:

I like. I like the fact that like their songs back then would start with a guitar riff. It's a book guitar If it were peach during parts of the song. I don't hear that anymore.

Speaker 1:

No, because of streaming, it's all. I had said this before. Uh, streaming people have to. Uh they get paid after, I think, 12 seconds yeah, of someone's streaming. That's why you don't have long intros anymore, because they have to get right to the meat.

Speaker 2:

That is wag the fucking dog man. That's all yeah.

Speaker 3:

It's like the late fifties or early sixties, with pop singles too, right Under two minutes. Yeah, kind of back to that.

Speaker 2:

Well, I love that, by the way. I mean, most of these songs from 65 are short, but the fact that you know it just it affects how you write song, song construction. There could be bands there with a ton of really cool riffs, but they're not going to do it now because yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Also, on May 6th 1965, the symphony of the new world first who cares?

Speaker 3:

The VOR, jack, come on, that's a great symphony. Okay, I love it.

Speaker 1:

So in 1965, the British Commonwealth comes closer than it ever has or will to a clean sweep of the US hot 100, stop 10. Lacking only a hit at number one, uh, let me see, only lacking only a number one at number two, instead of count me in by the American group Jerry and the Jerry Lewis. Gary, I don't understand what I just read, but I'm going to be happy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all the number two smart.

Speaker 3:

The professor singing the professor things.

Speaker 1:

May 9th 1965, bob Dylan performs the first of two concerts at London's Royal Albert Hall, concluding his tour of Europe. These members include the Beatles. In Donovan, may 30th 1965. The animals appear a third time on the Ed Sullivan show. Must have got some big ratings for that. Yeah, keep bringing them back like that. Well, they must behave themselves. It's like once a month for three months, you know, three months in a row they must have behaved themselves. Uh, june doesn't give a date. Sir Tom Wilson of Simon and Garfunkel uh records a heavy backing band onto the song the sound of silence, without the knowledge of Paul Simon, for release on a 45 RPM single and the B side. We've got a groovy thing going. The singer will eventually reach number one on the billboard heart 100s on New Year's Day 1966. So he snuck that in on them. Yeah, they were too young to argue at that point, anyways.

Speaker 2:

I think, no, I think they were broken.

Speaker 4:

They were almost broken up at that point.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think that there was a I don't know what the reason, but I think that was kind of well, Paul's first solo album came out that year. Yeah, yeah, and what was already English?

Speaker 1:

He did it Just just an album for for English, just for English, yeah, uh, the US music on the same, uh, I guess in June, with no date, the US music press popularized, popularized the term folk rock, which has been in print at least since November 2nd 1963, issue of a billboard magazine in which the devil's waiting by Glen Cove's was said to have a wide open folk rock sound. The term was also used of twins, by King tones and even Hoyt Axton. People outside people outside the trade, begin to take notice of the term in June of 65. That's pretty obscure, like yeah, it's a lot of detail for just calling it folk rock.

Speaker 2:

Most people would think that was like Dylan going electric.

Speaker 1:

I hate folk rock, anyways, I ever liked it.

Speaker 2:

You don't like the birds.

Speaker 3:

Boring. Where have all the flowers gone?

Speaker 2:

Oh, there's folk in there. What about um Stephen Bishop and animal house?

Speaker 1:

I was glad when blue she smashed the guitar.

Speaker 2:

Let's move on.

Speaker 1:

June 6th 1965. The Supremes have their fifth consecutive number one single back in my arms, again written by H D H from Motown Records.

Speaker 2:

June 14th. Never there were the Supremes. They weren't dying to rust that right.

Speaker 1:

June 14th 1965. Paul McCartney records yesterday yeah, one of the most replay. What is it?

Speaker 2:

Record cover cover cover.

Speaker 1:

Recorded it. Recorded song and music history. Yeah, how do you think John felt about?

Speaker 2:

that Fucking jealous?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he had to have had to have been yeah, because it's just Paul in a symphony behind them.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, paul playing guitar, no, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Well, I also. I think the irony. John said the irony was that you know if you go somewhere people like they're. Like we had a restaurant on the Strollers would come up and start playing yesterday.

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah shut up.

Speaker 2:

But it's a beautiful song, I mean obviously it is absolutely July 5th 1965.

Speaker 1:

Maria Callis gives her last operatic performance. And I don't care.

Speaker 2:

Great opera history.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, moments and operas, there you go. That's your filler, right there, that's your filler when I'm off. July 9th 1965, the release of Tamell Tamell musical film. Of the Tamell musical film, as I don't care. July 25th 1965, electric Dylan controversy. Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

The electric.

Speaker 1:

Dylan. Controversy was happened that day. Bob Dylan, playing a second day at the Newport Folk Festival, is booed for playing an electric set with the Paul Butterfield blues band. Joan Baez and Donovan also plays sets. That's like if I was at that unplugged in New York with Nirvana, I would have booed him.

Speaker 2:

Oh.

Speaker 1:

I would have booed him.

Speaker 3:

You would have booed Pat Smear because he was playing electric.

Speaker 1:

Doesn't, I would have booed them.

Speaker 2:

We have asked him before. I forgot Was it an electrified acoustic guitar he was playing? Was it an electric he?

Speaker 1:

did that on sold the world Pat Smear was back there playing a lot of yeah, no, that was electric. There was no acoustic, that was pure electric guitar.

Speaker 3:

Now, as far as Dylan's concern, didn't, don't look back. I think that came out that year. Da Penny Beckers home and he's in London and there's a guy of folky going. He should be shot. He was just like calling for his murder.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, furious, I'm calling him Judas.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, judas got a bad rap, by the way, that's all. He's were tight yeah.

Speaker 2:

You've seen, they ever seen, a mighty wind? Yes, well, a lot of a lot. I saw him he's among the real, a lot of folk artists when I came out like, well, that's not that funny.

Speaker 4:

It's hysterical because it's because it's about you.

Speaker 1:

You're being made fun of August 6th 1965, the small, small faces release what you're going to do about it, their first single. Also on that day, the Beatles released the soundtrack of their second movie help. August 14th 1965, husband and wife American pop duo I could say a generational icon couple Sonny and share earned their first number one hit with I got you, babe peaks at the position in the United States, UK, Canada and New Zealand. August 15th 1965, the Beatles play at Shea Stadium, the first rock concert be held in the venue of this size. Concert also sets a new world record for audience attendance at the time, 55,600 and for revenue, that was. Was that their last show?

Speaker 2:

Wasn't, no, no, the candlestick park. Candlestick park, that was the left one.

Speaker 1:

They couldn't have themselves play no it was like a boom box.

Speaker 2:

My first wife's uncle took his niece. There he goes. He was just screaming. There was no music at all.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I should say that Maybe see the films from that. I mean it's exciting. But let London's. He's only with arm and the keyboard because it doesn't matter, he's just fucking around yeah. I forgot what song it is with the play I'll see you. It's like whatever, no one knows. No, but nobody.

Speaker 1:

They couldn't even hear themselves.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was horrible.

Speaker 1:

And that's frustrating to a musician.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it's, yeah, it's going to be terrifying. I mean who's could they hear Ringo? I mean you got somebody got to follow the beat, so I mean it's probably just very faint yeah.

Speaker 1:

August 27th 1965, the Beatles visit Elvis at his home in Bel Air. It's the only time the band and the singer ever meet. September 30th 1965, Donovan appears on Shin Digg in the US and plays Buffy, St Henry's Universal Soldier Horrible movie, by the way, Didn't say yes.

Speaker 3:

That's that good, not cheap ass. Yeah, yes.

Speaker 1:

I think that was that late 70s early 80s?

Speaker 3:

No, I thought that was in the 80s, that's 80s Universal.

Speaker 1:

It's, I think it's 80s. Yeah, october 15th 1965, guitarist Jimi Hendrix signs a three-year recording contract with Ed Chaplin, receiving $1 and 1% royalty on records with Curtis Knight. The agreement will later cause continued continuous litigation problems with Hendrix and other record labels.

Speaker 2:

I knew, I knew, I knew Ed Chaplin Did you really. He was a good friend of my father's.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh that explains it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So, before he screwed over Hendrix would he record covers of hits of the day, like in the Caribbean with like other musicians, and sell them as bootlegs in the art, Totally, totally discrepital. But he had a recording student in New York. We had a roller skating rink. He was an avid roller skater. That's how my father had met. But he's always telling my dad and me he goes I produce Hendrix, I produce Hendrix and on the albums his name's not on the end of the albums. As a producer he just got him to sign a contract but eventually he lost the rights to Hendrix's music. My father used to bust his balls all the time he lost the project.

Speaker 2:

Well, he was like he's like Hessian the sopranos, you know he just he screwed the guy over. Scott, I was surprised you said that that kind of.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I saw Lou like that.

Speaker 2:

I lit up, I said Ed Chalpin, but actually on my birthday when he gave my band, my brother, some free studio time. So it was in New York, so it was about to leave. My father goes, do not sign anything he puts in front of you. But he was so cheap. It was in late August in New York City. It was disgusting. It was in the air conditioning.

Speaker 3:

And the recording is probably resurfaced in some other country. Yeah, no, yeah we might be hidden, like Yugoslavia or, you know, kazakhstan or Well, have you?

Speaker 1:

have you seen? Have you seen the movie yet? Searching for.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I got to watch that. I'm telling you these sugar man, sugar man sugar man, it's great.

Speaker 1:

Dude, that's, that's what that is about. Yeah, yeah, it's amazing. I'm telling you you have to watch it, it's good.

Speaker 2:

He's still alive.

Speaker 1:

I told you the six months ago and you still haven't watched it.

Speaker 3:

Oh how he's making a good movie. We didn't do our homework, I just don't think it's Rodriguez. Anyway, the show is like oh, it's morose. He didn't call me.

Speaker 1:

Morose, whoa, whoa, whoa. That two weeks ago, lucifer Green. You say morose. What the hell Am I supposed to come up with a big word now?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you have to come up with a big word next.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, this show is very linoleum and, as you know, this show is very delicatessen, there you go.

Speaker 3:

Big words.

Speaker 2:

It's very provolone.

Speaker 1:

Penalty box, that's. That was a bad joke. How can he think he was going to get away with that? How did he think he was going to get away with that?

Speaker 2:

He's provoking.

Speaker 1:

There's camp and then there's just shitty jokes that was even a camper kitsch.

Speaker 3:

But yeah, I was just that was because when I was a teenager, we went to the deli Lou, the Casa del Paul.

Speaker 1:

You don't really need a background on this.

Speaker 3:

I walked in and I said I want a something with provolone, and I got my head handed to me by the very Italian attendant.

Speaker 4:

I thought.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know. And then he said he said, put a lot of mayo on it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I did.

Speaker 1:

I just now I like mayo on my Italian sub.

Speaker 3:

So do I now, but not back then.

Speaker 1:

And I put oil and vinegar on it also. That's great, great combo. I do. I do. No lettuce, though. No lettuce. They like lettuce down here on their Italian side. Well, rough edge, it does make you move, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It just takes up space.

Speaker 1:

It's all it does. It takes up space.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is I load it with everything.

Speaker 1:

I like black olives, I like banana peppers, I like. I don't like green peppers, so I don't get that.

Speaker 2:

I like tomato onion yeah.

Speaker 1:

salt and pepper yeah, oregano.

Speaker 3:

I load it up. Yeah, getting hungry.

Speaker 1:

Double meat. I always get the double meat. You know what I?

Speaker 2:

had yesterday Subway.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, I haven't eaten subways, oh Jesus, in 20 years. Stuff's nasty. But I had yesterday that I don't really go to all the time, but it was just on the way home. I got a Jersey Mike's cheese steak Nice, it's really not bad. I got the double meat, so it was a little weight to it, but it wasn't really not a bad sub.

Speaker 2:

I put mayo on that. You're not bad.

Speaker 1:

I put mayo on that too. Really. Yeah, it's good. Yeah, I love mayo.

Speaker 2:

I do too. I like ketchup too. I like mayo and salami. I like salami, that's good. People look down on ketchup. They do, they do. Thank you, lou. I don't dare them, right. But now some of these people will go to five guys and you get ketchup on your burger. It's like it's just too. Yeah, it's not bougie enough. I don't know.

Speaker 3:

It's just a friend prize, catch up on it, catch up and scrambled eggs.

Speaker 1:

Mark. Mark just texted his wife down, says can you bring me an Italian sub you want?

Speaker 3:

another reply.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, I know what the reply is I can probably.

Speaker 3:

I told me how to say fuck you.

Speaker 2:

Mark, Mark, when I go to Costeville, so when I live there, I would get the large Roman Fiesta and eat it all day. The thing is ridiculous.

Speaker 3:

I got that. Yeah, that's beautiful.

Speaker 1:

Let me see we're on, we're on, we're on, we should be.

Speaker 3:

I know, I know, I already got to take a bathroom break. Go ahead, I'll save it up.

Speaker 1:

October 17th 1965, the animals appear for a fourth time on it's all of it. Wow, look at them.

Speaker 2:

They're tearing up, that's got to be a record. What were they playing? Like what songs?

Speaker 1:

I don't know. They always had a hit, though they always had good music.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but like I had early though it was kind of bluesy rocket what you know, I don't know, 65 was that kind of things were turning.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I was starting to kind of roll forward Roll the little year, october 26th 1965, the Beatles are appointed members of the British Empire the MBE by the Queen. Since it is unusual at this time for popular musicians to be appointed as MBEs, a number of previous recipients complain and protest.

Speaker 3:

Here I have, I do not like that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, november 5th 1965, almost done. Who released their iconic single my generation?

Speaker 3:

What's the story behind the stutter? Wasn't he supposed to be a kid on drugs or something he was other?

Speaker 2:

Other was a feeling his way through the song, trying to freeze it Generation.

Speaker 3:

I heard a steep, I think he said it was about a kid that's like all hopped up on pills.

Speaker 1:

You know like I don't know. I don't know if your stories tonight You're told you can't believe Roger Daltrey. I think he's just making it up.

Speaker 3:

I read about Google.

Speaker 1:

Google's always right, yeah, and the fact checkers went along with you. What is the story behind?

Speaker 2:

the story.

Speaker 1:

I just don't know what I thought One of you guys were doing. I heard him. I heard him talk about it one time. There was a story, though.

Speaker 2:

I thought he was just trying to flesh out the lyrics. So because people try to put us down, you know, just because you know, I think it was a it might have been a phrasing issue when he was just hacking around, going did, did, did, did just to fill up space. It's not.

Speaker 1:

It's not a great story, but it's better than Mark's story.

Speaker 2:

It's more plausible than Mark's.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, I think that's, I think.

Speaker 3:

Oh, it's an auto fill. Why did Roger Daltrey in the first result again stutter in my generation? What is it? Roger Daltrey has also commented that he had not rehearsed the song prior to the recording, was nervous and he was unable to hear his own voice. I doubt that.

