4x Life

One month in pop history, every week.

Author: Thomas Scovell

  • It’s August, 1966

    It’s still 54 years before Sadie will be born in our little trip down musical memory lane, so let’s get into it – we have catching up to do!

    Songs of the month


    “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” – Temptations
    [new] “Blowin’ In The Wind” – Stevie Wonder
    [new] “Born A Woman” – Sandy Posey
    [new] “Bus Stop” – Hollies
    [new] “Guantanamera” – Sandpipers
    “Hanky Panky” – Tommy James And The Shondells
    “Hungry” – Paul Revere And The Raiders
    “I Couldn’t Live Without Your Love” – Petula Clark
    “I Saw Her Again” – Mamas And Papas
    “I Want You” – Bob Dylan
    [new] “Lady Jane” – Rolling Stones
    [new] “Land Of 1000 Dances” – Wilson Pickett
    “Lil Red Riding Hood” – Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs
    “Love Letters” – Elvis Presley
    [new] “Make Me Belong To You” – Barbara Lewis
    “Mother’s Little Helper” – Rolling Stones
    [new] “My Heart’s Symphony” – Gary Lewis And The Playboys
    “Over Under Sideways Down” – Yardbirds
    “Paperback Writer” – Beatles
    [new] “Pretty Flamingo” – Manfred Mann
    “Red Rubber Ball” – Cyrkle
    [new] “Respectable” – Outsiders
    [new] “Say I Am” – Tommy James And The Shondells
    [new] “Searching For Your Love” – Bobby Moore
    “See You In September” – Happenings
    “Somewhere My Love” – Ray Conniff
    “Strangers In The Night” – Frank Sinatra
    “Summer In The City” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    [new] “Summertime” – Billy Stewart
    “Sunny” – Bobby Hebb
    [new] “Sunshine Superman” – Donovan
    “Sweet Dreams” – Tommy Mclain
    “Sweet Pea” – Tommy Roe
    [new] “The Joker Went Wild” – Brian Hyland
    “The Pied Piper” – Crispian St. Peters
    “The Work Song” – Herb Alpert And The Tijuana Brass
    “They’re Coming To Take Me Away Ha-Haaa” – Napoleon Xiv
    “This Door Swings Both Ways” – Herman’s Hermits
    “Trains And Boats And Planes” – Dionne Warwick
    [new] “Wade In The Water” – Ramsey Lewis
    [new] “Warm And Tender Love” – Percy Sledge
    “Where Were You When I Needed You” – Grass Roots
    “Wild Thing” – Troggs
    [new] “Working In The Coal Mine” – Lee Dorsey
    [new] “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” – Beach Boys
    [new] “Yellow Submarine” – Beatles
    [new] “You Can’t Hurry Love” – Supremes
    “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” – Dusty Springfield

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On the 4th of August the station manager of WAQY-AM radio in Birmingham, Alabama, became the first to urge listeners to boycott record stores and bookstores that sold music and memorabilia of The Beatles, starting an American backlash against the British rock group that was preparing to make a tour of the United States. Manager Tommy Charles told reporters, “We just felt it was so absurd and sacrilegious that something ought to be done to show that they cannot get away with this sort of thing.”

    And then…inevitably, on the 11th The Beatles held a press conference in Chicago, during which John Lennon apologized for his “more popular than Jesus” remark made in a magazine interview in March, saying, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry I said it really. I didn’t mean it as a lousy, anti-religious thing. I was sort of deploring the attitude toward Christianity. I wasn’t saying the Beatles are better than God or Jesus.”

    On the 26th NASA released the first photograph of the Earth as seen from the Moon, after Lunar Orbiter 1 transmitted a picture taken three days earlier. Ground control had decided to turn the orbiter’s camera toward the Earth, just as the probe was about to travel toward the far side, in order to show both objects in the same photo.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tPaYZOZVko

    And back to The Beatles who, on the 29th, played their final official concert, “marking the end of a career as international performing artists that lasted just under three years”. A crowd of 25,000 turned out at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, paying between $3.80 and $7.00 to see the Fab Four. Somewhat cheaper than Taylor Swift tickets in 2024…

    Crazy to think they were only touring for 3 years, which leads to the question of “why did they stop?”. Apparently a lot of it was technical – with the stadium setups of the time they couldn’t hear themselves over the crowd going crazy, and as their songs became more technical in the studio (overdubs, more than the four instruments the band played) they became harder to reproduce live – so they become a studio band for the remainder of their career.

