Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

Ep. 144 - Journey to 1971's Music and Movie Scene

April 26, 2024 Scott McLean Episode 144
Ep. 144 - Journey to 1971's Music and Movie Scene
Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
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Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
Ep. 144 - Journey to 1971's Music and Movie Scene
Apr 26, 2024 Episode 144
Scott McLean

Prepare to be whisked away on a sonic journey to 1971, as your guides, Scott McLean, Mark Smith, and Lou Collichio, pull back the curtain on an era bursting with musical genius and cinematic charm. We promise an auditory feast where you'll rediscover the year's hidden treasures and pay homage to the late Dickie Betts, whose guitar licks still echo through time. Whether you're a seasoned music lover or a rookie eager to expand your playlist, this episode is your ticket to understanding the depth and diversity of '71's cultural tapestry.

Settle in for a rollercoaster of emotions and trivia as we throw down in our weekly game of 45 poker—where the competition is as fierce as the debate over who should have won last week. The air is electric with stories of Fred Garvin's untapped comedic potential and the mysterious whims of social media algorithms. Our clash over classic hits will have you rooting for your favorites, from the Beatles to Dionne Warwick, while our banter – infused with a touch of disco and nostalgia – might just make you see these timeless tunes in a whole new light.

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Prepare to be whisked away on a sonic journey to 1971, as your guides, Scott McLean, Mark Smith, and Lou Collichio, pull back the curtain on an era bursting with musical genius and cinematic charm. We promise an auditory feast where you'll rediscover the year's hidden treasures and pay homage to the late Dickie Betts, whose guitar licks still echo through time. Whether you're a seasoned music lover or a rookie eager to expand your playlist, this episode is your ticket to understanding the depth and diversity of '71's cultural tapestry.

Settle in for a rollercoaster of emotions and trivia as we throw down in our weekly game of 45 poker—where the competition is as fierce as the debate over who should have won last week. The air is electric with stories of Fred Garvin's untapped comedic potential and the mysterious whims of social media algorithms. Our clash over classic hits will have you rooting for your favorites, from the Beatles to Dionne Warwick, while our banter – infused with a touch of disco and nostalgia – might just make you see these timeless tunes in a whole new light.

Speaker 1:

Well, here we are, episode 144. And on this episode we're going to pick up where we left off two weeks ago. We took last week off. We took last week off. We're going to be covering the albums and the movies of 1971. So if you weren't born, then get ready for a history lesson. If you were around back, then let's get ready to reminisce, because it's some good stuff back in 71. A lot of hidden gems there. And I'm here with the wrecking two Mark Smith and Luke. What's his name again? What's his name again? Luke Aliccio in the Music Relish Show. And we're going to get ready to talk about 71.

Speaker 2:

So yep, the KOFB Studio presents Milk Crates and Turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McClain.

Speaker 3:

Now let's talk music. Enjoy the show.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, amanda, for that wonderful introduction, as usual. As I look at how we're live streaming tonight, it looks like Facebook is fucking around again. They're fucking around again, so I'm streaming. Let me get this off the screen for the live streamers. There we go, remove that. Let me go up here and see exactly what's going on here. It's not letting me stream on one of my Facebook channels, which is not surprising, since there's an election coming up, so they start getting hyper-censorship-oriented on any little thing, but I'm streaming on my other and all the other blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Just double-check, blah, blah, just double checking, though. Uh, we're streaming live right now over YouTube X, facebook. Well, one on Facebook. I don't know what's going on. I can't figure on Instagram. I say this every week and it's like nah, you know, I don't even go on Instagram, I don't get it. I've never gotten it. It's just never made any sense to me. But it's a thing. And who am I, who am I, to question Instagram for its uselessness? Speaking of uselessness, speaking of uselessness.

Speaker 2:

You know, once you said uselessness, I knew I was first up. What's up, buddy?

Speaker 1:

how you doing scott good, good, good, you know who's not, who's not useless. Oh, here we go, you know who's not useless.

Speaker 3:

Oh, hello hooray, let the show begin.

Speaker 1:

I've been ready yeah, get off my there, you go Back in your spot. Hey guys, Somebody already commented in this Trump 2020. Trying to get me shut down, Joe Scholl.

Speaker 3:

Trying to get you riled up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't know what's going on with that.

Speaker 2:

You know what's got me riled up or sad. I played all Dickie Betts for the last week.

Speaker 3:

I know.

Speaker 2:

Cool that uh the day we didn't do a podcast, yeah yeah, yeah he was old, but still you don't like you know yeah, man, he, uh, he had a good run. Yeah, he had a fucking hell of a run.

Speaker 1:

Yep, you know you could go over his back. But I mean, if you're a music fan and you don't know dickie betts is, then you're not much of a run. Yep, you know you could go over his background. But I mean, if you're a music fan and you don't know dickie betts is, then you're not much of a music fan. Okay, so all right. So how do you break that category down? Right, so you can be a music fan, but you don't know who dickie betts is. So what's the next level to being the person who loves music but knows who Dickie Betts is?

Speaker 1:

Is that like two levels up. Do you think at this point in time?

Speaker 2:

That could be one level. Dickie Betts if you like classic rock and you like southern rock and country rock, you'll know who Dickie Betts is. You don't have to be a musician. There's some artists that you have to be a musician, like Steve Vai. Most people don't know Steve Vai unless they play guitar.

Speaker 3:

A lot of people know Ramblin' man.

Speaker 1:

Right, but do they know? Yeah, if you said, though, who's Dickie Betts? There's a level of music knowledge where someone would say Allman Brothers, and to us it's easy. Right, but there's a generation or two removed from the Allman Brothers, and so you get that next level fan that says, oh yeah, isn't that the guy that played? And then the next level above, that is what. Who did he play with?

Speaker 2:

Who Dickie Betts? Yeah, Great Southern. Great Southern that was his band, yeah, and that's where you really get in. Yeah, if someone really knows Dickie Betts, and that's what I was playing all week, that stuff.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, maybe at that point you're considered aficionado.

Speaker 2:

An aficionado. You think so?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like a sommelier Sure If considered aficionado an official you think so, yeah, like a sommelier or like a wine, if you like, when I find a parallel here we go with the fucking, the sommelier shit. I love when you speak french scott, I love when you speak french. Are you drinking a big glass of milk? There got milk.

Speaker 1:

You're a clean cut guy. I used to drink glasses of milk this big I probably still could, but I'm kind of, you know to a certain point and it's like yes you know, my blood works always like I say. It's always perfect, but the attempt fate yeah, no, this is.

Speaker 2:

This is ice coffee, this is I'm dragging from last night.

Speaker 1:

and then I swear you ever have those nights where you went to an event it might even have been a concert and you get home and you just kind of decompress a little.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

And you eventually go to bed, but then you wake up at 3 in the morning and your mind is still racing about Whatever event it was that happened to me last night after this. The fundraiser for Herd Foundation was way way. It went way beyond what we expected. It was a great turnout, oh great. We sold out and plus.

Speaker 1:

And plus Excellent Almost doubled what we thought we were going to have. It was a great time, so. A lot of energy, a lot of energy, good. But getting up at 3 in the morning and then trying to go back oh, this guy.

Speaker 3:

So reliable I have like a real moment.

Speaker 1:

And right at that moment, fucking big head Todd the Wet Sprocket comes in. I'm here, entertain me. Fucking big head Todd the wet sprocket comes in. I'm here, entertain me. Who, by the way, sent me I don't know, uh, how many text messages last week like how come you weren't on? I tried to watch last week. You didn't tell me you weren't on. Why didn't you tell me you weren't going to be on? I need to know when you're not going to be on. I look forward to it on my ride home if you're going to be on, but you have to let me. My phone blew up. Okay, superfan, okay, superfan.

Speaker 3:

I get it. Contempt for your audience.

Speaker 2:

Good, old-fashioned contempt. Wow, this is like British contempt like a Mick Jagger contempt.

Speaker 3:

MC and heckler at the same time. Jesus, you guys must be tight.

Speaker 1:

Now he wants to know if mark got a haircut like this. Is a super fan.

Speaker 2:

This is a super fan now it's my first night using earbuds, so I don't have the headphones on Lou Wow.

Speaker 3:

A lot of responsibility here, man I guess.

Speaker 1:

so you know didn't get a haircut, me and Lou.

Speaker 2:

You could have gotten a haircut. Yeah, oh, that's a whole other end scene that needed to be cut, by the way anyway. Yeah, I got tired of the headphones.

Speaker 1:

So I have my other podcast podcast, the vets connect podcast, and it's, it's, um, it's, it's a good, it's a totally different for it's it's informative for veterans and, uh, you know, in in bringing into the light non-profits that work with veterans, because I always I never even knew they existed until I got into this world with Herd Foundation, so I started the podcast just to get these organizations some exposure and it's got a little bit of legs. I get people that want to come on so I meet them first and see if they fit. They're not all nonprofits, but they're maybe a veteran who, uh, you know, has a great story or something. But there's a lot of those podcasts out there and that you get into that and you just get into the jungle of that and they're all good. Don't get me wrong.

Speaker 1:

I always say I give podcasters all the credit in the world. Um, your content is everything. But you know, some of them don't have the best or the quality. But anyway, point is I was speaking to this lady yesterday, coffee and, uh, linkedin she, she hit me up on linkedin thing, you know, hey, I think you know, uh, I'd like to be on your podcast. So I um, um, I don't know how it came up in the topic, but I said oh how LinkedIn uh is one of those places where people it's a networking, it's like all networking, you know and and you get the people that come in and like they hit her up.

Speaker 1:

It's a dating app also so that's what's so that's loose dating. I said I told her. I said I got a friend of mine as a matter of fact. Speaking of that, I said, uh, he goes on there but he doesn't date anything less than an executive. So you know and she looked at me with this disgust look of disgust, said I'm only kidding, I don't think he does it I don't Louis T Gold Digger. Executive, lou Colicchio, executive lover, exactly Executive. How do you do it, fred Garvin?

Speaker 3:

Because I'm Fred Garvin yeah.

Speaker 1:

Male prostitute.

Speaker 3:

Because I'm Fred Garvin male prostitute, I call this one the snake.

Speaker 1:

Classic.

Speaker 3:

They should have made that a movie.

Speaker 1:

It would have been a great character. It would have been a one-off. I don't think you'd be having like.

Speaker 2:

Austin Powers type, you know, but it would have been hilarious.

Speaker 3:

Yeah right, Fred Garvin goes to the camp.

Speaker 1:

He's got the back brace on.

Speaker 3:

It was the elaborate network of trusses yeah.

Speaker 1:

The elaborate network of trusses.

Speaker 3:

Just don't touch the actual rupture.

Speaker 1:

Oh, patty. So Patty Yossossi, good evening. She said hi guys, you didn't pop up on my notifications. I had to go on your facebook page to find you. Is this something new? No, one of my um facebook is is playing that we have an election coming up game, so we're going to kind of start censoring you and we don't like. We say so, they, they, they drop you down in the algorithm, they drop you down on how your stories go out and then they stop messing with your live stream. It's going to start all over again. It's going to start all over again. They haven't changed. So that's why you didn't see it, because I'm only broadcasting on one Facebook page.

Speaker 1:

And that's why I made two, by the way. That's why I made two.

Speaker 2:

Well, I'm furiously trying to text everyone. I know it's on. It's on, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so okay, we were, we left off. Oh, we got to do 45 poker. Oh, yeah, yeah, we got to do 45 poker. So who won last week, did you? Well, no one won last week. I declared myself the winner last week when we won.

Speaker 3:

I got to find my box Hold on, I declared myself the winner. It's your show. I guess you can do that. I have that privilege. It's good to be king.

Speaker 1:

There's Allison. Yeah, you didn't miss anything, allison, it's a family show. Now it's a family hour clean family show.

Speaker 1:

Yeah yeah, alright. Well, you know how the game goes. I have what's left of the box before I reshuffle. I have a couple weeks left of 45s. I pull out two, each one of us gets one, so we do two rounds of three and then mark bring comes in with the flop card, the flop 45 mark. Um, mark, has mark even won one of these yet? Yes, he has one right or two, maybe two is that giving him too much credit?

Speaker 3:

I think it was one.

Speaker 2:

I'm the James May of the show. I always come in last.

Speaker 1:

All right, Lou, let's start with you this week here we go 45 poker. Here we go. I'm reaching into the box and that is so funny that Mark and I have the same 45 carrier.

Speaker 3:

Isn't that funny.

Speaker 2:

That's hilarious yeah.

Speaker 1:

All right. Columbia Records Columbia Records, yeah, all right. Columbia records. Columbia records, okay, oh you know. Moderate hit, moderate hit. Uh had a little um, had a little bit of legs in the in, I believe, the 70s. Uh, lou is cheating. I see him writing down the answers todd come on now, who is this for Lou? This is for Lou. Yeah, so Lou gets from Columbia Records the Manhattans. Let's just kiss and say goodbye.

Speaker 3:

Moderate hit moderate hit moderate hit alright, I'm the king of the moderate R&B hit, so lately you have been yeah right here we go.

Speaker 1:

This one will go to me.

Speaker 2:

My ear is itchy all right here we go. Someone's talking about you. Uh, this isn't good, that's a generic.

Speaker 1:

It's a generic cover it's got a really it's got a weird kind of coloring to the. Yeah, I haven't looked yet. It's From.

Speaker 2:

Crepola. Records.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not. I don't know who it is, I don't know what. Let me see Stein and Vark Inc. Bull Music, inc. Bull Music. Is that something? Is that anything? Well Sounds for a ladies' man. Well, you know what. It's from 1974, motown Record Corporation, stevie Wonder. Oh, it's Stevie Wonder. Don't you worry about a thing, don't you worry about a thing, baby. All right, that's a good one, that's a good one.

Speaker 2:

You're in the lead?

Speaker 1:

Yep, yep, I would say so yeah, but here I am, here we go, here we go. Here he is baby. All yeah, but here I am, here we go, here we go. Here he is, baby, all right. Rca Records. This is an old RCA. Look at that, the rainbow thing going on, yeah, yeah. Today that would be totally misconstrued In today's world, it would be banned. Today it would not. It wouldn't be banned, it would be woke.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I don't have my coffee cup. I oh, I don't have my coffee cup. I meant to bring it home and show you.

Speaker 1:

Good, I'm glad you didn't, because you were going to irritate me with it. So good, that's right, scott, you just tipped me off. I know that.

Speaker 2:

Okay, here we go.

Speaker 1:

Let me see what is Todd's. He interrupts the game For the podcast listeners. I suppose by now you know who I'm talking to. Big Head Todd the Wet Sprocket says, as you used to say, scott, just when you think you have all the answers, I change the questions. That's right. That was a famous quote from one of the greatest wrestlers ever, rowdy Roddy Piper. That movie you don't throw rocks at someone that's got a machine gun.

