What song best encaspulates the 70's for you?

Takes me back to the '70s? Shit, man, I never left!

Boston (Any / all of the following):

  1. More Than A Feeling
  2. Peace Of Mind
  3. Foreplay/Long Time
  4. Rock & Roll Band
  5. Smokin’
  6. Hitch A Ride
  7. Something About You
  8. Let Me Take You Home Tonight

I suspect Journey will be popping up soon.

I was born in late 73, and the music I remember from the 70’s is really from the 60’s. I would beg my mom to play Peter, Paul and Mary over and over. “Leaving on a Jet Plane”, “Lemon Tree”, and “Puff the Magic Dragon” were my favorites.

No, we were just the spacey/philosophical types in our high schools! :smiley:

**Seasons in the Sun ** by Terry Jacks. My brother got a record player for his birthday and this was the first record he bought. He played it incessantly until I wanted to choke the life right out of him.

:smack: D’oh! I did mean the Beatles’ version. I was just remembering songs I heard a lot as a child. I was born in 1970.

Dancing Queen by ABBA should have been mentioned by now.

I see your “Dancing Queen” and raise you a “My Sherona”. (There - get THAT one out of your head now!)

“Freedom of '76” by Ween. That it was made in the '90s matters not. It is both the best example of “white bread soul” music around and takes me back to 70s memories for me.

Watching the River Run by Loggins and Messina. Used it in our Wedding :cool:

Great choices, all. Interesting that none, with the exception of “Convoy”, are Disco-Duck-esque novelty songs.

This would have been the one that I was going to mention specificially, but almost all songs mentioned heretofore are on my list.

Does anyone else remember those compilations “records” where, in response to list of questions, snippets of then-popular songs were used as the answers? I can’t name any specifically, but there seemed to be quit a few of them in the 70s.

And who can forget My Ding-a-Ling, by Chuck Berry?

No mention of Zeppelin?
For me the 70’s are about the Electric Light Orchestra.

Wait. “Undercover Angel” was supposed to be serious? :slight_smile:

I remember one from the early 80s, something to do with UFOs.

“break-in” records, popularized by Dickie Goodman (“Watergrate”, “Mr. President” and “Energy Crisis '74.”)- I think Wolfman Jack had one as well.

Thank you, you’re good.

And thanks to Fishbicyle below.

I never knew what they were called either.

Sure! They’re called “break-ins”. The most widely-known ones were by Dickie Goodman, who used to be partnered with Bill Buchanan for the first couple of years, starting in the mid-'50s. “The Flying Saucer (Parts 1&2)” was the first, in 1956. There were all kinds of these records by several artists up through the '80s. You probably have a soft spot for “Mr. Jaws.”

As I was born in 1970, my earliest musical memories were the songs my parents listened to at breakfast on WMZQ (DC-area country music). So **Rocky Mountain High ** and Take Me Home, Country Road have been branded on my brain as a childhood memory.

But for music that I willingly listened to, nothing beats Journey doing Don’t Stop Believing with a big Ka-chunk! halfway through as the 8-track player switched tracks.

When I saw that, I thought, “What an horrific oversight.” But thinking a little further, it seems that Led Zeppelin is one of those bands that, at its best, was truly timeless. I don’t think 70s (or late 60s) when I hear them. I just think it’s really good stuff.