    What’d Sadie think?

    Another two weeks at the top for classic “Wild Thing” by the Troggs before two weeks for “Summer In The City” by Lovin’ Spoonful.

    Loved ’em

    Some real classics on this week’s playlist – a personal favourite has to be “Wouldn’t it be nice” by the Beach Boys, off their classic “Pet Sounds” album that was released this year.

    • “Blowin’ In The Wind” – Stevie Wonder
    • “Bus Stop” – Hollies
    • “Pretty Flamingo” – Manfred Mann
    • “Summertime” – Billy Stewart
    • “Sunshine Superman” – Donovan
    • “Working In The Coal Mine” – Lee Dorsey
    • “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” – Beach Boys
    • “Yellow Submarine” – Beatles
    • “You Can’t Hurry Love” – Supremes

    Liked ’em
    • “Born A Woman” – Sandy Posey
    • “Guantanamera” – Sandpipers
    • “Lady Jane” – Rolling Stones
    • “Land Of 1000 Dances” – Wilson Pickett
    • “Make Me Belong To You” – Barbara Lewis
    • “My Heart’s Symphony” – Gary Lewis And The Playboys
    • “Respectable” – Outsiders
    • “Say I Am” – Tommy James And The Shondells
    • “Searching For Your Love” – Bobby Moore
    • “Wade In The Water” – Ramsey Lewis
    • “Warm And Tender Love” – Percy Sledge
    Leave ’em
    • “The Joker Went Wild” – Brian Hyland

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

  • It’s July, 1966

    As we head into the shortest day of the year down under in 2024, let’s turn our ears back to July, 1966 to hear some warm sounds of summer…

    Songs of the month


    “A Groovy Kind Of Love” – Mindbenders
    “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” – Temptations
    [new] “Along Comes Mary” – Association
    “Barefootin’” – Robert Parker
    “Cool Jerk” – Capitols
    “Crying” – Jay & The Americans
    “Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    “Dirty Water” – Standells
    “Don’t Bring Me Down” – Animals
    “Double Shot” – Swingin’ Medallions
    “Girl In Love” – Outsiders
    “Green Grass” – Gary Lewis & The Playboys
    [new] “Hanky Panky” – Tommy James & The Shondells
    [new] “Happy Summer Days” – Ronnie Dove
    “He” – Righteous Brothers
    “Hold On I’m Comin’” – Sam & Dave
    [new] “Hungry” – Paul Revere & The Raiders
    “I Am A Rock” – Simon & Garfunkel
    [new] “I Couldn’t Live Without Your Love” – Petula Clark
    [new] “I Saw Her Again” – Mamas And Papas
    [new] “I Want You” – Bob Dylan
    [new] “Lil Red Riding Hood” – Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs
    “Little Girl” – Syndicate Of Sound
    [new] “Love Letters” – Elvis Presley
    [new] “Mother’s Little Helper” – Rolling Stones
    [new] “Muddy Water” – Johnny Rivers
    “Oh How Happy” – Shades Of Blue
    “Opus 17” – Four Seasons
    [new] “Over Under Sideways Down” – Yardbirds
    “Paint It Black” – Rolling Stones
    “Paperback Writer” – Beatles
    [new] “Please Tell Me Why” – Dave Clark Five
    “Popsicle” – Jan & Dean
    “Rain” – Beatles
    “Red Rubber Ball” – Cyrkle
    [new] “See You In September” – Happenings
    [new] “Somewhere My Love” – Ray Conniff
    “Strangers In The Night” – Frank Sinatra
    [new] “Summer In The City” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    [new] “Sunny” – Bobby Hebb
    [new] “Sweet Dreams” – Tommy Mclain
    [new] “Sweet Pea” – Tommy Roe
    “Sweet Talking Guy” – Chiffons
    [new] “The Land Of Milk And Honey” – Vogues
    “The More I See You” – Chris Montez
    [new] “The Pied Piper” – Crispian St. Peters
    [new] “The Work Song” – Herb Alpert And The Tijuana Brass
    [new] “They’re Coming To Take Me Away Ha-Haaa” – Napoleon Xiv
    [new] “This Door Swings Both Ways” – Herman’s Hermits
    [new] “Trains And Boats And Planes” – Dionne Warwick
    “When A Man Loves A Woman” – Percy Sledge
    [new] “Where Were You When I Needed You” – Grass Roots
    [new] “Wild Thing” – Troggs
    [new] “You Better Run” – Young Rascals
    “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” – Dusty Springfield

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On their way back home after their Asian concert tour, The Beatles arrived in India on July 5th for the first time, after having experimented with Indian instruments such as the sitar.

