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Post by SharksFan99 on Dec 23, 2017 22:20:10 GMT 10
A thread to share and discuss songs you personally dislike from the 1970's.
In the grand scheme of things, I guess it's not really that bad of a song. However, I personally find the instrumentation of "Montego Bay" to be really cheap and tacky. It incredibly reached #8 on the Billboard Hot 100, #3 in the UK and the Top-10 in other countries around the world. There were a lot of great songs to have been released in the '70s, however this isn't one of them.
Yeah, this song is pretty bad. It's amazing that it was as successful as it was. "Long Haired Lover from Liverpool" actually topped the charts in it's native UK and reached #2 on the Australian Chart. It wasn't as successful in the US, only managing to peak at #38 on the Billboard Hot 100.
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Post by SharksFan99 on Dec 24, 2017 8:41:13 GMT 10
@paul @mamafrankie Just out of curiosity, what would you consider to be the worst songs of the '70s? You would both know more about '70s music than I do, so I was just curious to hear your thoughts on the topic.
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Post by #Infinity on Dec 24, 2017 16:04:44 GMT 10
10. I love both of these talented singers, but their talent is utterly wasted on this lame piece of kitsch. 9. One of several tasteless, boring, and worthless pieces of glam rock rubbish to come out of the UK during the first half of the 70s. I like "L'l'lucy" from this group, but mostly, their work was really, really bland. 8. Look, power to you if you want to be clean and moral (which...yeah, we'll get to that), but as a pop song, this is just pitifully corny. I guess I shouldn't be surprised that this is what became of Ringo Starr in more recent years. 7. Distorting the guitars doesn't improve upon 50s rock and roll, guys, it just dulls it out. 6. This is infamous, and for good reason. I probably shouldn't even be taking it seriously, but the fact of its existence is just evidence that somebody was a bit up his arse at the time. 5. if 2005 was the year that the UK most outmatched the US for popular music, then 1973 was hands down the year that the American charts were most superior to the British charts. The glam rock era was a truly dark period for music in the UK, possibly even worse than most 2010s years. For every act of the movement with artistic merit, like David Bowie, Roxy Music, and T-Rex, there were incredibly generic, soulless musicians like Gary Glitter, the Rubettes, and Mud. Slade may have improved significantly over the years, but their early megahits were just noisy garbage. 4. I know this guy's an easy target, for obvious reasons, but even taking out what a horrible human being Gary Glitter is, most of his music is just pure trash. Like a lot of glam rock from the early-to-mid-70s, this uncreatively lifts elements of 50s music, in this case doo-wop, and misguidedly amplifies it, sucking out any level of soul its source genre had in the first place. The lyrics and vocals are trash, too. Pretty fittingly, Glitter's only hit in America, and by far his best, is pretty much just an instrumental. 3. Jimmy Osmond - Long Haired Lover from Liverpool I won't post a video because SharksFan99 already did so himself. Even if you're going to let a talentless little kid ride off the coattails of his older siblings, at least give him something age-appropriate. Jimmy should have been featured on Sesame Street or something, not comparing himself to Abbey Road-era Beatles. 2. Seriously, Ringo? Why did you cover this? You can't disguise perversion with a saccharine pop melody. Kiss' "Christine Sixteen" is guilty of the same questionable subject matter, but this is worse because it's also in utter denial that what the narrator is doing is wrong. 1. Nothing even comes close. This is absolutely unbearable. I may be more tolerant and occasionally accepting of dumb novelty songs than most, but this is utter bullshit. I hate every aspect about it. The pitched-up character is annoying enough on her own, but compounding that issue is the nauseating pitched-down voice cooing, "I dig it! I really dig it!," as well as the fact that nothing about this track is musically coherent. The production is just some peppy boogie woogie junk, and at almost no point is there ever anything resembling a real hook. Most of the vocals don't even really match the backup instruments. This guy's name may sound like a male version of my personal idol, but this track may as well be the complete opposite of the charming, propulsive, orgasmically delightful "I Said Never Again (But Here We Are)."
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Post by #Infinity on Dec 24, 2017 16:22:42 GMT 10
In the grand scheme of things, I guess it's not really that bad of a song. However, I personally find the instrumentation of "Montego Bay" to be really cheap and tacky. It incredibly reached #8 on the Billboard Hot 100, #3 in the UK and the Top-10 in other countries around the world. There were a lot of great songs to have been released in the '70s, however this isn't one of them. I take it you're not so crazy about the tuba?
