Beatles “Overrated?”

It explains 80% of the reason I venture into the Wild West-Meets-Idiocracy world that is Twitter: @Super70sSports. Featuring a hilarious mix of sports clips, ads and a mélange of pop-culture references from the 1960s-to roughly the mid-1990s, the account, started by Moraine Valley Community College, sociology professor Ricky Cobb, is simply the best follow on the Twitter device.



Cobb built a cottage industry out of an account that conservatively, is good for at least four or five laughs a day. It’s a must-follow for anyone who remembers Howard Cosell and the Battle of the Network Stars, the American Basketball Association, Newport cigarette ads, 1980s video games and William Shatner-as-T.J. Hooker hood rolls.



And yes, Cobb hits the music notes hard. Nowhere else can you find pictures of Paul Lynde with the Osmonds and Fleetwood Mac takes split with a picture of Steven Tyler looking like your Aunt Clara.




Here’s a selection from my upcoming coffee table book “Cool Grandma...

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Ric Ocasek: Just What We Needed

The recent passing of Ric Ocasek left all of us reeling. Especially since it happened just days after we lost Eddie Money. Their respective music was the soundtrack of our youth for many of us. Ric showed us he had so many more facets than we ever dreamed possible. He was a singer, songwriter, musician, record producer and painter, as well as husband and father.



Born Richard Theodore Otcasek in Baltimore MD, he was always interested in music. A forced move to Ohio when he was 16 proved most fortuitous for Ric, because soon after that was when he met Benjamin Orr.  The two met when Ric saw Ben perform with another band, when they were just out of high school. They became friends but would not form a band together until some years later. In 1968, they formed a band called “ID Nirvana” and performed around the Ohio State University campus.



In 1970, the duo moved to Boston and formed a new folk-style band called “Milkwood,” which included future Cars keyboardist Greg Hawkes. The...

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George Harrison: What Is Life?

Forever known as “the quiet Beatle”, George Harrison was more an observer, a thinker, an innovator, and a man who was truly unafraid to try new things. George was also the youngest Beatle but was very much an old soul.



Harrison’s love of music started in the womb, with his mother playing music from Radio India. Biographer Joshua Green said, “Every Sunday she tuned in to mystical sounds evoked by sitars and tablas, hoping that the exotic music would bring peace and calm to the baby in the womb.” This form of music would figure heavily in his music later in life.



Harrison first became part of The Quarrymen with Paul McCartney and John Lennon, which would later become The Beatles. In March 1958, he auditioned for them, but Lennon felt that Harrison, having just turned 15, was too young to join the band. Not to be denied, McCartney arranged a second meeting, during which Harrison impressed Lennon by performing the lead guitar part for the instrumental “Raunchy.” Lennon then...

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Girls Just Want to Have Fun: Can We Call it a Feminist Anthem?

The year was 1983, a time that saw the birth of the moonwalk, the final episode of MASH and the debut of Fraggle Rock. As far as where women stood in 1983, the seedlings of a new “revolution” of sorts had been planted. Gloria Steinem was emerging as a prominent voice on the scene with the publication of her book Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. And then, you have Cyndi Lauper…



What has been reflectively touted as a feminist anthem for the 80s, Lauper’s hit song Girls Just Want to Have Fun tells a story and as seen in the video, a rather animated one at that. But can we legitimately call this hit a “feminist anthem”? Knowing what we know now, having soldiered through #MeToo, having butted up against glass ceilings and gender disparity in general, how should we interpret Cyndi Lauper’s musical/video plea for women to let their hair down and feel free to be, well, free?



The Great Lyric Flip



Many may not be aware that the original song was actually written and...

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Mixtape 2.0

The mixtape, a staple of the Gen X love arsenal in that when pledging your undying teenage devotion to the object of your affection, you would record all of the quintessential romantic ballads onto one tape. You’d then sheepishly present this tape to the person you adored. The labeling of said tape was just as important as the songs it contained. Clever mixtape titles along the alliterative lines of “Songs for Sarah,” “Barb’s Ballads,” or the more direct and simply put: “Mixtape for My Love.”



Some of the standard mixtape go-tos…You have the 80s hair band ballads of course. What mixtape would be complete without Bon Jovi’s iconic I’ll Be There for You or Motley’s Crue’s Without You. Then there is the lighter musical fare, Lionel Ritchie’s Hello and pretty much anything by REO Speedwagon or Air Supply.