    On the 11th “The Newlywed Game”, a TV game show described by one reviewer as “four newlywed couples answering questions which reveal how much or how little they know about each other”, premiered in the USA. TV critic Rick Du Brow of United Press International generally praised the show and its host, Bob Eubanks, as “quite pleasant and unpretentious” but said that the questions asked of the wives and husbands “weren’t exactly life and death matters.” …welcome to modern TV sir!

    Then on the 27th, for the first time in 58 years, liquor was legally served in Mississippi, the last of the United States to have repealed its prohibition laws. Quite the dry spell!

    What’d Sadie think?

    “Strangers In The Night” by Frank Sinatra is the first number one of the month, then we have “Paperback Writer” by the Beatles, “Hanky Panky” – Tommy James & The Shondells for two weeks and finally newcomer, “Wild Thing” by the Troggs.

    Loved ’em
    • “Hanky Panky” – Tommy James & The Shondells
    • “I Want You” – Bob Dylan
    • “Love Letters” – Elvis Presley
    • “Mother’s Little Helper” – Rolling Stones
    • “Summer In The City” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    • “Sunny” – Bobby Hebb
    • “Wild Thing” – Troggs

    Song of the week has to be “Wild Thing” by the Troggs. Which, I did not realise, was a cover. The original was composed for a band called “the Wild Ones”… which is wild? Too wild perhaps as it failed to chart and The Troggs version become the definitive take and hit.

    Apparently Chucken, Alden fron the Wild Ones, later said that he regretted not performing the song in the same way as the composer (Chip Taylor’s demo). The solo in the middle of the song was performed by the recording engineer using his hands as a whistle. This sound was subsequently imitated by the Troggs in their version using an ocarina… (A little fact for Nintendo fans.)

    Liked ’em
    • “Along Comes Mary” – Association
    • “Happy Summer Days” – Ronnie Dove
    • “Hungry” – Paul Revere & The Raiders
    • “I Couldn’t Live Without Your Love” – Petula Clark
    • “I Saw Her Again” – Mamas And Papas
    • “Over Under Sideways Down” – Yardbirds
    • “Please Tell Me Why” – Dave Clark Five
    • “See You In September” – Happenings
    • “Sweet Dreams” – Tommy Mclain
    • “Sweet Pea” – Tommy Roe
    • “The Land Of Milk And Honey” – Vogues
    • “This Door Swings Both Ways” – Herman’s Hermits
    • “Trains And Boats And Planes” – Dionne Warwick
    • “Where Were You When I Needed You” – Grass Roots
    • “You Better Run” – Young Rascals
    Leave ’em
    • “Lil Red Riding Hood” – Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs
    • “Muddy Water” – Johnny Rivers
    • “Popsicle” – Jan And Dean
    • “Somewhere My Love” – Ray Conniff Singers
    • “The Pied Piper” – Crispian St. Peters
    • “The Work Song” – Herb Alpert And The Tijuana Brass
    • “They’re Coming To Take Me Away Ha-Haaa” – Napoleon Xiv

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

  • It’s June, 1966

    I always like it when the 2024 month and our month in the past coincide- so here we are about to travel 58 years back in time…