Speaker 1:

Oh, but you'll believe your story over what he actually said in an interview. Are you hopped up tonight, Mark, Are you hopped up Yellow jacket white wine again?

Speaker 2:

Black beauties, yellow fin Black beauties. Yeah, black ripple.

Speaker 3:

Um no, I you know it's. It's Wikipedia. Anybody can put stuff into Wikipedia.

Speaker 1:

So here we go. All right, anyway, let me finish this, since my song contains a famous line I hope I die before I get old.

Speaker 3:

He tried to sound like a British mod on speed. That's another result I got.

Speaker 2:

Oh, here we go.

Speaker 1:

Are you done with your stories, Mark? Are we done with story time?

Speaker 3:

I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry Mark. Markie telling story time tonight. If the professor had stepped in and cleared it up, what happened?

Speaker 1:

The professor should have a whole segment Story time. Markie story time.

Speaker 3:

That's a great idea.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, can I do it, markie? Tell us, markie, do you have a story?

Speaker 3:

for us tonight. I'm going to be like James May from Top Gear. Yeah, welcome to story time. Yeah, stories, stories. Can I dress like Ebola the clown?

Speaker 1:

You can dress however you want.

Speaker 2:

That's terrifying. Good luck with that.

Speaker 3:

I want to know did you not brush your teeth for like two weeks prior to that? I don't.

Speaker 1:

It says I brush my teeth anyway.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, it's a great name, though, for a clown.

Speaker 1:

Oh, it's great. It is great. I'll give you the background history of another time, but there is definitely a backstory to that. Uh, this, let's see. November 14th, the Supremes have their sixth number one record. I hear a symphony for Motown Records.

Speaker 3:

Great song.

Speaker 1:

November 26th 1965, although Guthrie is arrested in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, for the crime of littering perpetrated the day before Thanksgiving in a nearby town of Stockbridge. The result, events, uh, the, the, yeah. The resultant events in adventure will be immortalized in the song Alice's Rest.

Speaker 2:

Is that really that's it? I want to kill.

Speaker 1:

Kill how long? How long is the original version of that?

Speaker 2:

Oh, 16, minutes, 16 minutes yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's. It's, it's something you know what? It's something that you need to listen to. I don't personally, but I will go back and listen to it now. Uh, like once a year. It's like a song you have to listen to, like once a year, coming up on Thanksgiving. Right, We'll get, we'll, we'll have a breakdown of that song. How's that? We'll figure something out in the movie. In the movie, yeah, we can kind of talk about that because it is it is a hilarious story.

Speaker 3:

I wonder how he felt when he had to tour. It's like they want me to play this every night, I got to tell us.

Speaker 1:

I think he, uh he, I think he changed things up after a while during while he was telling it.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay, yeah, he had to drive you crazy.

Speaker 2:

Apparently that guitar figure that he plays and the singing and play. That is not easy. It's just like a weird finger picking thing and he's talking and then singing. Why he's talented dude. Well, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

He's a folk singer.

Speaker 2:

right yeah, Folk singer.

Speaker 1:

Son of a legend. Son of a legend. Son of a legend, son of a legend.

Speaker 3:

He's coming into Los Angeles, uh, bringing in a couple of keys.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, that's right, he had three.

Speaker 1:

What's the other one? Oh see how Lou just did that. What's his other hit? Oh that one. Oh no, he had three.

Speaker 2:

He only had three. My mark remind me of a second Other city, oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

But he didn't write.

Speaker 2:

He didn't write that though.

Speaker 1:

Dave Phillips, king of the 45s. Welcome to the show, buddy. Thanks for dropping in America.

Speaker 3:

How are you? Oh, sorry, that's what Robert Kirkman.

Speaker 1:

Robert Kirkman painted my.

Speaker 4:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

He loves coming in on other shows. He, like, like Robert Kirkman, has no like, no, no like, no filter and no like bearing. He'll come in on a whole different type of show, like I'm doing with our votes last night's political show. He comes in with where's Ebola? Like you know, it doesn't has nothing to do with the king of Facebook, has nothing to do with any. He just pops in. He's like a pain in my ass.

Speaker 3:

What you're doing, a music show. He says Ebola. Look when you're an iconic entertainer, people want the act they want.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, you know what I think of Robert Kirkman. Yeah, that's what I think of Robert Kirkman. That means he's a really good friend of yours.

Speaker 3:

I know you will.

Speaker 1:

He's a pain in my ass, that's all he is.

Speaker 3:

You can handle him, I can't. Where are you? Where are?

Speaker 4:

you.

Speaker 1:

I keep drinking. Okay, here we go. We're almost done here, december 3rd 1965, almost done with the year. The events of the year.

Speaker 4:

Hang on, people, we got plenty of show to go.

Speaker 1:

But if you're a loyal listener, you already knew that December 3rd 1965, the Beatles released their album Rubber Soul. So two albums one year, help and Rubber Soul, what? What do you? What do you make of the difference between the albums? Do you see one?

Speaker 2:

Oh, I know Well the one's more soundtrack, but I think what songs are on? Help besides help, you got the hydro everywhere I know, I know I can name where the tracks from.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, now, now you bring it up.

Speaker 1:

I'll get it right here.

Speaker 3:

It's my second favorite helper. You know be who Beatles.

Speaker 1:

So the tracks are. Help the night before you've got to hide your love away. I need you and George Harrison, another girl. You're going to lose that girl. Ticket to ride. Ticket to ride is like. That's like the abusive relationship. Stalker song. I've said this before. Jack's like, no, no, listen to the words of ticket to ride. Go look at the words. Okay, it's an abusive relationship.

Speaker 2:

She said that living with me was bringing her down.

Speaker 1:

She would never be free while I was around. She could never be free when I was around. You're right, you're right by me.

Speaker 2:

Well, he was threatening at the end of Rubber Soul. What's the song?

Speaker 3:

You better run for your life.

Speaker 1:

But that ticket to ride is like, it's like, it's like the original Smith's song, right, very upbeat, very nice to groovy.

Speaker 2:

It sounds amazing, but if you listen to the lyrics, just like an.

Speaker 1:

Eddie Smith song. There's a fucking darkness in there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, okay. So on the hard days night soundtrack there's a song called when I get home it's got. It's an odd ball track and I listened to lyrics. I said oh wow, he's. He's saying about being with another woman. He says you shouldn't be with him, he's going to be back and he's got to go tell his girl about it. So it's just essentially hit some yeah. Once you get past that sunny, you know that infectious music there are the worst and dark where I mean run for your life. You know he's got a killer.

Speaker 1:

Also on, rather see you dead on help yet dizzy, miss Lizzie, and yesterday was on, yeah, you know what I see, help, as it's a bridge.

Speaker 3:

It's my second favorite album there's. You had Beatles for sale was the previous album, when they were still just doing the pop. You know, typically, help, they started to covers a little more original, yeah, and it was a bridge. And then by the time they got to Rubber Soul, they were really just they.

Speaker 1:

Trepo, we can work it out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there were studio crafter. Yeah, there's no covers on help to them. Is that the first Right? I'll just cover on the baby. No, no, this is Miss Lizzie. Is Larry Williamson?

Speaker 3:

Now, lou, I grew up on my version. That I grew up on listening to is the one that had all the film sound soundtrack mixed in. Like, in between you had the film, yeah, so I didn't have dizzy miss Lizzie on mine. So I'm looking at this. I'm like Whoa, yesterday, yesterday was not a my copy. I think the American version didn't have all that.

Speaker 2:

Right, that's a bridge between the old British invasion, beatles and what?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, just like the year and music, little transitioning.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, some other style, other styles were starting to gel with rock and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

And George Harrison's sitar on Norwegian Wood on Rub soul actually leads to him becoming friends with and a pupil of Ravi Shankar. And that's what her is Nor Jones, Nor Jones dude, I'm telling you have you, and I suppose you haven't, because you guys never listened to anything. I love her version of black hole son.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

It was. It's live. Yeah, I couldn't believe what I was listening to yesterday. That's why I took the picture. I was like Wow, yeah, like damn, if you, if you're out there and you can find it, maybe it's on YouTube. Noron Jones live version of black hole son is just, I think she did a studio version on some tribute album or something.

Speaker 3:

That wasn't the first time I heard it. She's just incredible when she, when she covers the song, she makes it her own.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would say go back, listen to hers, then listen to Paul Angus and you tell me which one's better.

Speaker 1:

That's horrible.

Speaker 2:

Oh my lord.

Speaker 1:

Oh my swing Like you did my little beat always like a cat.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it's like some of the lyrics.

Speaker 4:

I was working somewhere and I heard jump.

Speaker 2:

I'm like that's jump. I guess a Jack Jones or something I'm like but yeah, yeah, 1965, december 3rd.

Speaker 1:

Also on that day, the who released the debut album my generation, my generation. Undated events that happened in 1965. Not that of any importance. So those are the events of 1965. Did I say 85? No, he said 65. Good. So, bands that were started in 1965, bands that came up the association right Now, these are bands that, like baby boomers of probably Lou and I, you know kind of late fifties into our sixties, will remember these bands. They were some of them One hit wonders, yeah, but we grew up with this music. Oh sure you know what I mean. So when we were 10, this music's still popular. It was still on the radio.

Speaker 1:

Bo Donaldson and the Haywoods were formed in 1965. My favorite falsetto singer of all time in the rock and roll category can heat it's Kermit the frog. How a big dude like that can sing. Just like that, hi it's amazing Dan that song.

Speaker 3:

You know, that song said just bother us, right? That's one of the ones, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I kind of like them and I like their groove, I like they're a little different than everybody else.

Speaker 2:

Check them out. What's all the work together?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, we're together oh that was a very sixties.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that was that All right.

Speaker 2:

That's a good song.

Speaker 1:

Different singer I think that's the same guy, captain beefheart, was formed in 1965. Wacky shit.

Speaker 2:

He's better than Frank Zappa, though.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, better than Frank Zappa.

Speaker 2:

Seven cats in a bag is. I'd rather listen to yoga ono mock, don't make me.

Speaker 1:

I know, I knew he was going to put him. He was being knocked to shut himself off.

Speaker 2:

He's being belligerent.

Speaker 1:

So, like I was saying earlier, the names of bands back then and the names of bands like trashy vagina today, the cherry slush, ooh edgy, I just picked that name. I don't know where the fuck they are, but the chocolate watch band, right, see, they had, like these nice names, the psychedelic names are the best. Yeah, country Joe and the fish. One hit wonders, give me an F if it wasn't for wood stock.

Speaker 2:

Right If it wasn't for the wood stock album.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if really anybody would know who country Joe and the fish out with the F, you see case on.

Speaker 3:

There's often edgy and saying F.

Speaker 2:

you see K in the sixties, they might have thought they were canned heat.

Speaker 3:

And was the other one Dun dun, dun dun marijuana. That's what they're known for, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, one, two, three, one. We fight for the councils, the councils, they formed it.

Speaker 2:

They formed the 65.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the Delphonics great, starting in 65. Well, this is a little edgy for 65. Dick, dick.

Speaker 2:

Is the spell the same both ways? The IK the IK.

Speaker 1:

Dick and then right next to that is the Doodle Town, pipers.

Speaker 3:

So Dick, dick and the Doodle Towns. The doors, the doors started to tick, tick. The Doodle Towns and the doors. Doodle Town, new York, more yeah, do town.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let me see. Dave Phillips, king of the 45s, has given us a. He's given us an order. King of the 45s is demanding that we do a show on other Brit bands other than Beatles. There are a lot of time pre-lead Zeppelin and bad company, many other great bands in the mix. Well, you know what Mark? You know what Lou. Maybe we'll do that next week.

Speaker 2:

Why don't we do a wishbone ash tribute show? Would that make?

Speaker 1:

Dave happy, so I don't know, maybe we'll come up with some stuff when I was researching this show, I came across like albums released bands I didn't know about.

Speaker 3:

Like the pretty things. I listen to them. I'm like I never heard them and they're good.

Speaker 2:

You know they're kind of heavy.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they're like grungy.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if we could do a whole show on them, though.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, maybe yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's a segment.

Speaker 2:

you know they formed those like like festival bands kind of, I mean like Savoy Brown, uriah Heap.

Speaker 1:

Well, savoy Brown was formed in 1965. I didn't know that, but I knew that. Wow, yes, look at Lou, you should have just owned it. Lou See, you're too honest.

Speaker 2:

I am honest, I knew that I would have done that. I had a friend. Every time you mentioned a girl, he go, I fucked her.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, we all had friends like that Every little thing, yeah, he had a picture of her in his bathroom.

Speaker 3:

That's the closest thing, that's 30 seconds yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there you go. Uh, dyke in the blazers I have, I actually have a vinyl. Dyke in the blazers. No, they were. They were an American funk band, Right, the guy, uh, Alistair Christian, was the lead singer. They were good man, they, I mean they they were. You got to check out some of this shit. The D Y K Dike in the blazers right, he got nicknamed dyke when he was born. According, he's from Buffalo. Um, he plays a bass. Uh, he, he got shot. He got killed. Uh, he was preparing for it to go on tour and to record with Barry White when he fatally shot in the street in a, in a on a Phoenix street in 1971, at the age of 27.

Speaker 3:

Oh, we should. That was another one that got shot. We did a segment this past week on artists that got murdered.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I have to read the Yal Jackson article. Still, I got bombarded Um but uh yeah this guy dyke.

Speaker 1:

Dyke in the blazers are good. Uh, according to reports at the time, the killing may have been related to drug dealing, although a coroner's report showed no alcohol or narcotics in the system. Then they interview a cop, right, get magazine interviews a detective from Phoenix, and the guy says, uh oh, he was a drug addict he had, he had so many tracks in his arms. You wouldn't believe it. Uh, the shooting by Clarence Daniels was considered self-defense. Yeah, dike in the blazers. Yeah, again, check them out, check them out. Uh, we, you heard of a band. The final solution have you ever heard that name? No, I didn't think there were. There were a band. I've, somehow. I heard of them. Uh, although they never released anything from San Francisco, but they were like this, they were very influential that's probably where I heard it. Uh, very influential in that San Francisco sound of the sixties. Yeah, and then the name the final solution that was kind of edgy for 65.

Speaker 4:

Wow.

Speaker 1:

A little edgy but they were like a garage band type but they, um, yeah, they, they, they influenced that whole San Francisco sound that came out of there which means they had a lot of reverb on there. I like reverb.

Speaker 2:

I do too, but they're very reverby sound.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, grateful dead for the 1965. Yeah, the guess who? What did 65?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Jefferson airplane in 1965 was for yeah, it's big, yeah, yeah, some big names. The mom is in, the pop is formed in 65. The meters, the meters, the meters.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, were they from New Orleans.

Speaker 2:

New Orleans.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah. So the meters, let's see, let me go.

Speaker 3:

That's a good name for a band with good rhythm.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's good stuff. You know the name of that song.

