“Carmentea” – Miguel Angel Martin (1978) * Written by Miguel Angel Martin * Colombian LP: Miguel Angel Martin y sus Joropos * Label: Orbe
Miguel Angel Martin, from the Arauca region of Colombia that borders Venezuela, composed and recorded a version of his song “Carmentea” in the early sixties, after which it caught fire and metamorphosed into regional folkore. Martin went on to develop a name for himself as a celebrated musician, folklorist and journalist, while the real life subject of his paean, the woman with “black eyes that kill” (Carmen Teresa Aguirre), inspired a number of written investigations. This 1978 version of the song features a lead harp along with a call-and-response chorus (with female voices). The sound and instrumentation of the record, which includes David Paralas and “Los Copleros del Auraca,” is of the “joropo” genre more typical of Venezuela.
“Drifting Away” (1974) – Status Quo
“Drifting Away” (1974) – Status Quo * Written by Alan Lancaster and Rick Parfitt * 45: “Mystery Song” / “Drifting Away” * LP: Quo * Produced by Status Quo * Label: Vertigo (UK)/A&M (US)
The post-“Pictures of Matchstick Men” incarnation of Status Quo distinguished itself through a deep commitment to shallow boogie rock. (They’re perhaps the closest likely role models for Spinal Tap’s fictional trajectory). “Drifting Away,” though, appearing as the last song on side A of their 1974 Quo album, moves along with both characteristic insistence and uncharacteristic ease, drifting through the listener’s head long after the fadeout.
“All Night Long” (1966) – The Animals
“All Night Long” (1966) – The Animals * Written by Frank Zappa * LP: Animalism * Produced by Tom Wilson * Label: MGM
The Animals arrive at LAX. This is one of the last tracks recorded by the first incarnation of the Birmingham blues rockers, including aviophobic organist Alan Price, before they would disband and reform as “Eric Burdon and…” Written and arranged by Frank Zappa (who also plays guitar), the song stands out for its jet-fueled, raga-psych instrumental breaks that punctuate the blues verses lifted from Jimmy Reed.
“Dum Dum Girl” (1984) – Talk Talk
“Dum Dum Girl” (1984) – Talk Talk * Written by Mark Hollis and Tim Friese-Greene * 45: “Dum Dum Girl” / “Without You” * LP: It’s My Life * Produced by Tim Friese-Greene * Label: EMI
The year 1984 seemed to be Talk Talk’s most cheerful one, in which the pop world these future post-rock icons inhabited made them laugh in a way it couldn’t make them do in later years. All three of the Tim Pope-directed videos for their It’s My Life album (“Such a Shame,” “It’s My Life” and “Dum Dum Girl”) show them making fun of the music video idiom. For the pensive “Dum Dum Girl,” a “first take” goof-off became more familiar (and effective) than the official video. Or was that the plan all along?
“Danas Majko ženiš sina” (1972) – Slavko Petrović
“Danas Majko ženiš sina” (1972) – Slavko Petrović * Written by Aleksandar Nikolić (lyrics) and Budimer Jovanović (music) * EP: Danas Majko ženiš sina * Label: PGP RTB
Not to be confused with the previous entry’s subject (Slavko Perović), whose surname lacks a T. Although the title song on Slavko Petrović’s debut EP is a known Montenegrin folk song (title translation: “Mother, today you’re marrying off your son”), a co-credit for authorship is given to Budimir Jovanović, the record’s Serbian accordionist and ensemble leader. This is a genre the Serbs call “national” music, which correlates with American country music in that it changes very little conceptually across the decades, save for some technological giveaways. Although Petrovic’s early seventies-to-early eighties recordings float around online, substantial info about him certainly does not.