Speaker 3:

No crates and turnbuckles.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there you go. All right, here you go. It's Mark. It's Mark. It's on RCA Records. John Denver, either Back Home Again or it's Up to you. I'll give you the choice.

Speaker 2:

Back Home Again.

Speaker 1:

Okay, do we even know that song?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Ain't it good to be back home again.

Speaker 1:

Sometimes it feels like Not one of his stellar.

Speaker 3:

It's no Rocky.

Speaker 1:

Mountain High. It's no, thank God, I'm a Country Boy either.

Speaker 3:

No, so I guess I'm in love. There you go.

Speaker 1:

We got a generic cover. We got a generic cover Genetic Generic Genetic cover. We got a genetic cover from let's see Arista from Arista Records. Arista Lou just continues, continues to swim in fucking R&B mediocrity Swimming in it. I love it. Dionne Warwick, I'll never fall in love again.

Speaker 2:

No no.

Speaker 1:

I'll never fall in love again. He's consistent, though, so you can have a consistent hand and you might pull it off, I think that was a pretty big hit.

Speaker 3:

That was a huge hit. That's a Burt Bacharach song. That was a big hit, According to Lou who was no?

Speaker 1:

no, it was his 45. No, I agree too it was not.

Speaker 3:

It was not. Here we go you fucking Jersey boys.

Speaker 1:

I bet you that was number one. We took a week off and what you both decided? Like, okay, let's have a truce, let's have a tr, it's always about Scott.

Speaker 2:

It's all about Scott, all right, here we go.

Speaker 1:

Uh-oh, oh, okay, rso Records. Rso Records.

Speaker 2:

Asshole Records yeah.

Speaker 1:

Asshole Records. It is Jesus. This dropped me. It's dropped me. It's the Bee Gees Uh-huh Love, so Right. Or you Stepped Into my Life, uh-huh, uh, love, so right, or you stepped into my life love, so right's a bit the hit there, yeah yeah, but where does it race?

Speaker 3:

uh, it's kind of low yeah I mean it's modern era, but it's not, yeah, that kind of got them along to the next big hit. I would say.

Speaker 1:

All right, here you go, mark. Here's your second pick Columbia. Records. Columbia Records.

Speaker 3:

Nice, columbia.

Speaker 1:

Columbia, and here we go. Johnny Taylor Disco Lady.

Speaker 3:

Ah, yes.

Speaker 1:

Disco Lady. You know what? Move it in, move it out. All of the Disco Lady. That actually. I think that one Warrants. I'm doing my dance, here we go smooth welcome to the milk crates and turntables podcast with your host scotty mcclain, so sit back and relax people. Let's have some groove tonight With some Johnny Taylor Disco. Lady Perfect man, you should be a DJ.

Speaker 2:

I missed my fucking calling you timed that perfect.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, DJ in 1978.

Speaker 2:

I was only nine years old in 1978.

Speaker 1:

I missed my calling in 78.

Speaker 2:

It happened.

Speaker 1:

Oh shit.

Speaker 3:

Magic.

Speaker 1:

All right, so that puts me, I think. Let me see I might still be in second place. Okay, lou's in first. He's got Dionne Warwick.

Speaker 3:

Which was a number five. That was a number five in the Billboard Hot 100. Disco Lady no, dionne Warwick, I'll never forget.

Speaker 1:

Oh, dionne Warwick, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm giving you credit. Thank you Getting all defensive.

Speaker 1:

I had my defense ready for him. By the way, for the podcast listeners, lou is in his alcove. It's bright, it's bright. It's very bright.

Speaker 2:

He's got his artwork in the background.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he's not at a hostel in the middle of Europe. Maybe I am In Poland. He's in a hostel in Poland.

Speaker 3:

I'm in Gdansk.

Speaker 1:

Everybody Gdansk.

Speaker 3:

I have a summer house in Gdansk.

Speaker 1:

Hey, all right. So Johnny Taylor, disco Lady and John Denver back home again. Or Stevie Wonder, don't you Worry About a Thing? Biggie, biggie, biggie, right, yeah, and the Bee Gees Love, so Right. So what do you think? Does the John Denver drop? Mark to third.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I think Back Home Again was a bigger song than the Bee Gees Love, so Right.

Speaker 1:

Okay, all right. But Disco Lady, what bigger song than the bgs love? So right, okay, all right. The disco lady, what?

Speaker 3:

about disco lady. That was a biggie, it was a big hit man, it was all right.

Speaker 1:

So I'm in third. I'll be honest about this mark. You better fucking pull me a good good 45, all right. Well, first up is lou, it's lou. Get them bitches ready, give them the biggest piece of dog shit you have fuck, I don't even have to take it out. Fuck Lou.

Speaker 3:

Uh-oh.

Speaker 1:

The Beatles Nowhere, man, he's done, he's got it, he's got it.

Speaker 3:

You never know.

Speaker 1:

You got two pretty good songs to back it up. Lou could be back in the wind column.

Speaker 3:

That's the first beatle song, isn't it? We pulled yeah yeah courtesy of me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all right, the second one this is going to be I promise drumroll tomla records. All right, marvin gay, I heard it to the grapevine, oh all right marvin gaye.

Speaker 3:

I heard it to the grapevine.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh, I just became a contender with that one nice pull. Whoa stevie, I got stevie and marvin.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I don't know, buddy, I think that just I don't know wait till I pull gold out of my head. This one.

Speaker 3:

You didn't pull superstition though, either no, no, no no but, don't

Speaker 1:

you worry about it.

Speaker 2:

Thanks, that was a hit yeah, yeah, that was okay, another tomla and I pulled from a different section. All right, that's fine, we believe you, stevie wonder for once in my Life, wow.

Speaker 1:

Wow, uh-oh Okay.

Speaker 3:

This is a tough one.

Speaker 1:

This might be the toughest one yet. Let's start with Lou. Let's start with Lou. Lou has Dionne Warwick I'll Never Fall in Love Again. The Manhattans Kiss and Say Goodbye. And the Beatles Nowhere man, right. Yeah, I have Stevie Wonder. Don't you Worry About a Thing? The Bee Gees Love so Right. And Marvin Gaye Heard it Through the Grapevine arguably the best version of that song. Yeah, right through the grapevine arguably the best version of that song. Yeah, right, and mark has disco lady. I think that knocked him right off the top, but no, it was it. Uh, he has johnny taylor, disco lady that makes me third back home again from john denver.

Speaker 1:

I think the John Denver one knocked. I would say the John Denver one knocked him down more than the Johnny Taylor one. It's just my opinion.

Speaker 3:

It's more of a sappier John Denver.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and your third one was what?

Speaker 2:

Mark Stevie Wonder For Once in my Life.

Speaker 1:

For Once in my Life.

Speaker 2:

Which is a great song, alright, so let's see who number three is Stevie.

Speaker 1:

Wonder For Once in my Life. For Once in my Life, which is a great song.

Speaker 2:

All right, so let's see who number three is. Is it Mark? Yeah, it's me. Okay, johnny Taylor just pulls you down into the mud.

Speaker 1:

I think the John Denver one did, but that's just me.

Speaker 3:

I think it was John Denver, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Johnny Taylor, that's a smooth song.

Speaker 3:

It had legs. It had legs.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, johnny Taylor, that's a smooth song. It had legs, it had legs.

Speaker 2:

So, mark, you make the call. What who's number one? Yeah, yeah, boy, this is rough because Beatles like that should put Lou over the top, but I think the fact that you have two R&B classics, stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye, I think Manhattan's Kiss and Say Goodbye, that might fall below Love. So Right by the Bee Gees.

Speaker 3:

I don't know about that.

Speaker 2:

I disagree with you.

Speaker 3:

That's just my call.

Speaker 1:

All right, look them up. Look them up and see where they charted. I'll look up.

Speaker 2:

Manhattan. I'm seeing two great R&B songs Marvin Gaye, grapevine and City Wonder. It seems to me it's his call. Do we have a coin we could flip?

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, no, we're not going to flip.

Speaker 2:

No, let's put it this way If it was another Beatles song, I mean Nowhere, man's a great song, but Grapevine and Don't Worry About A Thing Shouldn't have pissed me off last Sunday. Lou Say it, say it I know really Where's your outcome.

Speaker 3:

I to piss me off last Sunday, Lil Say it, Say it, I know really, where's your rap job?

Speaker 2:

I'm going to go, I'm going to have to say Scott, I'm going to have to say Scott, Now I've got to tell you I know the Bee Gees song.

Speaker 3:

Okay, Besides being the first and only number one pop hit for the Manhattans, yeah. Pulled it out.

Speaker 1:

Pulled it out. Pulled it out. Right with the Marvin Gaye.

Speaker 3:

I want to leave it to the American people to decide.

Speaker 2:

How many people are listening? Three there's your sister there's. Patricia oh yeah, Hi Allie and Todd.

Speaker 1:

Those are the people that are watching. Those are the people that are watching. Patricia. Oh yeah, hi, ali and todd, those are the people that are watching. Those are the people that are watching. Yeah, so one thing I did forget to put together tonight was the um you make the call.

Speaker 2:

That's one of my favorite things that I knew I was missing something but oh, I love that, I know I do too.

Speaker 1:

We'll. We'll make up for it next week. But uh, let's jump right into albums from 1971. And I'll start it off with right at the beginning of the year. Chicago 3 came out in 1971. Let's see the track listing.

Speaker 2:

Not really one of their stronger albums, but Chicago nonetheless. So it was another double album, another double album yeah.

Speaker 1:

Name some songs. So you have Sing a Mean. Tune, kid Loneliness is Just a Word. What Else Can I Say? I Don't Want your Money. Tune, kid loneliness is just a word. What else can I say? I don't want your money. Then, uh, flight 602 motorboat, tomorrow's free, free country. All that sunrise is happy because I don't think there was any hits on it. Yeah, that doesn't sell her mother low down. Uh, a hard rising morning without breakfast, off to work, falling out, dreaming home morning again when all the laughter dies. Canon, once upon a time, progress, the approaching storm and man versus man, the end, nothing really spectacular fell off that album, a double album with no yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

No, peterson, terrible. That was right after their sophomore album. This was their junior album and it wasn't really anything spectacular.

Speaker 3:

There's a second album slump. I wonder if there's like a third.

Speaker 1:

That would be interesting to look at. Yeah, See what bands had one and two and then three started to kind of fall off the rails. Mark, what do you got?

Speaker 2:

I'm go with if I could only remember my name david crosby's first solo album. It's very good. What's what's on it? Um, no pits. Uh, I struggle to give you song names, but um, I know it by the music and it was one of those albums where, if you look at who was on it, everybody in the area was on it. Hold on one second and it was John Slaypack from music. Merchant, rest in peace, just died. He got me into that album because you walked in his record store and he'd say, have you ever heard this album? And he put it on and you had to stay for the whole album. He was a great guy.

Speaker 3:

I love that he was a character. He was a great guy. Love that he was a character he was a character that guy music is love cowboy movie. He was a local record store owner laughing.

Speaker 2:

What are their names? Traction in the rain song with no words orleans and I'd swear there was somebody here.

Speaker 1:

So there was no big like hits, just well recorded songs that reminds me of, uh, I went back home to, uh, to winthrop masson, which I'm starting to really lose my taste for home. I think that just might come with with age and watching it progress and kind of losing it. Uh, you know, just you're watching it just kind of crumble right in my eyes. But I would go back there and there was this, there was this store, because it's massachusetts. Um, there's this, there was this store and it was kind of one of those everything stores like you do in there and there's trinkets and it's got old games, not really an antique story, but the dude had a ton of albums and he was a very kind of quirky guy and he told me he said I listen to every single record that comes into the store, every one of these records, I play it and I the guy, would be there for like 12 hours a day like he. Just that was his. I think he slept that too.

Speaker 2:

To tell you the truth, it sounds like john slaypeck right lou.

Speaker 1:

He was the same way dude was all always there, man, yeah, and it was a fucking cool place to be because he had all this retro shit and stuff from when we were kids and he'd sell it. It's not like he collected it, he did, but he would sell it. But it was just you go in there and it just has that feel of just this is your life, this is your life, right in front of us. All the three of us could have walked in there and said this is my life, you know great place. But yeah, the dude said I listened to every single album that comes in here because people would come in to sell albums.

Speaker 3:

You know, I was like damn dude that was, that was the era they called the rack jobbers. People would come and actually see there were salespeople.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yep, who's up?

Speaker 3:

Lou.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what a great year for music.

Speaker 3:

Bill Withers' first album, just as I Am, produced by Booker T Jones.

Speaker 1:

Ah Got the classic hit Ain't no Sunshine which Rolling Stone said is number 280 of the 500 greatest songs of all time. There you go. He was good, Bill Reathers. I don't think they'll get an argument out of that, Right? No?

Speaker 3:

no, definitely not no.

Speaker 1:

1971, ZZ Top's first album came out.

Speaker 2:

Hmm.

Speaker 1:

Yeah Track listing Somebody Else Been Shaking your Tree Brown Sugar. Uh track listing uh, somebody else been shaking your tree brown sugar. I wonder if there's that a uh a remake, or is that there another song, I don't know? Uh squonk going down to mexico, old man, neighbor, neighbor, certified blues bedroom thang. Just got back from my babies and backdoor love affair.

Speaker 3:

There's a song called Squank Squank. How's it spelled?

Speaker 1:

S-Q-U-A-N-K.

Speaker 3:

Squank Okay Genesis.

Speaker 1:

I mispronounced it.

Speaker 3:

No, I don't know. Genesis has a song called Squank.

Speaker 1:

Ah, okay.

Speaker 3:

I forgot the tail.

Speaker 1:

Let me see something we're going to check and see what that.

Speaker 3:

There we go. Zz Top Brown Sugar.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it's nice.

Speaker 3:

I hear the guitar Cool.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to have to go listen to this album now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right it's great Again.

Speaker 1:

I haven't heard this album in. I got to say fucking 20 years at least.

Speaker 2:

I like Tres Hombres even better.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, that, yeah, of course, yeah, but that was their first album 1971.

Speaker 3:

Right out of the gate yeah. Did you ever think, hearing them back then, that they would evolve into what they became? Well, talk about a rebirth.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, Because of fucking MTV.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, MTV and good videos. Though the videos were good. Oh, they were clever, they were very clever.

Speaker 1:

You know. These video producers and directors caught on at a certain point and said let's just tell a story like instead of the nonsensical original videos with just optics. It was just all optics. It made no sense to the song. They started that that whole little series of videos. Every song it was the, the, you know, the eliminator car and the girls and they took it into with, with with rough boys. They took it up into into space space shuttle.

Speaker 3:

you know, that's right Um uh, Robert Palmer.

Speaker 1:

You know he started with addicted to love and then you didn't I didn't mean to turn you on and you know he had the girls in the background, so you started seeing it and that was cool. They didn't all do that, but that was something that was pretty cool. You're like, oh shit, but it gained. You know you watched it because it's like a pot too.

