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Da Diana Ross, Mary Wilson og Florence ’Flo’ Ballard som The Primettes troppede op på Motown Records i 1960, tog ingen dem alvorligt. Men de var vedholdende, og i 1962 underskrev de som The Supremes kontrakt med selskabet, og da gruppen i 1963 parredes med sangskrivertrioen Holland-Dozier-Holland, begyndte hitsene af vælte ind. Fra og med ‘Where Did Our Love Go' erobrede førstepladsen i 1964, lå gruppen uafbrudt på de amerikanske hitlister resten af årtiet. The Supremes er den dag i dag Motowns mest succesrige navn nogensinde.I 1967 blev Ballard fyret og erstattet af Cindy Birdsong, hvorefter navnet blev ændret til Diana Ross & The Supremes. I 1970 sprang Ross ud som solist og havde succes op gennem 1970erne, også som skuespiller, ikke mindst i 1972-filmen om Billie Holiday, ‘Lady Sings the Blues'. Diana Ross stod derefter på discobølgen, og karrierehøjdepunktet blev det Bernard Edwards og Nile Rodgers-producerede album, Diana, som i 1980 gik sin sejrsgang verden over, drevet af hittet ‘Upside Down', en vaskeægte dansegulvsklassiker.Som at få hældt honning i ørerne, parret med en afsindig lyst til at danse din vinterdepression væk, for bedre popmusik skal man lede længe efter!Playliste:The SupremesWhen the Lovelight Starts Shining Through His Eyes (1963)Where Did Our Love Go (1964)Baby Love (1964)Stop! In the Name of Love (1965)You Can't Hurry Love (1966)You Keep Me Hangin' On (1966)The Happening (1967)Diana Ross & The Supremes –Reflections (1967) Love Child (1968)Some Day We’ll Be Together (1969)Diana Ross Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand) (1970)Good Morning Heartache (1972)Touch Me in the Morning (1973)Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye: You’re a Special Part of Me (1973)Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To) (1975)Love Hangover (Album version) (1976)Upside Down (1980)Muscles (1982)
Topics: Shirley Anita Chisholm, H. Rap Brown, Diana Ross, Al Green, Superfly, Sanford & Son, & Fat Albert. (Bonus Artist: hidingtobefound) 1. 1972 - A Transitional Year, New Directions, Politics and Pimpin 2. News snapshots 3. Nixon wins reelection 4. Watergate: 5 dudes arrested for breaking into the DNC headquarters 5. Vietnam War: year 17 of 19 6. Deaths: 641 down from 2357 in 1971 7. June29 - SCOTUS rules death penalty unconstitutional 8. Economic snapshots 9. Black unemployment is 9.9%. highest since great depression. 10. 31% black families headed by women 11. Minimum wage: 12. Sports snapshots 13. Super Bowl: Dallas def. Miami 14. World Series: Oakland A's def. Cincinnati (4-3) 15. NBA Championship: LA Lakers def. New York 16. Science snapshots 17. CAT scanning, compact disks, electronic mail, and Prozac are developed. 18. Apollo XVII, the last manned moon landing to date 19. Entertainment snapshots 20. Time Inc. drops HBO, the first pay cable network. 21. Atari breaks out Pong, the first arcade video game. (home version in 1974) 22. Women dominate the Grammy Awards, grabbing the big 4. Carole King won Record, Album and Song of the Year, while Carly Simon won Best New Artist. 23. Music (top selling albums): #3. Fragile by Yes, #2. American Pie by Don McLean, #1. Harvest by Neil Young / just an fyi, #13. Led Zeppelin IV 24. Movies (top grossing): #3. What's up Doc, #2. The Poseidon Adventure, #1. The Godfather 25. Television: #3. Hawaii Five-O, #2. Sanford and Son*, #1. All in the Family 26. Black snapshots 27. Mahalia Jackson and Jackie Robinson pass away 28. NYC graffiti breaks out. it's one of the 4 pillars of hip-hop 29. MJ (@14) goes solo: hits w/ Ben 30. Cicely Tyson (@48) stars in Sounder: Box office hit. Proving that the black audience will take, a non 'super black' exploitation movie seriously. 31. QUESTION: What pops out for you? 32. Socio-political (1st major shift to a new direction, political power) 33. Shirley Anita Chisholm, (@ 47): politician, educator, and author of "Unbought and Unbossed! -1970 autobiographies. 34. in 1972, she became the first black person EVER to run for POTUS AND the first woman to run for the Democrats. 35. Already, in 1968, she was the first black woman elected to Congress. 36. Her campaign was underfunded, dismissed as a symbolic, & basically ignored by the power structure. 37. And she was not instantly a heroine for black people. 