Speaker 4:

No.

Speaker 1:

Couldn't, couldn't, couldn't, use it today, cause these woke motherfuckers get all bent out of shape. Here we go again.

Speaker 2:

No, sissy, strut, that's right, I'm a Sissy, yeah it doesn't offend me, it's supposed to be, yeah, yes, that's why.

Speaker 1:

Mark Smith. He's a big dude. Like, don't like. Oh he plays this thing.

Speaker 3:

I can't fight though, how tall are you? How tall are you sick? I was last time I measured. No, that was wrong. Six foot four.

Speaker 1:

Look at your dude Okay, you're the, you're the, you're the dude that I'd say just come with me, right. It'd be like the scene in Godfather two and Al Pacino takes the, the, takes the, the, the, the florist right and he says stand with me in front of the hospital, just stand with me, put your hands in your pocket and just put your collar up and just stand with me. And he looks like. He looked like a gangster. And then the gangsters roll up and they look and they see him standing there with Al Pacino. Yeah, mark is a dude, just stand behind me, you don't have to do it. Then just look at a stand there and look at medicine.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was your eyes.

Speaker 4:

If Mark's cross your eyes, look like a total lunatic.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, exactly, and nobody's going to say a word to you.

Speaker 3:

Listen, I was asked by my in-laws in the Bronx a few times ago with them to get money paid back.

Speaker 4:

So yeah, and I stand there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I can't fight, I can't fight.

Speaker 3:

In Zion In my elementary school. Everyone needs to pick on me because I was the tall guy and I beat up by the short guy because they can punch low. There was me. I never learned to just hold them back by their forehead. I never learned that trick.

Speaker 1:

You just got to charge at them. Dude your size you just charge at them and grab them and throw them down and then get that. You just get that crazy flaring, you know flailing and punching, yeah, yeah, the first swing out of the way.

Speaker 2:

I'm the work. I am in the baker. I stay in hell for you, father, you father, all right, moving on, moving on, we get really sidetracked a lot tonight, right off the bat. I don't like people with tall.

Speaker 1:

Pink Floyd was formed in 1965. Yeah, public enemies, not to be confused with the rap. There was a group, the knack, but they were from Boston. Yeah, I'll see. Your sister thinks it's too funny she knows I can't.

Speaker 3:

I've seen that.

Speaker 1:

Allison Marcus said a number of times, maybe before you started watching this, this, whatever we call this thing he'd say that his sisters would kick his ass.

Speaker 3:

The youngest one kicked my ass here to bars Many times, but I knew if I fought back I was in trouble.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, until.

Speaker 3:

I got old enough one day and I, that was it. Yeah, it was like Ralphie and Christmas story.

Speaker 1:

That's what I did. That's all you need. You're a big dude. You just run at somebody and just grab them and just stop flailing on them. Even if you're not hitting them, you're gonna scare the shit out of them and everybody around.

Speaker 3:

I got to learn to cross my eyes so that getting a headache I know guys that can move one eye I should try to get one. I just can't.

Speaker 1:

I can move one eye in and keep one eye straight. Wow, I can, and people freak out when I do. It's like the dude Zeus from the movie Friday that blue hasn't watched yet and calling hey and calling hey yeah. I know he had the mighty felminize.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

His way out.

Speaker 2:

I can move my eye in his way. It blew wise One blue this way, one blue that way.

Speaker 1:

Allison's. Yeah, that was a. So that was what was the. What was the the the out? Uh, uh, kristen McCalliff. Right, she went up on the challenger. And so what color were her eyes? Blue, one blue this way, one blue that way. Nasa need another seven astronauts.

Speaker 3:

Can we put him in the green room?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, wait here here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Do you?

Speaker 1:

want to get the most truly tasteless joke ever.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Are you sure? Yeah, I got one too. All right, people, this is, this is, this is. I'm going to just give you a warning If you don't want to hear a very disturbing joke, just just turn this off, for like I don't know a minute. So a child murder is walking through the woods with a little boy in the middle of the night. It's this bats flying around, it's lightning and the winds blowing and it's just, it's really crazy. And the kid looks up at the guy and says Mr, I'm afraid. And he looks down at the kid and says you're afraid, I'm the one that has to walk out of here alone.

Speaker 3:

Oh, did you come up with that one on your own? That's a Stephen King line, that's a that would be in the air.

Speaker 1:

I'm not apologizing for that.

Speaker 3:

I've never heard the day you apologize. I was worried about you, all right.

Speaker 1:

Moving on the quick silver messenger service. Oh, that's got a reaction from you, sister. The quick silver messenger service was formed in 1965.

Speaker 2:

Lou, all these 19, oh these San Francisco bands all started.

Speaker 1:

What's there? What do they know for what's um?

Speaker 2:

have another hit. Yeah, sweet love.

Speaker 3:

You've got a lot of reverb. They had some good stuff in the seventies. I heard a couple of their albums.

Speaker 1:

I liked Dave Smith in the 40 miles. That's awful.

Speaker 3:

I want you.

Speaker 1:

I agree with this the most truly tasteless joke you could ever tell.

Speaker 2:

I got one, okay, jesus nailed to the cross. Right Above them there's the initials I N R I. Do you know what that stands for? I'm nailed right in.

Speaker 1:

I don't think it's as bad as mine, but that's not good.

Speaker 3:

It's not as good as Lodi Lots of dumb Italians.

Speaker 1:

That's not going to be acronyms.

Speaker 2:

So quick. Silver message service. He was the guy that wrote um people get together.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay.

Speaker 2:

Get together yeah together.

Speaker 1:

The rascals were formed in 1965.

Speaker 3:

That's white soul, luz or a band.

Speaker 2:

That's white soul band ever.

Speaker 1:

And, like I said, savoy Brown Lurid named them earlier. Uh, I couldn't believe this one, this one. Actually, I was like what? The scorpions, yeah, yeah, formed in 65.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they're ancient. How old?

Speaker 1:

is close, like what 20 years to like they. They just the first time out in whatever one or two did you ever hear the first time Lonesome crow?

Speaker 3:

They're like a jazzy Dun dun dun, dun dun dun. And and close minor has a slow voice. I see they're really good though it was. They morph.

Speaker 1:

He has a great voice, that's oh yeah. He does, underrated we what we talked about this about a month ago. So his voice yeah, what a great voice does not get the credit for a rock singer that he deserves.

Speaker 3:

He, just, he just committed the mortal sin of when they played New Jersey. He kept saying hello, new York. And everyone was like you don't see that New Jersey.

Speaker 1:

Small faces, small faces. We had just mentioned their debut album, itchy coup park, itchy coup park, yeah Uh, the stone ponies. Who are they?

Speaker 2:

Linda Rastavs man.

Speaker 3:

There you go. Say good night to Dave, by the way. Good night Dave.

Speaker 1:

Good night, Dave. Thanks for the suggestion. Rascals all Italians next time, keep them to yourselves, my friend, I don't care. Yeah, don't tell me what to do, dave. Just cause you're a king of the 45s, you don't get to tell me what I do. You're not the boss, you're not my king, dave Phillips, king of the 45s, but it was a good suggestion though.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think we should do it just cause he watches the show every week, even if it's for 10 minutes, he always checks in.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of bands to talk about there.

Speaker 1:

Uh well, this, this, this name might have been a little edgy for 65. I guess Mark had to go to the bathroom. This name might have been a little edgy. The throb they knew that. I mean, they think they're going to get a record deal.

Speaker 2:

Really it sounds like a garage rock. Banter the.

Speaker 1:

Tijuana brass.

Speaker 2:

Was this before the rapper? Were they a band before him?

Speaker 1:

I think he was in the band and then he just became the the uh standout. You know like right the turtles Floating, yeah and uh. Let's see Los Vikings. Those are the Latin Vikings.

Speaker 4:

The Mexican the.

Speaker 1:

Mexican, the Mexican van that's everywhere, god damn.

Speaker 2:

Los Vikings. That's pretty funny.

Speaker 1:

Vikings went everywhere Holy.

Speaker 2:

They wanted warmer temperatures.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's see, Wait till that's. Let's cover a. Uh, what do I got here? Let's cover some albums and then when Mark gets back, we'll do some movies. Usually we kind of jump into the movies at this point, but Mark decided he wanted to go. I'll start off with uh, and we already said Rubber Soul, uh, uh, Highway 61 revisited came out in 65. Yes, Right, Big album.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is Um got like a rolling stone on it.

Speaker 1:

And I'm just going to double up on it. He had two albums that you're bringing. Bringing it all back home Also. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

What do you got listed? Oh, let's see Introducing the bow brummels. Do you remember who the bull brummels are? La-f-la-f. I thought I cried. That's a little to me. Oh me, guess who was produced by someone by the name of someone by the name of Sylvester Stewart, otherwise known as Sly Stone.

Speaker 1:

Ah, that's right. Sylvester Stewart, sly Stone.

Speaker 2:

Very good. Do you know who bull brummel was? No, he was this English guy, he was this fashion guy. He was this. He all men to this day. He set the fashion template for men of like the 19th to 20th century, like starting England. He just he started all these fashion things that still go today and stuff like that. So he was it's, it's, it's it's a word known for like a well-dressed, well-dressed man.

Speaker 2:

Oh, okay, so when you know that song. It's only rock and roll. But Billy Joel, you can read to be a bull, bull, brummel baby, if you just give it half a chance. So it's basically you know yeah, I hate that song.

Speaker 1:

I would not know the. It's still rock and roll to me. It's the only first thing I hear in that song.

Speaker 2:

I don't like the sound of it. I hate it. I like the drill. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Listen, it made him a lot of money, so that's why he did it, that was his rock album.

Speaker 2:

There's better songs in that record than that one. I'll tell you that.

Speaker 1:

Herb Albert, whipped cream and other delights came out that year. That's the album cover. Right there, buddy, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Let's see Love and spoonful. Do you believe in magic, do you?

Speaker 1:

believe in magic Any young girls they were great.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, summer in the city is one of my favorite songs of all time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the Rolling Stones with out of our heads came out.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I don't remember that album.

Speaker 1:

To tell you the truth, yeah, no, it might have been a British release. We're on albums now, mark.

Speaker 3:

They were like the Beatles. They're at the British albums and the American albums are totally different. I hate that. Yeah, yeah, what was the album that came out of our heads? Yeah, I think there was one hit on that album that we know of. You know, as long as?

Speaker 1:

it's not their worst. I mean the worst song they ever wrote Root Tuesday. Oh my God, I could live without it. I don't know why I thought that song was. I think because I thought everything that the Stones did when I was younger.

Speaker 3:

But that song? No no is.

Speaker 1:

It is a root. Yeah, I think it's Ruby.

Speaker 3:

Tuesday yeah, Along that line. I think a much better song than she's. A Rainbow from Satanic Majesty's Request album.

Speaker 2:

That was better.

Speaker 4:

That was a ballot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, out of our heads. Give us an album, mark, I'm going to give you turn, turn, turn the birds. Did someone say that? No, oh yeah, turn, turn, turn.

Speaker 2:

All right, people get ready. The impressions Under and, like I said, curtis Mayfield needs more recognition.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, besides not, but from non musician, musician types, besides non music freaks.

Speaker 1:

Not only maybe one of the greatest jazz albums ever and I'm not a big jazz guy, right Maybe one of the greatest. It is one of the greatest Christmas albums ever made a Charlie Brown Christmas.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3:

Do you remember when you were just?

Speaker 2:

yeah, that's some all our childhoods.

Speaker 3:

Do you remember when you were a kid to smell? When you went outside and it was snowing, there was like a certain smell in the air I can't describe. I smell that when I hear Charlie Brown Christmas. Yeah, that's called new.

Speaker 1:

You know what I call that, mark. So so, working with horses, doing all groundwork with horses, I've come up to you, try to explain it to people, and I've come to the point where I just say it's just what you just said, mark. It's experiential, like you have to experience it. Yeah, you know, like to walk out in the snow and just that's something crisp.

Speaker 3:

Just, and if you try to explain to somebody that never grew up in the snow, they won't know it. Just like I don't know what it's like to grow up in the deep south and have those hot summer days that we don't get up here in the north Same thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you get hot humid days up north, but not like down there.

Speaker 2:

No, not maybe Maybe not like Alabama, but like, yeah, like DC and New Jersey are very much on a par.

Speaker 3:

It's pretty hot, give me another album Having a rave up with the Yardbirds.

Speaker 1:

Oh, all right.

Speaker 2:

Lou Frank Sinatra, september of my year. He just took it. I was looking right at it, mother, Sorry. With the classic Dude I play that album.

Speaker 1:

I must play that album, I don't know a year, at least 15 times a year.

Speaker 2:

Oh cool.

Speaker 1:

I love that. I love Sinatra Sundays. Sunday Sinatra at Casa McVera 2.0. I put it on and it's just so fucking good yeah.

Speaker 2:

Such a great album, that song in particular too, yeah yeah, the song September of my years too, jimmy Van Huisen and Sammy Conn. It was a classic.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah I mean a bouncy.

Speaker 1:

C Barbara Streisand. My name is Barbara Two. My name is Barbara two, the number two.

Speaker 3:

Mark. The debut album from the Pretty Things came out that year. It's a pretty grungy album for a English band.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I get the feeling they fought a lot and they drank a lot from, just from here on Lou, debut album from my favorite girl group, the Shangri-La's leader of the pack.

Speaker 2:

Ah they were they were hot. Yeah, mary Weiss was hot, she's a sexy, sexy white girl and a girl group. They're like bad, they're like bad white girl.

Speaker 1:

Why she got to be a white girl, Lou. Why she got to be a white girl. Why can't she just be a girl?

Speaker 2:

Oh, because I. Why fuck me though the Ron ads, the other Sherels that roll black, or Puerto Rican, that's right, you know. And Leslie Gore, petula Clark, they were squeaky clean.

Speaker 1:

Yes, the Shangri-La grungy white girl.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they were grungy white girls.

Speaker 1:

He looking white girls.

Speaker 2:

Mary Weiss was hot you ever noticed.

Speaker 1:

That term only fits with white girls. She's a slutty looking white girl Like you never heard. She's a slutty looking black girl. She's a slutty looking Puerto Rican. No, it's always the white girls. She's a slutty looking white girl, depends what state you come from.

Speaker 3:

I think it's, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I just think the word slutty, just kind of, is a white.

Speaker 3:

It's like white people turn, invented back in the sixties, right yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's 65. It was invented.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

See, that's my story, Mark, that's my story.

Speaker 2:

What is shaming me?

Speaker 1:

Herman Hermits. Introducing Herman Hermits.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, and Henry the eighth right that came out in six years. I listened to it yesterday. That might be the first punk rock song ever written. What's the name? What is it? I'm Henry the eighth.

Speaker 4:

Oh Jesus.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Listen to the beginning. Forget about that stupid vocal. Listen to the whole music about it. It's kind of punky man.