    Songs of the month


    “A Groovy Kind Of Love” – Mindbenders
    [new] “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” – Temptations
    “Barefootin’” – Robert Parker
    “Come On Let’s Go” – Mccoys
    “Cool Jerk” – Capitols
    [new] “Crying” – Jay & Americans
    “Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    [new] “Dirty Water” – Standells
    [new] “Don’t Bring Me Down” – Animals
    [new] “Double Shot” – Swingin’ Medallions
    [new] “Girl In Love” – Outsiders
    “Good Lovin’” – Young Rascals
    “Green Grass” – Gary Lewis & Playboys
    [new] “Hanky Panky” – Tommy James & The Shond
    [new] “He” – Righteous Brothers
    [new] “Hold On I’m Comin’” – Sam & Dave
    “How Does That Grab You Darlin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    “I Am A Rock” – Simon & Garfunkel
    “It’s A Man’s Man’s World” – James Brown
    “Kicks” – Paul Revere & Raiders
    [new] “Kicks” – Paul Revere & The Rai
    [new] “Little Girl” – Syndicate Of Sound
    “Love Is Like An Itching In My Heart” – Supremes
    [new] “Mama” – B.J. Thomas
    “Message To Michael” – Dionne Warwick
    “Monday Monday” – Mamas & Papas
    “Oh How Happy” – Shades Of Blue
    [new] “Opus 17” – Four Seasons
    “Paint It Black” – Rolling Stones
    [new] “Paperback Writer” – Beatles
    [new] “Popsicle” – Jan & Dean
    [new] “Rain” – Beatles
    “Rainy Day Women Nos. 12 & 35” – Bob Dylan
    [new] “Red Rubber Ball” – Cyrkle
    “Road Runner” – Junior Walker & All Stars
    “Sloop John B” – Beach Boys
    “Strangers In The Night” – Frank Sinatra
    “Sweet Talkin’ Guy” – Chiffons
    “The More I See You” – Chris Montez
    “The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore” – Walker Brothers
    “When A Man Loves A Woman” – Percy Sledge
    [new] “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” – Dusty Springfield

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On the 21st the film adaptation of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” premiered at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, California, days after Jack Valenti of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) gave its approval in spite of the strictures of the MPAA’s Production Code, a prerequisite for being shown in most American cinemas. The Mike Nichols film could be distributed as long as the theater operator signed a rider to a standard contract “prohibiting anyone under the age of 18 from seeing the picture unless accompanied by an adult”, a forerunner to the “R” Rating that would be implemented as part of the limitations system that would be created in 1968.

    On the 29th the first British credit card was introduced, as Barclays Bank introduced the Barclaycard which is an excuse to watch to some ol’ advertising…

    Then at month’s end The Beatles performed at Budokan Hall in Tokyo, in the first of five concerts in Japan during a tour of Asia.

    What’d Sadie think?

    A week at the top for When A Man Loves A Woman” by Percy Sledge then two for “Paint It Black” by the Rolling Stones rounded out by The Beatles with “Paperback Writer”.

    Loved ’em
    • “Ain’t Too Proud To Beg” – Temptations
    • “Hold On I’m Comin’” – Sam & Dave
    • “Kicks” – Paul Revere & The Rain
    • “Paperback Writer” – Beatles
    • “Rain” – Beatles
    • “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” – Dusty Springfield

    Liked ’em
    • “Crying” – Jay & The Americans
    • “Dirty Water” – Standells
    • “Don’t Bring Me Down” – Animals
    • “Double Shot” – Swingin’ Medallions
    • “Girl In Love” – Outsiders
    • “He” – Righteous Brothers
    • “Little Girl” – Syndicate Of Sound
    • “Mama” – B.J. Thomas
    • “Opus 17” – Four Seasons
    • “Red Rubber Ball” – Cyrkle
    Leave ’em
    • “Popsicle” – Jan & Dean

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

  • It’s May, 1966

    A busy week last week, so we didn’t get to writing the blog post till late, you can find April 1966 here, before tuning into the sounds of May of that year below…

