LibertyNT said:You should hear the edit where Aquarius Is Cut out only leaving "Let The Sunshine In"
Never heard that done. Ugh. I liked Aquarius, but I could live without "Sunshine", anyway. Very repetitious.
LibertyNT said:You should hear the edit where Aquarius Is Cut out only leaving "Let The Sunshine In"
SolidGold16 said:LibertyNT said:You should hear the edit where Aquarius Is Cut out only leaving "Let The Sunshine In"
Never heard that done. Ugh. I liked Aquarius, but I could live without "Sunshine", anyway. Very repetitious.
CTListener said:The "Sunshine" part has all that gospel-style shouting in it, maybe the most soulful thing the Fifth Dimension -- whose music targeted a white, MOR audience -- ever did.
SolidGold16 said:The other song I don't mind seeing cut is already mentioned earlier... Hey Jude. A minute or so of that ending, and I'm ready to turn it off.
skippertthomas said:"Make Me Smile"-Chicago is the absolute botched single in its first form.. The second edit created by the MD/PD's in Chiacgo on 'CFL and 'LS and reissued by Columbia was the full front end with the tail end from "Ballad For A Girl In Buchannan" on the second album.... About 4:30 to 4:50 in length, if I remember...
oldies76 said:But that song is famous for being that 7 minute #1 song from 1968, by the Beatles. Beatles fans and oldies fans know that song and would rather hear it's full length. It was released as a 45 RPM single that way and usually played on radio for 7 minutes (give or take a few seconds).
I agree on "Beginnings" being slashed to 3 minutes, is wrong. That middle 3 minutes or so of non-stop drums, brass and horns section (3:38 to 6:15) with "Only the Beginning" being repeated throughout, is priceless!! The nice "samba" style ending could be faded early if needed, but the horns & brass is what Chicago is all about.
willdav713 said:skippertthomas said:"Make Me Smile"-Chicago is the absolute botched single in its first form.. The second edit created by the MD/PD's in Chiacgo on 'CFL and 'LS and reissued by Columbia was the full front end with the tail end from "Ballad For A Girl In Buchannan" on the second album.... About 4:30 to 4:50 in length, if I remember...
Chicago's Make Me Smile most Classic Hits stations play the Botched up version of 2:57 from their Greatest Hits album. But KZEP in San Antonio back in 1990 found away to piece it together off their Chicago II album. The Make Me Smile reissued starts off with the tail end from "Ballad For A Girl In Buchannan" dahdah dahdah dahdah dud dud dud ut dud dud ut dadud the end of the "Ballad" dah dah dah da dah dah dah dah dah dah it then "Make Me Smile" then the string guitar and brass, followed by the track "Now More Than Ever" 4:51 total time.
Any stations played the Quadraphonic mix of that song? Which Kath's adlibs are absent.
SolidGold16 said:willdav713 said:skippertthomas said:"Make Me Smile"-Chicago is the absolute botched single in its first form.. The second edit created by the MD/PD's in Chiacgo on 'CFL and 'LS and reissued by Columbia was the full front end with the tail end from "Ballad For A Girl In Buchannan" on the second album.... About 4:30 to 4:50 in length, if I remember...
Chicago's Make Me Smile most Classic Hits stations play the Botched up version of 2:57 from their Greatest Hits album. But KZEP in San Antonio back in 1990 found away to piece it together off their Chicago II album. The Make Me Smile reissued starts off with the tail end from "Ballad For A Girl In Buchannan" dahdah dahdah dahdah dud dud dud ut dud dud ut dadud the end of the "Ballad" dah dah dah da dah dah dah dah dah dah it then "Make Me Smile" then the string guitar and brass, followed by the track "Now More Than Ever" 4:51 total time.
Any stations played the Quadraphonic mix of that song? Which Kath's adlibs are absent.
I've heard a couple of stations over the years do the same thing, too. I love it when it comes back in from the fade with the entire "now more than ever". I don't remember anyone playing the quad mix of that song but it's so many years ago, only a jock would remember for sure. I wonder why the greatest hits didn't do the same, instead of chopping off the best part of such a great song?