Speaker 1:

It's more guitar driven than I. Not a good kid, right.

Speaker 2:

No, no, everyone's mad. I think he kills them all, doesn't he Stacked?

Speaker 4:

in the freezer.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm a great old man. I'm Henry Mark. Give me an album.

Speaker 3:

Oh, it's called the them featuring here Comes the Night. That might Was that their first album. I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I think that could have been. Yeah, it could have been Tough band.

Speaker 3:

Really tough band.

Speaker 2:

Lou. Oh, I had more songs and albums. The Zombies first album called the Zombies yeah, that's a cool name for a band.

Speaker 1:

Herb Albert releases the second album that year, South of the Border.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, after Whip Cream.

Speaker 1:

After Whip Cream yeah. I had Whip Cream on there, yeah, now did South of the Border have the song yeah In a third album, the Lonely Bull, he was killing it in 65.

Speaker 3:

One of those albums had I forget One of those albums has that song. There's so many, so many albums that came out. I have a bunch of them on CD. They're great to listen to. What do you got Mark Live at the Regal by BB King? That was always one of my favorite blues albums, Very good, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Lou, you got any more. The Astrid Gilberto album.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, astrid.

Speaker 2:

Astrid, that's right, astrid.

Speaker 1:

Get it right. I want to insult my girl, astrid. Yeah Herb in her monotone style.

Speaker 2:

Let's put an umla over that year right now.

Speaker 1:

What the fuck Is that? The? Is that what it's all about?

Speaker 2:

That's the two dots around with that. What's an umla?

Speaker 1:

It's called an umla, yeah, wow. It's like an omelet.

Speaker 2:

Like a Denver umla.

Speaker 1:

Lou. I guess he has to be all sophisticated with his wine people.

Speaker 2:

Wait the head's getting big. I'm learning something Now. In California wine there's such a thing called a slutty Cabernet. It's a big lush overwrite.

Speaker 1:

It's a white people thing. I told you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I guess you're right. Well, so is there an equivalent for non white women?

Speaker 1:

No, yeah it's called a hoe, that's the equivalent.

Speaker 2:

Why people say slut.

Speaker 1:

Black people say hoe.

Speaker 2:

I'm not making this shit up. Is there a term called hoe shaming? Now?

Speaker 1:

I don't care.

Speaker 3:

You just invented it. If not, what it is, I'm not, and you know what this?

Speaker 1:

you know what the Spanish is Puta?

Speaker 3:

Oh, you just said a nasty word.

Speaker 2:

Hold on, hold on, wait, get off the show. I dropped the C word in a band name A couple of years ago.

Speaker 3:

Oh, she's coming upstairs. Oh, oh, my God.

Speaker 1:

I'm just covering. I'm just being uh, what do we call it, Mark? What do you, what do you people call it Inclusive?

Speaker 3:

She just tripped over her virgin marriage. Oh, she's done another statue. We're all safe for now, cleaning it up.

Speaker 1:

Is that your beautiful wife, maggie?

Speaker 3:

You talking about your beautiful wife, and if she ever sees a summit dead man See that's all I have to say.

Speaker 1:

I say, wow, mark never said how beautiful you are, how bonita, and I'm, I'm safe, I'm safe, okay, don't do it again, I get the warning. I get a warning, but I'm just being inclusive.

Speaker 3:

I knew that word was coming.

Speaker 4:

I said it's going to be in one one part of the show.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

In the Chinese call it yin yang. How come you always go like this?

Speaker 1:

It's it, we're both going to say inclusive and you go inclusive because that's the way it's said, that's the right way to say it. You gotta, you gotta, really emphasize it.

Speaker 3:

I'll be in a meeting at work and I'll go. Can we be inclusive of?

Speaker 1:

the you gotta put up the quotes. You gotta put up the air quotes too, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It goes about staying in Asheville here. We don't have to, we don't even have to say it. You know we're pretty ahead of the curve down here in Asheville.

Speaker 1:

Hey, you know what album came out in 65? Smokey Robinson.

Speaker 3:

My voice is a little fucked up. My favorite Motown, going to a go-go, all right let's get a couple more in.

Speaker 1:

Let's get a couple more Okay, highway 61 revisited. I already said it I'm taking a leak, okay.

Speaker 3:

All right. Second one. You're going to hate me for this because it's something Jack, I think, talked about. I love Supreme by John Coltrane. I don't hate that Phenomenal.

Speaker 1:

I thought you didn't like that. I don't hate that.

Speaker 3:

I thought that was the one you didn't like.

Speaker 1:

There was some jazz about me sitting in, like, yeah, I don't, I'm not a big jazz guy, but I know that's, that's an all time classic.

Speaker 3:

Well, don't worry, the guitar player, I mean, doesn't doesn't Bono reference it in Angel of Harlem?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you got. John Coltrane and the love of Supreme miles and she's got to be an angel named dropping motherfucker. He probably never even listened to them. He did just to make this home.

Speaker 2:

Just to make this song.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you don't pick on Bono because you held his balls on your neck, so don't pick on Bono.

Speaker 1:

All right, if anybody has a right to it's me because I had his balls on my neck, I have the right to do that. I got this, this little moth flying around me. You know those little, the little ones like they're. They're like not. You can't really swat them because they're too small. Get a pair of chopsticks.

Speaker 2:

He's buzzing around me, though, but moths don't buzz, so give me one loop the pole Butterfield blues band debut album, the Holly's debut album, holly's yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Eva's Eva destruction, barry McGuire.

Speaker 4:

Tell me.

Speaker 3:

What do you got, Mark? You probably never heard of this guy. Bert Janche released his first album. Who is Bert Janche? Jimmy Page totally ripped him off for much stuff. He had that alternate tuning sound for the singer and a bunch of songs. He just ripped him off blind. So that album came out.

Speaker 1:

The temptations came out with an album in 65 called the temptation. The temptation sing smoky. Everybody loves smoky. Yeah, nothing could compare with smoky sings, baby, like the song says. On them, their debut album them.

Speaker 3:

I think that's the one I saw with here comes the night. Maybe that's what it was, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Hey, the best of the letterman came out. Hey, they were big back then.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she does it. The whole town says she does it here's a little bit of a.

Speaker 3:

Here's a little bit of a record. The kinks put out two albums in which both they incorporated their name into the title.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 3:

King controversy and kind of kinks.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah. And the art birds had two albums that we mentioned, one of them for your love, for your love. That's a good song. Got to clap the end back on that record.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's a good song. Yep, now for your love was just Clapton.

Speaker 2:

That was on that album. There's a mix. I think it was a mix of both. Okay.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, because he quit one for you. Love him out. It was too pop firm. He was very good.

Speaker 1:

Did you try to correct the professor? Just say no, he did. Did you try to correct the professor hey?

Speaker 3:

what is what is? He's got a PhD doesn't mean he's always right. Oh, Luke called it you got to go.

Speaker 1:

He's in the penalty box. Luke gave the.

Speaker 2:

Caesar thumbs down my friend, my friend marksman. I don't and I don't care if he's six foot four, I'm five eight, but I'm like Joe Pesci, you got to kill me.

Speaker 1:

And I don't care if he's six.

Speaker 2:

I don't care. Ever see a giant tree fall timber. What's he? What's he?

Speaker 1:

reading Led Zeppelin book. You know, let's have, but it's a picture book, so it's not like he's really doing anything. I read pictures, you know what's that?

Speaker 2:

Mark had a little situation with another, another friend of mine in Perry's, so this, this friend threatened Mark. I said, mark, my money is on you.

Speaker 3:

I should have brought that up. It's true. He called me one drunk at night and said Do I got to come kick your ass? And I'm like, oh shit, he's gonna kick my ass. No, he's not. No, he's not, he's a five Irish guy. You know, the Irish we get like out of our heads sometimes.

Speaker 2:

Hey, I'm being threatened by family now.

Speaker 1:

Mark's sister's coming after you, buddy. She's coming at you, buddy.

Speaker 2:

Are you six foot four to Alison?

Speaker 1:

I don't think it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2:

That's a sister, it's a sister thing, it's just a sister she's the sister.

Speaker 3:

I protect all of us. Alison got me into rock and roll.

Speaker 4:

There you go. Okay, alison, okay.

Speaker 3:

Remember almost famous, when what's his name is big sister was giving him all these albums. Listen to. That's what she did for me. She gave me bad company.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm excited the moon. She's like listen to this and listen to this. But my, my sister was 10 years older than me. She turned me out of the band, all that stuff. Yeah, big sister, great Yep. So the story was to do.

Speaker 3:

Alison got me into rock Sue, the middle one got me into R&B. Stacy is the one that got me into brain cell surgery and Emerson like in Palmer. But she ultimately became a disco fan and tried to get me into disco. Didn't like it, but then later on I liked it.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, she kicked your ass.

Speaker 1:

She did yeah.

Speaker 3:

Okay, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my brother's just beating me up.

Speaker 2:

Are you? Are you the youngest of the youngest?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, until I got older than I, then I got a little bigger than them and you know kind of things changed.

Speaker 2:

I'm the second youngest. I changed a little bit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it wasn't, it wasn't like we had, but I did fight both of them one time and then I was barred. It was insane. It was they both. It was fucking insanity. You kicked out. Oh, we got kicked out If we were. We were fighting. The bounces came over to break it up and I, at one point I grabbed my middle brother, mark, and he was, he was thick like me, and I don't know what happened. It got caught in his shirt or something and I dislocated my ring finger, no, my middle finger, my left middle finger, it was like an L right and I just I said stop, stop and we had flipped tables. This was just an all out punch, it's just a hockey fight.

Speaker 1:

Right, it was like they were punching me. I was punching at them and because I just had got on their last nerve, evidently we would do it.

Speaker 3:

It wasn't going around. You were pissed off.

Speaker 1:

Oh, we were all I was just. I pissed them off to no end until they just my middle brother comes over the table and then my oldest brother, colin, jumps on and he starts throwing punches and then we're just going at it and I don't know who got the better at who, but at one point I said stop and I held up my left hand and my middle finger is an L right. It's literally right at the first knuckle right, the middle knuckle right, and it's just and so right. At that point the bounces move in and they start trying to break it up and my brother's turn on them and say stay the fuck away from my little brother. And they start punching the bounces and they were going out the back door and my brother Colin punches the wooden door and the panel goes like flying out of the door. He punched the panel out of a fucking wooden door Right and we kicked the door open and we spill out into the streets and the bounces just couldn't. They closed the door behind us. You can still see in because there's there's no wooden panel there. So everything was saved that we just turned around and I just started. We just kind of started going out of it again and it was just this whole.

Speaker 1:

How did you straighten your finger out? So I have to take this. This was. This was in downtown Boston, in an Irish bar called the midnight court. I had to take the subway home, took the bus to the hospital, went to the emergency room and the guy looked at the finger and was just like, oh, he just went. Oh, so there you are. They numb it up and they do the ones All right on three, and I'd never experienced that before and he says one, two, pop, pop and just jams it back in. It still hurt, even with the dude. I was drunk, so I had that going for me and that going for me, but my finger was jacked. It was jacked for a while, it was swollen, I mean, they put the splint on it and it was just like left hand was out of commission for a little while.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you really sad about that. Come on, did you have to learn to use the right?

Speaker 1:

No, oh well, they do say if you do, if you're righty you do, it lefty feels like someone else is doing it.

Speaker 2:

It's like oh stranger, yeah Right.

Speaker 3:

It was opium, aunties, to say, sit on your, sit on your hand and numb it. But then I'd be like, but it's a manhands opium.

Speaker 2:

I'm figuring out polish on his mark. Tried One more. Let's do one more. Let me see.

Speaker 1:

I had one right here. The righteous brothers came out with two albums that year, some blue eyed soul and back to back. Oh yeah, bird, back rack. What's new pussycat?

Speaker 4:

Oh I had that.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's move into movies. We have singles, we want to do singles. We're already at an hour and a half Good ones. All right, let's break out some singles, no problem.

Speaker 2:

This diamond ring. Gary Lewis and the playboys, written by Al Cooper. Written by Al Cooper. Listen to the instrumentation on it. It's really interesting. The righteous brothers unshamed melody it's a biggie.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Then ghost Yep, I didn't say, I don't have singles.

Speaker 3:

Dylan like a rolling stone from highway 51.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Woolly bullies, sand the sham and the farrows the rolling stones get off my cloud satisfaction.

Speaker 1:

Elvis Presley crying in the chapel.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yep, yep, help me round about the Beach Boys.

Speaker 1:

Yep, that's. I was just looking at that one Shirley Bassey gold finger. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Let's hang on the four seasons. Next time you hear that, listen to the guitar in the beginning. It's all distorted. It's weird, Doesn't make. Doesn't make sense for them.

Speaker 1:

The Beach Boys, California girls. Great song yeah.

Speaker 2:

Blue. Mark sitting this one out.

Speaker 3:

I got you by James Brown and the the fabulous flame by James Brown oh okay, I got a few famous flames.

Speaker 1:

Go ahead, Mark.

Speaker 3:

Help me run the Beach Boys.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, tom Jones. It's not unusual Well to be loved by anyone.

Speaker 2:

And I sound just like him.

Speaker 1:

I did good, just that.

Speaker 2:

That was good my mom, would have thrown her panties at you. Hey, now, yeah, call me. Oh, my Jane, the Americans.

Speaker 1:

Jane the Americans Yep, yep. Well, lou, I mean.

Speaker 3:

Mark, I just had it here, come back to me. Oh, do you believe in magic?

Speaker 1:

Are the animals we gotta get out of this place.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, in the midnight hour, wilson picket A song you're not allowed to cover anymore, though. Tom Jones, what's new pussycat?

Speaker 4:

What, what, what what.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, shotgun Like shotgun that one Junior Parker, just a shotgun by shotgun. I guess it's Junior. It might be just another song Junior Walker and the All.

Speaker 2:

Stars Junior Walker yeah, junior Parker, you were on my mind by we five, you were on my mind.

Speaker 1:

Herb Albert Taste of honey. Wasn't that the dating game song? It was one of those, yeah.

Speaker 2:

The dating game. Yeah, was that the one.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's right, that's what I was talking about.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what it's called Making whoopee. Mitch Miller did not like it.

Speaker 3:

He was offended. Fuck, Mitch Miller.

Speaker 2:

He hated the Beatles.

Speaker 3:

Hush, hush, sweet Charlotte from Patty Page Eerie movie Eerie.

Speaker 2:

The movie came out the year before Hush, hush, sweet Charlotte. How about Down in the Boondocks by Billy Joel, royal Down in the Boondocks, the animals.

Speaker 1:

It's my life.

Speaker 3:

I'm telling you now by Freddie and the Dreamers.

Speaker 2:

All right, great Luke and arrow possibly go now by the Moody Blues with Denny Lane, with Denny Lane of wings on lead vocal.

Speaker 1:

Ah then, g L O R I A Gloria. Yeah, except it wasn't that version, but that's what I used.