Speaker 3:

Right now zz top is kind of funny because, uh, there was not a pretty boy in that band, no, and they had this image. That really hit in an era of, like you know, there's a lot of beautiful mediocrity. You know mtv and video, a lot, a lot of people that may not have been all that big with radio, into stars or again the potential, because it's just the whole look or something.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and then they were ahead of the time with that look, because a lot of people you know, yeah, the long beard was kind of weird back then oh they, they, that was them, that was kind of creepy back then in a weird way well, it was.

Speaker 1:

They just looked like rednecks saying that it was they were.

Speaker 3:

They were cool, fucking rednecks it was like duck dynasty before. Yeah, yeah, they were.

Speaker 1:

They were the original duck dynasty. Look, look at mark. If mark was a vampire that fucking beam of sun on your face you'd be melting like you'd be turning to ash right now. I think marsha got a really long beard. Look at you guys with the bright backgrounds. I like this. We need to stay in daylight.

Speaker 3:

The sun is setting over, it's going to get dark in here.

Speaker 1:

Come wintertime, lou is going to be fucking back in his little fucking hostel in Nashville. What color is your background, Lou?

Speaker 3:

It's sanguine.

Speaker 2:

I call it sanguine, brick sanguine louis t.

Speaker 1:

I call it sanguine.

Speaker 2:

Shit louis t sanguine all right mark.

Speaker 1:

Give us an album for 71 well, in honor of dickie.

Speaker 2:

No allman brothers at the fillmore east ah that's that East?

Speaker 1:

Is that the king of 71? Or is that one of the top three? We have a few.

Speaker 2:

I didn't listen to almonds for quite a while and this past week, as I went back.

Speaker 1:

Hold on, hold on, it's my brother, hold on.

Speaker 3:

Yo.

Speaker 2:

Yo, are you having a show?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're on right now. As a matter of fact, you're on the air right now, because I can't get it. Go to my other Facebook channel. Go to YouTube. It's on YouTube, right.

Speaker 3:

No, I went on YouTube and it's not on there.

Speaker 1:

It says it's let me see, this is off.

Speaker 2:

My sister's watching.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Mark's sister's watching on YouTube. Maybe it's that fucking that Motorola Razr telephone that you're using.

Speaker 2:

Maybe it's that flip phone. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, guess. So All right, I'll try to find it.

Speaker 3:

All right, find it. Yeah, all right, dude here. Yeah, I guess. So All right, I'll try to find it.

Speaker 1:

All right find it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, all right, dude.

Speaker 1:

Here Colin. He's like what the fuck Can't watch fucking YouTube on a Razer.

Speaker 3:

Its technology doesn't work that way. Life on a Razer's Edge. Wow, your burner phone Exactly.

Speaker 1:

It's better. Although those Razors were the best, that was the best cell phone I ever had.

Speaker 2:

They were badass.

Speaker 1:

I love that thing, man. Why were they? You know why? Because you could take a picture and then add music. You can add music to it. It was like the original smartphone, then you send it as a text, you know, and you could do little kind of cool things with it, and that was one of the first phones, I believe.

Speaker 2:

You could add a custom ringtone to yes, and everybody up here put Crazy Train. So when the phone rings, you hear five phones going. Oh, the podcast.

Speaker 1:

Mark, what's your ringtone? What's your number one ringtone?

Speaker 2:

Oh, I just picked one of the Samsung, you know as far as songs you don't have like.

Speaker 1:

my ringtone is checka-con, checka-con, checka-con checka-con.

Speaker 2:

Let me rock you. Let me rock you. Checka-con I used to have Don't Fear the Reaper.

Speaker 1:

Oh gee, look who popped up. I guess his Razor phone, my brother Colin his Razor phone. He fucking sent an emoji. He's getting real technical now, like he's learning.

Speaker 2:

My brother's using emojis. Is it his birthday today? No, because Dave just said happy birthday Colin.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he puts fake birthdays on his fucking Facebook shit.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay. Yeah, he's just good at that we're apparently the beautiful mediocrity trio. Yeah, what is that Big head, todd the Wet?

Speaker 1:

Sprockets says MCTT brings you the beautiful mediocrity trio. At least we're beautiful Really. At least we're beautiful. Well, Mark, has that Fabio hair going the?

Speaker 3:

Fabio yeah, I'd like to see a bird flying in his face.

Speaker 1:

Hit the Mark's face. Wouldn't that be hilarious if that window that's blasting that sunlight a bird comes fucking busting through the window.

Speaker 2:

Or a squirrel lands in my hair.

Speaker 1:

All right, we're losing track here. Who's got an album? Who's got an album?

Speaker 2:

All right. Yeah, I was doing Phil Maurice, but yeah, it just gets better with age.

Speaker 3:

Lou did you? Yeah, the first record I ever owned, don McLean, american Pie.

Speaker 2:

Oh there you go. What songs were on that?

Speaker 3:

American Pie and I think Narcissisma, narcissisma, that's a weird tune by him. By the way, he's also a cantor. He can sing in the Jewish synagogue. He was a cantor before he became a pop star. Really, yep, I believe so, all right.

Speaker 1:

My girl with the greatest mouth in the history of music carly simon her debut album her debut album yeah I think the hit on it was that's the way I've always heard it should be.

Speaker 3:

It is yeah, yeah, that was. That was produced by jimmy hendrix's producer, eddie kramer. Ah, alone one more time. The best thing. Just a sinner, dan my fling.

Speaker 1:

Another door reunions Ah, alone. One More Time. The Best Thing. Just a Sinner, Dan my Fling Another Door. Reunions Rolling Down the Hills the Love's Still Growing, but the album cover, the album cover.

Speaker 3:

It's just her mouth, isn't it? I wish it was.

Speaker 1:

I'd have that fucking thing framed. Look at my brother, he's like I missed the first 40 minutes. I'm just going to listen to it later. Fuck this, yeah, okay, well, listen to you tomorrow. See you later, I guess he's given some advice.

Speaker 2:

We got to script this better.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, all right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, car simon's debut album 1971, greatest mouth in in music just saying okay, mark, I'm gonna go with the game changer, for yes, they got steve howe in the band and the yes album contains I've seen all good people. Starship trooper, yours is no disgrace, yours yeah, that was a game changer.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, silly heroes.

Speaker 3:

I, so what's the music like with the previous guitar player?

Speaker 2:

it was good, but they didn't have that direction like this set them on that path to yes that you know, if you heard the older albums you'd be like, well, you hear john anderson, you know it's them, but they weren't the same yeah, yeah, they were still good though lou mungo jerry.

Speaker 1:

In the summertime, when the weather is hot, you can jump right up and the dudes makes fucking millions off that song oh yeah, that was the number one.

Speaker 3:

We talked about that, yeah but it's.

Speaker 1:

It's one of those quirky songs that pops up in movies, yeah, fucking tv shows. Yep, maybe, maybe one of the stupidest songs ever fucking written made recorded it's. It's a jug band exactly what it is. It's not a great song, it's a quirky like fun. It's a fun song, it's a fun song.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of stupid, but it's one of the same. But can you listen to?

Speaker 1:

it. So if you're driving on a long drive, is that on your long drive playlist?

Speaker 3:

If I ever hear the song, I don't mind it at all.

Speaker 1:

Really.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'll listen to it actually.

Speaker 1:

I listen to Ken Heath before I listen to that, you know.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what was Ken Heath? What was that big one? Go to the Country. Yeah, go to the Country. Go to the Country. Those songs are contemporaries of each other.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I just always liked Ken. I was like dude, it drives me crazy.

Speaker 3:

No, I kind of One of the rare fat lead singers Back then. Yeah yeah, One of the rare Becursed to John Popper.

Speaker 1:

Yeah be cursing to john popper, yeah, yeah well, he got skinny and he lost it all. Yep, I'm not a big harmonica fan. No, I I. They were fucking flash in the pan and he was, like you know, the fat guy with the fucking vest full of harmonicas and the stupid hat and they'd come on all like the late night shows because he was funny to look at and you, you know, whatever, the jolly fat guy.

Speaker 3:

You know, with the harmonica vest. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think, a keyboard tie. You know what came out in 1971? One of the greatest albums ever made Carole King Tapestry. Yes, indeed, yeah, carole King Tapestry, one of the greatest albums ever made. No, no doubt an iconic album. Iconic album cover.

Speaker 3:

You know, very simple, but it captures everything yeah, it captured that early or mellow 70s vibe yeah, yeah with the fucking cat very soft sitting in a window.

Speaker 1:

You know, window with that will window seat things right yeah, yeah, it's always that album always remind me of my mom, so that's, uh, that's a special place in my heart. Dave phillips says I'd to the opening a can of tuna fish. Before I listen to canned heat, I'd rather open a can of tuna fish. Is it chunk light tuna, which, by the way, that's my favorite kind of tuna. Oh, I like Everyone calls it cat food. I'm like I love chunk light tuna.

Speaker 2:

I love it. I will only have Porto tuna in oil Porto.

Speaker 1:

I don't care what it is. I like chunk light tuna, but I do like the yellowfin. Lately I've been using the yellowfin tuna. That it is. I like chunk like tuna, but I do like the yellow fin. Lately I've been using the yellow fin too. Okay, that's that that's pretty good.

Speaker 3:

That's pretty, it's a big good. I don't know the brand, but it's yellow, that's made from yellow fin tuna. But you're not a fancy solid albacore kind of no it's fucking chicken salad.

Speaker 1:

Albacore is just chicken. And dave phyllis, I knew he was gonna say albacore. We've had this argument on facebook albacore is just fucking chicken salad, it's all it tastes like. Doesn't taste like tuna at all doesn't? It has that real cheap tuna taste. They're very fishy. You gotta get it's like though a can of and, as over the years it's it's kind of devolved, because now, like when you you crack it and you and then you drain it right, you press the top of the can down, it's only about a quarter of tuna fish the rest of it is water it was all of that squeeze where you squeeze it in the sink.

Speaker 2:

All right, come on, come on. You know what?

Speaker 1:

my mom used to do. My mom used to take it and she'd drain it and then she'd put it in her and squeeze it with her hand, get all the juice out of it. Oh wow, yeah, she was a dedicated tuna and the funniest thing is she hated tuna. Oh, that's funny.

Speaker 3:

But she made fucking great tuna. How many tuna sandwiches did you have as a kid? Oh my God. And the idea of tuna and mayo now kind of makes you feel weird. So I make Mediterranean tuna salad. This fucking guy, what the fuck, what. It's great.

Speaker 2:

What it?

Speaker 3:

what it's great. It's better for you. It's olive oil, some crack are you?

Speaker 1:

are you a liberal? Lou are you? Are you a liberal?

Speaker 3:

I am. He stole my whole joke, like I thought we were gonna go with something.

Speaker 1:

He fucking ruined me just now. I thought I was gonna go down the rabbit hole with lewin.

Speaker 2:

Nope, he's like that well yeah, it's in that fast and that fast what you know, what I like you know what? I like make a nice egg salad. Oh my god, oh, it's so good yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Well, lewin put himself in the penalty box. You can in a bucket, by the way. For those that listened to that episode about the egg salad, mark and I relentlessly texted Lou pictures of egg salad for the following week.

Speaker 2:

I never saw him shake his head that hard Fucking devil.

Speaker 3:

Who invented that shit? Who's up? Mark, you're up.

Speaker 2:

Mark, the greatest guitar player to come out of Northern Ireland, ireland, rory Gallagher Deuce His second solo album.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I could no hits on it, that anyone would know. But it's a great album. Yeah, okay, and you don't hear anybody today talk about Rory Gallagher Hardly ever, nobody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah hardly ever nobody, yeah, no you don't, at least not in the united states. No, and then what? I? What? I do hate an auto. Well, I hate that. Everyone says he died from alcohol because he was an irishman. He didn't die from alcohol, he died from prescription drugs. Yeah, and they counteracted with something. And I, and I just get. I get so mad when they say, oh, he died of drinking. Now, he didn't, he didn't have to die no he'd still be alive if it wasn't for that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's not the Irish, that's the white guy. Die death Prescription drugs. Let's call it what it is.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Anyway.

Speaker 3:

They all mix really well. Moving on, mark, that was me Lou. This is for Dave Phillips. It is a collaboration album John hooker and canned heat called hooker and heat. Oh, it was just for the look at that look at that.

Speaker 1:

Wow, timely wow uh, this, this is, this is interesting. This album, uh, I'm gonna go with uh, cool in the gang, live at the sex machine. Right, listen to this, listen to the listing. Uh, what would the world be? What would the world be like without music? Let the music take your mind and walk on by, walk on by wow cool, the gang back in the funk days right, yeah yeah, chocolate buttermilk, which actually sounds pretty good that's a great title trying to make a fool of me. Who's gonna take the weight? Pneumonia wichita Linemen.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I saw that Scott Really Got to hear that, well, let's see what we got.

Speaker 1:

Let's see Cool.

Speaker 2:

And you know how I feel about that song. That's one of the greatest songs ever written and I've never heard a bad version of it. No Like Little.

Speaker 3:

Wing. There are no bad versions of Little Wing. Yeah, it no Like Little Wing. There are no bad versions of Little Wing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, here we go, cooling the gang. All right, let's see.

Speaker 3:

You would never know. This is cool, right.

Speaker 1:

Not then right, it's jazzy.

Speaker 2:

Hear the chords though.

Speaker 1:

I am alive. Hear the chords. Wow, what a choice for them to play live shows how good they are a muted trumpet that's a miles davis sound.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, wow. Their second album was a live album.

Speaker 3:

That's made, that's wild it's a great title too.

Speaker 1:

And then they did uh, I want to take Higher, written by Sylvester Stewart, aka Sly Stone and Funky man, and Touch you. So that's wow, that is. Look at them. All. Right, mark, what do you got?

Speaker 2:

Probably my favorite Stones album, sticky Fingers and even though we know the songs, I'm just going to list them to show how good the album is. Yeah, yeah, brown Sugar, sway Wild Horses. Can't you Hear Me Knockin'? You Gotta Move, bitch. I Got the Blues, sister Morphine, dead Flowers and Moonlight Mile. It's like a great sit-down.

Speaker 1:

You got to move. You got to move. Camera's fall down watch out you got to move. You got to move um two things off that album. One, uh, my favorite stone song sway yeah, great song great song. This is my favorite stone song. There's so many, but that, just that. So over the years I've had different. Midnight rambler was my favorite for a long time, and then uh, gimme shelter was my favorite for a long time and yeah okay, but sway just kind of settled in as the song you know, and the great one of the.