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Post by SharksFan99 on Dec 24, 2017 16:30:46 GMT 10
I take it you're not so crazy about the tuba? It's not so much the instrument that I have an issue with. I just think it makes the song sound really cheap and tacky, especially considering how repetitive it is.
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Post by longaotian on Dec 24, 2017 16:49:18 GMT 10
I know quite a lot of songs from the '70s, I just don't know the names for any of them lol
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Post by SharksFan99 on Dec 24, 2017 17:15:49 GMT 10
I know quite a lot of songs from the '70s, I just don't know the names for any of them lol Haha. Can you remember the names of the bands/artists or the lyrics in the songs?
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Post by Deleted on Dec 25, 2017 0:17:54 GMT 10
@paul @mamafrankie Just out of curiosity, what would you consider to be the worst songs of the '70s? You would both know more about '70s music than I do, so I was just curious to hear your thoughts on the topic. I love 70s music and struggling atm to think of any bad songs. I'll get back to you on this after Christmas
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Post by Deleted on Dec 25, 2017 9:20:33 GMT 10
I hate the following: Fattie Bum Bum by Carl Malcolm Lonely This Christmas by Mud Ire Feelings by Rupie Edwards (the worst one) Lucky Number by Lene Lovich (the second worst one) All of T Rex's output Let 'Em In and Silly Love Songs by Wings The Hustle by Van McCoy
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Post by SharksFan99 on Mar 17, 2018 22:49:45 GMT 10
This 1977 song by John Paul Young is simply too repetitive for my liking and I'd argue that it's one of the worst Australian songs of the '70s. It's generally not a bad song as such, but the repetitive beat and the lacklustre lyrics ruins the song for me.
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Post by Telso on Aug 16, 2018 3:16:48 GMT 10
Basically if "Baby" by Justin Bieber was released in the 70s, even though this is agreeably much worse because instead of a driving electro-beat the extremely corny instrumentation makes it ended up sounding like emotional dribble. This is a Paul Anka cover that became a huge hit in the Anglophone countries.
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Post by God Less America on Aug 16, 2018 14:46:12 GMT 10
I can't think of anything I dislike from the 70's although I'm sure there must be a few howlers, nothing is jumping out.
There was a fair bit of cheese around like Popcorn and The Pushbike Song.
I have not read this thread before posting but imagine Leo Sayer and Gilbert O'Sullivan getting some stick!
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Post by Telso on Sept 13, 2018 1:04:18 GMT 10
Apparently a massive hit in 1971 America. This is simply extremely embarassing, an annoying childish melody coupled with lyrics about his penis. Another one of those novelty songs I can't really stomach. How can a legend of the 50s come up with something this bad?
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Post by SharksFan99 on Sept 13, 2018 20:28:10 GMT 10
Apparently a massive hit in 1971 America. This is simply extremely embarassing, an annoying childish melody coupled with lyrics about his penis. Another one of those novelty songs I can't really stomach. How can a legend of the 50s come up with something this bad? Incredibly, it managed to top the Billboard Hot 100, Canadian and the UK Charts in 1972. I do agree though that it's not that great of a song and it's especially disappointing that the artist responsible for "Johnny B.Goode" (one of the best songs of the '50s, IMO) later resorted to releasing material such as this.
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Post by #Infinity on Sept 13, 2018 23:33:40 GMT 10
Incredibly, it managed to top the Billboard Hot 100, Canadian and the UK Charts in 1972. I do agree though that it's not that great of a song and it's especially disappointing that the artist responsible for "Johnny B.Goode" (one of the best songs of the '50s, IMO) later resorted to releasing material such as this. The version of "My Ding-A-Ling" that became famous was actually a live performance recorded at the Lanchester Arts Festival. The fact that this song is live makes a huge, huge difference and frankly makes me perfectly understand why it reached #1. As a polished studio recording, it sounds like a dumb children's song with a subliminally perverted message, but here, it comes off as Berry having intimate fun with his audience in the midst of a show, so the ridiculous lyrics are like the type of silly jokes you crack with your friends while having a good time, brought to life by a rock and roll legend.
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