Speaker 3:

Tired of waiting for you by the kinks.

Speaker 2:

They were great. You turn me on Ian Whitcomb as a weird song that was on the Spotify 1965 list. It's freaking weird, I can't even hum it out. I'm just when I said this this was pretty racy for 1965. You turn me on.

Speaker 1:

Now I know why the animals were on Ed Sullivan so long, because here they are so many times the animals. Please don't let me be misunderstood. When are they on Ed Sullivan? They?

Speaker 2:

kept popping out these hits hey man, I can't help myself four times.

Speaker 3:

Nowhere to run by Martha and the Vendels.

Speaker 1:

Running out here Roy Orbison, right away. Hmm.

Speaker 2:

Mrs Brown, Herman's Hermits. There are a lot of hits out here. I mean Freddie and the Dreamers.

Speaker 3:

Mark the last time by the wrong stones.

Speaker 1:

A mother in the Vandellas no way to run infamously played in what movie? From 1979. I think it was. Was that again no way to run.

Speaker 3:

I just said that.

Speaker 1:

Oh, did you.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you're not listening to me. Listen to me.

Speaker 1:

Well, you're telling some fables tonight. I should start calling you Esop. There's two things.

Speaker 3:

Tell a lot of fables tonight. This doesn't always. It is this. You got to listen.

Speaker 1:

There was no way it was. That infamously played in is a great scene in a movie that came out in 79 movie the Warriors. Thank you, Lou.

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, right.

Speaker 2:

All right, I got one. Oh yeah, come on, cut the country charts, make the world go away. Eddie Arnold, who from the country charts.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, when it was real country.

Speaker 2:

Yes, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Cores like country.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, cores like country, was that stuff called a golf in Western?

Speaker 3:

Well, I was joking with my son. We were in shot right one day. We were in shot right one day and they were playing this new country song and I said to my son I said I hate this new country. All they sing about is Cores like and literally the guy goes I just want to sit on the beach and have a Cores like and I'm like your name dropping. Wow, I want to hear you drinking whiskey because you lost your woman and you're getting really, you know like. It's like really you know not.

Speaker 2:

Most country artists. You know that music was landlocked. You didn't sit on a beach. So that's the golf in Western stuff.

Speaker 3:

That's the beach country, but the real country is kind of sad.

Speaker 1:

All right, gentlemen, let's get into movies. Yeah yeah, I'm going to start off with a thunderball. 1965 James Barn heads to the Bahamas to recover two nuclear warheads stolen by Specter Phil Specter.

Speaker 3:

Did he have the big Afro on the movie?

Speaker 4:

All right, Mark, give me a little bit for a few dollars more.

Speaker 1:

Clint Eastwood yeah the second of those. It's actually. That was the, that was like the third, it was like the trilogy. You had the good, the bad, the ugly, fistful of dollars in a few dollars more. Same character, the man with no name, or as he was referred to by the ugly, played by who? I wallock.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, okay, blondie and Blondie.

Speaker 3:

Which one of those movies was the one where they hang him and but he isn't die? Which one is that? Oh, no, that's, that's another whole movie that's hanging.

Speaker 1:

Oh, no, no, no, that was the good, the bad, the ugly.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no no. They would go around, they would go around and they would like Clint Eastwood would turn him in and they would collect the bounty where he was actually hung by a bunch of people and they thought he was dead and they went by Hang him high, hang him high and.

Speaker 4:

Alan Hill, the skipper from.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, hang him high. Yeah, mark, did you give me a movie?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that was for a few more dollars.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, yeah For a film.

Speaker 2:

Lou Faster, pussycat kill, kill. Yeah, buddy, I want to see that. Yeah, did you have? You seen it? I think I have. Yeah, it's an exploitation film about three go-go dancers that go into kidnapping.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, but they're a total grind house Total.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I looked at some of the pictures. They were hot yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, total grind house.

Speaker 4:

There was a band, the, band name Faster pussycat, faster pussycat yeah.

Speaker 3:

They're no for hot.

Speaker 2:

Slutty, slutty white girls. No, they were Asian girls. What do you go oh?

Speaker 1:

okay, there's always slutty white girls in there. What do you call them? Come kind.

Speaker 2:

Okay, they're remaking it. Norman Reedus of the walking dead is producing a remake of faster pussycat Kill, kill.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they're never good. I'm going to see they're probably gender swapping to make them men. Maybe, it was what was known.

Speaker 2:

I mean gay men, there you go.

Speaker 3:

Trans Trans men. I'll go for the role.

Speaker 2:

The original one was known for their provocative gender roles in 65. So the girls were out there being bad and they were killing. I like it. I like it a lot.

Speaker 1:

One of the greatest war movies of all time, one of the greatest World War two movies of all time the battle of the both. Yeah, andrey Fonda, robert Shaw, robert Ryan, yeah, oh yeah, dana Andrews.

Speaker 3:

Great movie. I was talking with Perry one day. We were talking about World War two movies. You had the really good ones. Then you had the ones that were B movie movie level and they just weren't that good. And when you watch one of those you get you just get taken down like oh, this sucks so many corny bad. You know. Yeah, that was a good one that was a good one.

Speaker 1:

Battle of the Bulge yeah.

Speaker 2:

Well, those mid 60s ones were good midway.

Speaker 1:

This was so before the agenda driven movies of today, though.

Speaker 4:

And they just wanted to entertain you.

Speaker 1:

That's it, and make money. What do you got, luke?

Speaker 2:

The Adventures of the Smurfs, 1965.

Speaker 4:

1965. It's a Bel the.

Speaker 3:

Smurf movies in 1965. It's the first animated.

Speaker 2:

It's a compilation of animated Smurf cartoons from Belgium. It was originally a Belgium cartoon. I saw that.

Speaker 3:

I love that. You gotta be kidding me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I thought that was in the 70s, the 80s, I thought it was the 80s.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, wow, yeah, I'm like okay.

Speaker 1:

Dr Shavago. Oh, my Sharif, that was my next pick. Well, you got me earlier on one of those songs.

Speaker 3:

That was crazy Shavago Yep Rod Steiger.

Speaker 2:

Rod Steiger. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Those magnificent men in their flying machines. Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

They wanted to break a record of something right, so it wasn't one of those things.

Speaker 3:

I think yeah, yeah. I barely remember it, but I watched it as a kid.

Speaker 1:

Luke.

Speaker 2:

The Hills are Alive. Sound of music.

Speaker 1:

Sound of music. It was a big fucking movie dude. The Von Trap family.

Speaker 2:

I was the Verklempf family Jesus.

Speaker 1:

The spy who came in from the cold, Richard Burton. Oh yeah yeah. Instead of coming in from the Cold War, British agent Alec Lamees chooses to face another mission. Yep, Mark.

Speaker 3:

And I got to say something. These movies in 65, and I'm going over them, I was like in 74, 75. I was watching daytime TV after school. They were showing a lot of these movies. We had W ABC John Sevin.

Speaker 1:

New York would have the 430 movie 430 movie, the one you HF.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah. Flight of the Phoenix, one of my favorite movies. Ah, it's about the plane crashes in the Sahara Desert. And they remade it in the 90s or 2000s.

Speaker 1:

They did. I remember the original.

Speaker 3:

I just I wow Some of these movies would just pop up and it was a character movie because you got to see it now and it was like I don't know. I don't know, but I don't know. The guy's is really bad.

Speaker 2:

He could like start knocking people off and there's nothing they can do about it. Can't run away, you know Lou.

Speaker 1:

The greatest story ever told who's in it?

Speaker 3:

Max one see now. Max one See now Watch that.

Speaker 2:

He played Jesus. We won't go there.

Speaker 3:

What's Jesus's middle name? What's Jesus's middle initial? We're going to have to go there.

Speaker 1:

I don't know, it's just I don't know. I don't know, it's just a popsicle stick I'm nailed right in.

Speaker 2:

My father used to see. Still to this day says Jesus, mary and Joseph, yeah, yeah, the three names, the whole family.

Speaker 3:

Oh, what about? What about Jesus, Marimba? What does that mean I don't know? I was downtown when I first moved to Pearl River town. I was in a pub. I said I want to have a traditional, you know, because they have a good Irish pub. And there was a guy yelling as kids use the funniest thing.

Speaker 1:

I was in Jesus, Mary and Joseph, you little feckers, dr Tara's house of horrors with Christopher Lee, peter Cushing, the greatest horror duo ever. Right, christopher Lee I mentioned last week, the guy is a fucking animal, you just don't know it. He's so prim and proper. The dude did some crazy shit.

Speaker 3:

Read his life story. Yeah, oh man.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and he always the greatest Dracula ever. Peter Cushing, the greatest van Helsing ever, right yeah. Yeah, horrors aboard a British train, mysterious fortune teller, dr Shrek, uses tarot cards to read the futures of five fellow passengers. That has to be a hammer film.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Because that's they were in every, almost every hammer film.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that was so cool, by the way, the way Britain would did all their own monster movies. They did Frankenstein and Hammer films with it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah great, and those women the way you ever see the women of hammer, If you okay okay, gentlemen gentlemen and women, if you really want to see, I'm just gonna say this like a real women what's the real woman? What is that supposed to mean? You know what that means? Go Google women of hammer films, Holy shit.

Speaker 3:

They come out of the bar and they say walk around and they say I got to take a slash and then we'll go. Oh God, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Your British accent sucks though, Max. Finally, someone has to tell you.

Speaker 3:

Every episode. No part of the joy of it is it sucks At least I go.

Speaker 1:

It's so bad, it's good.

Speaker 3:

It's good. If you take out the T's you have a chance like it's a little or you know, okay, but yeah, the women of hammer, oh, lee smokes Tough women.

Speaker 1:

Oh, in every hammer film, guaranteed you get breastes, guaranteed and they're all natural to all. Those are some crazy beautiful women, yeah, and for British women, they all had good teeth.

Speaker 3:

There was one where they were hanging somebody and it was supposed to be a key came back as a vampire, but they show it's the 1500s and they're hanging.

Speaker 4:

Vampire.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. And then the woman's hanging out the window. She's got perfect teeth and she's like, yeah, I'm like yeah, I think it was vampire circus and the camera was shaky. It was ahead of its time, like today, when you try to do reality, you shake the camera and I was like whoa vampire circus right off the bat.

Speaker 1:

The first five 10 minutes breasts.

Speaker 2:

I've never seen that many of those hammer movies.

Speaker 4:

Oh, you gotta see the beginning.

Speaker 2:

You know, as a kid I remember seeing them with the monster shows. You know, your, your blopper, I'm playing. He was always on the TV. I never sat them that. I read that as an older person and so it went from beginning and. But I'm noticing, because of the Halloween season, a lot of them are on some of the streaming networks.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, you gotta just sit down. Great Saturday afternoon watches. Yeah yeah, we used to see them in the movies at Kincaid's theater. It was like Saturday matinee. Sometimes they do double features. It was great back in the day. But moving on, probably one of my favorite movies of all time. No, no lie, I would watch this and you don't see it on anymore. Wow, you don't see anything on anymore because everything's on streaming, but the great race.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's before. Oh yeah, the great.

Speaker 4:

Leslie Tony Curtis.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, tony Curtis, the great man, natalie Wood, jack Lemon, peter Falk. I mean, jack Lemon and Peter Falk were the bad guys. Peter Falk was his little henchman, jack Lemon's little henchman. I think, yeah, great movie.

Speaker 3:

All right, Mark Die monster die with Boris Karloff. Ah, he was really just he. I think he was on drugs when he did that one right, Wasn't he?

Speaker 2:

morphine. He was, he, just, it was he was tell.

Speaker 3:

You could tell, like you could just see he showed up ago. Where's my lines?

Speaker 2:

But at least I'm still performing.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, I saw that the other day on Sven Gully. Ah, there you go, and.

Speaker 2:

Gully Lou. Oh yes, Frankenstein conquers the world.

Speaker 1:

That's.

Speaker 2:

Japanese. That's a Japanese horror movie.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and the gen that that is the worst looking Frankenstein maybe ever, is it really? Yeah, I think it's a giant. He's like a giant Frankenstein.

Speaker 2:

I saw the movie post he looked. It looks like he's about six stories tall.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's, it's the worst fucking Frankenstein. They just took Godzilla and put him in a fucking Frankenstein.

Speaker 3:

Like when they did King Kong, they couldn't do that he was to watch all these fucking movies.

Speaker 1:

My brother, colin, had. I have no idea where he was, but we would watch all these fucking horror movies together. Oh yeah, it was horrible.

Speaker 2:

Was he pain like it was a really bad green color.

Speaker 1:

Ah yeah, the makeup and the whole thing. I even think it probably was a mask, like a rubber, fucking massive. They just kind of stuck to his face and glue that you want to get dealt that. So they had tiny little YouTube, youtube that the trailer for Frankenstein, the sons of Katie elder, yeah. Oh yeah, john Wayne Dean Martin.

Speaker 2:

John Wayne Dean Martin.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Dean Martin did a couple of good movies.

Speaker 3:

Godzilla invasion of the astro monster. Yes, I was a fan of Godzilla. I watched him all the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, astro monster. Which one was that had?

Speaker 3:

wings and it looked like a loser, just like all the others.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't monster, zero, right? No, we had a drink, that's like the ultimate villain.

Speaker 3:

That's it out of me. When I was five years old, it was so great how they did that.

Speaker 1:

Monster zero was. Yeah, that was fantastic. Yeah, it was fantastic. I mean it's for special effects back then. Right, we had a dragon was fucking great yeah.

Speaker 2:

Lou beach blanket bingo. Like it being good. I love those movies. Yeah, I like Eric von zipper, but he was a, he was a biker gang leader, yep.

Speaker 1:

That's right, that's right. She's my idol. I'm gonna one up you on this one. Yeah, stuff a wild bikini.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, man, same cast. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Mark, wow, bikini. I can't, because he's my idol and I know he's fucking movies you're bringing up.

Speaker 3:

Holy shit yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'll show you how to stuff a wild bikini.

Speaker 1:

I've seen him. It's an invisible bikini they create or it's crazy, it's great.

Speaker 3:

I'm getting the giggles.

Speaker 1:

I can't do this you. I'll tell you I loved all these fucking. I'm tired. Maybe we should do a movie podcast on the side sometime. We should. We're gonna end up filling up our weeks. We're pretty tough to get to tie Lou down and nail him down over the next month and a half. Oh man.

Speaker 2:

You know I didn't fill market on my ruling schedule.

Speaker 3:

Oh, maybe we can have a vacation. Can I have a vacation?

Speaker 1:

I said, if you ever want, I can do like music news, I can do it by myself.

Speaker 3:

You know what? But thing, lou, if you're busy, I'd be very long though, joy to guy the joy of two guys that came out wrong.

Speaker 2:

Haven't you know like say that I'm not gonna watch, that I'm not gonna watch, that I'm not gonna?