Speaker 1:

I think the greatest line in in the in the history of music in my, my opinion just my opinion, and it's always debatable is let's do some living after we die from Wild Horses. That fucking line when I first heard that as a kid let's do some living after we die yeah, I don't know why that line sticks in my head. It's just that's the greatest fucking line I've ever heard in a song. And it comes toward the end. You know what I mean. It's not like it's a slow build up to them and then it's like we're just gonna keep going, let's do some living. I don't know, it's just fucking great line.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, brown sugar though epic what's a little eerie is, while he wasn't a co-writer, but graham parsons had some input right on that song. What's that fuck?

Speaker 1:

was that? My phone just started speaking Arabic, okay.

Speaker 3:

When he covered that was it credited to Jagger Richards I think so it's for years.

Speaker 2:

Everybody said he co-wrote it. They didn't get credited, but I believe when he says I don't know he was there when they were writing it, but that's a line, and graham was going to be dead soon, you know ah okay all right uh, let me see.

Speaker 1:

April bernard says wild horses was a dance staple at the junior high. Yeah, that that's slow dance, time to slow dance when they used to have junior high dances and all that good stuff Dave Phillips said. Is there any doubt that Mick and the boys are the best? Well there's people that say Led Zeppelin's the best. Yeah, there is a doubt, but you can't argue right, yeah. There's no wrong answer. I don't think with that.

Speaker 3:

You know, when you hear a band cover the Rolling Stones, it can be good, or sometimes it can just be like a garage, like bed garage rock, you know yeah. Mick Jagger's a hard guy to get around unless you're doing a total show and Charlie Watts.

Speaker 2:

Nobody can play songs like Charlie.

Speaker 1:

So I just caught this. What did April say? April said I guess it was Wichita Lyman. She said my favorite song with the best line in history. I didn't even see her write that, but I say let's do some Live and After you Die, if she's still watching, type in what the line is that you think is the best line in history and that's coming from one of my favorite songs of all time.

Speaker 1:

So I might I might not argue with you. And she loves miles. She loves miles. Yeah, yeah, uh. Let's see who what. Who's up lou?

Speaker 3:

john lennon.

Speaker 1:

Imagine fucking, most overrated fucking song ever in the history of music it's a good.

Speaker 3:

It's a good album it is.

Speaker 1:

But the song. I'll give you the whole album.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, with that song I'm not bored of it. That's a classic that I don't get tired of yeah, I I've.

Speaker 3:

There are most times when I hear it I don't okay, here we go, you know, um, yeah, but I think I think it's a good record. I don't think it's a super slick record. I mean it's, you know, if you compare it to like all things must pass or you know these big things, when the beatles first came out, it's a good record yeah, she's talking about wichita lineman.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, that's what I said. That's she said, and I, I'll give you that April. That is that, and I need you more than want you and I want you for all time. And that again I said I knew it. I can't argue with that. My favorite is let's him do it, but that would be in my top five, easily, easily top five. That's a great line, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

No argument here, madam jimmy webb yeah, jimmy webb, yeah, yep, uh, let's see, let's see what. I had it lined up too. I don't know, I can't find it, uh, oh, um, not a huge fan, but was back in the day because it was, it was. It was the cool thing to have this album. It had one good song and jethro tell aqualung. Then I grew up.

Speaker 3:

Then I grew up I love, love, cross-eyed mary cross-eyed mary's a great song too.

Speaker 1:

I give them that that. So this is that album. This is that album. Yeah, locomotive breath right? Yeah, this is their their unforgettable fire type thing. I mean, this is their joshua tree, right? Yeah, this is the album that launched them into heavy metal history.

Speaker 2:

But to me it's their most mundane album, like their other album, sparkle more. That album is kind of I. I got tired of it really quick. I didn't listen to it for years and I'm right which album?

Speaker 3:

uh, when did um tool to rock and roll to your new dog come out? Was that 76, no 74. Was that the album after this? Because that's that's the last jethro tolle album I own? Yeah, I'm not.

Speaker 2:

I don't know the chronology so well, but yeah, I agree with you, though it's it's and the production's god awful, it's so sludgy. You know, steve wilson remixed.

Speaker 1:

He did an okay job, but he couldn't do that great, so dave phillips says uh, king of the 45s, I would change my life to better suit your mood is a great line. What?

Speaker 3:

album. What song is that that's smooth with carlos santana and rob thomas, that's wow, good catch fuck move. Rob thomas dave phillips in this rob thomas thing is is he a matchbox 20? If he, yeah, I have him.

Speaker 1:

If he was on the screen right now, he'd be in the penalty box. How's that? He does this to bug me. He does it on purpose. Dave phillips does this to bother me.

Speaker 2:

Is this the equivalent to me playing guitar?

Speaker 1:

Jack playing guitar. You can't play guitar.

Speaker 2:

It's true I can't I got you.

Speaker 3:

I got you, motherfucker. Scott Mark Perry and I are in a music recording together. We've done a song. Okay, next week let's debut it.

Speaker 1:

Let's debut the Rob version of it next week. Who had that up? Who's up, mark, did you just pick I?

Speaker 2:

did Aqualung. Okay, yeah, I'm going to go with get you a little geeky here. Tarkus from Emerson Lake and Palmer Don't know if you ever had it Took us, but it has the uh, yeah, yeah, and it has uh the side long epic, tarkis, jeremy, bender, bitches, crystal, great stuff, all right all right lou marvin gaye.

Speaker 1:

What's going on, yeah there you go, yeah, yeah that, yeah, that's one of the that song never gets old yeah.

Speaker 3:

Ever, Ever, ever.

Speaker 1:

Yep, the Kinks Percy. What is that Percy? It has Lola right Lola's on it. It has Ape man, Yep.

Speaker 3:

That's one of my favorite Kinks songs.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm an ape man. I'm an ape man. Yep, that's one of my favorite king songs yeah, I'm an ape man.

Speaker 3:

It's not like steel drums on it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, uh, it's. It looks like it's a four record set, I don't know why. No, well, it can't. It was re-released. So yeah, it's a lot. Yeah, it was re-released in 88 and 2004 and 2014.

Speaker 1:

You know they do these deluxe edition two disc bonus tracks thing yeah but uh, let me see, then ape man might have been added on, because it's god's children. Lola, the way we, the way love used to be, completely, uh, running around town moments, animals in the zoo, just friends. Whip lady dreams, helga. So lola is the reason everyone bought that album. Helga, they had a song called Helga Wait.

Speaker 2:

Lola was on. Lola vs the Power man.

Speaker 1:

Well, here it says Percy. Oh, you know what this was. This was the soundtrack to Percy. It was a movie. That's what I was looking at. I'm looking at the album cover. I'm like that's not what it is, uh, soundtrack by the kinks soundtrack.

Speaker 3:

Was it a kinks movie?

Speaker 1:

no, it was uh. Let me see uh percy's 71 film soundtrack for the british comedy film percy so, and that movie was basically edwin anthony is an innocent and shy young man who was hit by a nude man falling from a high-rise building while carrying a chandelier. Edwin's penis is mutilated in the accident it has to be amputated.

Speaker 1:

I know what that's like the falling man is killed. Edwin becomes a recipient of the world's first penis transplant. He receives a very large penis of the womanizer killed in the same accident. So the guy that fell out of the building See, this is when writing was fucking good. These idiots in Hollywood today have no fucking clue how to write a movie. I'm just going to have to go watch this now.

Speaker 1:

With his new bit of anatomy which he names Percy. Edwin follows the womanizer's footsteps, meeting all his women friends, before settling happily with the donor's mistreated widow. See, that's a fucking beautiful plot. It's intricate. It's intricate, it's got rabbit holes. It's got a giant penis from a dead man who killed Fuck it's got everything. Very, from a dead man who killed fuck it's got everything very British. Wow, that's before John Wayne Bobbitt too yeah, yeah, baby was the sequel called Octopercy oh Jesus, oh Lou Lou, lou Lou, I'm sorry. Tuesdays at Shecky's it's Lou Colicchio.

Speaker 2:

Tuesdays at Shecky's. It's Lou Colicchio. Tuesdays at Shecky's Penalty box.

Speaker 1:

For Lou. He was doing so good.

Speaker 3:

He was doing so good.

Speaker 1:

And Laura says Lola was mad. No, no, is this? Did we just have an epiphany on Milk Crate's and Turntables that Lola was a man? No, no, did we just have an epiphany on Milk Crates and Turntables that Lola was a man? Is that why it says she walked like a woman but talked like a man? What, lou, did you know? Get out of my spot.

Speaker 2:

Now get out of my spot.

Speaker 1:

Lou, did you know that Lola was a man? Did you know all these years?

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, I saw it oh you saw percy.

Speaker 1:

You saw his giant percy. You saw. That's what I saw I saw his fucking octopersy.

Speaker 3:

This feels like the uh the rangers devils game, the other night there's more penalty box.

Speaker 2:

Oh gee. Well, come on, Lou, this feels like the Rangers-Devils game the other night there's more penalties going.

Speaker 1:

Yeah well, lou needed a break. He's in there drinking some water. He's getting refreshed yeah he's sanitizing his camera. There you go. The body of Christ compels you. The body of Christ compels you. Hey, dave Phillips just brought a fact to the show and lola, he liked cherry cola oh wow, the epiphany box up a nod is as good as a wink to a blind horse by the face Blind horse, yeah.

Speaker 2:

That was the first album I heard from the faces. It was really my introduction to Rod Stewart when I was really young. Loved the whole album because it's got the big hit Stay With Me on it, yeah, and it's got their version of Miss Judy's Farm, the Bob Dylan song, yep.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yep.

Speaker 3:

All right, lou, I'm not playing anymore. All right, I got one Cross me Still's national young four-way street, of which I didn't know Love, the one you're with was on that. I thought there was a Steven still solo song.

Speaker 2:

Well, it was, it was, but he did it with them.

Speaker 3:

It's on that album?

Speaker 2:

did you know? It was the live version. But when he introduces it he goes, you know? He says the title of the song and people are so innocent in the audience they all laughed in shock. Because this is a song called if you can't be with the one you love, love the one you're with you. Listen close.

Speaker 3:

You hear people going oh you know, it was kind of risque or something like yeah, yeah, because a lot of people. Just there was like a group thing going on that there you go.

Speaker 1:

That was the 60s, 70s. Um, this dude, this album, uh, the dude had a, had a pretty good career going. Then he died, but this is probably his. I would say it's his most famous album Pearl by Janis Joplin. You know that dude.

Speaker 2:

Oh, all right, it's getting old, it's getting old.

Speaker 3:

Well.

Speaker 1:

I mean he left a good legacy with that album.

Speaker 3:

What songs of his are on that record? Crazy Train, mrs Crowley. He sings Move Over.

Speaker 1:

Cry Baby. A Woman Left Lonely Half Moon, me and Bobby McGee Mercedes-Benz. Trust Me, get it While you Can.

Speaker 3:

I forgot that was there.

Speaker 1:

This is the dude's legacy. That's his legacy album In the cover. He's not a good-looking dude on that cover.

Speaker 3:

He didn't have to be back then.

Speaker 1:

He didn't have to be. He had a face made for radio, a face only a mother could love.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah Was that Big Brother Was that Studio Cat, no that was.

Speaker 2:

That was her last album. It was her last album.

Speaker 1:

That's a dude. He's dressed like a girl on the cover, so he was kind of you know. But that was the 70s, the glam rock thing, banana, banana dude looks like a dude, let's see. I don't know, lou, I could dig into it, but it's going to. Let me see. Piano Richard Bell, hammond Organ, ken Pearson, electric Guitar, john Till.

Speaker 3:

Richard Richard Bell.

Speaker 1:

Hammond Organ, ken Pearson, electric Guitar, john Till, richard Bell, brad Campbell and Baso. It wasn't.

Speaker 2:

I don't think it was Old Big Brother. No, the record company wanted her to be a solo artist.

Speaker 1:

He had gone on his own by then.

Speaker 3:

Richard Bell went on to play with a band after Robbie Robertson. Ah look at Lou.

Speaker 1:

There it is. That's the Lou we love. I'm back.

Speaker 3:

Pulling that shit out of his ass, along with the piercy mark what do you got?

Speaker 2:

uh hunky dory david bowie. Oh, many of my favorite songs still like changes. Oh you pretty things. Life on mars kooks. Andy warhol song for bob dylan, queen bitch about the. Oh many of my favorite songs Still Like Changes. Oh you Pretty Things. Life on Mars Kooks. Andy Warhol Song for Bob Dylan, queen Bitch, the Boulay Brothers it's great.

Speaker 1:

I bought that album when I was eight. I had that album. Told you, I was a big way ahead of my time with that music. I was listening to that when I was so eight, turning nine, and I had Hunky Dory.

Speaker 2:

It's a very piano driven album. Do you know who played the piano on that album?

Speaker 1:

uh, nikki wild guess.

Speaker 2:

Elton john rick wakeman. He was a member. He was never a full-time member, but he was asked to be a member of the spiders from wars.

Speaker 1:

Did a lot of work with david bowie oh, look at, look at mark doing his best loop.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, good job man.

Speaker 1:

Good job.

Speaker 3:

Mark, I'm impressed. Yeah, I just bought you a free pass out of the penalty box.

Speaker 1:

Professor Junior, you get a free pass now. Oh, he gets a free pass, get out of the penalty box for free.

Speaker 3:

He gets a free pass.

Speaker 1:

You get to cash it in anytime you want.

Speaker 2:

That's great. I'd like to thank the Academy.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, okay, luke don't get carried away. Al Green gets next to you. Oh hey, now you called the police. Good stuff. Tired of being alone. I'm so tired of being alone. Yep, yep, and a great version of I Can't Get Next To you, ah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Great version.

Speaker 3:

Might be my favorite. All right, yeah, if you ask me, if you ask me who my favorite male soul singer is, I can't decide between al green and marvin day. I can't do it. I kind of lean toward marvin because he's more of a chameleon. But I read salad al green, you know, yeah, yeah great album uh laA Woman by the Doors 71. Yeah, that's a great album. That's a fucking great album. That album got denigrated. The critics said it was cocktail jazz. They didn't get it, fucking idiots.

Speaker 1:

They're critics.

Speaker 2:

What makes them a?

Speaker 1:

critic. You know, If we had the time, if we had the time, if I hit the lotto and I said, all right, you guys are official employees of the Milk Crates and Turnitin the KOFB studio, we could be fucking music critics. If I paid you $80,000 a year, would you take it? You just give us a pay cut.

Speaker 3:

Oh hell, yeah, I'd take it. You gave us a pay cut. You said it was $104 last time.

Speaker 1:

Oh, this motherfucker remembered. Holy shit, holy shit. He remembered.

Speaker 3:

Fucking loon, we know he's in charge. He's like hey, mark, just let me do the business talking.

Speaker 1:

Just give us a pay cut. Okay, give me $120. Okay, I'm quoting you, man, come on, that was if I hit the billion dollar fucking lotto. Yeah, it was supposed to be six figures. If I had had 600 million, if I went 200 million or more you'd get 125,000 a year. How's that Beautiful. I like it. And I have time to listen to albums, to review and then we can just do a podcast on critique and just critique albums.