"Hey Jude" as a seven-minute song is a bit of a myth. But all we had back then were our 45s, so we didn't know any differently. But now, we have CDs, so we can watch the counter on our CD players as it plays. So the reality of the matter is that after about 6:20 or so, it has faded down to the point that you will have dead-air (at least as perceived by the listeners) if you let it run much past that. Take out the na-na-na chorus, and the song itself is barely three minutes long. The scream that starts off the na-na-na chorus is at about 3:07-3:09 in the song.oldies76 said:But that song is famous for being that 7 minute #1 song from 1968, by the Beatles. Beatles fans and oldies fans know that song and would rather hear it's full length. It was released as a 45 RPM single that way and usually played on radio for 7 minutes (give or take a few seconds).SolidGold16 said:The other song I don't mind seeing cut is already mentioned earlier... Hey Jude. A minute or so of that ending, and I'm ready to turn it off.
If you have the album of the Beatles' American #1 hits (which came out sometime in the '80s), it had an edited version of "Hey Jude" on it so that they could fit it in with the other 19 songs on that album.oldies76 said:Also heard a 5 1/2 minute version of "Hey Jude"....basically, the repetitious 2nd half faded way too soon.SolidGold16 said:One more: "Aquarius/Let The Sun Shine In" (Fifth Dimension) became just "Aquarius" in most cases, with the song abruptly chopped off on the first note of the second part of the song.
If you have that album on cassette (as I once did :'(), you get both mixes. The 12" was probably a bonus just for the cassette; I don't remember.chas108 said:Here's an example where the short version blew away the long one.
The mix is far better, and since the extended remix seems to have become the definitive radio version, Men Without Hats' "The Safety Dance" - with its sparse (by comparison) mix and added "vocals" - is, to me, the annoying one.
This is the original 2:40 version. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7movKfyTBII&ob=av2e
firepoint525 said:"Hey Jude" as a seven-minute song is a bit of a myth. But all we had back then were our 45s, so we didn't know any differently. But now, we have CDs, so we can watch the counter on our CD players as it plays. So the reality of the matter is that after about 6:20 or so, it has faded down to the point that you will have dead-air (at least as perceived by the listeners) if you let it run much past that. Take out the na-na-na chorus, and the song itself is barely three minutes long. The scream that starts off the na-na-na chorus is at about 3:07-3:09 in the song.
SolidGold16 said:Beginnings is one of my favorite Chicago songs. For some reason "Only the beginning" being repeated doesn't bother me, because the music is just so perfect.
Yeah, I didn't find out just how inaccurate the times shown on the 45s were until I went to work at my second station (the first station didn't even have network news!oldies76 said:Yeah...I don't think the entire 7:11 length (45 RPM time on Apple Records) is ever heard anyways. The CD begins fading just after 6 minutes as you mentioned, but radio stations compensate for this fade, by raising the "volume" and we don't get a fade until nearly 6:50 or thereafter....just a thought.firepoint525 said:"Hey Jude" as a seven-minute song is a bit of a myth. But all we had back then were our 45s, so we didn't know any differently. But now, we have CDs, so we can watch the counter on our CD players as it plays. So the reality of the matter is that after about 6:20 or so, it has faded down to the point that you will have dead-air (at least as perceived by the listeners) if you let it run much past that. Take out the na-na-na chorus, and the song itself is barely three minutes long. The scream that starts off the na-na-na chorus is at about 3:07-3:09 in the song.
Yes, that version edited out an entire refrain of "Fee-Fee-Fi-Fi-Fo-Fo-Fum...". The cut-up sounded harsh, terribly unprofessional. Finally found the origional, uncut Devil on YouTube.Dave said:The GoldDisc version of "Devil With the Blue Dress On" by Mitch Ryder.
1069_KIFR said:The Edmund Fitzgerald.