Come Dancing by the Kinks.
Had it since watching a documentary on the band about a week ago. I like the song, but this is beginning to annoy me.
j
Come Dancing by the Kinks.
Had it since watching a documentary on the band about a week ago. I like the song, but this is beginning to annoy me.
j
“Another Day of Sun” from La La Land.
I hadn’t thought of it for ages. It popped in my head, I you-tubed it and it gave me great joy.
How Do You Do by Mouth and MacNeal.
Linda Ronstadt’s version of You’re No Good. I’d forgotten how good this track is all around: the inspired singing, the backing vocals, the musicianship, the arrangement, the lyrics (check ‘em out)… just everything. Recorded and released in 1974, it’s one of many songs I often heard on the radio in the earliest years of my adolescence, and I still love lots of studio-crafted, guitar-driven rock from this period (perfectly mature but not overripe). So, I’m predisposed to liking this track, and I hadn’t heard it for a very long time until recently, hence the earworm. Seriously, check out the lyrics (I could never understand most of them). It’s not so interesting to call someone evil and leave it at that, and the second verse of this tune puts an interesting twist on it.
For about a week now it’s been the theme song for Good Omens
Before that it was Secret - The Pierces
ETA: A bit ago… Ooh La La - Run the Jewels
Not that I’m complaining, this is 1of those killer songs I never get tired of
Right now? “In Her Eyes”, Achinoam Nini.
Since we first heard it in Barbie, this Dua Lipa song has been in heavy rotation at our house: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5_1gxZ6pxc
back jack and do it again from steely dan. never gets old.
For no sane reason, the theme from the Facts of Life.
It’s bouncy!
Right this second - “Deadbeat Club” - The B-52s. Mainly because I saw them Friday night. Great show, and their last time around.
The Beatles - Obla-Di, Obla-Da.
I don’t like it but my brain does.
Not Fade Away, Rolling Stones version. I watched a video earlier today about how to play the strumming pattern, and now it’s stuck in my mind and doesn’t seem like it will fade away anytime soon…
Orville Peck’s “The Curse Of The Blackened Eye” has been humming in the back of my head.
It’s very catchy and haunting.
Out of nowhere, Spirit In The Sky by Norman Greenbaum.
But that’s OK. I don’t mind being stuck with that for a little while.
j