Speaker 2:

I loved our album review segment on that would be so remember.

Speaker 1:

That was great, I loved it.

Speaker 2:

Uh, mark, what do you got? Um, the precursor to dark side of the moon, metal from pink floyd has you have to say with your voicing one of these days I'm going to chop you into little pieces. Fearless, which has, you'll never walk alone. The song that liverpool fans sing, uh and echoes, which is their first great prog masterpiece.

Speaker 1:

It's 23 minutes long and it's a great song isn't, you'll never walk alone, didn't jerry lewis used to end every marathon the jerry lewis telethon with that song? He might have he did after every, after after 72 hours, straight up that late. Yeah, he did. He would do like the 72 other for the Jerry Lewis telethon.

Speaker 2:

I used to wake up at 3 am just to see what it looked like, and it was on yeah, and he'd be talking He'd be on it. Yeah, it was like 48 hours.

Speaker 1:

I think it was 48 hours. But he ended every telethon with. You'll never walk alone again.

Speaker 2:

Stupid me. I thought it was a jerry and the pacemaker song and then one day I heard a louis armstrong version of it and I looked it up. It's a song from the 20s or 30s.

Speaker 3:

It's a great song so when we were kids, go on, when I was 15, I wanted jerry lewis muscular dystrophy, swim, swimathon. Oh, okay, yeah boring.

Speaker 1:

So so we uh, a friend of mine, his his mom's like you guys should go out and collect, you know, for muscular dystrophy. So we went fucking door to door and went up and we must have collected I don't know like 100 bucks. Right, this is back in the 70s, right? Yeah, Collected about 100 bucks. We gave it to his mom. She's going to mail it it in.

Speaker 3:

She fucking spent it she fucking yeah, oh man that's bad.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was bad. We didn't like I. We weren't. I wasn't old enough, like we weren't old enough to get mad like that. Like what the fuck mad? You were just like whoa. It was like what, really?

Speaker 2:

oh fuck, that's top shelf liquor right the whole time supposed to do that.

Speaker 1:

Well, she did. She kept the fucking money you gotta. So you got a hundred bucks laying around. You're a single mom, right. You're a single mom, right, with three boys. You got a hundred dollars laying around in 1970, fucking five. Wait till monday and then go to the fucking bank, cash it, get it, get some bill, get a check and then put it in the mail and send it. Are you just gonna look at it and go well, I kind of need milk and right in in a pack of cigarettes and a bottle of fucking Boone's Farm and some tinfoil.

Speaker 1:

I need some tinfoil. Oh boy, here we go. No, no, dude, I watched this, I watched this lady. This was back in the day when you could beat the fuck out of your kids and nobody cared. Everyone said, good, right, I watched her, her, his youngest brother uh, he was my buddy, was the, was the middle child and the youngest brother, uh, he kind of tagged along with us. He pissed his mom off so bad she grabbed the first thing she had to grab the box of the tinfoil right reynolds wrap, not the reynolds foil right and she fucking hits him with it.

Speaker 2:

That's a heavy blow.

Speaker 1:

She hit him with the fucking pot that had the blade that you fucking. She cracked him in the arm and fucking gashed his arm open.

Speaker 3:

This is great Did she apologize?

Speaker 2:

Did she say it's hard?

Speaker 1:

Fucking great, it was great and the fucking, it was chaos in that kitchen for like 10 minutes. He's screaming this blood. The mother doesn't believe what she just did. I'm just like that I'm like the chicken pulp fiction. That uh, rosanna which is waiting for him to drop the needle into the fucking, into her chest, and she's got that. Look, I'm just watching this play out. It was fucking crazy yeah.

Speaker 2:

We all had that friend whose parents beat him.

Speaker 1:

Good times. I think every one of us got beaten at one point in time or another. Some just went to another level. Sure, who's up, who's up?

Speaker 2:

What was the last album? We just said hunky dory.

Speaker 3:

No uh, la woman. La woman that was you scott yeah, so mark's up oh, okay, I'm up.

Speaker 2:

Um, I'm well, dave just picked it. I was gonna save it for later, but uh, who's next?

Speaker 2:

you know I it's an album, too, like I got tired of for years, uh, like aqualung, but they recently remixed it and they finally made it sound like you could hear the cymbals, because it had a horrible sound and uh, I'm listening to it again. It's yeah, it's worth. You know the stature it has. Okay, I think I think bob o'reilly was probably the first two song I ever heard. I had a boom box. My sister gave me a cassette and I was probably like seven years old and I'm listening. I'm like just hearing those keyboards coming in and then teenage wasteland and all those, like it was magic to me.

Speaker 3:

Right, right, yeah, let's, uh, let's, let's do three more three more albums each and then we'll jump into some movies, okay, so, uh, lou, start with you the rascals search and nearness. It's the last album with the original rascals lineup, it's it's post. Uh, people got to be free. The 1968, their last hit, which was the number one. But the last two records they made, apparently they're really good, they're kind of jazzy, but it just. I'm going to check them out, but it just didn't. It was not the rascals that you know that two minute, three minute tight pop, r&b, blue eyed soul hit. But apparently the albums are very interesting. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Dave Phillips, king of the 45, says Pete Thompson is a genius. We, I think we all know that. Patti Yossi, and a big affirmative yes to us getting our asses whooped back in the day. Big affirmative yes to that. Uh, the carpenters debut album came out in 71. Oh, wow, rainy days and mondays, let me be the one for all we know. Superstar. Uh, one love knowing when to make it easy on yourself. I mean, yeah, that's the Coppers.

Speaker 1:

There's really not much more. You can say no, nope, they went through that. They were big and then they were laughed at and they were considered camp 70s and no one paid much attention to them. And then it always comes around Greatness eventually. And they were great, they were a perfect fucking sound for that point in time One of the most beautiful voices, tommy Boy made them cool again. Ah, good call.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it shows that that was the ultimate guilty pleasure scene. You know, yeah, we're both breaking into the chorus. You know that's even back in like in 70s. You know, being a little kid I'm like I thought they were great, but you know it wasn't what my older siblings were listening to.

Speaker 1:

But it was great am yeah, and who originally sang Superstar?

Speaker 3:

I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Rita Coolidge. Is she really In 70.? Yeah, wow, yeah. Written by Bonnie Bremlett and Leon Russell. That's right, that's right, yippers, all right.

Speaker 2:

Mark Going to go with Nilsson Schmilson, which had a great song from the great movie, you know, Jumping to the Fire. What movie? Yeah, you know Goodfellas. Yeah, great album.

Speaker 3:

With the Jim Gordon drum solo in it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah yeah, this fucking big head, Todd just disruptor. Can you recap the last 20 minutes? I had to step into a store and, while you were at it, go over the first 45 minutes of the show for your brother, colin he's your brother for crying out loud. I got your back Shut, the fuck up.

Speaker 2:

Everybody's saying happy birthday to Colin.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, again, that's what you get for believing Facebook, that's what you get for believing. Facebook. That's what you get for believing Facebook. Everybody trusts Facebook. Yeah, harry Nils. I think he had a couple albums on 71, didn't he? He did.

Speaker 3:

The Point.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

The Point.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what do you got Luke?

Speaker 3:

What do I got? I ain't got shit.

Speaker 1:

I ain't got shit. We can kind of start wrapping I got.

Speaker 3:

I got more andy williams love story. Okay, that was a big move.

Speaker 1:

Well, andy williams was a big he was. He was popular back then. He was on the radio.

Speaker 3:

He has a great christmas. My son likes his christmas album. Uh, my first wife, god rest her soul.

Speaker 1:

She loved fucking andy williams christmas songs.

Speaker 3:

She loved him in the ph Christmas songs she loved them In the Philippines.

Speaker 1:

He was big, Really Okay.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think it's great. You'd be surprised. You never think about it. But my wife now. God bless her for putting up with me. I'm not a hard person to live with, but I got a life-size Spider-Man Hulk. There's that side. There's that side. There's that side that she puts on that's all Is Iron man on. Oh shit, he hasn't been on all show. Kind of like Mark. Am I really that bad Iron man on. He hasn't been on all show, kind of like Mark Get it.

Speaker 2:

Let's see, oh I just dropped everything.

Speaker 3:

There it is. There it is Spill the wine.

Speaker 2:

No, I didn't drop my wine. No.

Speaker 1:

I'm just laying back tonight. Who just called off an album, Lou All right.

Speaker 3:

Lou.

Speaker 1:

So Paul McCartney Ram.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Right, uncle Albert, albert Halsley, that's one of my favorite. That's a leftover Beatles song if I ever heard one. We've discussed that.

Speaker 3:

That is absolutely a leftover Beatles song, one of the most important songs of childhood.

Speaker 1:

Oh, the way it just. I mean, nobody else was doing that. So the Beatles stopped, but he continued that formula of kind of different segments, which is what made Pet Sounds right yeah, good Vibrations right, that whole like just gaps of different sounds that all blend into each other. It's like different chapters of the song, right, yeah, other like different. It's like different, uh. Chapters of the song, right, yeah, uh. But uncle albert albert hosley, uh, what does it got too many people? That's one of my favorite, paul mccartney, one of my favorite song.

Speaker 2:

Too many people I love that song yeah, back to my car.

Speaker 3:

Which is a backseat of my car is basically a beach boy song yeah, yeah, so that came out in 71.

Speaker 1:

Mark Every.

Speaker 2:

Picture Tells a Story from Rod Stewart. Yeah, probably his biggest pre-disco fame solo album. Yeah, I mean so many good songs on it, including I Know I'm Losing you, which is just a great version of that song. Yeah, Maggie Mae Mandolin Wind Find a Reason to Believe. It's great, it's all good Lou. Lee Michaels' album.

Speaker 3:

Fifth, with the song. You Know what I Mean on it. I just saw her yesterday. You know, what I mean. Oh yeah, yeah, that was a big hit. Yep, that's his organ, vocals and drums.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

What do we got?

Speaker 1:

here. Link Wray came out with his debut album.

Speaker 2:

Ooh.

Speaker 1:

Badass Never got the credit he deserved.

Speaker 3:

Nope yeah, Link Wray's debut album. It took a documentary to get him noticed like that right, right, that's.

Speaker 1:

Uh, what was the whole? There's a whole story behind that song. It was the like they wouldn't play it because it had too many. Uh, that's rumble, right, rumble, yeah.

Speaker 3:

It got kids crazy it was triggering those kids to fight.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, have a rumble and you see the videos him doing it. He just has that fucking, that cockiness, that arrogance walking around like I'm fucking Link Wray. You know what I mean? He should have been able and he should have been more popular than he was.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, did you ever see that movie? It's Gonna Get Loud with Jimmy Page the Edge.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Yes, remember when Jimmy Page was playing air guitar to it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he's playing the air guitar to it. He's got this big smile on his face, yeah.

Speaker 2:

On the original vinyl. He's in his music room. I love that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah that's a good call, Mark.

Speaker 2:

Good call. Yeah, who's up Me?

Speaker 1:

Last one, yeah because you did your three right, scott?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think that was my third, okay so I was going to say the big bomb that none of us mentioned Led Zeppelin IV but I thought for sure you would bring up Maggot Brain from Funkadelic. I was just looking at greatest guitar solo ever, well behind.

Speaker 1:

Prince's, you know. But yeah, maggot Brain.

Speaker 2:

And I never heard it, but you recommended it to me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, just fucking great Great Funkadelic. Oh, just fucking great great funkadelic. Yeah yeah, yeah, glad you got that. I was gonna try to squeeze it in, but you got it.

Speaker 3:

Uh, luke the mahi vishnu orchestra, the inner mounting flame, jazz rock, prog rock, that's a great album, great album. You got me on that one but, you got me on that one billy cobham on drums john o'Laughlin, a great guitar player.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my buddy, richie Farino, just dropped on. Yeah, what's up, richie? I just saw him last weekend. He was down here in sunny Delray Beach, had lunch with him and my other buddy and his girlfriend. So, yep, yep, good to see you, richie. Dave Phillips, king of the 45, shaft, came out in 71. Isaac Hayes yeah, that's that. So let's jump into some movies from 1971. Okay, and I'll start off with Dirty Harry 71. Like, if you had asked me when did Dirty Harry come out, I would have said like 73. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Really 74.

Speaker 1:

I didn't know it was that early into the seventies. Yeah, you know what I mean yeah, I know so that was kind of a shocker. But yeah, dirty harry, what do you got, mark?

Speaker 2:

uh, I have a clint. Uh, clint, I can't talk tonight. Clint eastwood one too, but it was kind of a weird one, the beguiled. Remember that the civil war they fucking cut his legs off.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, right, that was a rough, it's a nuns, the nuns if you're expecting an action movie, you're not gonna like that. No, that's more of a. That's up there with Play Misty. For me it was one of those kind of fucking weird movies.

Speaker 2:

Which also came out that year, Play.

Speaker 1:

Misty for me. Lou, what do you got for a movie in 71?

Speaker 3:

Stanley Kubrick's the Clockwork Orange. Yeah, uh-oh, yeah yeah, kind of a hard movie to watch somewhere. Yeah, yeah, uh-oh, yeah yeah, kind of a hard movie to watch somewhere.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I went to a bar in New York. It was themed after that called the Milk Bar. It was weird in there too. Oh, wow, and the upstairs was a lot worse.

Speaker 1:

A lot of Percys hanging out there.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the upstairs was a lot different than the downstairs. I had to push somebody out of my way to go downstairs because I said you're not leaving where you going, boy no, yeah, actually I was going up the stairs, my younger brother came down, he goes you don't want to go up there, so I did. And so what was up there? Uh, it was well the actually the heathenism.

Speaker 3:

Was it just heathenism? Uh, there was no, it was a. It was a gay bar upstairs. Oh, okay, all right, when I could talk, because I what? There were people in alcoves and it was like oh, there's a little too much so I turned around and this big woman blocked my way and said you're not going anywhere, so I had to push her arm out of my way. Yes, I am. Did you meet percy?

Speaker 2:

lou did you know? No, I, no, I didn't, I didn't.

Speaker 1:

I love New York A great movie that I got to see a few years back. It was probably before COVID. It was, look it, happy birthday my brother, nobody's birthday, I don't know. Bobby Delco, my oldest friend. That's my oldest friend right there, barbie delco. Oh, we've been friends since I don't know what was 60 now, since we were I don't know 54 years.

Speaker 1:

We've been friends yeah, wow yeah, and we used to, we used to, we used to fight each other when we were kids. He lived, he lived right across the street from me pretty much and we'd fight. But as we got older, me and him never, ever disagreed on anything from like once we kind of grew up, wow, it was just such a great friendship Like there was never. You know, friends argue, friends fight, friends get in disagreements. Me and Bob never, never had a disagreement or an argument. He's just always Me and Bobby actually did the old school fucking jackknife, dirty jackknife, cut your thumbs, do the blood brother thing, the blood brothers, yeah Right.

