Not necessarily the music that was great, but the music that caught the attention of young you. For me there a few that I remember.
Here is one that amused me
Saw her at Waco Hall in 1981. BJ Thomas headlined the Word event.Keyser Soze said:
I listened to this one at night on a small radio at night in bed. Just thought the lyrics "send your camel to bed " was cool.
How in the world did I miss this one?NoBSU said:Saw her at Waco Hall in 1981. BJ Thomas headlined the Word event.Keyser Soze said:
I listened to this one at night on a small radio at night in bed. Just thought the lyrics "send your camel to bed " was cool.
Same girl that dragged me to the tent revival and pigskin talked me into that Word music revue. She had her better moments like many trips to West for a pitcher and two stepping. Man those old dudes could polka. Oh, and her uh, apartment number, was 34C. Not huge but large contiguous parcels of prime real estate.fubar said:How in the world did I miss this one?NoBSU said:Saw her at Waco Hall in 1981. BJ Thomas headlined the Word event.Keyser Soze said:
I listened to this one at night on a small radio at night in bed. Just thought the lyrics "send your camel to bed " was cool.
I think you just did.bularry said:
Someone post muskrat love
This must have come out after Peter Tork was busted for LSD in El Paso because he didn't make the back of the cereal box.NoBSU said:
Last Train from Clarksville
bularry said:
Someone post muskrat love
fubar said:
On a trip to/from Texas ... my Dad actually allowed me to turn up the AM radio volume:
Keyser Soze said:
Funny how the memory works and remembers some specific moments for no particular reason and forgets most others. I was was in a mall getting a snack with my Mom. Maybe an orange Julius. I remember clear as can be this was on the juke box
Ha! My dad, whose musical tastes ran all the way from Lawrence Welk to Mitch Miller, actually listened to that one on the car radio, too, and seemed to like it.fubar said:
On a trip to/from Texas ... my Dad actually allowed me to turn up the AM radio volume:
Sunday service ended with "Precious Lord, Take my Hand." Of course "Peace in the Valley" was Dorsey's biggest crossover hit. Red Foley makes me think of my dad. That was his era of country why gospel crossovers were often.bubbadog said:Ha! My dad, whose musical tastes ran all the way from Lawrence Welk to Mitch Miller, actually listened to that one on the car radio, too, and seemed to like it.fubar said:
On a trip to/from Texas ... my Dad actually allowed me to turn up the AM radio volume:
Since he had grown up with songs in the 30s and 40s that had lyrics like "Celery stalks at midnight," the nonsense lyrics of Joy to the World didn't bother him.
Or like this one he used to sing sometimes:
It was midnight on the ocean,
Not a horsecar was in sight
As I stepped into the drugstore
To get myself a light.
The man behind the counter
Was a woman old and gray
Who used to peddle shoestrings
On the road to Mandalay.
Should have turned on the tv and watched Jot instead.bubbadog said:
Thanks to my mother, I grew up listening every Sunday morning before Sunday School to Hymns We Love with Norvell Slater on WFAA radio.
I didn't say I liked it. I said I listened to it.
https://www.amazon.com/Through-Years-Hymns-We-Love/dp/B00B6KN6LS
whaddya mean instead? I had to listen to Hymns We Love AND watch Jot.whitetrash said:Should have turned on the tv and watched Jot instead.bubbadog said:
Thanks to my mother, I grew up listening every Sunday morning before Sunday School to Hymns We Love with Norvell Slater on WFAA radio.
I didn't say I liked it. I said I listened to it.
https://www.amazon.com/Through-Years-Hymns-We-Love/dp/B00B6KN6LS