Speaker 4:

watch that.

Speaker 2:

That was a movie from 1960.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay, speaking of, let's get back to the French movie.

Speaker 1:

Let's get back to the movies. Mark, what did you say?

Speaker 3:

Uh well, you said the album, but the movie what's new pussycat with with?

Speaker 2:

Allen Lou. Let's see moratory with Marlon Brando and Yule Brenner World War II type movie, critically so very commercial flop. There was a string of Brando's flops in the 60s leading up to the Godfather comeback. But yeah it's not a bad movie, but it just didn't get in.

Speaker 1:

The Cincinnati kids started Steve McQueen and the ultra hot and Margaret and Tuesday Well, and Edwin G Robinson, you see you see, and I'm gonna play some poker you see, is that related to? Before he had the golf ball of a nose from being a boo sound. Didn't you always have that? I don't think he had it like he did in the streets of San Jose. That bulbous thing started looking like WC fields after a while.

Speaker 2:

I'm here, hey, buddy, buddy boy oh my nose is still good, it's okay.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

No was that related to the, the movie with Paul Newman and Jackie Gleason?

Speaker 1:

Oh no, that's the hustle of the hustler. Probably of the same kind of plotline. Yeah gambling High stakes, it's poker and the Cincinnati kid hustlers.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm out, I'm out, I have no more movies. So you guys go back and forth.

Speaker 1:

G of the dead. Orgy or driving to a cemetery looking for inspiration for a horror story, encounters the dancing dead Orgy orgy of the day 2.9 stars, point nine stars. What else you got? You got anything else I?

Speaker 2:

got the face of Foo Manchu. Christopher Lee, yes.

Speaker 1:

Moving. That will never show again. Well, we can find them on streaming, because he's playing a Chinaman. Yep, that's right. Planet of the vampires, yeah, after landing on a mysterious planet, a team of astronauts begin to turn on each other, swayed by the uncertainty, influence of the planet and its strange inhabitants. Yeah, what?

Speaker 2:

do you get?

Speaker 1:

My Lou.

Speaker 2:

Clarence the cross-eyed lion. Oh, I saw that. Remember that.

Speaker 1:

I do remember that that was great.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, poor lion. Yeah, he showed the double vision he had. Yeah, to the eyes of a lion Major.

Speaker 1:

Dundee In 1864, a union officer decides to illegally cross the border and destroy the Apache and Redskins using the mixed army of union troops, confederate POWs, civilian mercenaries and scouts. It was Charlton, that's it. That was with Charlton. Yeah, and the United States was the most beautiful country in the world, it was Charlton. Killing. All that was with Charlton. Yeah yeah, major Dundee, dundee Couldn't make that movie today, couldn't want to make that movie today. That's a good movie.

Speaker 3:

That's a good movie hey talking about this is not 65, but this is a fucked up movie. Jersey Dementia 13. No, I never saw that. Yeah, well, it's. It's one of what's his name's first movie. He's the director Francis for Coppola, you've been.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, I'm tired. There's a Facebook group called Grindhouse, Sleaze and Exploitation movies. These people come up with the most bizarre, and I actually watched some of these. I'm like these people are fucking crazy.

Speaker 3:

They love these Dementia movies? How about these movies? I think I don't know if it's France or Russia. They're from where they say people actually die in them, Like oh, the Serbian film is.

Speaker 1:

The Serbian film is a musical film. Probably. It's hard to find. It's not on streaming. The Serbian, a Serbian film is. Is is kind of in that world known as the movie. It is twisted. I just saw the plot and I kind of went read a little more. It is an extremely twisted movie, like disturbing movie.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

A Serbian film. Now you know there's some lunatic out there listening right now. Yeah, but tomorrow and next week, that's going to say huh they go to the dog rabbit Watch that.

Speaker 3:

Good luck finding it, you can find other things. I'm listening to Andy Summers solo album.

Speaker 1:

I mean a bowl of ice cream.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, this one has to do with pornography and murder, and it's insane, lou this one wouldn't be made either today, because it was casting Egyptian as a Mongolian gangist con with Omar Sharif.

Speaker 1:

Oh, the best gangist con is with John Wayne. Played him, though.

Speaker 2:

That's the greatest gangist con ever. We're going to go across the Mongolian steps.

Speaker 4:

Oh go, Nothing Go.

Speaker 2:

That's what was the name of that movie. It's a cool gangist con.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, nothing.

Speaker 3:

Angus kind is the greatest ever. Nothing Be Ted. Would you want Robinson and the 10 commandments?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm already. Yeah, I'm already, I got these roles.

Speaker 3:

You say there's a car's back.

Speaker 2:

That's the car's an ancient, he's always chewing, chewing.

Speaker 1:

Fuck you.

Speaker 4:

When I went.

Speaker 1:

Oh, why not the nose? Ten little Indians I remember that movie. Well, ten people are invited to a luxury mountaintop mansion only to find out, find that an unseen person is killing them one by one. Could one of them be the killer? And the way it was filmed and the way it was put together is like this there was they. It was like a great, great mystery. They can't like movies like this anymore.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was kind of the way it was edited. It was edited.

Speaker 4:

It was fucking really good.

Speaker 2:

Lou the sandpiper with Elizabeth Taylor. Oh, yeah, yeah, so playing with sandpebbles, that's right Steve.

Speaker 1:

McQueen, that's right, that wasn't 65.

Speaker 2:

She was pretty edgy. She was homeschooling a child. She's kind of an unconventional free-spirited woman, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Mark did a movie.

Speaker 1:

I'm out Village of the Giants. Deliquent teenagers ingest a substance and grow 30 feet tall Dead, proceed to take over a small. I saw this movie. It was on creature double feature. Actually it was fucking horrible, but it's so bad it's good, that's all it matters. So bad it's not. Delinquent teenage Giants Somebody was smoking weed saying this would be a good fucking movie, man.

Speaker 2:

I got the financing for it.

Speaker 1:

I got it. I got it, just figure out the special effects.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you know what, as you guys are bringing up these movies I'm also thinking 65, let in the 66, they were starting to get towards the rating system and I think some of these movies pushed it to that, to the rating system, oh you got people that would take their kids to the movies.

Speaker 1:

And they still made these grindhouse movies in the 70s. They still made them, the exploitation, the black exploitation films. Yeah, you know Cleopatra Jones and all those movies Black Tola, mike, blackula, black.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, blackula was shown in New York. It wasn't really yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Lou, you got any more movies. Let's see Von Ryan's Express.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm looking right at it Von Ryan's Express.

Speaker 1:

The, the movie, the movie that I think this is like a very, very cult following that just got ruined because, well, doctor who and the Daleks, right, doctor who Movie, yeah, in 65, iconic, iconic Doctor who that last, the last, last series that they did. They changed Doctor who into a girl, into a woman and they went back and you're sign for it. And they went back and they erased all the history and Doctor who started as a little black child. The BBC absolutely destroyed, like Doctor who over in the UK is like I don't know what it is compared to being here. Oh, it's. It's used to watch my brother, my brother, mark, and I used to watch it on PBS. Doctor who, yes, doctor who, they absolutely woke it to death. I don't think it said they just absolutely destroyed.

Speaker 1:

I still watch Doctor who the old ones, I watched it. You watched the latest one with what's her name is the Doctor.

Speaker 3:

Yeah yeah. Doctor who is not. Doctor who is not neither a man or a woman.

Speaker 1:

That's always been a man. That's all there is to it. Oh, okay, it's always been a man. Okay, tough guy, always been a man.

Speaker 3:

Doctor who's a man, always been a man. I gotta say Peter Capaldi was much better than I thought he would be. He was really good.

Speaker 1:

Ah, let's see.

Speaker 2:

Let's do a couple of Doctor who originally.

Speaker 3:

Oh, it was, it was it. They changed roles too, like just it's it Well, the high Doctor who is like an alien being. So Doctor who, is the original actor. He keeps coming back as a new person, so that's how they get new actors. Yeah, peter Cushing played him in this movie though. Really.

Speaker 1:

Cushing played Doctor who in the movie. Yeah yeah, let's see a few more movies, perry Perry just cursed of the fly. The third We've got to walk on the big Mac to eat right now. God's oh he. I'll tell you what, man. It's not bad, it's not bad. He commented that this is a great entertainment. He's fascinated with that.

Speaker 3:

We were talking about on the phone the science of what you did. He was like the science of it.

Speaker 1:

I, literally, I really had to figure it out Like, alright, how am I going to do this? And when I ate the buns by themselves off the big Mac, they, like I said, they're their own entity. Like you don't realize how bad those buns aren't even by itself.

Speaker 3:

He said you, you said that it wasn't like real bread.

Speaker 1:

It's not, it's not, it's got a thicker consistency to it. This is why it lasts, that's why, it doesn't turn green, it doesn't get moldy. It's just hard to eat it by itself. It's just weird. It has a weird texture to it. But that's leading up the Luther. The Luther this month, guys, the Luther I never left.

Speaker 3:

I never left so hard as the last time you put last year I ate to a big bubble.

Speaker 1:

You know my buddy, big Bob is going to be a commentary. He's going to do the commentary again. Everyone loved big Bob and the Luther is. It's the king of sandwiches, Absolutely King of of Thanksgiving sandwiches. Off and imitated, never duplicated.

Speaker 2:

He's taking a green bean casserole in there as it's. I have in the bag, do you? Have, oh, oh whatever I have, I mean it all goes into a sandwich.

Speaker 1:

You know what I did one year? I called it the Luther 2.0. I took stuffing because I make the greatest stuffing, right. I'll give you my recipe off the air it's the greatest stuffing recipe ever, right. And I put them. I pressed a waffle, a stuffing waffle, I did two of them and I built the Luther in between the stuffing waffles. So I'm getting a.

Speaker 3:

I'm getting an attack right now.

Speaker 1:

And I use the gelled gravy with mayo and crabby.

Speaker 2:

Oh it's, you took a waffle. I actual waffle. I got a waffle.

Speaker 1:

No, I took a waffle maker Right.

Speaker 2:

I press like a waffle Press the stuffing into it.

Speaker 1:

And I put the stuffing and I pressed it, yeah, and I had to Thick, that's actually pretty cool, but you use white bread. Oh yeah. I use potato bread actually.

Speaker 2:

Well, doesn't the bread just disappear?

Speaker 1:

It doesn't just it's well, this has been. This has been finely craft. Yeah, I understand, potato bread is definitely a technique to eating it to with minimum spillage, and the thing is literally it's like six, seven inches tall, hi, it's it's.

Speaker 3:

when I saw you eating it, I said your whole desk is going to be a mess, and it wasn't.

Speaker 1:

I was like whoa, I've mastered the Luther. I've mastered the Luther. This is the time here. I stopped getting people on Facebook saying is the Luther coming? Is the Luther coming?

Speaker 3:

You could eat a Luther on a subway coming home from work. I could see you doing it.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I mean again. I've mastered how to eat this thing.

Speaker 2:

Or I'm driving.

Speaker 1:

It's. That would be a test. I don't think I'd want to put anybody at risk for the Luther, Because if it came down to hitting somebody or dropping the Luther, well I'm getting sued.

Speaker 3:

That could be the next internet race. People eating, the Luther doing.

Speaker 1:

Right, yeah, the Ticks are crazy. Yeah, let's do the Luther while you're driving.

Speaker 2:

What if you mix a Luther with another like a burger? That's sacrilege.

Speaker 1:

Fucking penalty box. You even penalty box. Are you kidding me? What Put a burger in the Luther? It is neat with Turkey. I might give him a double minor for that he might get a double minor.

Speaker 3:

You're going to get competition.

Speaker 1:

He's going to do it oh it's good If he does that, he'll get a one show suspension.

Speaker 3:

He's sleeping.

Speaker 1:

He'll get a one show suspension. I think he pissed him off.

Speaker 3:

Oh, oh. That's the opening Italian. Look who pissed who off.

Speaker 1:

He's a little bit with a Luther.

Speaker 3:

That's that he looks like the Godfather right now.

Speaker 1:

Is Lou withholding on us? Is he withholding right now? Is he withholding? He's looking off into the distance like he doesn't hear us. Oh, he's doing it. Now what?

Speaker 3:

He'll try to get back on the computer. I'll crash.

Speaker 1:

Oh, he moved himself on the show.

Speaker 3:

We thought your computer would crash.

Speaker 1:

He just cried no, he just scrunted, it was microphone. No, let's see. Let's go back to these movies he's in.

Speaker 2:

It's entertain me, entertain me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, come on, let me see the Ipkras file. Yeah, that was a good one that was, that was with Michael Cane, michael Cain, michael Cain, that's just my Michael Cain.

Speaker 3:

I'm Michael Cain. I'm Michael Cain.

Speaker 4:

Hey, hey, I got this one.

Speaker 2:

You're terrible impersonations of Michael Cain.

Speaker 1:

He does.

Speaker 4:

Jesus.

Speaker 2:

Just just a little bit. I love just a little bit, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

That's much better than what Mark did.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm not, I do a better OK.

Speaker 1:

Dr Goldfoot in the bikini machine.

Speaker 4:

How are you getting this?

Speaker 1:

from Vincent Price, frankie Avalon oh yeah, what the hell yeah the other side of that movie.

Speaker 2:

So that's like Beach Bank of Beach Blanket Bingo meets Dr Fibes.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, kind of like that. I prefer Beach Bank at Bingo, beach Bank at Bingo.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I got movies. Give me a movie Cat Blue with Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin. The hard drinking, hard drinking, lee Marvin, yeah.

Speaker 1:

What do you got, Mark?

Speaker 3:

Family. I don't have anything. I'm done.

Speaker 1:

The Devil's Mistress. In the Old West, a female vampire praise on unsuspecting cowboys.

Speaker 2:

That's kind of cool. I joined yeah.

Speaker 1:

Die, die, my darling Right. It's supposed to be like fast to kill.

Speaker 3:

So there's all these dying movies. Die die push pussycat, die die die die monster, all the bloody pit of horror. Yeah, drive in movie.

Speaker 1:

A photographer and models go to an abandoned castle to shoot some sexy covers for horror novels. I'd be nice to them. The castle is inhabited by a lunatic who believes himself to be the reincarnated spirit of a 17th century execution. Nice, yeah, let's apply.

Speaker 2:

And by thinking these things, by thinking an executioner as a character.

Speaker 3:

They don't have to worry about vampire royalties.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's right, that's right.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to the budget A couple of I'm out. You're exhausted my list, all right.

Speaker 1:

Let me just bring up one more. I know it's in a libido, oh. A young man visits his ancestral home, accompanied by his guardian and their respective wives, where he is plagued by the memories and influence of his murderous, psychosexual father, whoa Psychosexual father 1965. They were right on the borderline of grind house back then.

Speaker 2:

Right, mike, my vision of astral monster Right, let me see.

Speaker 1:

Ah, one more good one Frankenstein versus barricade.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the end of.