Speaker 1:

Which today parents would lose their fucking minds. Oh my God, I can think about it. It would be a, it would be a whole biohazard thing. They'd have you covered in a fucking, in a trash bag and fucking isolated and fucking you know oh, you know oh, yeah, yeah, dr fauci's coming for you. If you did that opposing blood types, and then we're blood brothers. We literally like we, we want we. That's the closest you can get right. So we did it. Then you're bob love bob.

Speaker 2:

Yep, um, now that I just digressed back 54 years I don't know if I'd want back kids weren't as full as shit that they're full of now.

Speaker 1:

You know back then back there.

Speaker 2:

Right, you did have you do have 13 year olds with stds nowadays, that's true, you would not believe this.

Speaker 1:

Fucking signs like driving in delray, that the bus stops, and it's like syphilis is back, yeah, and it's like a picture of a side view of a pregnant woman old school, school. It's like syphilis is back. This generation is fucked up. Yeah, like they just have random sex. Like it's yeah, you know, oh, I got an STD, I can tell you. Yeah, how do you feel about genital?

Speaker 3:

warts.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. I think it's a hype.

Speaker 3:

Let's put some compound w on the move.

Speaker 2:

That's not what's correct, carry on compound w right, let's carry on the most private of privates, yeah, I think the show hit a new low.

Speaker 3:

That's a visit to the er I'll dub you. I put it on my genital warts oh, this is awful, oh Lord.

Speaker 1:

I used to put that shit. I had warts on my hands.

Speaker 3:

I did and you put it on and it's fucking it's basically acid.

Speaker 1:

It turns white. Right it turns white. So imagine you're putting that shit on your Percy. Oh my good Lord.

Speaker 3:

And if you have an octopussy it's even worse because there's eight of them.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I'll give you that one buddy.

Speaker 3:

Okay, it came full circle.

Speaker 2:

There you go. I got to walk.

Speaker 1:

You got it. You got it. That worked, that one worked, that one worked. See Everything for a reason, buddy.

Speaker 3:

Everything for a reason.

Speaker 1:

Where the fuck are we now? Who's up? We're talking fucking syphilis and genital warts.

Speaker 2:

What the fuck?

Speaker 1:

I think I'm up and I'll bring up a movie that had irresponsible sex Diamonds Are.

Speaker 3:

Forever Last.

Speaker 2:

Sean Connery. He was starting to show his age a little bit when he did that.

Speaker 1:

Right Was that with Octopussy? No, no, octopussy was man with.

Speaker 2:

Wasn't that man with the golden gun? Wasn't she? Yeah, yeah, uh, diamonds are forever was the one where he was in las vegas and those two um, the twins, were beating him up the two oh yeah, they kicked the shit out of him yeah, was that?

Speaker 3:

that's sean connor's last one? Yeah, he came back after george luis mb but that wasn't an albert broccolino.

Speaker 2:

No, not the 179.

Speaker 1:

Yeah I think I was, I think I was going to talk about it. So there's this movie that I got a chance to see before covid uh, what's the name? Um, um, fathom, fathom events does these? They re-release these movies into theaters for like one night only. Yeah, yeah, right, I love that they do that. I think it's a great fucking gig. You know, unfortunately movie theaters are dying and uh, but hopefully there's a resurgence. But, um, I got to see on the big screen again, 50 years later, a willie wonker in the chocolate factory. Oh, wow, yeah, I got to see it in the movie theater again, which I just went. My wife had never seen it in the movie theater, so you know, it was down the street from us, so we went and watched it. It was like a fucking tuesday night, you know, but yeah, it was just great watching it on a movie screen again. Did people come out for it? You, uh, no, there wasn't that many. But you know what was cool? It was probably half full, but there was maybe three or four families with kids.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

They took their kids to see it, so you got to think that they're probably in their 30s, right yeah? And they knew enough to say, hey, let's go watch this movie on a movie theater. That's the kids, kids introduction to that movie yeah, well, you can.

Speaker 3:

You can also see christmas story. Oh, we just got a big.

Speaker 1:

We got a big compliment. Dave phillips, king of the 45s, good night boys show one of your best. Thanks, dave. Well, maybe we should focus, uh, stop working on doing albums from a year, from each year. You know, I think you know, we get these rabbit holes, yeah we can do it.

Speaker 3:

We can talk about genital warts more.

Speaker 1:

I think that's what he liked. I think he liked the syphilis genital warts compound W on the Percy.

Speaker 3:

I think that's what.

Speaker 1:

Dave Phillips. That's what put him over the top tonight.

Speaker 3:

Great content. I want to get a case of crabs, the old crotch crickets you know.

Speaker 1:

Big Head Todd to it. Sprocket says he has the best Facebook post ever, which is talking about my brother Colin. My brother Colin makes, has Facebook posts like, like a sheep.

Speaker 3:

And he sends me attachments I can't open. He did it the other day. I'm like I, I don't, I don't want to do about it.

Speaker 1:

lemon meringue pie it's like he tries to do x twitter on facebook. There's no crossover there, like you know, but he fucking tries. He doesn't do more than like six word fucking posts.

Speaker 2:

Uh, mark, give me a movie, a movie that scared the life out of me when I was a kid. I don't remember what. What was in it, though? The house that dripped blood with um wow has to be vincent price. Oh, christopher lee was oh, christopher lee, yeah okay and it was a, it was like four stories, one of those movies, but I just remember seeing it as a kid and being really great, greatest dracula ever.

Speaker 1:

Christopher lee is one of the fucking greatest, coolest alpha fucking males ever to walk the planet earth. Go look up, look up christopher lee, dude, I highly highly. Oh, he had a staggering life. Look what this motherfucker did. Like he hung out with you just a little. Go check him out, man. You gotta look at the life of christopher lee. You'd be like what, yeah, what I think he was. He was like he was. He was at the last fucking, uh, the last time the, the guillotine was used, like he was in all these moments. He fought in the wars like he hung out with these fucking, like these great fucking people and he and it's just an amazing life he led.

Speaker 3:

You can make a movie just on that guy is that his real name or is that his stage name?

Speaker 1:

I think it's his real name, but that is the world's most interesting man, christopher Lee is. You know. Aside from the joke and the commercial, I think he's the world's most interesting man.

Speaker 2:

As a beta male, I'm going to say my second favorite Dracula was Gary Oldman. You're the best.

Speaker 1:

Mark, I haven't told you, but you're the fucking best Morty.

Speaker 2:

Get an audio sample of that. Luke, Get an audio sample of that.

Speaker 3:

I got it. That's a pain in the ass.

Speaker 2:

That's capital B to you bitch, that's great Fucking Mark. Go on oh you always knew he was a sad character and he got the sad.

Speaker 1:

Well, evidently you didn't see Count Yorga. That's a great vampire movie. Was that Christopher Lee or no? No no, no, let me, I'm going to pull this up. It's fucking. Let me see, it's one of the best. Let me see, here we go, yorga, yeah, yeah, you have Count Yorga then. You have also known as the loves of Count Yorga, vampire. That came out in 70. Right, let me see.

Speaker 2:

I wonder if Sven Gulli would play it, because that's where I get a lot of my old horror movies plot production, trying to see who played them uh robert quarry.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, robert quarry, that's right, that's right yeah, yeah, fucking count yoga lou gotta watch it. Okay, yeah, great great movie, great vampire movie, different but cool yeah, I'm, he did two of them I think there was. Yeah, I think there's a return account yoga so the origin of the film?

Speaker 2:

it was originally to have been a soft core porn film called the low, the loves of count yoga lorga yeah, and some prints of this film display this titties screen title great, they took a big page out of hammer films with the titties okay, yeah yeah, and the hot chicks, the hot vampire chicks it was gonna get the most beautiful fucking horror movie women ever, and that's another thing.

Speaker 1:

Go look up the women of hammer, I've seen it.

Speaker 1:

Holy fuck, voluptuous, oh my god, my God, All European women, All Europe. I mean it's like wow, that's why we watch those movies. Of course, I think I forget the one Hammer film. Like right off the bat, first scene, First scene. There's like the sex scene and there's this beautiful. I forget one of the Hammer girls. She's got to be like 36d, like just perfect, almost like russ. Maya's caster into the movie right off the bat. I'm like this is going to be a good movie. I was 13.

Speaker 3:

this is going to be good, did you think elvira was hot?

Speaker 1:

in the oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I did.

Speaker 3:

I mean she was worthy of the b movie, horror movie, yeah yeah, yeah, sexy, sexy, nice body.

Speaker 1:

You know, not pretty, but you know funny. Yeah, I thought she was hot, although I I thought I thought that uh, uh, what's her name? Um oh come on, you know who I'm talking about the blonde. Uh, she did the the late night shit on, like saturday nights um wanda, something after docs. Uh, what was her name? The blonde.

Speaker 1:

You know who I'm talking about yeah, yeah late night and she, she would do the movies, but she wasn't like a character, she was just like this ditzy, uh, buxom, blonde, pretty, uh, something after dark or something sounds familiar, but oh, it's fucking right on the tip of my tongue I'm looking at, not ronda she, ronda, yeah, yeah, it was ronda. She, yeah, ronda after dark or something like that. Right, yeah, yeah, yeah, it was Rhonda Shearer. Yeah, rhonda, after.

Speaker 2:

Doc or something like that, right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2:

Up all night with Rhonda Shearer. Up all night with Rhonda yeah, Up all night.

Speaker 3:

Rhonda Shearer Wow, oh my God. Yeah, go look her up, that's early 80s Go look her up. You won't be disappointed.

Speaker 1:

I kind of remember that now, all night with Rhonda Sher.

Speaker 2:

She was one of the first early USA Network.

Speaker 3:

Yep, when you're on cheap cocaine after going. Oh, now you're talking, buddy, now you're talking. Yeah, the whole stuff went hand in hand together, man, oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yep, yep, yep. Move on to the movies. Let's get back to the movies before we go down that rabbit hole, cheap cocaine and up all night. Baby laxative uh mannitol yeah, oh god all right, give us a movie.

Speaker 3:

Who's up luke? Um, we'll keep you in the same vein. The abominable dr fives yeah, dr vincent price. I think maybe I really like vincent price's horror stuff. He was great oh, he was the, he's the king, he's no doubt the king of horror, king of horror, christopher Lee, king of Dracula, yep, yep, we had it all. We had it all. The Matt Rushmore, I guess.

Speaker 1:

And Vincent Price. He was like a Shakespearean-trained actor yeah, yeah. But he knew, he figured out. This is what I'm good at. I'm not going to try to fight it. I'm not going to try to. I want serious roles. Yeah, cha-ching cha-ching, cha-ching, cha-ching every movie he came out with a horror movie. Cha-ching cha-ching yeah, he built an empire on being the king of monster movies. Yep yeah you know, and then although. And even beyond. He would do some TV shows eventually, batman, as he got older. Yeah, egghead.

Speaker 3:

Great Egghead Great.

Speaker 1:

Egghead, yeah, and you know what the thing about him was.

Speaker 3:

I love that. I love that show.

Speaker 1:

The thing about Vincent Price. So I always dog on Kevin Costner. I said Kevin Costner, he was Robin Hood and he talked like this and Dances with Wolves. He was playing with the indians and he talked like this water world, I'm in the ocean, I talk like this. Fucking kevin costner is the same fucking guy in every movie, right? At least adam sandler stays in the same character, type of character. He doesn't try to fucking, you know, advance his career by being more diverse right except spaceman, except spaceman.

Speaker 1:

yeah yeah, vincent price was vincent price in every fucking movie, yep right.

Speaker 3:

But he did it good.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Like he did it good. Like who's the comedian? Like Chris Farley. Chris Farley could be Chris Farley, but he's funny in every movie. Yeah, you know, but Vincent Price just did it in horror movies. He was the same guy, same voice.

Speaker 3:

You can't disguise that nope, you know he had acting chops, though I mean it wasn't, it wasn't some schlub actor. This guy was a shakespearean train. He was you know his career. Before that he he had great role. He had roles before the horror stuff, but he, just he was just you know I mean he ran with the guy, or this yeah but once I happy when you don't deny what you're good at like that. That's why he didn't have a problem with it and then he, just he.

Speaker 1:

Then he became the voice of probably one of the greatest pop songs ever recorded thriller yeah, yeah, that's right oh, also also alice cooper. Welcome to my nightmare. He did black widow. Oh, in between welcome to my nightmare Keeping lipping doctors. Please don't touch the displays. Little boy, how cute, thank you. Moving along, we have the nasty record. His tiny fangs cause creeping ulcerations of the skin. Isn't she precious. But here, here is my darling, my dear the the black widow. Isn't she lovely and so deadly I I listened to that album.

Speaker 2:

So much that was great.

Speaker 1:

I can repeat that. I don't the whole fucking thing go listen to that. It's in between. Uh, welcome to my Nightmare and Black Widow. It's Vincent Price, way before Thriller, way before Thriller. So Alice Cooper had that market cornered with the Vincent Price voice before.

Speaker 3:

Michael Jackson. He's a cool guy. I saw a thing yesterday with him. He lived near Groucho Marx and Groucho Marx was kind of lonely. But Alice Cooper should go over with a six-pack of beer and hang out with Groucho Marx and Groucho Marx was kind of lonely, but Alice Cooper should go over with a six pack of beer and hang out with Groucho Marx.

Speaker 1:

Imagine that. Imagine that dude, I mean like Groucho Marx.

Speaker 3:

God icon, you know. And yeah, he also played. He played golf with Barry Goldwater, yeah, you know, just the, just a cool, cool guy. And you know they said when he, um, he helped the guys from mega def go clean, dave mustaine um, you know I was, he was like a coach, the people that were recovering alcoholics and stuff like that but you know cool dude. I was low, I was like dallas oh, I don't, I don't know anybody now you might not like his, but he was.

Speaker 3:

He was just a cool cat like his whole shtick was good it was interesting, he was unique. You know, marilyn manson wouldn't exist if not no, exactly.

Speaker 1:

And marilyn manson will tell you that, yeah, he'd say, he'll admit that you know. No, no secret there 1971, I'm 18.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yep you were 18 in 1971 all right movie.

Speaker 1:

Who's up?

Speaker 2:

I think I am Omega man.

Speaker 1:

I think we went over 71 movies before, but it doesn't matter, did we? Yeah, we're coming up on a couple hours. These movies sound like Last Picture Show. I think we've talked about this, yeah and Omega man.

Speaker 2:

We talked about that too, and Omega man, we talked about it, it's all right.

Speaker 1:

The audience doesn't give a fuck, it's all right, the audience doesn't give a fuck. They don't remember, they won't remember.

Speaker 2:

All the new listeners are my audience isn't that bright.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's right, I said it. Todd big head. Todd the wet sprocket. Go after my audience.

Speaker 3:

Contempt for your audience.