    Songs of the month

    “A Groovy Kind Of Love” – Mindbenders
    “A Sign Of The Times” – Petula Clark
    [new] “Backstage” – Gene Pitney
    “Bang Bang” – Cher
    [new] “Barefootin’” – Robert Parker
    [new] “Come On Let’s Go” – Mccoys
    [new] “Cool Jerk” – Capitols
    “Daydream” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    [new] “Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    “Eight Miles High” – Byrds
    “Frankie And Johnny” – Elvis Presley
    “Gloria” – Shadows Of Knight
    “Good Lovin’” – Young Rascals
    [new] “Green Grass” – Gary Lewis & The Playboys
    “How Does That Grab You Darlin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    [new] “I Am A Rock” – Simon & Garfunkel
    [new] “I’ll Take Good Care Of You” – Garnet Mimms
    “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” – B.J. Thomas
    [new] “It’s A Man’s Man’s Man’s World” – James Brown
    “Kicks” – Paul Revere & Raiders
    “Leaning On The Lamp Post” – Herman’s Hermits
    [new] “Let’s Start All Over Again” – Ronnie Dove
    [new] “Love Is Like An Itching In My Heart” – Supremes
    [new] “Love’s Made A Fool Of You” – Bobby Fuller Four
    “Message To Michael” – Dionne Warwick
    “Monday Monday” – Mamas & Papas
    [new] “Nothing’s Too Good For My Baby” – Stevie Wonder
    [new] “Oh How Happy” – Shades Of Blue
    [new] “Paint It Black” – Rolling Stones
    “Rainy Day Women Nos. 12 & 35” – Bob Dylan
    “Rhapsody In The Rain” – Lou Christie
    [new] “Road Runner” – Junior Walker & All Stars
    “Secret Agent Man” – Johnny Rivers
    “Shapes Of Things” – Yardbirds
    “Sloop John B” – Beach Boys
    “Soul And Inspiration” – Righteous Brothers
    [new] “Strangers In The Night” – Frank Sinatra
    [new] “Sweet Talkin’ Guy” – Chiffons
    [new] “The A Team” – S/Sgt. Barry Sadler
    [new] “The More I See You” – Chris Montez
    [new] “The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore” – Walker Brothers
    “This Old Heart Of Mine” – Isley Brothers
    “Time Won’t Let Me” – Outsiders
    “Together Again” – Ray Charles
    “Try Too Hard” – Dave Clark Five
    “When A Man Loves A Woman” – Percy Sledge

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On the 17th Bob Dylan and the Hawks (later The Band) performed at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. Dylan was booed by the audience because of his decision to tour with an electric band, the boos culminating in the famous “Judas” shout. Three years earlier, in his protest song “With God on Our Side”, Dylan had sung “Through many a dark hour/I’ve been thinking about this/That Jesus Christ/Was betrayed by a kiss/But I can’t think for you/You’ll have to decide/Whether Judas Iscariot/Had God on his side”.

    Brilliant video of some youth of the day decrying the new Dylan sound below. (Fair enough, ‘I like the old Kanye’ too lads…)

    And in more hippie-milestones on the 20th, Zal Yanovsky and Steve Boone, of the American folk-rock band the Lovin’ Spoonful, were arrested in San Francisco for possessing marijuana, marking the first time members of a popular music act were busted for possessing illegal drugs.

    Then the next day, in Northern Ireland, the Protestant Ulster Volunteer Force issued its “declaration of war” against the Roman Catholic Irish Republican Army, a statement that appeared in Belfast newspapers. “From this day we declare war against the IRA”, UVF Chief of Staff William Johnston wrote. “Known IRA men will be executed mercilessly and without hesitation. We will not tolerate any interference from any source and we solemnly warn the authorities to make no more speeches of appeasement.”


    Since starting this project I’ve actually received my Irish Citizenship, and will not this was not the country’s proudest day…

    What’d Sadie think?

    It’s a good three weeks at the top for the great “Monday Monday” by the Mamas & Papas before Percy Sledge’s “When A Man Loves A Woman” takes the spot.

    Loved ’em

    Some more classics this month but none more so than “Paint it Black” by the Stones, for many reasons a notable release in the hippie-era, not-least at the first popular song to feature a Sitar.

    Then there’s James Browns’ “It’s A Man’s Man’s Man’s World” – which I’ll admit has one more “Man’s” than I realised in the title and which, more importantly, Rolling Stone magazine characterized (fairly!) as “biblically chauvinistic”. I’d like to think the tune has aged well, but the lyrics haven’t… except for how much they seem to echo some of the terrifying rhetoric one sees on X these days. Do better 2024!

    • “Green Grass” – Gary Lewis & Playboys
    • “I Am A Rock” – Simon & Garfunkel
    • “I’ll Take Good Care Of You” – Garnet Mimms
    • “It’s A Man’s Man’s Man’s World” – James Brown
    • “Love Is Like An Itching In My Heart” – Supremes
    • “Paint It Black” – Rolling Stones
    • “Road Runner” – Junior Walker & All Stars
    • “Strangers In The Night” – Frank Sinatra
    • “The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore” – Walker Brothers
    • “The More I See You” – Chris Montez
    Liked ’em
    • “Backstage” – Gene Pitney
    • “Barefootin’” – Robert Parker
    • “Come On Let’s Go” – Mccoys
    • “Cool Jerk” – Capitols
    • “Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    • “Love’s Made A Fool Of You” – Bobby Fuller Four
    • “Oh How Happy” – Shades Of Blue
    • “Sweet Talkin’ Guy” – Chiffons
    • “The A Team” – S/Sgt. Barry Sadler
    Leave ’em
    • “Let’s Start All Over Again” – Ronnie Dove