“Ne ljuti se, Dragana” (1979) – Slavko Perović
“Ne ljuti se, Dragana” (1979) – Slavko Perović * Written by Branislav Radonjić * Produced by Slobodan Nikolić * LP: Ne ljuti se, Dragana * Label: Jugoton
Slavko Perović is a Serbian singer with a backlog of participation in the mariachi craze of fifties-sixties Yugoslavia. His 1979 LP Ne ljuti se, Dragana (don’t be angry, Dragana) is an affable assortment of acoustic schlager, with four of the ten songs, including the title track, being compositions credited to Branislav Radonjić. He’s the one who also leads the trio of musicians (two guitars and a flute, an unusual combo for the genre) who accompany Perović. All of the rest are traditional.
“Adios” (1989) – Linda Ronstadt
“Adios” (1989) – Linda Ronstadt * Written by Jimmy Webb * LP: Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Wind * Produced by Peter Asher * Label: Elektra * Charts: Billboard Adult Contemporary (#9)
The closing track from Ronstadt’s Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Wind showcases three American pop masters who, in comeback mode, are actually at the top of their game: Linda as lead vocalist, Jimmy Webb as songwriter, and Brian Wilson as vocal arranger. As one of two singles released from the album (the other one being “When Something Is Wrong with My Baby,” Ronstadt’s duet with Aaron Neville), “Adios” received enough radio love from Lite FM stations to reach #9 on Billboard’s AC chart.
This was the era of Wilson’s late ’80s revival, a time of musical productivity that was compromised, in many ways, by the smothering watchfulness of his psychotherapist Eugene Landy. According to two reports—Ronstadt’s Simple Dreams memoir and Christian Matijas-Mecca’s The Words and Music of Brian Wilson—the sessions for “Adios” were somehow Landy-free, which gives Wilson’s five-part harmonies, all sung by him, even more fresh-air resonance. In her book, Ronstadt refers to Webb’s song as “wistful,” but listen and hear how Wilson turns it into something more heart-rending.
“Them Changes” (1970) – Ramsey Lewis
“Them Changes” (1970) – Ramsey Lewis * Written by Buddy Miles * 45: “Them Changes” / “Unsilent Majority” * LP: Them Changes * Produced by Ramsey Lewis * Label: Cadet
Jazz keyboardist Ramsey Lewis had a knack for the single format; too bad his “Them Changes” never got much radio traction, although playlists show that Los Angeles MOR station KMPC used to give it some air time. Recorded live at the Depot in Minneapolis in May 1970, this Rhodes piano version of Buddy Miles’s signature song hearkens back to the club-date sound of earlier Lewis hits like “The In Crowd” and “Hang on Sloopy,” locking into a deep groove with the help of Morris Jennings (drums), Cleveland Eaton (bass), and Phil Upchurch (guitar). The current-event images on the cover give the instrumental album an activist vibe. (The 45 version cretits “Ramsey Lewis & Co.”).
“After the Fox” (1966) – The Hollies
“After the Fox” (1966) – The Hollies * Written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David * 45: “After the Fox” / “The Fox-Trot” * LP: After the Fox (soundtrack) * Producer: A.I.R. (London) Ltd. * Label: United Artists
“After the Fox” is a lesser known Burt Bacharach/Hal David movie theme featuring harpsichord and beguiling chord changes. Released the year after What’s New Pussycat, the song plays during a candy-colored, animated intro (linked below). Leading man Peter Sellers provides comical interjections between the Hollies’ lead vocals. The After the Fox film, more appreciated today than in 1966, serves as a cineaste’s field day with its numerous industry in-jokes.
“Tickler” (1971) – Earth Quake
“Tickler” (1971) – Earth Quake * Written by J. Robert Dunbar * Produced by Earth Quake and Allan Mason * 45: “Tickler” / “Guarding You” * LP: Earth Quake * Label: A&M
San Francisco’s Earth Quake played the type of melodic, carefully proportioned rock and roll that would eventually get called power pop. Heavy airplay in the Bay Area for their song “Tickler” got them close to national chart placement when it appeared in Billboard as a San Francisco “regional breakout hit,” but it never, in fact, broke out. Frustration with the A&M label prompted manager Matthew “King” Kaufman to form the label Beserkley, housing Earth Quake until they’d call it quits in 1979, but eventually having chart success with the Greg Kihn Band. (Adapted from a longer post at Early 70s Radio.)