38. Of course, black male colleagues showed little love: "When I ran for the Congress, when I ran for president, I met more discrimination as a woman than for being black. Men are men.... They think I am trying to take power from them. The black man must step 39. forward, but that doesn't mean the black woman must step back." 40. QUESTION: Is this the real reason more black women haven't run? (only other black woman was Carol Moseley Braun from Il in 2004) 41. About her legacy, she said, “I want to be remembered as a woman … who dared to be a catalyst of change.” (Obama?) 42. Famous Quotes: 43. "Tremendous amounts of talent are lost to our society just because that talent wears a skirt." 44. "The emotional, sexual, and psychological stereotyping of females begins when the doctor says, 'It's a girl'." 45. "In the end, anti-black, anti-female, and all forms of discrimination are equivalent to the same thing - anti-humanism." 46. Conclusion: In our lifetime we saw THE MOST successful path for black advancement. Politics. Only 36 years from Shirley to Obama. 47. Shirley Chisholm was an underappreciated legend and icon. 48. Other Comments? 49. Meanwhile...the Black Power Movement is falling apart! (2nd major shift) 50. 1971-1972 the Panthers split into different camps. Huey vs Eldrigdge 51. They went "Hatfield vs McCoy" and started retaliatory assassinations. 52. H. Rap Brown (@ 29), is the latest high-profile BPM figure to fall. 53. Others include: Angela Davis, Assata Shakur, Elaine Brown, Eldridge Cleaver, Fred Hampton, Huey P. Newton, Stokely Carmichael, and Bobby Seale 54. H Rap Brown sentenced for an attack on a New York City bar?!?! 55. Currently serving a life sentence for murder after shooting of two Sheriff's deputies in 2000. 56. He was known for taking over SNCC after Stokely and his autobiography, Die Nigger Die! 57. Probably most famous for saying, "violence is as American as cherry pie” -and- "If America don't come around, we're gonna burn it down." 58. QUESTION: Was the decline of the BPM more internal (reliance on the gun and violence), external (black people lost interest) -OR- did black people choose to go the "integration" route? 59. Conclusion: The BPM had a great message: Pride, Self-reliance, and education. But, I think they were too extreme. 60. Other Comments: 61. Music: 1972 Top Singles #1 Roberta Flack The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face #2 Gilbert O’Sullivan Alone Again (Naturally) #3 Don McLean American Pie #4 Nilsson Without You #5 Sammy Davis Jr. Candy Man #6 Joe Tex I Gotcha #7 Bill Withers Lean On Me #8 Mac Davis Baby Don’t Get Hooked On Me #9 Melanie Brand New Key #10 Wayne Newton Daddy Dont You Walk So Fast #11 Al Green Let’s Stay Together #12 Looking Glass Brandy (You’re A Fine Girl) #13 Chi-Lites Oh Girl #14 Gallery Nice To Be With You #15 Chuck Berry My Ding-A-Ling #16 Luther Ingram If Loving You Is Wrong I Don’t Want To Be Right #17 Neil Young Heart Of Gold #18 Stylistics Betcha By Golly, Wow #19 Staple Singers I’ll Take You There #20 Michael Jackson Ben #21 Robert John The Lion Sleeps Tonight #22 Billy Preston Outa-space #23 War Slippin’ Into Darkness #24 Hollies Long Cool Woman (In A Black Dress) #25 Mouth and MacNeal How Do You Do #26 Neil Diamond Song Sung Blue #27 America A Horse With No Name #28 Hot Butter Popcorn #29 Main Ingredient Everybody Plays The Fool #30 Climax Precious And Few 62. Vote: Best Single, __________________________________ 63. 1972 Albums 64. Jan - There's a Riot Going' On - Sly & the Family Stone 65. Jan - Black Moses - Isaac Hayes 66. Mar - Solid Rock - The Temptations 67. Mar - Let's Stay Together - Al Green 68. May - First Take - Roberta Flack 69. Jun - A Lonely Man - The Chi-Lites 70. Jul - Still Bill - Bill Withers 71. Oct - Super Fly Soundtrack - Curtis Mayfield 72. Nov - All Directions - The Temptations 73. Dec - I'm Still In Love With You - Al Green 74. Vote: Best Album, __________________________________ 75. Key Artist - Diana Ross (@28): Singer, songwriter, actress, and record producer. Born and raised in Detroit. 76. Became famous as the lead singer the Supremes, the best charting girl group in history. With twelve number-one hit singles. ("Where Did Our Love Go", "Baby Love", "Come See About Me", "Stop! In the Name of Love", "You Can't Hurry Love", "You Keep Me 77. Hangin' On", "Love Child", and "Someday We'll Be Together", etc...) 78. The movie dream girls was inspired by the group 79. She also did a few big films: Lady Sings the Blues, Mahogany, The Wiz, etc... 80. Question: Here's my problem with The Boss. Mary Wilson was the heart and soul of the Supremes. Florence Ballard was the best singer. Diana was what? 81. Conclusion: The Supremes were deliberately glamorous, because Gordy wanted all of Motown to be crossover artists. Beyonce has real game, I'm not convinced Diana wasn't just hyped up. 82. Other Comments: 83. Key Artist - Al Green (@26): singer, songwriter and record produce. Born in AR, grew up in Michigan, discovered in Memphis. 