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

  • It’s April, 1966

    We’re late this week so let’s rush towards the sounds of April, 1966…

    Songs of the month

    “634-5789” – Wilson Pickett
    “19Th Nervous Breakdown” – Rolling Stones
    [new] “A Groovy Kind Of Love” – Mindbenders
    [new] “A Sign Of The Times” – Petula Clark
    “Baby Scratch My Back” – Slim Harpo
    “Ballad Of The Green Berets” – S/Sgt. Barry Sadler
    “Bang Bang” – Cher
    “California Dreamin’” – Mamas & Papas
    “Daydream” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    [new] “Eight Miles High” – Byrds
    “Elusive Butterfly” – Bob Lind
    [new] “Frankie And Johnny” – Elvis Presley
    [new] “Get Ready” – Temptations
    [new] “Gloria” – Shadows Of Knight
    [new] “Good Lovin’” – Young Rascals
    “Homeward Bound” – Simon & Garfunkel
    [new] “How Does That Grab You Darlin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    “I Fought The Law” – Bobby Fuller Four
    [new] “I Hear Trumpets Blow” – Tokens
    “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” – B.J. Thomas
    “It’s Too Late” – Bobby Goldsboro
    [new] “Kicks” – Paul Revere & Raiders
    [new] “Leaning On The Lamp Post” – Herman’s Hermits
    “Listen People” – Herman’s Hermits
    [new] “Little Latin Lupe Lu” – Mitch Ryder & Detroit Wheels
    “Love Makes The World Go Round” – Deon Jackson
    “Magic Town” – Vogues
    [new] “Message To Michael” – Dionne Warwick
    [new] “Monday Monday” – Mamas & Papas
    “Nowhere Man” – Beatles
    [new] “Rainy Day Women Nos. 12 & 35” – Bob Dylan
    [new] “Rhapsody In The Rain” – Lou Christie
    “Secret Agent Man” – Johnny Rivers
    “Shake Me Wake Me” – Four Tops
    [new] “Shapes Of Things” – Yardbirds
    [new] “Sloop John B” – Beach Boys
    [new] “Somewhere” – Len Barry
    “Soul And Inspiration” – Righteous Brothers
    [new] “Spanish Flea” – Herb Alpert & Tijuana Brass
    [new] “Sure Gonna Miss Her” – Gary Lewis & Playboys
    “These Boots Are Made For Walkin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    [new] “Think I’ll Go Somewhere And Cry Myself To Sleep” – Al Martino
    “This Old Heart Of Mine” – Isley Brothers
    “Time Won’t Let Me” – Outsiders
    [new] “Together Again” – Ray Charles
    [new] “Try Too Hard” – Dave Clark Five
    “Walkin’ My Cat Named Dog” – Norma Tanega
    [new] “What Now My Love” – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass
    [new] “When A Man Loves A Woman” – Percy Sledge
    “Woman” – Peter & Gordon
    “You Baby” – Turtles

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On the 18th “The Cultural Revolution’\ was officially proclaimed in the People’s Republic of China, with the publication of the government announcement that gave the name that would define the era of upheaval. The official People’s Liberation Army daily newspaper published a front-page editorial with the title “Hold High the Great Red Banner of Mao Tse-tung’s Thought, and Actively Participate in the Great Socialist Cultural Revolution”

    And on the 21st, the opening of the Parliament of the United Kingdom was televised for the first time. Glorious slice of technicolor pomp n ceremony below…

    Then on the 30th regular hovercraft service began over the English Channel, between Ramsgate and Calais, with an SR.N6 transporting 36 passengers. It would be discontinued in 2000. The customers paid two pounds, two shillings (equivalent to $6.30) apiece for the journey. I remember really wanting to go on the hovercraft in 1985, when I first visited the UK, but we had to take the regular ferry as we had my Grandfather’s ashes to scatter overboard apparently.

    What’d Sadie think?

    It’s a week more at the top for “Ballad Of The Green Berets” by S/Sgt. Barry Sadler before “Soul And Inspiration” by the Righteous Brothers has a couple there, followed by a week for new track “Good Lovin’” by the Young Rascals.


