"By a camera or you'll die"I like that one. I'm not familiar with the others.
"By a camera or you'll die"I like that one. I'm not familiar with the others.
I wish it were still that way."Glory of Love" is getting AC airplay again after years of not hearing it.
And I am grateful. WEZV in Myrtle Beach did play it in 2017 when the station switched to soft AC but I haven't checked lately.I don't hear Amy Grant anymore, though -- not even "Baby Baby".
Absolutely unlistenable to me, for many reasons.But the music I most associate with Peter Cetera are 80s ballads like "Hard Habit to Break,"
Most Cetera Chicago tracks do that to me.
I'm trying to put both of these in one but it doesn't work. No, I have different reasons for disliking Cetera. "If You Leave Me Now" despite Cetera and "Does Anyone Really Know What Time It Is?" are the only Chicago songs I like. You would think "Colour My World", but no.Cetera turned a great band into another Air Supply or Bread. Toothless saccharine ballads were his trademark. Sure, they sold a lot of records. It still tarnished the legacy of the bands excellent early catalog...
This one I like. But not "Sara". "We Built This City", sort of."Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now".
Don't get me wrong, I totally respect Jefferson Airplane for the socially conscious songs they released in the early years. Additionally, both Grace Slick and Marty Balin could really sing! But the group was releasing songs for a completely different audience (the MTV generation) by the time Mickey Thomas joined and songs like "Sara" were released. I guess I understand why the older fans were upset, but isn't it great that Starship was able to adapt their sound and appeal to another generation?Jefferson Starship was also heavily criticized by their long-time fans for "selling out" and "going corporate" in the '80s when they jettisoned "Jefferson" from their name and had three #1 pop hits, "We Built This City", "Sara", and "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now".
I'm not usually interested in socially conscious songs, but in songs that sound good.Don't get me wrong, I totally respect Jefferson Airplane for the socially conscious songs they released in the early years. Additionally, both Grace Slick and Marty Balin could really sing! But the group was releasing songs for a completely different audience (the MTV generation) by the time Mickey Thomas joined and songs like "Sara" were released. I guess I understand why the older fans were upset, but isn't it great that Starship was able to adapt their sound and appeal to another generation?
And isn't it great that Jefferson Airplane's body of work ticks both boxes? As someone from the MTV generation, I wanted to acknowledge my understanding of the significance of the group's earlier material while expressing my preference for their 80s songs. TBH, couldn't Airplane and Starship be considered two different groups that shared some members?I'm not usually interested in socially conscious songs, but in songs that sound good.
Yes, very different groups. The early Airplane era was part of the San Francisco vibe with the Grateful Dead, Santana, etc... The middle Jefferson Starship era still had Marty Balin classics like "Miracles" and "Caroline". After Balin left, the band deteriorated into 80s dross.And isn't it great that Jefferson Airplane's body of work ticks both boxes? As someone from the MTV generation, I wanted to acknowledge my understanding of the significance of the group's earlier material while expressing my preference for their 80s songs. TBH, couldn't Airplane and Starship be considered two different groups that shared some members?
It was adapted for a commercial for a financial/investment company (I forget which one) in the 1990s. Talk about selling out!"We Built This City" is actually quite embarrassing...
This is, again, the misconception that "variety" means "more songs". Variety is a perception based on a station not playing weak songs or stiffs.No, they do it because they're reaching a wider audience. A wider audience is served by playing the hits.
I remember a short Jefferson Airplane revival, probably 1989.It was adapted for a commercial for a financial/investment company (I forget which one) in the 1990s. Talk about selling out!
Even worse, many Radio stations made their own custom versions. They edited in their own call letters for shameless promotion. The lyric about "playing corporation games" was absurd. Truly awful...It was adapted for a commercial for a financial/investment company (I forget which one) in the 1990s. Talk about selling out!
Same with "Life is a Rock"Even worse, many Radio stations made their own custom versions. They edited in their own call letters for shameless promotion. The lyric about "playing corporation games" was absurd. Truly awful...
I would go with an occasional spin of "Anytime".Or "One Man Woman/One Woman Man".
Or "(I Believe) There's Nothing Stronger Than Our Love"
Or "I Don't Like To Sleep Alone"
Or "The Times of Your Life"
As Dr. Akbar would say....
YIKES!
The song that broke the streak. "Having My Baby" peaked at #1, "One Man Woman/One Woman Man" at #7, "I Don't Like To Sleep Alone" at #8, "(I Believe) There's Nothing Stronger Than Our Love" at #15, "Times Of Your Life" at #7 and "Anytime" at #33.I would go with an occasional spin of "Anytime".
Good Lord Man! Note all the current commercials being broadcast today who use Classic Rock music as their background. I'm absolutely sure those old groups didn't "sell out".It was adapted for a commercial for a financial/investment company (I forget which one) in the 1990s. Talk about selling out!
Most of those were custom versions sung by the artists and provided by the record labels.Even worse, many Radio stations made their own custom versions. They edited in their own call letters for shameless promotion. The lyric about "playing corporation games" was absurd. Truly awful...