The Mechanics of the Mixtape



Believe it or not actually creating this mixtape was a fairly in-depth process. Prior to the development of the dual cassette boombox...

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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: The Peg Entwistle Story

Hollywood and films are both synonymous and iconic, and truly a collection of tall tales and urban legends as well. Some are myths – purely conjecture, and it’s always astonishing to hear the rumors – Stallone once did porn, footage of Brandon Lee’s fatal shooting can be seen in the final cut of The Crow, James Dean’s death Porsche claimed more victims after him, Richard Gere has a gerbil fetish – the list of completely rubbish untruths is miles long.



But beyond the glittering lights, there are many true Hollywood stories. Long the center of the world’s movie industry, there are always salacious tales that go along with that infamy. Let’s explore one of the more fascinating ones.



One of the most interesting that comes to mind is the Peg Entwistle story. Millicent Lilian ‘Peg’ Entwistle was a British actress who gained notoriety when she jumped to her death from the “H” in the Hollywoodland (now just “Hollywood”) sign in 1932. She originally had some modest success on...

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1980s, The Best Decade for Halloween Ever—We Sure About That?

The 1980s: the decade when Halloween wasn’t necessarily the happy-go-lucky, relatively sheltered (by way of a parent still dotingly accompanying you in your tween years) experience that it is today. At least not my childhood Halloweens anyway. No, mine were of the sweat and suffocate in a plastic Gold Circle-purchased costume (no Walmart in our neck of the woods yet) variety, and then upon returning home, mom and dad would do their due diligence by inspecting every piece of “suspect” candy. For what…why, razor blades of course.



Now certainly, if you google Halloween in the 80s, overwhelmingly, nostalgia driven pieces will turn up. Happy pieces. Best-decade-ever-for-Halloween pieces. I am not ashamed to say that I am a Halloween hater, and I attribute 90% of that to the 80s.



Early Halloweens (Ages 5 to 7)



Disclaimer: after age 5 I did not go again until I was 8.



My mother tries to fit me with one of those plastic smocks bearing some semblance of Wonder Woman and...

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Rocky Horror Picture Show A Retro Review

What do you get when you cross a sweet, young, newly engaged couple with a house full of raving mad lunatics? You get one of the greatest cult classic films of all time!



Rocky Horror Picture Show is a campy, musical spoof on the haunted-castle horror movie, encompassing a ’70s glam-rock world of androgyny with characters that are more than offbeat. Adults have been gathering at ritualistic midnight showings of Rocky Horror across the country since its 1975 debut, contributing to it becoming a cult classic.



Made from a hit stage show, the premise of the movie is this – the young couple get lost and stumble across a mad transvestite doctor and his minions from the planet Transsexual. He is in the midst of unveiling Rocky Horror, a humanoid creation who unfortunately spurns the doctor’s advances, much to his annoyance. The film follows Brad and Janet’s descent into the world of Dr. Frank N. Furter and his minions. And what delightfully transpires after that is pure kitsch...

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The Bee Gees How Can You Mend A Broken Heart

Photography used with permission, courtesy of Suzanne Allison Photography.



When you hear the name “Bee Gees,” many automatically (and erroneously) think “disco.” However, the Brothers Gibb truly were anything but, and this new HBO documentary proves beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the Bee Gees were massively underestimated. But the music journey of Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb was a tumultuous one, and How Can You Mend A Broken Heart lays it all on the line.



They’ve sold an estimated 220 million records and had six consecutive US number ones during their late-’70s phase. This achievement alone begs the question – how come the Bee Gees still remain rather underrated?



Producer/director Frank Marshall weaves an intricate tapestry of the Brothers Gibb and their lives, from their humble beginnings in the Isle of Man, to their first successes in London, to their astronomical success in Saturday Night Fever, to their lives after the wheels came off. And ultimately...

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The story behind … “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”

There is usually quite an interesting story behind hit songs like Do They Know It’s Christmas?”



This particular story starts in early October 1984 in England, where Bob Geldof of Boomtown Rats fame, was watching television, and saw a BBC news report about the horrible famine in Ethiopia. This disaster had resulted from a very severe drought, and as Geldof watched, he felt compelled to do something. But the question was what could he do?



He then contacted his good friend, Midge Ure, lead singer of Ultravox, and after tossing around several ideas, they then decided their best option was to collaborate on a benefit single to be released during the rapidly approaching holiday season. Ure stated, “We knew if we made it a Christmas song, we would pull at the purse strings as well as the heartstrings”.  Since time was of the essence, the two quickly co-wrote “Do They Know It’s Christmas”, a song designed to make the listener think of those who were living in poverty, and unable to...

