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Great Music From the 60s

Rescued One

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No, no, no! My grandfather was a Texan who fought in WW1. He died in Muskogee, Oklahoma, in the early thirties. I'm a Yankee who is unfamiliar with Oklahoma cities, but I remembered that name Muskogee. My husband and I drove through OK once and he was called a "foreigner!"
 
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Handmaid for Jesus

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Lukaris

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Zager and Evans: 2525

This is a haunting song & I believe these guys sensed things were (are) happening much faster than the epic timeline of their opus.




 
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Handmaid for Jesus

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This is a haunting song & I believe these guys sensed things were (are) happening much faster than the epic timeline of their opus.




All of that is happening now, in the year 2023.
 
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This is a haunting song & I believe these guys sensed things were (are) happening much faster than the epic timeline of their opus.




I remember..listening the song..
- from radio.
 
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mourningdove~

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"Take Five" ~ Dave Brubeck

"Take Five" was first released as a promotional single on September 21, 1959, on the Dave Brubeck Quartet's album Time Out. The single initially had modest success but became a sleeper hit after being reissued for general release in May 1961, eventually becoming a major jazz standard and a significant crossover pop hit.

 
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LizaMarie

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"Take Five" ~ Dave Brubeck

"Take Five" was first released as a promotional single on September 21, 1959, on the Dave Brubeck Quartet's album Time Out. The single initially had modest success but became a sleeper hit after being reissued for general release in May 1961, eventually becoming a major jazz standard and a significant crossover pop hit.

This reminds me of music I heard growing up. My parents had that Dav Brubeck album.
 
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mourningdove~

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I haven't heard that one in AGES!

There was something about the '60s'. We seemed back then to have many popular songs with lyrics that didn't quite make sense to many of us! And without the internet to research them, we were kind of left 'to guess' at what we thought the song was about. ("Mellow Yellow" is another song that comes to mind! Lol!)

This song was one of those that never made sense to me, but was entertaining, nonetheless.
Back in the 60's we just 'sang along' ... I'm not sure that even our parents knew what we were singing about! Lol

Today, according to the internet:


AI Overview

The song "Pictures of Matchstick Men" is about the overwhelming feeling of obsession with someone's image after a breakup, where "matchstick men" symbolize the haunting presence of the person's face and eyes seen everywhere. The term "matchstick men" is a direct reference to the paintings of the British artist L. S. Lowry, who is known for his depictions of crowded industrial scenes with figures resembling matchstick men.

Obsession and Haunting

  • The lyrics describe seeing the person's face and eyes in various places, such as "underneath the pillow" and "in a funny kind of yellow" in the sky.
  • The repeated phrase "All I ever see is them and you" highlights the inescapable nature of the obsession, where the image of the ex-partner is intertwined with the symbolic "matchstick men".
Inspiration from L. S. Lowry

    • Status Quo's Francis Rossi was inspired by the distinctive style of L. S. Lowry, a British artist who painted industrial landscapes and figures that resembled matchstick drawings.
    • The phrase "matchstick men" in the song directly refers to the artist's famous style of painting people as simple stick figures.
Symbolic Meaning
    • The matchstick figures, drawn from the artist's work, are used to represent the person's unforgettable image.
    • They convey a sense of being small and insignificant compared to the overwhelming presence of the ex-partner in the singer's mind.
    • The repetition of seeing these images signifies the loss of self and the inability to find peace or reality outside of the obsessive thoughts about the relationship.
 
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Chesterton

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I haven't heard that one in AGES!

There was something about the '60s'. We seemed back then to have many popular songs with lyrics that didn't quite make sense to many of us! And without the internet to research them, we were kind of left 'to guess' at what we thought the song was about. ("Mellow Yellow" is another song that comes to mind! Lol!)
In the late '60's there was a rumor going around that young folks would get high by smoking banana peels. Some people thought Mellow Yellow was a drug song (similar to Puff The Magic Dragon).

My older sister had that record, and my parents told me that when I was a toddler I loved the song around the time I was just learning to talk, so I couldn't pronounce the L sound and I sang Mewwow Yewwow. :)
 
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mourningdove~

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In the late '60's there was a rumor going around that young folks would get high by smoking banana peels. Some people thought Mellow Yellow was a drug song (similar to Puff The Magic Dragon).

My older sister had that record, and my parents told me that when I was a toddler I loved the song around the time I was just learning to talk, so I couldn't pronounce the L sound and I sang Mewwow Yewwow. :)
What a sweet memory! :yellowheart:

I must be just a wee tad older than you.
When "Mellow Yellow" was released in 1966, I was 12 years old ... and able to pronounce the words!
:blush:
 
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mourningdove~

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The Oft-Misinterpreted Meaning Behind Donovan’s Psychedelic Hit “Sunshine Superman”​

When it was released in 1966, Donovan’s “Sunshine Superman” was one of the first psychedelic rock tunes to top the pop charts; and since then, the hypnotically jangling hit has become synonymous with the acid-drenched ethos of the ear. The song whispers of LSD-fueled summers and syrupy mind trips at first listen, but upon closer inspection, the tune’s true meaning touches on something different.

Behind the Song
Like many songs, “Sunshine Superman” began with love. Donovan met his future wife, Linda Lawrence, in 1965. At the time, she was healing from her separation with the Rolling Stones’ Brian Jones with whom she had a young son. Donovan and Linda courted briefly; however, in pursuit of her modeling career and a fresh start, Linda left England for Los Angeles, California.

When Donovan found himself in the States, promoting his new hit song “Catch the Wind,” he and Linda reconnected. It wouldn’t be long before the musician proposed, something the young Linda declined in need of time.

“I was miserable but undeterred,” Donovan shared of the experience in an interview. “Back in London, in the early fall of ’65, I lived above the flat of my manager, Ashley Kozak. Missing Linda, I began to write ‘Sunshine Superman.’”

Sunshine came softly a-through my a-window today, the snaking song begins in a tip-toeing rhythm, Could’ve tripped out easy a-but I’ve a-changed my ways / It’ll take time, I know it but in a while / You’re gonna be mine, I know it, we’ll do it in style / ‘Cause I made my mind up you’re going to be mine.

“As I wrote the words and music, it became an optimistic heartbreak song. Like many of my songs, it expressed hopeful melancholy,” the artist continued, debunking the common misinterpretation, “The second line, “Could’ve tripped out easy a-but I’ve, a-changed my ways” has nothing to do with an acid trip. It means I could have allowed my thoughts to slip into depression but I didn’t.”

The song, however, is a sign of the times and does make references to the acid-tinted ideologies and mind-expansion Olympics of the 1960s. “‘Sunshine’ was indeed slang for LSD,” the artist admitted, “but the reference was actually about the sun coming through my flat’s window.” As for the Superman reference, he explained it had little to do with the superhero. “It’s a reference to the book Thus Spoke Zarathustra, by Friedrich Nietzsche, who wrote about the evolution of consciousness to reach a higher superman state,” he shared.

Everybody’s hustlin’ just to have a little scene, he sings in one verse, but his desire is no longer to “make it,” it’s to be with Linda. He makes mention of Green Lantern in another line, asserting to his lover that the comic book character ain’t got a-nothin’ on me / I can make like a turtle and dive for your pearls in the sea.

While several lyrics can easily equate to a nonsensical slop, the song contains a throughline, the gist of the song in the recurring words, When you’ve made your mind up / forever to be mine. Donovan explained the line was “simply a prediction that in time, Linda and I would once again be together.”

 
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