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#1
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I've always liked the Devil in a Blue Dress/Good Golly Miss Molly/C. C. Rider thing that Mitch Ryder and the Detriot Wheels do (or add in Jenny Take a Ride as done by Springsteen, I like that to), and Kansas City/Hey Hey Hey Hey by either Little Richard or the Beatles, and that got me thinking about other songs you could combine.
So far I've got Surfin' USA/Sweet Little Sixteen (same melody, after all, but I think it would be cool to somehow move from the Chuck Berry sound to the Beach Boys harmonies), and What I Like About You/Rockin' in the USA (although actually in the reverse order - there's a harmonica part in the instrumental break halfway through Rockin' in the USA that could lead perfectly into What I Like About You). If I were in a band, we'd do both of these. Any others?
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Actually, I think these ARE the 'droids you're looking for. |
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#2
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When I was in college radio, by far the best segue I did (completely accidentally) was when I followed "Leader of the Laudromat" with the Lone Ranger theme:
"Who's that playing the piano?" "The Looone Ranger!" I also discovered that Led Zepplin's "When the Levee Breaks" is the perfect song to segue into. No matter what you played before, it sounds great.
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"One never knows, do one?" Provider of quality fantasy and science fiction since 1982. |
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#3
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"Bonnie Dundee" & "Steamboat" / "Keel Row" / "Glendlaurel Highlanders"
seemed to work nicely. |
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#4
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I'd like to hear a combo of Suzanne Vega's 'My Name is Luca' and Shawn Colvin's 'Sunny Came Home'.
I don't know why, but I think it would be really funny to hear a song about Sunny coming home to live with the other psycho up on the second floor. |
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#5
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I think it would be possible to do a "Money Medley" that starts with Pink Floyd's "Money" and during the instrumental break segues into Dire Straits "Money For Nothing." It would be also nifty to work in the old Kingsmen tune by the same title as well.
Also, I can hear in my head (but don't have the skill to reproduce) a "Freedom" medly that starts with Ritchie Havens strummed-guitar "Freedom" from Woodstock and mixes in bits of Bread's "Mother Freedom" and George Michael's "Freedom 90" A fascinating mix can be done with Santana's "Jingo" and Deep Purple's "The Painter", (from their self-titled thrid lbum, the one with the Hieronymus Bosch cover) based on a similar riff. Then, of course, there are damn near zillions of songs that have borrowed the beat from "Willie and the Hand Jive" including the cult fave "I Want Candy" by the Strangeloves. You could have a hell of a medly collecting all the others. Which reminds me of Ten Years After's "I'm Going Home" performance at Woodstock, blending a number of classic rock themes. |
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#6
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Quote:
__________________
Did you see that ludicrous display last night? |
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#7
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Quote:
In the years when I jocked (back in the days of turntables and slip-starting) we vied with each other for nifty transitions - matching beats, overlaps that worked well, cold endings that could be picked up on the next beat with the opening note of a similar song, etc. but I've forgotten most of them in the years since. It's nice to hear others with the same zest for enjoying the possibilities of the music. |
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#8
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"Space Oddity" by David Bowie (Major Thom to ground control ...)
"Rocket Man" by Elton John The classic-rock station I listen to played this pair after coming back from extensive news coverage (and they never did news) of the Challenger explosion. Gave me chills.
__________________
"My mind is going ... I can feel it," HAL9000 |
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#9
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A Rage Against the Machine double that works well:
Guerrilla Radio ends with the line "Hell, no, can't stop us now." And Renegades of Funk starts with the words "No matter how hard you try, you can't stop us now" |
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#10
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I can't quite "hear" how to pull it off, but a transition from "Under My Thumb" to "Ain't to Proud to Beg" (the Stones version) would be cool.
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#11
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Think about it...
Anything by Korn, followed by anything by Hole.
__________________
"Unchecked right-wing media power means that in the United States today, no issue can be honestly debated and no election can be fairly decided." -- David Brock, former conservative journalist and "right-wing hitman," author of Blinded by the Right: The Conscience of an Ex-Conservative |
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#12
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#13
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I've long wanted to do a mix of "Knocking on Heaven's Door" and "Love Shack." Sounds crazy, right? But imagine the following back-and-forth:
"Knock knock knocking on heaven's door." "Knock a lil louder sugar!" "Knock knock knocking on heaven's dooooooooor."
__________________
"Therapy is extremely expensive, popping bubble wrap is radically cheap" |
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#14
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songs I've played into...
One that I've done is Dylan's "Tangled Up In Blue" moving into The Who's "Pinball Wizard". Works well if TUIB is played a bit fast.
My favorite is the Stones' "Wild Horses" moving into Peter Gabriel's "In Your Eyes". It makes for a darn long song, but it's down right soulful. It works so well on so many levels; same key, the Bm chord is the perfect transition place, and the themes meld nicely. |
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#15
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Quote:
That'd be the Bo Diddley beat, son. I've done some great segues in my past life as a DJ, but I'll be damned if I can recall one right now. Ephemera, I guess.
__________________
Shiva Diggin' the scene with a gangsta lean. |
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