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Bob Geldof: From Serf to Sir

Born in Ireland on October 5, 1951, Robert Frederick Zenon Geldof KBE (aka Bob Geldof) is a man who wears many hats, a singer-songwriter, author, political activist, even occasional actor, and also, a devoted father.



Geldof first achieved fame as the lead singer of the Irish rock band, the Boomtown Rats, in the late 1970s, who realized their popularity in the time of the growth of the punk rock movement. The band had UK number one hits with the songs Rat Trap and I Don’t Like Mondays.



While acclaimed for his music, Geldof is most widely recognized for his activism, especially anti-poverty efforts in Africa. In 1984, he and Midge Ure founded the charity supergroup, Band Aid, to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia. They also went on to organize the charity super-concert, Live Aid, the following year and the Live 8 concerts in 2005.



Live Aid was a benefit concert held on Saturday, July 13, 1985, as well as an ongoing music-based fundraising initiative. The original...

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Marc Bolan: 20th Century Boy

Marc Bolan was a singer, songwriter, musician, record producer, and poet. He was the lead singer of the band T. Rex and was one of the pioneers of the glam rock movement of the 1970s.



Born Mark Feld, Bolan was given a guitar by his father at age 9. He formed a skiffle band, and during lunch breaks at school, he would play his guitar in the playground to a small audience of friends. At 15, he was expelled from school for bad behavior.



Bolan briefly joined a modelling agency and became a “John Temple Boy”, appearing in a clothing catalogue for the menswear store. He modeled suits for their catalogs and for the window displays. It was suggested that Bolan was in fact bisexual according to those in the music scene. When asked about his sexuality during an interview in 1975, Bolan confirmed that he was, indeed, bisexual.



The Who’s Pete Townshend stated in an interview, “I remember Marc Bolan with full make-up on, working as a rent boy to buy clothes, in and around the Scene...

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Little River Band: Cool Changes

Formed in 1974 in Melbourne Australia, Little River Bandworked through many obstacles, and numerous band member changes, to finally achieve the success they craved, only to lose it due to personality conflicts.



In late 1974, using the band name Mississippi, Beeb Birtles, Graeham Goble, Derek Pellicci and Glenn Shorrock met with newly hired talent manager Glenn Wheatley. They had initially tried to break in through the UK market, but that idea was quickly scratched. After much discussion, and also due to the indifferent reception they had each received in the UK, they ultimately decided their new band would need to establish itself in the United States.



As for the name change, Birtles later stated in his autobiography, “Shorrock and I were sitting in the back seat of a car driving down Princes Highway to play a gig at The Golf View Hotel in Geelong. As we passed the Little River exit sign, Shorrock said ‘Little River, that’d be a good song title.’ Within a split second he...

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Peter Frampton: Do You Feel Like We Do?

Peter Frampton knew he wanted to be a musician very early on in life. At the young age of 7, discovered his grandmother’s banjolele in the attic, and taught himself to play it. Not satisfied with just that, he also taught himself to play guitar, piano, and organ as well. By the time he was 8, he was enrolled in classical music lessons to immerse himself further in his chosen passion.



Frampton played in his first band, The Little Ravens, at age 12, and was classmates with David Jones A.K.A. David Bowie. Frampton’s band played on the same bill at school as Bowie’s band, George and the Dragons, and Peter and David would spend lunch breaks together, playing Buddy Holly songs, despite the 3 year difference in age.



By 14, he was also a successful child singer, in a band called the TruBeats, then in another called The Preachers, both produced and managed by Bill Wyman of Rolling Stones fame. In 1969, when Frampton was 18 years old, he joined with Steve Marriott of Small Faces to...

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Saturday Night Fever: A Retro Review

What do you get when you make a movie about the insane disco craze of the 70s? You get music, dancing, and a whole lot more that could have been left on the cutting room floor. Ironically, it’s the numerous and heavily choreographed musical sequences that have failed to stand the test of time.



John Travolta portrays the angry, bitter young man from Queens named Tony Manero whose one true passion is to dance. Travolta is truly mesmerizing in every scene, carrying the film despite some woeful performances from the supporting cast. Naturally, his dancing is etched on the culture’s collective consciousness, but it was his dramatic work which earned him an Oscar nomination for his performance.