    Loved ’em

    A big month for big hits! I was “this many years old” when I learnt the actual name of Bob Dylan’s “Everybody must get stoned…” – oops!

    • “Gloria” – Shadows Of Knight
    • “Message To Michael” – Dionne Warwick
    • “Rainy Day Women Nos. 12 & 35” – Bob Dylan
    • “Shapes Of Things” – Yardbirds
    • “Eight Miles High” – Byrds
    • “Get Ready” – Temptations
    • “Monday Monday” – Mamas & Papas
    • “Sloop John B” – Beach Boys
    • “When A Man Loves A Woman” – Percy Sledge
    Liked ’em
    • “A Groovy Kind Of Love” – Mindbenders
    • “Frankie And Johnny” – Elvis Presley
    • “Good Lovin’” – Young Rascals
    • “How Does That Grab You Darlin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    • “I Hear Trumpets Blow” – Tokens
    • “Kicks” – Paul Revere & The Raiders
    • “Little Latin Lupe Lu” – Mitch Ryder & Detroit Wheels
    • “Rhapsody In The Rain” – Lou Christie
    • “Spanish Flea” – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass
    • “Sure Gonna Miss Her” – Gary Lewis & Playboys
    • “Together Again” – Ray Charles
    • “Try Too Hard” – Dave Clark Five

    Leave ’em
    • “Leaning On The Lamp Post” – Herman’s Hermits
    • “Somewhere” – Len Barry
    • “Think I’ll Go Somewhere And Cry Myself To Sleep” – Al Martino
    • “What Now My Love” – Herb Alpert & Tijuana Brass

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

  • It’s March, 1966

    It’s a lovely sunny autumnal day in 2024 as we write this. Let’s use music to transport us back to March, 1966…

    Songs of the month

    [new] “634-5789” – Wilson Pickett
    [new] “19Th Nervous Breakdown” – Rolling Stones
    “At The Scene” – Dave Clark Five
    [new] “Baby Scratch My Back” – Slim Harpo
    “Ballad Of The Green Berets” – S/Sgt. Barry Sadler
    [new] “Bang Bang” – Cher
    “Barbara Ann” – Beach Boys
    “Batman Theme” – Marketts
    “California Dreamin’” – Mamas & Papas
    “Call Me” – Chris Montez
    “Crying Time” – Ray Charles
    [new] “Daydream” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    “Don’t Mess With Bill” – Marvellettes
    “Elusive Butterfly” – Bob Lind
    “Going To A Go-Go” – Miracles
    [new] “Homeward Bound” – Simon & Garfunkel
    [new] “Husbands & Wives” – Roger Miller
    “I Fought The Law” – Bobby Fuller Four
    “I See The Light” – Five Americans
    [new] “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” – B.J. Thomas
    [new] “It’s Too Late” – Bobby Goldsboro
    “Lightnin’ Strikes” – Lou Christie
    “Listen People” – Herman’s Hermits
    [new] “Little Latin Lupe Lu” – Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
    [new] “Love Makes The World Go Round” – Deon Jackson
    [new] “Magic Town” – Vogues
    [new] “My Baby Loves Me” – Martha & The Vandellas
    “My Love” – Petula Clark
    “My World Is Empty Without You” – Supremes
    [new] “Nowhere Man” – Beatles
    [new] “One More Heartache” – Marvin Gaye
    [new] “Secret Agent Man” – Johnny Rivers
    [new] “Shake Me Wake Me” – Four Tops
    [new] “Soul And Inspiration” – Righteous Brothers
    [new] “Sure Gonna Miss Her” – Gary Lewis & The Playboys
    “The Cheater” – Bob Kuban & The In-Men
    “These Boots Are Made For Walkin’” – Nancy Sinatra
    [new] “This Old Heart Of Mine” – Isley Brothers
    [new] “Time Won’t Let Me” – Outsiders
    “Uptight” – Stevie Wonder
    [new] “Walkin’ My Cat Named Dog” – Norma Tanega
    “What Now My Love” – Sonny & Cher
    “When Liking Turns To Loving” – Ronnie Dove
    [new] “Woman” – Peter & Gordon
    “Working My Way Back To You” – Four Seasons
    “You Baby” – Turtles
    “Zorba The Greek” – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass

    [new] = New to the chart this week.

    You can listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.