84. Kicked out of the house when his very religious daddy caught him listening to Jackie Wilson. 85. Quote: "I also listened to Mahalia Jackson, all the great gospel singers. But the most important music to me was those hip-shaking’ boys: Wilson Pickett and Elvis Presley. I just loved Elvis Presley. Whatever he got, I went out and bought." 86. Started out in 1967, flashed in 1971 with the album, "Al Green Gets Next to You", PEAKED in 1972 with 2 albums - "Let's Stay Together" & "I'm Still in Love with You", and capped 1973 with the lp "Call Me", a critically acclaimed "Masterpiece!" 87. Basically, everything we love about Al was dropped in that 3-year window. 88. 1974 he was born again 89. Soon after that his "girlfriend" dumped boiling grits on him in the bathtub before shooting and killing herself. (with his gun!?) 90. By 1976, he was ready to go gospel. 91. His longtime producer, Willie Mitchell (the guy who discovered him and crafted his music), passed on doing gospel music. (Bounced check story) 92. 1977, he dropped "The Belle Album", his 12th. Rolling Stone magazine said, "We may someday look back on The Belle Album as Al Green’s best" 93. Question: Just an observation really. This is the 3rd major shift in 1972. Al didn't make political or activist music. Some said he was the last great "Soul Man". In 1971 Marvin asked, what's going on. During 1972, in the middle of war protests, Watergate, an 94. election, civil rights protests, the Panthers shooting up the streets, Al Green made LOVE ok again. 95. Other Comments: 96. Vote: Key Artists, ________________________________ 97. Movies 98. Lady Sings the Blues: Based on Lady Sings the Blues by Billie Holiday 99. Starring: Diana Ross (@28), Billy Dee Williams (@35), Richard Pryor (@32) 100. Blacula: important because it was a successful black horror film 101. Buck and the Preacher: important for casting blacks as leads in a western and was the first film Sidney Poitier directed 102. Super Fly: 4th Major shift (The streets are talking) 103. Priest is done with the clothes, the cars, the drugs, the money, and the white women. 104. But, his partner, Eddie isn’t. 105. Quote (Eddie talking to Priest): "You're gonna give all this up? 8-Track Stereo, color T.V. in every room, and can snort a half a piece of dope everyday? That's the American Dream, nigga! Well, ain't it? Ain't it?" 106. Curtis Mayfield (@30) wrote and produced the AMAZING soundtrack. 107. Starring: Ron O’Neal (@35), Carl Lee (@46), Sheila Frazier (@24) 108. At the time of its release, lots of black folks didn't like what Super Fly was representing. 109. Quote from the Hollywood NAACP branch: “we must insist that our children are not exposed to a steady diet of so-called black movies that glorify black males as pimps, dope pushers, gangsters, and super males.” 110. The filmmakers (White producer / black director) say they wanted to show the negative and empty aspects of the drug subculture. 111. Regardless, Super Fly landed BIG TIME with the "post-Civil Rights" generation. 112. They thought Eddie spoke the gospel. 113. Quote (Eddie talking to Priest): " I know it's a rotten game, but it's the only one The Man left us to play. That's the stone, cold truth." 114. Question: Ultimately, what is the legacy of Superfly? 115. Conclusion: I really enjoyed the movie. However, it blatantly dismissed the BPM, and spoke directly to the criminal elements in the black community. This movie, along with the "Urban" writers, Donald Goines and Iceberg Slim, helped spawn a generation 116. of criminals. That can't be a good thing. 117. Other comments: 118. Vote: Key movie, ____________________________________ 119. Television 120. Jan - Sanford and Son debuts on NBC (6 seasons) 121. Groundbreaking: 1st "Black" cast sit-com on the air...at least 2yrs before: That's My Mama ('74), Good Times ('74), The Jeffersons ('75), and What's Happening!!('76) 122. Theme music by Quincy Jones (@39) 123. Starring: Redd Foxx (@50), and Demond Wilson (@26) 124. Foxx was born in St. Louis, raised in Chicago, and ran the streets with pre-Muslim Malcolm X back in the day. 125. He came up performing raunchy comedy and developed a cult following in the 50's and 60's. 126. In 1970 he flashed in the comedy movie "Cotton Comes to Harlem" and the producer of All in the Family hit him up. 127. Question: Is Lamont crazy? Quote: "MLK left black people hooked on economic dependence and Sanford and Son taught entrepreneurship" 128. Conclusion: Undeniably funny. Redd had the respect and help from some of the best young comics in the business, black and white. Classic! 