This movie is full of strong language, sex, and violence. The characters take part in gang fights, as well as racist and sexist behavior, and there’s a truly disturbing gang rape scene in the back of a car. The male characters drink, smoke, and talk about sex with wild abandon, and misogyny...

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Beastie Boys: 90s Icons

Beastie Boys were an American hip hop and rap rock group from New York City formed in 1978. During the height of their popularity, the group was composed of Michael “Mike D” Diamond (vocals, drums), Adam “MCA” Yauch (vocals, bass) and Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz (vocals, guitar).



Starting as a punk band, Beastie Boys were formed out of members of the experimental hardcore punk band the Young Aborigines in 1978, with Diamond as vocalist, Jeremy Shatan on bass guitar, guitarist John Berry and Kate Schellenbach on drums. Shatan left in 1981, Yauch replaced him on bass and the band changed their name to Beastie Boys. Berry left shortly thereafter and was replaced by Horovitz.



They quickly changed gears in 1983, after achieving success with the experimental hip hop song Cooky Puss. They toured with Madonna in 1985, and a year later, released their debut album, Licensed to Ill, the first rap record to top the Billboard 200 chart, and spawned the huge mega hit, You Gotta...

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Smashing Pumpkins: From 1979 and Beyond

Alt-Rock band, The Smashing Pumpkins were formed in 1988 in Chicago by front man, Billy Corgan, along with D’Arcy Wretzky (bass), James Iha (guitar), and Jimmy Chamberlin (drums). While the lineup has changed over the years, the current one is Corgan, Chamberlin, Iha and guitarist Jeff Schroeder.



Disavowing the punk rock roots of many of their alt-rock contemporaries, they have a diverse, densely layered, and guitar-heavy sound, containing elements of gothic rock, heavy metal, dream pop, psychedelic rock, and progressive rock. Some have called their songs “ethereal” and “other-worldly” in nature. I would simply call them unique.



Corgan is the group’s primary songwriter; his cathartic lyrics have shaped the band’s albums and songs, which have been described as “anguished, bruised reports from Billy Corgan’s nightmare-land” on more than one occasion. Indeed, a lot of them have a somnolent, almost dream-like quality.



After releasing their first album to mixed reviews...

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Van Halen: Can’t Stop Lovin’ You

Van Halen was a rock band formed in Pasadena, California in 1972, and largely credited with “restoring hard rock to the forefront of the music scene.” But while the band is well known for their energetic rock shows, it’s best known for the legendary, masterful guitar work of founder and lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen (EVH). Van Halen consisted of EVH on lead guitar, brother Alex Van Halen on drums, vocalist David Lee Roth; and bassist Michael Anthony from 1974 until 1985.



Their music speaks very eloquently for itself. From their self-titled debut album in 1978, through their next few albums Van Halen II, Women and Children First, Fair Warning, Diver Down, and 1984 in 1984, the band rocked hard, and partied harder. By the mid 1980s, Van Halen was one of the most successful rock acts of the time.



In 1985, Roth left the band to embark on a solo career and was replaced by former Montrose lead vocalist Sammy Hagar. Their next four albums...

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Red Hot Chili Peppers: Still Givin’ It Away

When you think of true California rock, the Red Hot Chili Peppers (RHCP) are one of the first bands to come to mind. They’re a funk-rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1983, and their music combines an eclectic mix of alternative rock, funk, punk rock and psychedelic rock for a truly unique sound.



The original line-up was vocalist, Anthony Kiedis, bassist, Flea, guitarist, Hillel Slovak, and drummer, Jack Irons, but has changed a few times over the years. The first album featured Jack Sherman on guitar and Cliff Martinez on drums as Slovak and Irons both had previous commitments to other bands they had to fulfill. Both original members appeared on the band’s 3rd album, but sadly, Slovak died of a drug overdose on June 25, 1988; and Irons, devastated, left the band. Other past members include DeWayne McKnight, D. H. Peligro, Arik Marshall, Jesse Tobias, Josh Klinghoffer, and Dave Navarro. The current line-up is Kiedis, Flea, drummer, Chad Smith, and guitarist, John...

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That Thing You Do: Retro Review

That Thing You Do is the story of a young band of Beatle-like clones, who stumble upon a hit single. Before long, the wide-eyed Wonders find themselves on the radio, touring state fairs, in a cheesy beach movie and on a popular TV show—all on the strength of one song. But what a song!



