by Robin Duke | Apr 1, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
In the mid 1960s if you were a teenage male and couldn’t find enough mates to form a band with then the world was in danger of being a lonely place. And the chance of appealing to the opposite sex was almost out of the question As a standalone you could try and be the...
by Robin Duke | Mar 24, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
As Rod Stewart so memorably put it with his 1969 album title – An Old Raincoat Won’t Ever Let You Down. Probably true. He could have added – An Old Pop Song Won’t Ever Let You Down Either. Though in a way Handbags and Gladrags did. For him. And didn’t. Confused? You...
by Robin Duke | Mar 14, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
By the time Gerry and the Pacemakers peaked in the UK charts at number six in the spring of 1964 with Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Crying, there was already an ominous sense of their helium balloon of success beginning to deflate. Ok, it turned out to be the group’s...
by Robin Duke | Mar 6, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
As one (and a half) hit wonders go, The Zombies haven’t done badly. Considering what’s left of the original band (two members – again not bad considering it’s 57 years since they first got together – will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame later...
by Robin Duke | Feb 28, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
Deadpan America comedian Steven Wright once remarked: “Nothing lasts forever – except the fade out to Hey Jude.” In a way he wasn’t too far wrong. The song itself clocks in at more than seven minutes but, a bit like those mums who start packing to come home from a...
by Robin Duke | Feb 21, 2019 | Songs released in the 1960’s, The Great British Songbook Songs
There’s probably a stage musical waiting to be written about one and a half hit wonders Thunderclap Newman. The one hit was, of course, Something In the Air, which spent 12 weeks in the 1969 charts, three of them at number one – replacing The Beatles’...