Speaker 1:

World War Two, germans transport the immortal heart of Frankenstein's monster to Japan, where it is seemingly lost in the bombing of Hiroshima. Yes, later A wild boy is found, born from the immortal horse. This is more fun than music.

Speaker 2:

Wait so, scott, the heart, the heart wasn't transplanted into the body of your boy, it just mutated.

Speaker 3:

It's mutated.

Speaker 2:

Yes, so the heart of one way grab little arms we like from atomic, just the way Godzilla was created.

Speaker 3:

Atomic energy and all that stuff, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's see. Uh, I'm going to do the top 10 this week in 1965. I can't believe I found this. By the way, this shit gets hard to find sometimes. A number 10 this week in 1965. I'm serious, we should think about a movie, uh, kind of Side job, side podcast, you never know, right.

Speaker 2:

It would be all about the movies I've never seen. I'll just sit here like an idiot.

Speaker 3:

That's because you don't want to research. I know I'll watch them.

Speaker 2:

I'll watch them.

Speaker 1:

Number 10 this week in 1965. One, two, three by Len Barry. One, two, three. Number nine this might be one of the greatest videos ever made because of one girl. Okay, If you've never seen it, you have to see. Hang on Sloopie by the McCoys. You have to see the video. This girl is one of the most naturally gifted girls I've ever seen in a video and this is from 65. Like this is. I don't know what happened between then and now, but you just don't see this. I don't see this type of girl anymore. I don't know what it is Now. You got to send this.

Speaker 3:

Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

Smoke. And when you see the video, healthy, oh and she's good. She's just like a perfect 10, almost. Yeah, number eight this week in 1960. Remember, hang on, sloopie. Watch the video, You'll know exactly what I mean. When you see, as soon as the girl enters the frame, you can't take your eyes off her. I number eight this week in 1965, positively fourth street by Bob Dylan. Number seven this week in 1965, you're the one by the Vogue's. Number six this week in 1945 Roy head in the trails singing treat her right. Number five this week in 1965. Everybody loves a clown. Gary Lewis and the playboys yeah, they had a lot of hits here. Yeah, number four this week in 1965. Keep on dancing. By the Gentries.

Speaker 2:

I can't find the video. The girl was called Lisa Leonard Dalton.

Speaker 3:

She was a sleepy girl, yeah there's a reason I came up with something deconstructing a myth the sleepy girl yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'm telling you she has her own following. I was. She mesmerized me, she's blonde, yeah, but she was that girl, I did find it Mark.

Speaker 3:

Okay, oh, send it to me All right. Yeah, you know this is top 10.

Speaker 1:

We'll watch Yep Number three this week. Yeah, that's fine, she's worth it. The sleepy girl is worth it this week. If anyone was going to bump me, I'd let the sleepy girl. I'm telling you she's. She's kind of up there in my, in my iconic women, like with Carly Simons both she's pretty sleepy, so okay, that's one like I'd like to hang on to that. She's a sleepy white girl.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to use that. I'm going to use that in my daily life. There you go Way to full circle, that's one sleepy white girl and no one can say there you go Way to bring it full circle.

Speaker 1:

That's how you're supposed to finish a joke, finish a show and bring it back. Yeah, man.

Speaker 3:

All the way around who be baby and don't do a bad bridge.

Speaker 1:

That's right. This week in 1965, get off my cloud the Rolling Stones Number two this week in 1965, a lovers concerto by the toys.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, that is, that is done.

Speaker 1:

That's a classical piece, yeah, and number one this week in 1965, no surprise here Yesterday by the Beatles. Wow yeah.

Speaker 2:

That, paul, I don't get any of that John could be jealous, but he got 50% of the song yeah that's true.

Speaker 3:

I forgot about that, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So he's maybe. He was probably like, yeah, okay, great song, but I'm gonna be all right, let's get into this day of music.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, right along this day in music, this show was like a slow train leaving the station.

Speaker 3:

It was a. It was a clusterfuck at the beginning.

Speaker 1:

It started very contentious.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, you two.

Speaker 4:

You two is here.

Speaker 2:

I just told, I just got. I just told the truth and got put in a penalty box. That's what I did. Yeah, well, it's because we're draconian of you. Yes, that's right.

Speaker 3:

That's right. Just face it You're a fly in the town draconian.

Speaker 2:

That's the flee in Scott circus, that's right.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 2015, taylor Swift was being sued for $42 million for allegedly stealing the lyrics to her hit song from 2014. Shake it off, which topped the music charts around the world. R and B singer Jesse Bram claimed in legal papers Swift stole the words from the song he wrote in 2013 called haters gun hate.

Speaker 4:

I'm sure they settled that out of court Uh.

Speaker 1:

2012. On this day in 2012, metal Hammer magazine published a list of top 10 rock and heavy metal mustaches. Ever List included mustaches worn by the likes of Frank.

Speaker 4:

Zappa.

Speaker 1:

All the members of Black Sabbath except.

Speaker 3:

Tony had the best.

Speaker 1:

James Hetfield Wait, wait.

Speaker 2:

James Hetfield had a mustache. Uh, his was bullshit, that's like he had a full men's shoe yeah Like a full men's shoe.

Speaker 1:

Let me placed, uh, and let me place the Freddie Mercury was was at the top of the list. He had a tickler.

Speaker 2:

Anyway, I'm going to go back to reading about boys. Yeah, I had a lot of mustaches too.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they did, they really did.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 2008, us drummer and singer Jimmy Carl Black died. He was a member of the keys, the soul giants, the mothers of invention, and Jimmy Kyle Black and the Manish boys also worked with Jimmy Hendrix, janet Shauplin, the doors, joe Cocker, grateful debt and the turtles. Uh, this, okay, I'm just going to say this. Uh, this day in 2008, shakir Stewart shot himself dead in the bathroom of his home in Atlanta. He worked as a music promoter and was vice president of deaf jam music group. He signed Rick Ross, karina Paisen, kyra Sierra, young GZ and worked with LL cool J and NAS on the stage 2007. When is it? This year's MTV music awards, held in Munich, germany, included Avril Lavigne, who was named best solo artist in her song. Girlfriend was voted most addictive track the dick track.

Speaker 1:

Not even a read might as well Muse went to awards for best UK and Ireland act and best headliner act. Lincoln park when the award for best band of 2007,. The German band Tokyo hotel took the prize for best international act. Amy Winehouse when the artist choice prize and award chosen by her fellow musicians and the ultimate urban prize went to R and B singer Rihanna. So the Amy.

Speaker 1:

Winehouse was a pretty little thing, okay. On this day in 2004, a man who allegedly stalked Australian pop star Natalie and Bruglia was deemed too mentally ill to be interviewed by police. A 44 year old fan was arrested after turning up on the doorstep of the singer's $2 million home in Berkshire. After flying to London from Australia.

Speaker 3:

That's a good defense. I'm too crazy to be interviewed.

Speaker 1:

That's a great defense.

Speaker 3:

All that for one song.

Speaker 1:

I heard the way he tried to try to sexually salt her and when the judge asked him, how do you please? He says I pleaded sanity because I'm crazy over that girl.

Speaker 2:

But he left wack his pee pee. You got it, you got it. She must be a blind, so she cannot see what is being done. She must be a deaf, so she cannot hear what is being said.

Speaker 3:

I see, fred Glenn, it's a judge. You come into my core.

Speaker 1:

This is bad. This isn't a good one. It was a sad day on this day in 2004. 61 year old Terry Knight, former manager of Grand Funk Railroad, was murdered at his home in Colleen Texas. Lou, you talked about this. We were talking about him on Sunday night was defending his daughter during a domestic disturbance, when he was stabbed by a boyfriend.

Speaker 2:

That's right, donald.

Speaker 1:

Allen fan night began his music career by leading a Michigan band called Terry Knight in the pack. It's good A billboard top 50 hit with I who have nothing.

Speaker 2:

He also produced a band, blood Rock, that had the number 36 hit DOA. Did you ever hear that, scott? You hear that song, scott? What?

Speaker 1:

Oh, I did DOA. They played it, the most depressing song ever written.

Speaker 2:

It's a first person account of someone dying. Yeah, they're in an accident, it's, it's, it's wild, I mean it's like the most depressing song ever written, isn't it? It's creepy. It's more creepy than it's not like season in the sun, but it's very morbid. It's very metal it's very sanguine yeah it's very sanguine Really I understand.

Speaker 1:

2003, organizers of the MTV Europe Awards reunited 500 screamers, recruited 500 screamers to attend this year's event. The music lovers were selected at an audition held in Edinburgh, prince Street guns. About 1500 pop mad teenagers and adults scream themselves horse in a bid to get their hands on a ticket to the exclusive event. Yoko would have won that 20 times. She would have cleaned the crowd out. They would have just all walked on that one. But don't bother trying this kid. This kid's pretty cool. And on this day in 2000, robbie Williams offered to donate his bone marrow to save a fan's life after meeting leukemia. Leukemia sufferer Joanna McVicker. Williams asked his fans to sign up as potential donors after being told that the death of the desperate shortage of male donors Wow.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's the dude that drives fucking Robert Plumming Jimmy Page crazy yeah that's all.

Speaker 4:

That's right. That's doing neighbors, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Fighting over hedges and stuff. Right now, the heights of your hedges or something.

Speaker 1:

She's the one right, which was a song originally written by she's the one, do you?

Speaker 3:

think it's the first thing. No, no, see me in the world party oh.

Speaker 4:

I don't know.

Speaker 1:

World Party. What's in ship of fools? What's his name?

Speaker 2:

Oh.

Speaker 1:

Carl Carl.

Speaker 2:

Wallin Warren.

Speaker 1:

Wallinger, wallinger, carl Wallinger, yeah, that's, that's a great. I like that version better than Robbie Williams. It's a great song. It's like whoever sings it. It's one of those songs. It's a great song. She's the one. Yeah, but when World Party does it, that's the original. It's just so good.

Speaker 3:

So good, hey Lou, don't you think that Jimmy Page could like call Alistair Crowley to do something about?

Speaker 2:

that we talked about him. You can put like a hex on him.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I don't know why he hasn't. Yeah, this, this is relevant to that, by the way.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, this is relevant for today. On this day in 1997, scandinavian Dance Pop Act and I remember this Aqua side of the four week run at number one in the UK singles shot this shot in an American too, with Barbie girl, a massive worldwide hit. The singles sold more than eight million copies. She's a Bobby girl you couldn't go anywhere without her.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, you know what was that? Again, it's 97.

Speaker 1:

Wow, there was a year I get out of the.

Speaker 2:

Air Force. It was the 80s, oh did they use the Barbie, and was he using?

Speaker 3:

the.

Speaker 2:

Barbie movie.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I would think it was. It's got some kind of see that Barbie movie anytime soon. No, I think I think I saw it. I saw it. I bought a ticket and I sat and I watched it. You would know I'm just on this day. I sat in the theater. I wouldn't Perry.

Speaker 1:

Denovic, the AI said one song she didn't write. And Natalie Bruglia, is that what it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what I mentioned.

Speaker 1:

Is that what he commented on it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and then he's got a whopper and a big Mac to remember.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, god's, he's brought that up early. He's got tentacles out all over the web.

Speaker 1:

It does it just fingers are like giant.

Speaker 2:

It's like squeeze, I got to put fingers.

Speaker 1:

I was there in 1990. American session musician and arranger Ray Pullman died of hot failure at the age of 60. He's credited with being the first electric bass player in Los Angeles studios in the 1950s. Yeah, he was a member of the wrecking crew. Yes, not that he confused with the wrecking too.

Speaker 2:

No, he was what you know. He did it. You know he left the wrecking crew. I think he became the musical director on Shindig.

Speaker 1:

And then what's your name? Sad inform oh okay, okay. Right, she had to replace. Comes full circle. You guys got to get t shirts. Perry has to make you t shirts. The wrecking to do.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, I'm going to design it, though it work.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, do it the wrecking to. I want one of those two. Nice, some way, you have to say milk rates and turntables Promoting.

Speaker 2:

It's not my show, I just got my finger on the penalty.

Speaker 4:

I just want my name of the show on the shirt.

Speaker 1:

You want a cigar guy, but I'm dead serious. You should design a shed saying the wrecking to. That would be awesome. That would be awesome, man.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. And then people say, like, what does that mean? I'll be like Don't you know why don't you know it.

Speaker 1:

Why don't you know what it means to milk rates and turntables? What?

Speaker 2:

Yes, who the fuck are you?

Speaker 1:

Why are?

Speaker 2:

you talking to me? Oh, you know what? Yeah, you know nothing and you're from no fucking where you're nobody from nowhere, so I wanted to, I okay.

Speaker 1:

So this guy, this guy that I met at the church concert a couple weeks ago you know, church, wow, battle of Menti this guy, phillip, battle of Menti, sent me a thing on Facebook saying hey, I, you know, I met you at the concert, gonna listen to you, to your podcast. I meant to mention it with the beginning, but you guys so, phillip, I'll mention them next week. But you guys, just you ruined it for him because I was. I was going to mention his name right at the beginning of the podcast. So, phillip, it's their fault, it's the wrecking to his fault.

Speaker 3:

No, you were all. Your brain was all cornflakes tonight. You were just like popcorn cornflakes. I. You know what I gotta do I got to get on at seven. I got to get on at seven. You get on at seven, 15.

Speaker 1:

If I lose control of my show, if I lose control of my podcast, I'm going to run down at seven 15.

Speaker 3:

You got the right feed. You got this, you got that. I'll, I'll get you straight.

Speaker 1:

No, matter how many times he does it. Lou pops on like two minutes before the show comes on and I'm always, like I was just about to say to you, mark this, lou like this and all of a sudden he just pops on, like I don't know why.

Speaker 3:

So nervousness is Lou gonna make it my wife, the beautiful doctor, very she has.

Speaker 1:

she has a gate anxiety right. It's this gate coming into my community and she had a sticker on a car that didn't always read sometimes. So she would pull up and sometimes it would the gate, the arm. The gate wouldn't open, the arm wouldn't go up, it would just sit there and then someone would come up behind her and she gets all unnerved from that, right Cause now she has to back up and get closer to the, the reader, right, right, the carrier. So we got her a new one. She always, every night, she said every night I pull up to this gate, especially if it's raining, and I get I have anxiety right that the gate isn't going to open.

Speaker 3:

I hear you, I know that yeah.

Speaker 1:

So even though she gets a new sticker, brand new sticker, it's clean, cause the old one, the sun, had been a gate anxiety, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So, I.

Speaker 1:

I'm starting to get Lou anxiety. It's time to get Lou anxiety because he can pop on at two minutes too, but it doesn't mean his shit is going to work.

Speaker 2:

Does not mean his shit is going to last time because I forgot my laptop needed some adjustment, so I use my old unit, so right. Your old unit my old unit yeah.