Speaker 1:

Contempt for my audience, our audience.

Speaker 3:

Gentlemen, it's our audience. Yeah, really, they're our friends audience I've I've made friends with some of your, your friends here yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

They love you guys, man they love you guys. Yeah, fuck jack, that's what they say.

Speaker 3:

They'll be back when's jack coming back.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. You gotta, you gotta, you gotta nail him down to get him um. Who's up who's up?

Speaker 2:

I uh, I, I was up. I said omega man and I just realized we did talk about omega man in a previous show yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Uh, vanishing point. Did you see that movie? No, uh, during the 70s, car delivery driver kowalski delivers hot rods in record time but always runs into trouble. The dude has to drive. He has to drive. It's a great movie. Uh, he has to drive a, a charge, a supercharge, from like, uh, I don't know where it is, it's like new york to california, in like New York to California, in like fucking 72 hours or something, and it's all. It's just one of those action 70s car chase movies. There's a great scene where one of these kind of I think it was more in the desert, like a desert hick or something, starts helping him out and he getsibike and he puts it on top of his fucking car and it's got a fake light on it or something. I just remember the song Mississippi Queen starts playing. Yeah, it's a great movie, great ending, great ending. That's all I'm going to tell you.

Speaker 1:

Okay, great movie, great ending. It's a real 70s movie, though, so get ready to watch some car chases and 70s movies. Yeah, yeah, vanishing point though yeah, vanishing point. There's muscle cars and it gets a 7.2 on imdb. So you know that's not bad for a 71 movie, you know 7.2 rating yeah, yeah I got it written down uh lou. I think I cut in front of you summer of 42.

Speaker 3:

Oh, oh yeah, jennifer o'neill I think after the graduate. That's the second greatest milf fantasy movie. Oh, of that era. You know, miss robinson, that older woman, jennifer o'neill, cover girl, the cover girl that she was, yep, a coming of age story yes, it was the andromeda strain oh yeah, great science fiction.

Speaker 1:

Top scientists work feverishly in a secret state of the art laboratory to discover what killed the citizens of a small town and how the deadly contagion can be stopped. Wait, wasn't that COVID? Wasn't that COVID? Yeah, except they didn't stop it, they actually helped it along, isn't that COVID?

Speaker 3:

Okay, isn't that, covid?

Speaker 2:

You're going to get us kicked off Facebook. They're already fucking me on one.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I got to check into that tomorrow. These bastards Fuckers.

Speaker 2:

Mark An early Robert De Niro film, the Gang that Couldn't Shoot Straight. I barely remember seeing it. I know Jerry Orbach's in it.

Speaker 3:

Jerry Orbach Jerry.

Speaker 1:

Orbach yeah yeah, jerry Orbach, tv characterbach. Yeah yeah, jerry Orbach, a TV character actor.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, he made Law Order. He did, though, you're right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I've never watched maybe one episode of Law Order Me neither he did a movie. I got a moment to stop.

Speaker 2:

He did a movie. There was an Australian actor named Brian Brown. It was a movie. There was an australian actor named brian brown there's a movie called fx where it was effects okay and jerry orbach played a mobster and they had to fake his death and that is my favorite jerry orbach movie that was good.

Speaker 3:

That was a good movie. Yeah, it was. It was very good yeah, brian brown luke octoman. It's a 1971 mexican-american science fiction monster film with costume designed by a future academy award winner, rick baker, who did plan the apes makeup. At times, uh, rick baker did the. Uh tim burton plan the apes makeup, which was better than the movie. It tells the tar um. It's an expedition team that becomes a target of a murderous humanoid octopus. The film received negative reviews it's nowhere as good as octopussy, I'm telling you uh, let's see twins of evil.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, baby, yeah you got a couple of hot twins right in a religious sect led by Gustav Wiel Hunts all women suspected of witchcraft, killing a number of innocent victims. Young Frida, gustav's niece, will involve herself in a devilish cult and become an instrument of justice in the region. Twins of evil.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, baby Coming to a driving near you. Yeah rated, yeah rated r buddy, so you know what that means you know when was the first time you saw boobies in a movie in the theater? In a theater, probably it was a hammer film, that's probably a hammer film, yeah it might have been.

Speaker 1:

It might have been Vampire Circus. I think maybe Vampire Circus yeah.

Speaker 3:

Mine was with my dad and it was this movie called the Devil and Miss Jones.

Speaker 1:

That was a porno movie. It was a fucking porno movie Was it?

Speaker 3:

I was 10. I don't know, that's a porno fucking movie.

Speaker 1:

What the fuck, lou, you got the best father ever. My dad was great.

Speaker 3:

What the fuck how'd you like a graduation present son?

Speaker 2:

I think it was the movie.

Speaker 3:

ah, watch him porn there we go, that was in 1973, right the Devil and Miss Jones right here it is.

Speaker 1:

This is in Wikipedia. This is exactly what it says. The Devil and Miss Jones is a 1973 pornographic film.

Speaker 3:

Two years off, whatever. Okay, so I was 12.

Speaker 1:

Georgina Spelvin, who's a porn queen right.

Speaker 3:

There's something else I tell you.

Speaker 1:

Georgina Spelvin, Harry Reams there's a letter Released during the golden age of porn, from 69 to 84. Yeah, after his success with Deep Throat, the director Gerard Damiano shot the film in a converted apple packing plant in Milanville.

Speaker 2:

Pennsylvania. They were packing apples.

Speaker 3:

Fucking A Lou Winner.

Speaker 1:

Lou just won the night.

Speaker 3:

He won the show. My dad took me to a movie the.

Speaker 1:

Devil and Miss Jones.

Speaker 3:

I was only 10. I'm sorry, dad, I'm sorry, that's the greatest.

Speaker 1:

That might be the best story you've ever told, it's not true? Well see, that's when the Devil and Miss Jones was right up there with Deep Throat, and I think maybe. Behind the Green Door where they actually released them into movie theaters. People wanted to go see these movies just out of total curiosity. Look at Patty says love you. I love you too, yeah buddy, what's behind the green door? Yeah, look at that, the devil in Miss Jones.

Speaker 3:

Let's get the plot. I love you too. Yeah, buddy, what's behind the green door? Yeah, look at that.

Speaker 1:

The devil in Miss Jones. Let's get the plot. Let's get the plot.

Speaker 1:

Justine Jones, a lonely and depressed spinster they had plots back then Decides that suicide is the only way out of her routinely dull existence. She slits her wrists with a shaving blade while bathing and dies with a shaving blade while bathing and dies. The angel Abica, john Clemens, informs Jones that although she has lived a pure life, her suicide has disqualified her from entering heaven and she spends eternity in limbo, angered that her soul indiscretion has left her with only the options of limbo or hell. Left her with only the options of limbo or hell. Jones begs Albuquerque to let her earn her place in hell by being allowed to return to Earth and become the embodiment of lust. After an intense session of pain and pleasure, loose 10, remember, he's 10, with a menacing man who goes only by the name of the Teacher, harry Reams, justine has several bizarre and sexually deviant encounters, the last of which is a graphic threesome.

Speaker 2:

You saw a suicide in graphic text when you were 10.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God. Just as Jones is enjoying her new life of lust, the time she was given to fulfill herself runs out and she is faced with eternity in hell. Though she is at first horrified at the pain she will be forced to endure, abacus dispels the common human myth of hell and promises Jones that she will be quite comfortable in quotes Now a raging sex addict.

Speaker 1:

Jones finds herself confined to a small room with an impotent man who's more interested in catching flies than her. She desperately begs the man for sex, but he merely asks her to be quiet while he listens for the buzzing insects. That's the end of the movie.

Speaker 3:

This thing was written.

Speaker 1:

Fucking Lou Adam Chan was written. My dad took me to some movie the Devil and Miss Jones. The fact that Lou didn't know that that's a classic porn movie amazes me.

Speaker 3:

He had a Juergen squirt bottle with him too. I don't know. I thought we were going down this path did you see that? Actually the movie was called badge like 351 with robert duvall, and there's a letdown, huh I do.

Speaker 1:

I do know a dude that has squirt gun. He put fucking liquid soap in it and went to a porn theater in boston and started shooting it from the back I heard that from Howie Mendo. This dude said this back in the day. Oh my God, wasn't me Back to the movies, jesus, how did we get? Let's do one more each. We're under two hours. We had a good show. Let's quit. While we're ahead, we're working blue now. We've talked about STDs porn Compound W Porn.

Speaker 3:

You and my dad are watching porn movies.

Speaker 1:

Vampires with titties. Vampire movies with titties.

Speaker 2:

This is why I stayed quiet.

Speaker 1:

Because Mark's sister probably stopped watching an hour ago.

Speaker 2:

god, oh, allison, we're sorry, my sister took me to a first rated r movie.

Speaker 3:

Oh, there you go. I didn't see a porn movie. Was that called pizza boy?

Speaker 1:

uh all right, uh, one more each, one more each, then we'll good lord who's up mark?

Speaker 2:

just start with you the French Connection and you know what scene I always remember from that movie.

Speaker 3:

The Picky Toll, another Picky Toll movie.

Speaker 2:

When he goes, he's at the bar and he passes out on the bar and then it's the next morning and he just gets up and walks out of the bar. Like this guy slept, you know, and that was Popeye Doyle, you know, it's like I just remember being a teenager going. How can you sleep with your head on a bar all night and just get up and go to work?

Speaker 3:

Little did I know a few years later.

Speaker 2:

wasn't he based off a real character though? Yeah, popeye Doyle was a was a real. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Big head. The way it's broadcast is Dave left the show way too early sweet dreams, yeah okay, lou, uh, this is the movie that got al pacino the role in the godfather. It was panic and needle park, the panic and needle park ah, okay and he played a junkie, but I think that was something that got him noticed by uh, by coppola okay all. Okay.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's see I'm going to get this.

Speaker 3:

It was his first role.

Speaker 2:

Wow.

Speaker 1:

Let me see.

Speaker 2:

So the Godfather was his second role.

Speaker 3:

I believe. So yeah, it was actually Paul Sorvino was in this Funny. A guy named Richard Bright was in this. Richard Bright was Al Neary in the Godfather movies. He killed Fredo. Oh Okay, so some of those old actor characters are made into the Godfather, except for Paul Sandoval.

Speaker 1:

Goodfellas. This is maybe one of the best vampire. We're going to end this on a big note here Wait, can I yeah? Yeah, go on.

Speaker 3:

That movie was produced by Dominic Dunn. Why do I know that name? He is a lawyer. He's an American writer, investigative journalist and producer. He had a show on. He had this crime show well-known. His daughter was an actress that was murdered. What movie was she in? We're kind of going off the path here.

Speaker 2:

So from STDs to murdered daughters, that's one hell of a show here.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he had a big show like some legal show, Dominic Dunn. I didn't know he was a movie producer.

Speaker 1:

That sounds familiar.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I landed big on Vampiros.

Speaker 3:

He's the father of Griffin Dunn, the actor. He was an American werewolf in London he played the friend that got killed on the Anywho.

Speaker 2:

You're going to get put in the penalty box for interrupting, it's all right, it's all right.

Speaker 1:

It's all right. Luchas is catered. Sometimes it's very sporadic his cadence.

Speaker 3:

I'm good, are you sure? Yeah, I'm good. I'm good Really.

Speaker 1:

Okay, I'm good, are you sure? Yeah, I'm good. Really Okay If I start talking, you fucking interrupt me.

Speaker 2:

Fucking All right, I don't even want to talk right now.

Speaker 1:

Wait, can I just one time? You can interrupt me too.

Speaker 2:

What the fuck, why not? He is the father of Griffin Dunn. He is, oh, okay.

Speaker 1:

All right, good, good, good, good. Look up there, mark Carry on Carry on Vampiros Lesbos yeah, wow, yeah, rated R, not X, not like the devil in Miss Jones. Nope, rated X, that was rated X. Vampiros Lesbos yeah, why not? Yeah, and these two chicks. They go ballistic on each other and then whatever victim falls into their fucking trap. Yeah yeah, lots of titties, lots of lesbian sex. The victims are women, no, they're guys.

Speaker 2:

They'll bring guys in, they don't care because, the vampire would kill a man if they want the film was shot 1970 in turkey.

Speaker 1:

it was a popular success in theaters in europe on its release and was the first film to have more psychedelic scores by frank for a franco film and the first to have a lesbian theme as a prominent feature of the film. Yeah, so the film's score became popular in the mid-1990s when it was included in the compilation Vampiros Lesbos Sexadelic Dance Party, an album that became a top ten hit on the British alternative charts.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah Got to re-watch that one. Yeah, vampiros, lesbos, it was filmed in Turkey. Yeah, yeah, got to re-watch that one, yeah, vampiros Lesbos.

Speaker 3:

It was filmed in Turkey.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Way too tame for your dad, Lou yeah.

Speaker 3:

It was only rated R.

Speaker 1:

It was rated R.

Speaker 3:

No, the Lesbos thing.

Speaker 1:

Why would my father take me to an R-rated movie when the fucking devil in this Jones, is playing?

Speaker 3:

He'd be like this doesn't live up, son, but enjoy the popcorn.

Speaker 1:

I've been told this is a good movie, son, so let's go. Let's go. Let me see this Day in Music Ta-da On this day in 2023,. It was a sad day. This guy's legacy kind of changed over the years. American singer, actor and civil rights actress Harry Belafonte died from congenitive heart failure at his home in Upper West Side, manhattan. He was you know, he was back in the day, he was kind of an activist, he was kind of you know. But as he got older and social media came around, then he really started popping off and people like me were like huh.

Speaker 2:

What I always knew, how Harry was.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, but he died on this day last year. Let's see.

Speaker 3:

He lived a long life. He was in his 90s, wasn't he?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Well, he died. Let me see age of 96. Wow, yeah, 96. On this day in 2017, Elton John suffered a potentially deadly bacterial infection during a tour, forcing him to spend two nights in intensive care. Doctors used Compound W on his Percy. That's what it says here Did it ever burn.

Speaker 3:

Compound W on his.

Speaker 1:

Percy. Did it ever burn Upon W On his Percy? On this day in 2016, motley Crue, co-founded Nikki Sixx, launched a campaign asking Google to pay musicians more money. Yeah, good luck with that. On this day in 2009, a man suing Ra oh, wait a minute. Dave Phillips is back. What the fuck With an accusation. What the fuck. He never left. Last House on the Left came out in 71. Here we go back to the movies.

Speaker 1:

Harry sold out his Jamaican roots, sold out his Jamaican roots. Yeah, harry Belafonte sold out his Jamaican roots. A man suing rapper Snoop Dogg Dogg told the court he received a brutal beating from the staff security. Richard Monroe Jr also claimed that the rapper hit him with a microphone after he climbed on stage. I remember this Dude shouldn't have climbed on stage.

Speaker 2:

Let's not say that Abbie Hoffman got his head cracked open by Pete Townsend. He jumped on stage.