    This month in history

    On the 4th The London Evening Standard published an interview with John Lennon of The Beatles, in an article headlined “How Does a Beatle Live? John Lennon Lives Like This”. One of the topics covered was his religious views, and the article, syndicated in papers worldwide, made little impact at first, including Lennon’s statement that “Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that; I’m right and I will be proved right. We’re more popular than Jesus now; I don’t know which will go first— rock ‘n’ roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. It’s them twisting it that ruins it for me.” But when the article appeared in the teen magazine Datebook in July, however, Lennon’s statement proved a backlash against the popular British group in advance of their American tour.


    Here’s a bizarre interview where a member of the KKK denounce the evil Beatles…

    On the 23rd, for the first time in 400 years, the spiritual leaders of the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of England met openly, as Pope Paul VI received the Archbishop of Canterbury, Michael Ramsey, in Rome. The following day, they issued “The Common Declaration”, pledging to inaugurate between their followers “a serious dialogue which, founded on the Gospels and on the ancient common traditions, may lead to that unity in truth, for which Christ prayed”

    And on the 29th, in what one author would later describe as “a psychiatrist’s worst nightmare”, University of Texas student Charles Whitman confided to the University Health Center staff psychiatrist, Dr. Maurice D. Heatly, about a recurring fantasy of “going up on the Tower” (the observation deck of the 30-story Main Building that overlooked the campus) “and shooting people”. Dr. Heatly scheduled Whitman for a follow-up appointment, but prescribed no medication. Four months later, on August 1, the former U.S. Marine would use his sniper training and shoot 42 people, 15 of them fatally, in addition to five others murdered earlier in the day.

    It wasn’t the first warning sign missed, several years earlier in 1962, he remarked to a fellow student, “A person could stand off an army from atop of [the Main Building’s clock tower] before they got him.”

    What’d Sadie think?

    Just as we see the charts begin to be filled with the “counterculture” we see the tension in society as its “Ballad Of The Green Berets” by S/Sgt. Barry Sadler that is number 1 for the whole month…keeping the iconic “These Boots Are Made For Walkin’” by Nancy Sinatra from the top. The pro-military song was a patriotic song, written by an actual Staff Sergeant, at a time that protests against the Vietnam war were beginning to grow.

    Loved ’em
    • “634-5789′ – Wilson Pickett
    • “19Th Nervous Breakdown” – Rolling Stones
    • “Bang Bang” – Cher
    • “Daydream” – Lovin’ Spoonful
    • “Homeward Bound” – Simon & Garfunkel
    • “My Baby Loves Me” – Martha & The Vandellas
    • “Nowhere Man” – Beatles
    • “Shake Me Wake Me” – Four Tops
    • “This Old Heart Of Mine” – Isley Brothers
    • “Walkin’ My Cat Named Dog” – Norma Tanega

    Not the most obvious track, certainly not as classic as many of the others, to do a deep dive on but “Walkin’ My Cat Named Dog” by Norma Tanega turns out to be extremely important.

    Firstly, the weird title, “Tanega’s impetus for the song came from living in a New York City apartment building that did not allow dogs; instead she owned a cat which she named “Dog” and took for walks.” Ok!

    But off the back of this successful song, “In 1966, Tanega traveled to England to promote her music. Her tour included a performance on the ITV program Ready Steady Go!, where she met British pop singer Dusty Springfield. After Tanega returned to the U.S., Springfield made many transatlantic calls to her and accrued a large phone bill. On a visit to New York, Springfield entered a romantic relationship with Tanega. They returned to England and lived together for five years. The couple took up residence in London’s Kensington district, where Tanega continued to paint and play music. Springfield recorded many of Tanega’s songs.”

    Quite the cat dog tale!

    Liked ’em
    • “Baby Scratch My Back” – Slim Harpo
    • “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” – B.J. Thomas
    • “It’s Too Late” – Bobby Goldsboro
    • “Love Makes The World Go Round” – Deon Jackson
    • “Magic Town” – Vogues
    • “One More Heartache” – Marvin Gaye
    • “Secret Agent Man” – Johnny Rivers
    • “Time Won’t Let Me” – Outsiders
    • “Woman” – Peter & Gordon
    Leave ’em
    • “Husbands And Wives” – Roger Miller
    • “Little Latin Lupe Lu” – Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
    • “Soul And Inspiration” – Righteous Brothers
    • “Sure Gonna Miss Her” – Gary Lewis & The Playboys

    Now go listen to the full playlist on Youtube via this link.