Showing posts with label Phoebe Snow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phoebe Snow. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 May 2019

Saturday Snapshots #83 - The Answers



Welcome, Fresh Princes (and Princesses), it's time to Boom Boom, Shake the Room Big Willie Style (did I mention my first name is William?).

Alternatively, you can get the answers to Saturday Snapshots straight from the Men In Black. Be careful though: they won't let you remember...

Hot competition just after 8.30 yesterday morning, though I think Lynchie clinched the win with his superior knowledge of Iron Maiden songs. Thank you all for playing, as always.


10. Devastating hurricane with burnt feet.


Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans.

Katrina & The Waves - Walking On Sunshine

Pound for pound, you'll still struggle to find a purer pop song.

9. Which Engine Type gets you furthest from Oklahoma?


Engine Type was an irresistible anagram.

Gene Pitney - 24 Hours From Tulsa

8. Shroud stops car with paracetamol.


Turin shroud.

Brakes stop the car.

Paracetamol is a painkiller.

Turin Brakes - Painkiller

C saved the day with this one - I thought it was pretty obvious. But then I would, wouldn't I?

7. Limerick lad finds friend in the blizzard.


Phoebe was a Friend.

A blizzard is lots of snow.

Lynchie questioned whether a limerick is poetry - I refer him to Alyson, our resident poetry expert.

Phoebe Snow - Poetry Man

6. Torturer joins Suggs on stage.


A medieval torture device was an Iron Maiden.

Suggs is in Madness.

Iron Maiden - Can I Play With Madness?

5. Mausoleum launches noose into space.


Rocket From The Crypt - On A Rope

Rigid Digit had a lie in yesterday but turned up in time to nab this one.

4. Fake news causes sword fight.


Propaganda - Duel

Within the space of one minute, Alyson, George and Walter all got this one.

3. Substance friars shake the street.


The Chemical Brothers - Block Rockin' Beats

Despite not being a dance music fan, I always loved this one. George claimed to have identified the song (although he didn't name it) and also claimed to have never heard it. Which made me wonder if he spent the whole of 1997 underground.

2. Vegas wrap overhead.


Burritos come in wraps. If they're overhead, they might be flying.

Las Vegas is Sin City.

The Flying Burrito Brothers - Sin City

1. Itinerants found beneath pier.





Just The Two Of Us can get together again next Saturday for more of the same...

Thursday, 23 March 2017

March #4: Sometimes It Snows In March


Some fool on the radio this morning was saying how people are shocked about the fact it's been snowing certain parts of the country over the last couple of days. "In March!" As though it's never snowed in March before. Personally, I can remember plenty of times on or around my birthday when the new sprouting daffodils have been smothered in a blanket of white. This is not unusual.

Anyway. It's not snowing here today. My commiserations if it is where you are. The only snow you'll see on Top Ten Towers today is this...


4. Phoebe Snow - Married Men

My 70s sojourn continues with another new discovery I feel I may have been vaguely familiar with in my early, Wogan-dominated, Radio 2 childhood. Phoebe Snow was a folky, jazzy, bluesy singer songwriter who scored a big mid-70s hit in the states with the song Poetry Man. I don't remember that at all, but I feel like I might have vague memories of her cover of Paul McCartney's Every Night, which was a Top 40 (just) hit in the UK in 1979. That song is the lead track on an album I've been listening to a fair bit lately, Against The Grain... on which, you'll also find today's offering, The Married Men. Lyrically, it's a knockout...

One of 'ems got a little boy
Other one he's got two
One of 'ems wife is one week overdue

I know these girls they don't like me
But I am just like them
Pickin' a crazy apple off a stem

Givin' it to the married men
The married men
All o' that time in hell to spend
For kissin' the married men






All of which brings us to one of the things I like most about writing this blog. I could just post this song and say "I like it", but I always like to do a little digging too. That's how I discovered The Married Men is also a cover, of a song by The Roches, a band I didn't know at all... but having checked out their version, I might even like it more than Phoebe's.

The Roches were a folky harmony group made up of three sisters, Magie, Suzzy & Terre. They worked with Paul Simon on his Rhymin' Simon album and Suzzy was even married to Loudon Wainwright III for a while (I do own some music by their daughter, Lucy Wainwright). Sadly, Maggie Roche died in January of this year, which turns this into an RIP post... but The Roches are definitely a group I'll be investigating in the future.




Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...