Showing posts with label all-time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all-time. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

DBKP Bubblegum Music Video Festival: Top 16 Bubblegum Hits of All-time

16 Videos of Bubblegum Music 1967-70



Talk about a labor of love.

Songs with sugary-sweet hooks and lyrics drenched in 100% sucrose.

Ok, we admit it, bubble gum music--it's a guilty pleasure from the seventh grade.

Sweetest music this side of sugar-soaked syrup.

We've assembled 16 of our favorite bubblegum songs in video form from the Golden Age of Bubblegum (our term) 1967-70. All sixteen saw pretty extensive airplay in the U.S. or U.K.

One group, Sweet, started out with bubblegum and wound up as glam rockers with mainstream pop hits, especially "Ballroom Blitz". They do appear a bit "glam" already though, in the videos here.

Back when FM radio was for doctor's offices and AM radio was flooded with bubblegum--most of it churned out by Buddah Records.
The first wave of "pure" bubblegum came with Jerry Kasenetz and Jeff Katz - music producers who formed Super K Productions in 1967 and gave the world the Music Explosion's "Little Bit o' Soul" and The Ohio Express's "Beg, Borrow and Steal" (the latter being a knock-off of "Louie Louie"). However, these songs were closer to R&B garage band music, and missing the element of nursery rhyme/nonsense lyrics that would be introduced by staff songwriters Joey Levine and Elliot Chiprut.

About a year later, Kasenetz and Katz released the Ohio Express's memorable "Yummy Yummy Yummy," a #4 hit in June 1968. Although the Ohio Express was a real, touring garage band in the Midwest, their hit singles were recorded by session musicians fronted by singer-songwriter Levine. The band members were handicapped attempting to reproduce Levine's distinctive nasal whine for their live performances.


Our Top 16 Bubblegum Hits of All-time:

"Yummy Yummy Yummy"
The Ohio Express




"Goody Goody Gumdrops"
--1910 Fruitgum Company




"Green Tambourine"
--Lemon Pipers




"Gimme Gimme Good Lovin'"
--Crazy Elephant




"1-2-3 Red Light"
--1910 Fruitgum Company




"Little Willy"
--The Sweet




"Quick Joey Small"
--Kasenatz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus




"Chewy Chewy"
--Ohio Express




"Dizzy"
--Tommy Roe




"Sugar Sugar"
--The Archies




"Wig Wam Bam"
--The Sweet




"Down at Lulu's"
--Ohio Express




"Simon Says"
--1910 Fruitgum Company




"Funny Funny"
--The Sweet




"Indian Giver"
--1910 Fruitgum Company



From Wikipedia:
Kasenetz and Katz developed a strong relationship with Buddah Records, and scored many hits on Buddah during 1968 and '69: "Indian Giver" and "Simon Says" by the 1910 Fruitgum Company, "Chewy Chewy" and "Down at Lulu's" by the Ohio Express, and one-offs such as "Quick Joey Small" by The Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus (another front for the same batch of Levine-fronted studio players). Kasenetz and Katz also influenced other Buddah artists not other their direct control, most notably The Lemon Pipers: their 1968 hit "Green Tambourine" was produced by Paul Leka but had a distinct Kasenetz-Katz feel.

Others joined in, including music publisher Don Kirshner and "Hanky Panky"'s co-author, Brill Building writer/producer Jeff Barry. Kirshner's 1966 creation The Monkees is often called bubblegum, due to their producer-driven career and reliance on outside songwriters and session players. Barry often contributed to the Monkees' projects as a songwriter and/or producer.

Kirshner and Barry struck gold again in 1969 with the Filmation cartoon group The Archies, whose "Sugar Sugar" (written by Barry with Andy Kim) was the year's best-selling single. (Ron Dante and Toni Wine provided the Archies' singing voices.) Cartoon producers Hanna-Barbera created The Banana Splits, costumed actors miming to pre-recorded tracks for a Saturday morning cartoon show, around this same time. Other animated acts included Josie and The Pussycats (from Hanna-Barbera), The Hardy Boys (Filmation), the Groovie Goolies (Filmation), The Sugar Bears, and (in the UK) The Wombles. US singer Tommy Roe also scored a massive bubblegum hit with "Dizzy" in 1969.

Okay, one more.

"Mercy"
--The Ohio Express



Did we leave any out?

Let us know.

We're so avant-retro-garde.

[NOTE: The only reason 1910 Fruitgum Company's "Special Delivery" wasn't included was we couldn't find a video of it.

compiled by Mondoreb
image: artie wayne
Source:
* Bubblegum pop

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Sunday, November 4, 2007

Top 10 Worst TV Shows of All Time:

Vote on the Worst




Everybody has a favorite show they love to hate. We put 10 of them in a list for you. If you think we left one off the list that really stunk up the place, leave a comment at the end of this. XFL Football and 10 Cooking shows were close to making the list. We'll be putting another list together and we'll consider it. And no, we already considered MSNBC's Countdown and didn't pick it. It didn't make the list. Barely.

Here's our list of the Top 10 Worst TV shows of all time. They're in no particular order--we don't want to influence you. You can vote for the absolute worst use of the medium of television at the end of this story.
"Petticoat Junction" (1963-'70). Some shows from that era hold up remarkably well -- either as sweet nostalgia or entertaining camp. Not this one, set in Hooterville.

"My Mother the Car" (1965-66). In it, Jerry Van Dyke's mother was reincarnated as a talking automobile, the voice supplied by Ann Sothern. Actually made it through one season.

"B.J. and the Bear" (1979-81). Comedy/adventure about an itinerant trucker who traveled the nation's highways with his pet chimpanzee.

"Mr. T. and Tina" (1976). Starring Pat Morita (who also played Arnold on "Happy Days"). Canceled after five episodes.

"Manimal" (1983). NYU prof could change into any animal to help fight crimes. Show turned into a turkey.

"Cop Rock" (1990). Steven Bochco, apparently bored with making legitimate cop series ("Hill Street Blues"), decided it would be fun to have cops sing, and it would be even more fun to have them performing legit, hard-core cop work while they did it.

"Pink Lady and Jeff" (1980): Quite possibly the most demented variety show of all time, this bizarre offering paired two Japanese pop singers who spoke almost no English with comedian Jeff Altman. Hilarity did not ensue.

"The Jerry Springer Show" (1991 to present). His aim is low.

"Homeboys from Outer Space" (1996-97). The name was a tip-off.

"Barney & Friends" (1992-present). Yes, some little kids love it. But parents helped compile this list, and it annoys the heck out of us.

Read the complete list of 25 at the Chicago Tribune.

What's the worst TV show of all time? Here's a chance for you to vote on the DBKP list of all-time worst TV shows. We're sorry--we left "Barney and Friends" off the list. At first, we were gonna make it a case for non-discrimination of dinosaurs of color. It wasn't that we were partial to the goofy-sounding but harmless Barney: we just forgot to include him.

On the right sidebar, right under the Drug Clock (appropriate placing?)you'll find our poll of All-time Worst TV shows. Knock yourself out--vote.

by Mondoreb & Little Baby Ginn

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