129. Other Comments: 130. Sep - Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids (8 seasons) 131. Fat Albert first popped up in 1967 during Cosby's stand-up comedy routine "Buck Buck," 132. Starring: Bill Cosby (@35) 133. Born and raised in Philly. High school drop-out. Got his G.E.D. and went to Temple Univ. on a scholarship. While bartending, he discovered his comedy talent. 134. He dropped out of college and mastered crossover comedy in the early sixties. 135. In 1965 he broke out in the hit tv series I-Spy and by 1970 he was America's top Black comic. 136. He went back to college in 1970 and got involved with PBS and the Electric Company. 137. During this time, he cooked up "Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids" 138. It was based on his childhood friends and every show had an educational lesson in it. 139. A lot of times the crew would end the show playing a song in the neighborhood junkyard. 140. Question: Frankly, did the sex scandal undermine his whole career? 141. Conclusion: I used to really like Bill. 142. Other comments: 143. Vote: Television, ___________________________________ 144. Vote: 1972 Biggest Shadow, __________________________
On this episode, Brittany and Danielle finish off the book. Brittany is sick of talking about toasted cheese sandwiches, Danielle sings a little too much, and the ladies announce their next read! LISTEN TO THE BOOK ALONG WITH US VIA A FREE 30 DAY TRIAL ON AUDIBLE! http://www.audibletrial.com/BaBaT YouTube: https://youtu.be/3OfuykVodXI Why High School Musical 2 Is The Best One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EP2fPQ67A0o Harry Potter as Ring Composition and Ring Cycle: http://www.lulu.com/us/en/shop/john-granger/harry-potter-as-ring-composition-and-ring-cycle/paperback/product-13042044.html You Can't Hurry Love by Phil Collins: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hg7Oh_FZyss
Musician/subway busker Nicola Hogg (@nicolahoggmusic), with her terrific voice and great songs, saved the day in this episode! To re-cap: podcast host Will Hines along with temporary co-host Connor Ratliff were in London for improv reasons and impulsively decided to try and rent time at famed Beatles recording studio Abbey Road. To their shock, it WORKED and they suddenly had 10 hours of studio time with almost no plan. The day before the session, they pass Nicola Hogg playing "You Can't Hurry Love" at the Tottenham Court Road subway station, and she sounded terrific. But that's not a Beatles song, you say. Well, so what? She's a young talented musician, and didn't the Beatles foster many such talents via their Apple Records label? And weren't Connor and Will, for the day at least, owners of official Abbey Road studio recording time? After exchanging a few tweets ("Uh, hi, you don't know us -- want to meet us at Abbey Road and record?") the delightful Nicola Hogg becomes the one and only client of our day-long adventure in running a record label, which is called Songer Records for reasons made clear in this episode. Nicola plays us her songs, as well as some great Beatles covers. We talk about her music story, her thoughts on the Beatles and songwriting and performing in general. She's great! Check out Nicola's terrific music at these places: On Spotify, she's Nicola Hogg. And she's @nicolahoggmusic on twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Soundcloud! One more Abbey Road ep next week!
#dianaross #disco #funk #paris #djtarek Diana Ross, née le 26 mars 1944 à Détroit, Michigan, États-Unis, est une chanteuse de soul, de pop et de rhythm and blues américaine. Plusieurs disques auxquels elle a participé sont devenus des disques d'or ou des disques de platine. En tant que chanteuse des Supremes, de la maison de disques Motown, elle a participé à la création de plusieurs chansons qui ont eu un grand succès, dont You Can't Hurry Love, You Keep Me Hangin' On, Baby Love, Where Did Our Love Go et Stop! In the Name of Love. Comme artiste solo, elle a aussi obtenu maints succès, dont Ain't No Mountain High Enough, Do You Know Where You're Going to, Love Hangover et Upside Down.
Rhod Sharpe interviews Lamont Dozier, part of a legendary song writing team that brought us some of the all time classics like the Four Tops "Reach Out" & "You Can't Hurry Love"