Speaker 1:

The infamous Rolling Stones tour. They came on singing Satisfaction and the dude runs across the stage and Keith Richards swings the fucking guitar at him right, you've seen that clip, yep the confetti's all fallen right. This dude decides to sprint and he just casually takes his like. He sees it coming, he's teeing him up.

Speaker 3:

He fucking whacks the dude with his guitar.

Speaker 2:

And that hurts, that hurts.

Speaker 1:

And then puts it back on and keeps playing.

Speaker 3:

You guys remember Soy Bomb?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, soy.

Speaker 3:

Bomb. He did that with Bob Dylan, right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, at the Grammys. He did it at the Grammys, right yeah. On this day in 2008, the Empire State Building in New York City was lit up in Mariah Carey's motif colors, and nobody fucking cares. On this day in 2007, american singer Bobby Boris Pickett died of leukemia at the age of 69. Another guy who must have made a boatload of money doing it. I hope so. I think we just talked all this recently where he had numerous holiday hits or some shit like that, or Halloween hits, but that every year that rolls around, that's his Christmas Halloween Monster.

Speaker 1:

Mash cha-ching, cha-ching, cha-ching, cha-ching. So he did good. On this day in 2007, during the Rolling Stones' current world tour, aides to George Bush were told they couldn't book a luxury five-star hotel suite because Mick Jagger had already booked it. Yeah, good On this day in 2003, in this year's Sunday Times Rich List, Paul McCartney was confirmed this is 2003, as the world's richest musician, with a fortune of over 760 million pounds, which has to be close to a billion at that point. Then it went Madonna, Mick Jagger, Elton John, Ozzy Osbourne became the 24th.

Speaker 1:

Jagger was sixth. Elton John was seventh. Madonna was fourth. Ozzy became the 24th richest musician after earning an estimated 42 million pounds, which is like $56 million from his MTV show On this day. It was a sad day it was. It was In 2002, TLC member Lisa Lopez was killed in a car accident in Honduras. Did you ever see the conspiracy theory behind her death?

Speaker 2:

No, no, it's really weird.

Speaker 1:

No, it's like it's something. See, if it's on YouTube, it's kind of odd. There's really weird. No, it's like it's something. See, if it's on YouTube, it's kind of odd. There's some other things related to it. She had a lot to say, oh, she had a lot to say about the industry and people in the industry, like kind of what Cat Williams did yeah, you know, and all of a sudden she dies in a fucking car accident in Honduras. You know it. Car accident in honduras. You know it's like whoops, yeah, uh, they say they kind of link alia in there was, she had something kind of she was ready to talk about, or however it went and her plane just went down, you know and they said it was overloaded.

Speaker 1:

Well, what fucking pilot is going to let that happen? Number one the pilot makes the call on those private jets Yep, they don't say we're paying for this. He's like I'm fucking flying it, you're not going to fucking overpack it. And then like we're too heavy and right, okay, you work for you.

Speaker 3:

When did her plane crash?

Speaker 1:

That was in the nineties, wasn't it?

Speaker 2:

She just did that one vampire movie.

Speaker 1:

It was like, yeah she did a queen of the damned.

Speaker 2:

Okay, she did that, one vampire movie.

Speaker 1:

Yeah she did. Queen of the Damned. Okay, right, right On this day in 1997, U2's Pop Mart World Tour kicked off in Las Vegas 35,000 fans. And then I saw that what are we in May, Maybe? I saw it a couple in Arizona Sun Devil Stadium.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I loved Pop yeah.

Speaker 1:

I had no problem with it. I had no problem with it. I had no problem with it. I liked Mofo.

Speaker 2:

That was a good song.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 1994, the Eagles played the first of two shows where they recorded their Hell Freezes Over album. Okay, on this day in 1990, the Fender Stratocaster that Jimi Hendrix played at Woodstock Festival was auctioned off for a record $295,000. That's all of it. His two-hour set at the 69 Festival became the longest of his career On this day in 1988, Bon Jovi's manager, Doc McGee, always a little suspect.

Speaker 1:

Convicted on drug offenses arising from the 1982 seizure of 40,000 pounds of weed smuggled into North Carolina from Columbia, mcgee was sentenced to five years suspended prison term and a $15,000 fine. See Pays to be rich, yep. On this day in 1987, madonna went to number one in the UK singles charts with La Isla Bonita. I actually like that song Me too. Yeah, it's a nice one. True Blue album was pretty good for her. Yeah, she liked that song Me too. Yeah, that's a nice one. True Blue album was pretty good for her. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

That song had been offered to Michael Jackson for his Bad album.

Speaker 1:

Wouldn't have sounded anywhere like that. No, on this day in 1987, u2 started a five-week run at number one in the US album charts with their fifth studio album, the Joshua Tree. Not going to read all about that, we all know. On this day in 1982, paul mccartney and stevie wonder were at number one in the uk singles charts with maybe this is in the top 10 worst songs ever recorded ebony and ivory yeah yeah, that's got to be in the top 10.

Speaker 1:

No fucking doubt, no doubt it is not far behind who we built the city. I'm just telling you that it's a fucking horrible song.

Speaker 2:

And throw Say, say, say in there too.

Speaker 1:

Even liberals laugh at that song.

Speaker 3:

Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

We have senses of humor? No, you don't.

Speaker 1:

They don't have a sense of humor.

Speaker 2:

I do. I'm a made of mail with a sense of humor. You are the anomaly, my friend.

Speaker 1:

You are the anomaly, my friend, you are the anomaly, let's see. On this day in 1980, strangler's singer-guitarist Hugh Cornwell was released from a London prison.

Speaker 2:

On this day in 1970.

Speaker 3:

Let's see Serving six weeks for possession of drugs.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 1979, the police made their debut on BBC TV's Top of the Pops performing Roxanne. That was yep. On this day in 1977, elvis Presley made the last recordings of his life during a concert in Saginaw, michigan Civic Center. On this day in 1974, pamela Corson, the long-term companion of the late Jim Morrison, died of a drugs a drugs, they say plural drugs overdose.

Speaker 3:

It was a mixture.

Speaker 1:

On this day in 1970, jackson 5 started a two-week run at number one in the US single charts with ABC. It was their second number one in the US single charts with ABC. It was their second number one USA hit. On this day in 67,. Just days after completion of Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, the Beatles embark upon their next project, recording the theme to Magical Mystery Tour at Abbey Road Studios. They had to be getting burned out by that. Jump right into those two albums, one after the other, and then you have the White Album and the White Album, then the White Album. Yeah, yeah, or they're at the peak of their creative, you know time?

Speaker 3:

No, they weren't at the peak yet, I don't think no, the White Album, I think. I mean, I think Abbey Road, I mean I think that was really good.

Speaker 1:

So you, think that's more of a creative album than Sgt Pepper's. I like Abbey Road.

Speaker 3:

I'm not a big Sgt Pepper fan, but I'm saying creativity-wise, like the uniqueness of it.

Speaker 1:

So you can write an album of great songs, but there's certain albums that pop up in time that are just so unique in how they're recorded and they sound, you know.

Speaker 3:

A Day in the.

Speaker 1:

Life, they.

Speaker 3:

If not for A Day in the Life, that record would not be what it is.

Speaker 1:

Really.

Speaker 3:

You think, so I do.

Speaker 1:

I think Abbey.

Speaker 3:

Road is. I think the songs are overall better. I think there's a lot of weak songs on Sgt Pepper. Really.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Lovely Rita, I mean things like that LR.

Speaker 1:

Rigby Within you.

Speaker 3:

LR Rigby's, not on Sgt Pepper, though.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no.

Speaker 3:

I mean, what is it? Uh, she's leaving, she's leaving. Well, that makes me cry, that song makes me cry. It's, it's a nice song, but I mean then there's within you, without you, which totally kills side too well discussion for another show yeah, absolutely on this day in 1954, johnny ray, poor old johnny ray.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, johnny ray was number one in the UK singles charts with Such a Night the singer's first of three UK number ones. He became deaf in his right ear at age 13 after an accident. What was he? The fucking star of Christmas? What's the fucking story with Jimmy Stewart?

Speaker 3:

Oh my God, the Christmas movie there. It's a wonderful life there. It's a wonderful life.

Speaker 1:

It's a wonderful life when the fucking the druggist slaps him in the side of the fucking head and his hair starts bleeding. He's deaf in one ear.

Speaker 2:

I've never seen it oh, no, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 3:

You gotta be joking I'm not kidding you, I hate christmas. No, actually I don't oh no, I don't actually. I love christmas, all right.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's move on for another discussion another time the singer's first three uk chimes. He became deaf and is right here at the age of 13 after an accident and would later perform wearing a hearing aid and dexys. Midnight runners, 1982 music video on come on eileen used footage of johnny ray from 1970, from 1954. The lyrics of the song say poor old johnny ray. He sounded sad upon the radio. He moved a million hearts in mono.

Speaker 3:

There's another day, yeah, that's it didn't't Billy Idol reference him in like Rock the Cradle?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Johnny Ray, johnny Ray. Yeah, that's a good call, good call.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, let's see Born on this day Jacob Underwood, eric Avery, simon Fowler, Andy Bell. Andy Bell from Erasure, the singer Andy Bell, who sounds just like what, what's her name from?

Speaker 1:

yaz, because that's basically uh yeah, allison moyer, andy bell, fucking dude kids. Uh, uh, what's his name from depeche mode that started uh, yaz, um andy, uh, andy, something. He gets allison moyer, she leaves and he gets a fucking singer that sounds just like her and starts another band. He raves shit, brilliant. Born in this day in 1958, phish Phish From the band Marillion. You remember Phish, not the Barney Miller Phish, sorry, let's see. Born in this day in 1950, steve Ferroni. Former drummer of the Average Right Band.

Speaker 2:

Is it Ferroni or Ferron Ferron?

Speaker 1:

He's best known for being the drummer for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers in the last 25 years.

Speaker 3:

He had an XM show too, but he pronounced it Ferroni Ferroni. Yes.

Speaker 1:

Thank you Mark. Thank you Lou, fuck you Mark. Thank you Lou, you lou, fuck you mark. Thank you, I thought I said it right. You made me second guess myself. You know italian exactly. Fucking soccer, fucking watcher again, julian, yeah uh born of this day in 1949. Michael brown, singer who cares, uh 1946. Ronnie gilbert from the blue magoos uh 1945 1945,. Bjorn Elvis of his Swedish singer, songwriter, producer from ABBA 1945, stu Cook, bassist with CCR born in 1945,.

Speaker 1:

Michael Kogel from Los Bravos, born in 44. Charlie Hopper, singer, with the UK subs, born in 43,. Charlie Hopper, singer with the UK subs, born in 43,. Tony Christie, uk singer. Jerry Lieber, albert King.

Speaker 3:

Jerry Lieber, yeah, lieber and Stoller.

Speaker 1:

Born in 1933. Yep, lieber and Stoller, that's right. And finally, born on this day in 1918, the legendary, the iconic Ella Fitzgerald.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Born on this day in 1918. Been listening to her all day.

Speaker 1:

Yep, yep, that's it, gentlemen. Two hours and 15 minutes, I'm sure Quick, yeah it went by fast.

Speaker 2:

We're going to take a break and we'll be back to play some hot biscuits after this break there you go Finish it off with a little DJ voice.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I like this. I like this just grabbing albums and we'll pick a year and just start. Oh yeah, we'll just start tearing up albums again. I think we still have some years to go, though we still have some years to go.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah. Well, the last show we did, the year we did. We never did the albums 71.

Speaker 1:

last show, we did the year, we did we never did the album, so we were 71.

Speaker 2:

That's why I said we'll pick up this week. What did we do last time? It was supposed to be 74.

Speaker 1:

That lou said yeah, lou said oh, we already did 74, like literally 20 minutes before the show.

Speaker 3:

And then I said well, what haven't we done, we, and we kind of swapped over to uh, to 71 yeah yeah, and we didn't finish the albums in the in the movie so there was a shit ton of I mean a lot of good albums in 71, though.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, good year shit, yeah, good year, but uh, yeah, we'll, we'll start. We're running out of years. We've done fucking like 30 episodes of years, I think so far.

Speaker 3:

Wow, yeah you're the whole 70s. We'll look, we'll look we probably didn't.

Speaker 1:

I know, I think there's a couple years left. Let's see. Patty Ossie says Great show, scott, lou and Mark. Thanks for all the info and laughs. Sweet dreams, you too, patty, big Ed, todd, the Wet Sprocket. Good night, gentlemen. Great gentlemen, great show, thank you. Uh, bob kirkman, wasn't that youtube?

Speaker 3:

concert, the one somebody's. I don't know what the fuck he's talking about.

Speaker 1:

Sweaty balls, sweaty balls, yeah, sweaty balls on the back of my neck yep, yep, yep, yep, yep, uh. That's it, gentlemen. Uh, again, as I always say, thank you for your time, thank you for your knowledge, but most of all, thank you for your friendship. I appreciate it, I.

Speaker 2:

I truly do.

Speaker 1:

And everybody, thanks for watching, thanks for listening. If you like it, share it. If you didn't like it, well, thanks for watching and listening for two hours and 17 minutes. This was a good show. It was a nice flow, good info it was. You know, considering we took, maybe we should take a week off more often.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I don't want to do that. What?

Speaker 1:

did we say this is our therapy right?

Speaker 2:

Yep, it is, it's mine.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so next week we'll be back with episode 145.

Speaker 2:

Wow.

Speaker 3:

Oh shit, right, I see 300 episodes in our future gentlemen, I see 300 episodes in our future Music relish. Actually, we're closing in on theoretically 100, because we had the 30 years absolutely you did yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So we're almost at 100 now yeah, yeah, but we'll have to start, um, digging around and finding, uh, kind of new avenues. I like the pop culture aspect of it, the movies, and you know, maybe we can kind of start incorporating that into the show and talking about, you know, different things. Doesn't always have to be music, but music always pops up, yeah, it always pops up.

Speaker 1:

So let's start, you know, coming up with maybe some ideas for rabbit holes, and because you get a string and you can do 20 episodes of one rabbit hole yeah, yeah uh, but I, you know I get good feedback with the talking about the movies and the tv shows and the shit like that that we throw in now. So, uh, yeah, let's start kind of maybe thinking about shaking it up a little bit and uh, that's it. So, all right, everybody, uh, as I always say, doing this show for you to quote, quote my favorite artist, morrissey the pleasure, the privilege is mine and Mark's and Lou's, and we'll be back next week with, I don't know, maybe some movies, maybe some TVs, maybe some music, a little bit of everything.

Speaker 3:

And some porn movies.

Speaker 1:

Oh Jesus, Way to fucking end the show, Lou Jesus.

Speaker 3:

Fucking 10 years old devil in miss jones daddy, what's that? Okay, gotta go. Good night. That's why this is therapy.

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