Speaker 1:

Okay, anyway, let's move on on. On this day in 1980, bruce Springsteen scores his first number one us album with the river, featuring the number five and UK number 44 single hungry hot, his first top 10 hits.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

On the stay of 1975. Elton John started the three week run at number one in the US singles shots with one of his better songs, Island girl. I think that was a fucking hack song. Compared to what he was putting out around. I think he started kind of getting a wall. The lyrics about a prostitute in New York city and a Jamaican man who wants to take it back to Jamaica.

Speaker 3:

I don't get any of that I don't get any of that from that fucking song.

Speaker 2:

Make a jerk off into white man's world. Well, he went with a different bunch of musicians on that record too.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, rock of the Westies.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, on this day in 1970 Matthew's Southern comfort.

Speaker 1:

We're at number one on the UK singles shots with their version of the Joni Mitchell song. With stock groups, only UK number one hit on the stay of 1969. Elvis Presley went to number one in the US singles shots with my favorite Elvis Presley song of all time Burn in love. Oh, and a fine young cannibals doing great remake of it. Suspicious minds yes, they do. The fine young cannibals doing excellent, excellent.

Speaker 3:

Suspicious minds is my favorite Elvis song. Yeah, love it. I mean, it's such a great song and Dwight Yolkham did a great cover. Yeah, I mean it's a great song it's.

Speaker 1:

It's hard to not do a bad. It's just like uh, uh. What was I saying earlier that? Oh, she's the one by world party. Anybody that does it with any talent, you can't go wrong.

Speaker 1:

Yeah On this day in 1969, the Beatles scored their 13th US number one album with heavy rude yeah. A final studio recordings from the group featured two Harrison songs. Something in here comes the sun to. I mean, could not have gone out on a better fucking note than that, george. Yeah, the cover supposedly contained clues adding to the Paul is dead phenomenon.

Speaker 3:

Paul is barefoot.

Speaker 1:

The card number plate is LNF 218 F, supposedly referred to the fact that McCartney would be 28 if he was still alive. Lnw was said to stand for Linda McCartney weeps. People really dug deep on that one and the four Beatles represent the priest John Dresden, white the undertaker wring going to black suit. Well, they did. Paul barefoot and the grave digger, george, and jeans and a denim shirt.

Speaker 3:

Did you ever see the guy in the background who photo bomb? Greatest photo bomb ever? I put that on a while ago on Facebook. He got interviewed by the Guardian or something and he was talking about. He's like, I was just out there parked, you know, and there's these guys greatest photo bomb ever.

Speaker 1:

He's just like like the original photo bomb. Yeah, yeah, the guy in the background to stand in there looking like what are these freaks?

Speaker 3:

Who knows the Paul for walking barefoot in that fucking street in the city? Yeah, would you walk barefoot in Manhattan?

Speaker 1:

You know what. You know what I hate. My friend did this and I love him like a brother, but I hate when fucking people do this. They go to England and they had the hair. Take my picture on. That could be any fucking crosswalk in England.

Speaker 3:

Do you know how pissed off those locals there are of that they actually rush at?

Speaker 1:

the people, yeah, yeah I mean if you're in the middle of the taxi we got our picture taken on the crosswalk. Look at us. Look at us If I was there.

Speaker 3:

I would take a picture from the sidewalk that's just my style and say, hey, that's the crosswalk. I think people should really want to get a picture of that crosswalk.

Speaker 1:

Stop having sex right in the middle of the crosswalk. You just gave the red.

Speaker 3:

Would you?

Speaker 1:

worldwide.

Speaker 3:

You just gave the red. Yeah, those pieces of shit you can rent a big pink house and the band playing.

Speaker 2:

You can't go in the basement where they made the music with Dylan.

Speaker 3:

Yeah exactly this house yeah you can't go to the basement. It's an Airbnb. We're going to get it and we're going to break into that.

Speaker 2:

I would definitely break in.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 1968, george Harrison releases for a solo album Wonderwall Music on the Apple label. I've never heard songs, which were mostly Harrison instrumentals, featured Eric Clapton Ringo. He just couldn't shake those guys Right? He was always with, like these guys right. Let me go play the like he had his own thing. But Eric Clapton, ringo, like that little crew, yeah, all kind of hung out together, right? Eric Clapton, clouse Foreman, a cloud to Ringo, who else was it? Who was it that?

Speaker 3:

Eric Clapton yeah, doesn't matter.

Speaker 1:

Jim Gordon, jim Kelter, jim Kelter. On this day in 1966. The doors played the first night of a month long residency at the Odine Disco Tech, midtown Manhattan in New York City. Oh.

Speaker 2:

Disco Tech.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, disco Tech on this day in 1963.

Speaker 1:

The Beatles kick off a UK tour performing two shows at the Odin Cinema in Shelton, gloucestershire. The repertoire for the tour was I saw her standing there from me to you, all my loving. You really got to hold on me. Roll over Beethoven boys, till there was you. She loves you money, which I like, the incredible sleeping lizards version, twist and show supporting the Beatles, where the rhythm and blues quartet, the venom, the, the Vernon's girls, frank Berry, the Brooke brothers, peter and Jay, peter, jay and the Jaywalkers and the Crestrells, the Kestrells who, I don't know this day in 1956, elvis Presley bought a new Holly Davidson motorbike and spent the day riding around Memphis on his new bike with actress Natalie Wood.

Speaker 1:

Okay, hi, elvis, he got that word that night too.

Speaker 2:

You know that she was something else.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she was yeah, the only word that can't float on this day. In 1955. R&b group the famous flames, led by singer James Brown, cut their first demo of please, please, please at a radio station in Macon, georgia. It would lead to their singing with King Records Born on this day. Let's see, let's move down this fast. So far, nobody Rick Allen, the one on the one on drama from death leopard yeah.

Speaker 2:

Anthony Kitas you can't tell the difference of this play.

Speaker 1:

You had one up to begin with.

Speaker 4:

Okay, guy, If he had lost his arm they would have fucking dumped him about two years later, never know.

Speaker 2:

They would have been like any other, you got to keep an eye out.

Speaker 1:

He went out and loses his arm and they're like, damn, we got to keep this motherfucker, how would? That look. We kick the one on drummer out of our band, hey good.

Speaker 2:

PR. You've seen that meme. If you air drum to death leopard with two arms, you're an asshole.

Speaker 1:

That's the second time I almost spit it up.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 1962, Anthony Kitas was born 62.

Speaker 2:

Look at the street Gonna.

Speaker 1:

go to me because I get to read me, I'm gonna do some mid level rap and I'm not gonna be good, no talent. Fucking, only because they had a cool name and they kind of jumped around and he danced like a fucking white guy. Yes, you know I hate to. You know I hate. I used to like him back. He does. He started off with the fake one, like the white boy can't dance moves. Like as an adult, like he started trying to keep that whole like I haven't learned to dance yet, type thing.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, beck can eat shit, you're a one trick. You have to stick with what you do.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he's protected by the fucking, those lunatics in LA.

Speaker 4:

The scientist yeah.

Speaker 3:

He murdered somebody and they covered it up for him, are you?

Speaker 1:

serious. I didn't hear that some there's something, you can find it somewhere on the internet that he did something, that somebody died in his house or something, and that they cover it all up for her.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the. His last album was kind of like a retread it was. I heard a lot of yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Born in this day in 1957. Lyle Love it, one of the ugliest men. Evident grace that cover of an album.

Speaker 3:

What a great songwriter you know. But you're right, Ugly.

Speaker 2:

I do. Robert has a pretty nice mouth too. She does, yeah, she does.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she's not a singer, so no, she's no, Carly Simon no no, no, no no. I love it. Looks like some. He's a dude uglier than a bag of assholes. Here goes the train again. Like Joe Jackson has a face made for radio. Joe Jackson looked like duck boy. Look at the party he looks like an ashtray.

Speaker 3:

There's a lot of English men whose faces look like ashtrays.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, what does that?

Speaker 3:

mean All right. So, lou, I'm going to tell you guys there's a there's a team in the Premier League called Nottingham Forest. Their coach, steve Cooper. I will text you both get you guys a picture of their. That's an ashtray face. All right, it's a typical.

Speaker 1:

English.

Speaker 3:

Kind of a snarl on the upper lip.

Speaker 1:

Yeah and his teeth look like the cigarette butts put out in the ashtray. It's like in all different directions Each tooth has its own personality.

Speaker 3:

I love it.

Speaker 1:

I love it. Born in this day in 1951. American composer, singer, songwriter, Robert Bell. Who's Robert Bell?

Speaker 2:

There you go, there you go, lou. Thank you Then they came out with celebration.

Speaker 1:

They ruined everything. Yeah, I like too hot, though I do like that song it's 17. We feathered high school. Sweetheart, love was so brand new.

Speaker 4:

That's a good song I actually.

Speaker 1:

that's a great course but they're never like this 70s music Funky. They were so funky, oh man, yeah, but they went with the times, made a lot of money doing it.

Speaker 3:

They sold out the commercials.

Speaker 1:

Let me see, born on this day in 1947. Jim Steinman Okay, yeah, jim Steinman. Well known for his beatloaf Me work with meatloaf and it's what was his most successful shot single Me love he was on.

Speaker 2:

I will do that, but I won't do anything, his most successful shot single.

Speaker 3:

I do anything for love, but I won't do that. No, he worked with another band. Who do you work with?

Speaker 2:

Oh wait, I was a total eclipse of the heart, Yep.

Speaker 1:

Totally clips of that Good one, yeah, and air supplies making love, love out of nothing at all. Really.

Speaker 2:

Wow, I didn't know that. I didn't know it either.

Speaker 1:

Steinman died from kidney failure on April 19th 2021 at the age of 73. Who played?

Speaker 2:

drums on totally clips of the heart, he'll appear. Oh yeah, okay. Max Weinberg. Oh wow, yeah.

Speaker 3:

He was all hand fisted right.

Speaker 1:

Because loose sister dated. We all know that.

Speaker 2:

That's how you're moving on. No, max.

Speaker 1:

Weinberg stories.

Speaker 3:

I can't have a student this day in 1947.

Speaker 1:

Bob Weston we had a brief role as this guitar songwriter with Fleetwood Mac. Very brief.

Speaker 3:

Very.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, when Huh?

Speaker 2:

When was he in Fleaver Mac? It was the early 70s, the Bob Laws Cheers.

Speaker 3:

Part of the band.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, let's see.

Speaker 3:

Max Weinberg played with him too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, born in the state of 1946.

Speaker 4:

Rick Gretch, yeah Baseball, yeah Family.

Speaker 1:

Faith traffic. Gingerbake is there for a session. Musician Rob Stewart, ronnie Lane, vivian Stan Shull, buddy waters. The crickets, bgs, grandpas and Gretch died of anal failure. Oh renal.

Speaker 4:

Jesus.

Speaker 3:

Christ Scott.

Speaker 2:

Is that the end of being an asshole? I thought anal failure oh.

Speaker 1:

Jesus, oh, march 17, 1990. The age of 43. Whoa.

Speaker 2:

Anyway that's your kidneys.

Speaker 1:

Okay, we have this guy who's Barry Sadler, born in this day in 1940.

Speaker 2:

Barry Sadler, I hear the Marine song. Yeah, the Ballad of the.

Speaker 1:

Green Berets, yeah, yeah. And finally, born in this day in 1936, Andre Williams, American R&B musician. His most famous songs include the hits Jailbait, greasy chicken, cat like Jack.

Speaker 2:

See how.

Speaker 1:

I had to. I said it like a black guy, yeah. Just in case you people like is he making? Yeah, I did, I said it like, cause that's how he said it.

Speaker 3:

Jailbait was a great Aerosmith.

Speaker 1:

He co wrote Stevie Wonder's first song, thank you for loving me, oh yeah, and also was the co author of the R&B hit Shake a Tail Feather, shake a Wilder yeah, and a hit for the five duo, for the five do tones, james and Bobby. He died March 17th. Another one died on March 17, age 82. And that is it, gentlemen Jesus we almost hit three hours we almost idea.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we bought the same time we did last week. We were right on time. The movies we did a lot of movies. I think we covered as much movie time almost as we did on music. That's good, though.

Speaker 3:

People like that shit. Yeah, Barry, you know I'm going to watch some.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to watch some hammer movies from it before.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, buddy, the women of hammer. Go check them out. I have a hot time picking one.

Speaker 2:

Sluppy girl.

Speaker 1:

Sluppy girl. Nice white sloopy girl. Sloopy white girl. Sloopy white, Good one.

Speaker 2:

Sloopy white girl. I can't wait to use that yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you are one Sloopy white girl. Let me tell you how. I tell you what. Look at you.

Speaker 2:

You don't have to be on LinkedIn.

Speaker 1:

That's it.

Speaker 2:

That's right, you don't have to be an executive level. What's on that sloopy face to face here.

Speaker 1:

Well, gentlemen, as I always say, thank you for your knowledge, thank you for your time and, most of all, where's Jack? Hold on, I got to take another picture of that. Hold on. Okay, I got it, let's see, let's get that, let's see, see, got it, I got it. But most of all, as I always say, gentlemen, thank you for your friendship. I truly appreciate everything you bring to the table, everything you bring to the show.

Speaker 3:

You didn't bring much tonight I had my COVID shot so I'm kind of like good luck to you, buddy.

Speaker 1:

Better you than me.

Speaker 3:

I got microchips in my blood, you know, so that's right.

Speaker 1:

And, as I say to everybody out there, thank you for watching, thank you for listening. If you like it, share it. If you didn't, thanks for watching and listening for two hours and 50 minutes.

Speaker 3:

One set of a grateful dead show, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, without you guys, I would just be me and these two guys talking, and that would be good Cause you are the engine that runs this machine and, to quote my favorite artist, morris, he doing the show for you. The pleasure, the privilege is mine and we will be back next week with I don't know. We always decide, like on Monday.

Speaker 3:

We really want us to research, so you tell us at the last minute we had a little bit of a fight.

Speaker 1:

We'll, we'll, we'll try to get it in before Monday. Let's have a. We'll give Dave Phillips something about some offbeat fucking.

Speaker 3:

British band Bring something to the lose going to own that show yeah.

Speaker 1:

We'll do a segment on a British band and let Lou just be the professor, be the professor's corner, all right, yeah, and as it is guys, girls news watches viewers. Thank you, and we'll be back next week. Say goodbye, guys.

Speaker 2:

Bye.

Episode 123
Musical Events and Discussions in 1965
Events and Anecdotes From 1965
Key Historical Events in 1965
Discussion on Rock Legends and Their Albums
Discussion
Album Releases and Musical Discussion
Music Albums and Racial Terminology Discussion
Bar Fight in Downtown Boston
Discussion About 1960s Music and Movies
Discussion on Movies From 1965
Films and Memories From 1965
The Luther Sandwich and Movie Discussions
Topics
Discussing Podcasts, Anxiety, and Music History
Musical Discussions and Opinions
Gratitude for Audience and Future Plans