In 1964, Guy Patterson (Tom Everett Scott) works at his father’s appliance store until a freak accident sidelines a local quartet’s drummer. Guy joins the band, and takes a song written by the angst-driven Jimmy (Johnathon Schaech), to new heights by turning it from a sleepy ballad into a rockin’ up-tempo tune. Steve Zahn, plays the adorable cutup Lenny on guitar, Ethan Embry plays the bass player (who never has a name through the entire movie), and Liv...

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Poison: Still Nothin’ But A Good Time

Since the 80’s, Poison has given us “nothing but a good time,” and served up some hard driving rock & roll as well. The band, initially named Paris, was formed in 1979, in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania and consisted of lead vocalist, Bret Michaels, and drummer, Rikki Rockett, who were childhood friends, as well as bassist, Bobby Dall, and guitarist, Matt Smith.



They changed their name to Poison and moved to California. Arriving in L.A., the group struggled to survive away from home with no family and no money, but they were determined to make it. Smith, however, was about to become a father and concerned about the band’s future and left the band to return to PA. Auditions were held, and were down to three: C.C. DeVille, Steve Silva, and Slash. Although Michaels and Dall did not initially get along with Deville, the band eventually agreed that his “fire” made him the best choice.



The band signed to independent label Enigma Records in 1986 for...

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Commodores: Still Sailin’ On

Funk and soul band, Commodores, were first formed in 1968 at Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University) from two former student music groups, the Mystics and the Jays. The new six-man band featured Lionel Richie, Thomas McClary, and William King from the Mystics … Richie later described some members of the Mystics as “jazz buffs;”  and Andre Callahan, Michael Gilbert, and Milan Williams from the Jays. To choose their new name, King opened a dictionary and randomly picked a word. “We lucked out,” he remarked with a laugh when later telling this story in a magazine interview. “We almost became ‘The Commodes.’



After signing with Motown in 1972, the group’s most successful period was in the late 1970s and early 1980s when Lionel Richie was the co-lead singer. The band’s biggest hit singles are ballads such as Easy, Sail On, Three Times a Lady, Still, and Nightshift; and funky dance hits which include Brick House, Fancy Dancer...

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Grease: Retro Movie Review

Grease:



Retro Movie Review



Grease was the word when this movie came out in 1978, and the word is still alive and well today. Numerous re-releases of the movie, and 70s kids becoming first parents, and now grandparents have ensured that, by indoctrination of the each follow on generation that the movie remains an icon.



The movie itself is about the friendships, romances and adventures of a group of high school kids in the 1950s. The story, set in Southern California, involves a “greaser” named Danny (John Travolta), who has a summertime romance at the shore with an adorable Aussie named Sandy (Olivia Newton-John). When summer ends, they think they’re parting forever, only to find themselves at the same high school...

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Julian Lennon: Truly His Own Man

John Charles Julian Lennon, also known as Jules, is so much more than just the eldest son of Beatle, John Lennon, and former first wife, Cynthia Powell. He is also a very accomplished singer, songwriter and musician, and an amazing photographer, among many other things.



Named after John’s deceased mother Julia, Julian is also an avid environmentalist, and his White Feather Foundation raises money and awareness for many different projects, such as clean water, education and health, and indigenous projects on a global scale.



We first came to know Jules as a small boy, who even had several Beatles songs written about, or inspired by him. Good-Night from the White Album, and the now infamous Hey Jude were both written about him. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds was inspired by him, written by his father after Jules painted a watercolor picture of his good friend Lucy, surrounded by stars.



After his parents’...

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Fictional Band Movies: Retro Review of Velvet Goldmine and Still Crazy

What do the rock movies Velvet Goldmine and Still Crazy have in common, other than great music? Both are British in nature, both are heavily music oriented, and both are fictional… Or are they?



Velvet Goldmine



Velvet Goldmine is primarily about androgenous glam rock icon Brian Slade, who sets 1970s London on fire with his Ziggy Stardust-esque stage persona, Maxwell Demon. (Jonathan Rhys Meyers). Starting with Slade’s humble beginnings to his rapid, meteoric rise to stardom, as well as his equally rapid descent from the top. Slade’s married to the very dutiful Mandy (Toni Collette), who very blithely “allows” her husband’s often, and many transgressions, and poorly managed by Jerry Devine (the hilarious Eddie Izzard).



Enter the raucous, radical, and very troubled rocker, Curt Wild (Ewan McGregor), who turns Slade’s semi-charmed existence upside down. Also, a somewhat mysterious glam rocker named Jack Ferry (Micko Westmoreland), who wafts in and...

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